The Tim Ferriss Show - #780: Cyan Banister — From Homeless and Broke to Top Angel Investor (Uber, SpaceX, and 100+ More)
Episode Date: November 27, 2024Cyan Banister (@cyantist) is a general partner at Long Journey Ventures, an early-stage venture capital firm focused on early and new investments. Cyan was an early investor in Uber, SpaceX, ...DeepMind, Flexport, and Affirm and has invested in more than 100 companies. Prior to that, she was at Founders Fund, a top-tier fund in San Francisco. Subscribe to Cyan's Substack at uglyduckling.substack.com. Sponsors:Eight Sleep’s Pod 4 Ultra sleeping solution for dynamic cooling and heating: https://eightsleep.com/tim (save between $400 and $600 on the Pod 4 Ultra)AG1 all-in-one nutritional supplement: https://DrinkAG1.com/Tim (1-year supply of Vitamin D (and 5 free AG1 travel packs) with your first subscription purchase.)Wealthfront high-yield cash account: https://Wealthfront.com/Tim (Start earning 4.25% APY on your short-term cash until you’re ready to invest. And when new clients open an account today, you can get an extra fifty-dollar bonus with a deposit of five hundred dollars or more.) Terms apply. Tim Ferriss receives cash compensation from Wealthfront Brokerage, LLC for advertising and holds a non-controlling equity interest in the corporate parent of Wealthfront Brokerage. See full disclosures here.*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsorsSign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/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, Margaret Atwood, Mark Zuckerberg, Peter Thiel, Dr. Gabor Maté, Anne Lamott, Sarah Silverman, Dr. Andrew Huberman, 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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Hello boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of
the Tim Ferriss Show. And this conversation is a long overdue conversation. I have been wanting
to make this happen for quite some time. My guest today, Cyan Bannister is a general partner at
Long Journey Ventures, an early stage venture capital firm. She was also an early investor in
a few names you might recognize Uber, SpaceX, DeepMind, Flexport, Affirm,
has invested in more than 100 companies. He was most recently a Founders Fund. I was actually
an LPN Founders Fund way back in the day. A top tier fund in San Francisco. You can subscribe to
Cyan Substack at uglyduckling.substack.com. Her writing is great. I would recommend subscribing. And you can find her online,
at least on X, the artist formerly known as Twitter at Scientist, one of the best
handles I've seen. C-Y-A-N-T-I-S-T. But first, just a few quick words from our
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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 is the appropriate time. I'm a cybernetic organism living tissue over metal and
to see you.
And good to see you.
So we just listed off using the royal Wii, some very impressive names. And certainly I would
consider you one of the top angel investors of many vintages, not just one across quite
a few different time periods. But it didn't start off that way. You weren't the child of Tim Draper or anything leading to atherton at age seven, things along these
lines. Could you take us back to homelessness in your life and how that factors in?
I was raised on the Navajo reservation in Northern Arizona, and I had an extraordinary
education.
And I think I was incredibly lucky
to have been educated there
because I have about the equivalent
of an eighth or ninth grade education.
And the reason for this is due to circumstances
outside of my control,
I became homeless off and on when I was 13,
and then homeless officially when I was 15,
and became a ward of the state of Arizona.
And this was because my mother,
she had a very difficult time keeping children in her house
past the age of 13.
My sister was removed from the house
when she was a teenager.
My brother was removed when he was a young boy.
So to dive into a couple of things you mentioned,
and if you don't wanna cover any of this,
we don't need to, but the first is,
I suppose, question a lot of listeners
will have on their mind, which is what was it like
for you growing up on a reservation?
What are some of the memories that stand out
or characteristics that stand out?
Well, first of all, I am white. And so being on a reservation, I was a minority. And it gave me
a really unique perspective around being a minority. When I was a kid, I thought I was
an albino Indian. I just thought that I'd lost my melanin and the other kids treated me the same.
Because when you're a child and you're small, you don't know anything about racism. You don't
know anything about being another. You start to notice these things, but you definitely don't
treat each other differently. But as we started to get older, that's when the name calling started.
That's when a little bit of the bullying started from other kids.
And I can only suspect that they learned this at home, you know, or they witnessed it someplace
else because it certainly was not something they were born with.
And I'm happy that I experienced this because there is a lot of prejudice in this world.
And I would say there's probably a lot more
prejudice than there's actually racism.
But experiencing that really taught me what it's like to walk in those shoes and made
me hyper aware of it when I became an adult.
The other thing is the culture is just a really rich culture, and it's very different than
any other place you could ever live.
I really recommend that people visit the Navajo Reservation or any of the reservations that
allow visitors because it's hard to believe that that's an America, you know, because
there's this amazing swath of land with a old ancient culture that they preserve.
And there's just a lot of things that happen there
that you can't experience any other place.
And it's right here if you're in America
and you're back door.
And so being able to go and experience a ceremony
or get a guided tour down a canyon
is something that I really recommend everybody do.
But when I was little, there were no guides.
I would just walk down into canyons and explore ruins.
And the kids and I would run free and wild.
It was a very different time.
But I also have a little bit of an accent.
I don't know if you notice it.
But if you go to the Navajo reservation,
you will see that people speak the way I speak.
And there's just not a lot of variation in my tone. And then it just sort of
goes up and down in a certain way that's very specific to that region. It's created some
confusion for me because culturally I am Native American. And that has always been bizarre when I
moved to a place where people didn't understand our customs and the things that we respected
and the holidays that we observed
or the customs that we had
are just not anything that anybody I went to school with
after I left the reservation even understood.
So I've always felt like an outsider no matter where I am.
And I think that's been wonderful
and incredible for my career.
You can certainly look at that and have kind of a victim mindset about it.
But I took the opposite path, which was, you know, this is what makes me special is that I don't fit in wherever I am.
You're going to have a lot of questions about that.
And before I get there, and this is again referring to something you mentioned, that
your mom had a hard time keeping kids in the home.
What are some of the reasons why kids were removed from the home by the state or otherwise?
My sister was removed first, but I was told a lie about her removal.
I was told that she ran away from home. And it was right after my brother was born.
And we went out trick-or-treating.
And my child mind remembers it as happening the next day,
but maybe it wasn't the next day, but my sister's room was vacant and empty.
And suddenly my little brother was in it.
And I was expected to just roll with it.
And when I asked where she was, I was told she doesn't want to live
here anymore, and she ran away. But reality was quite different. About a year later or so,
I went to go visit my grandparents and discovered that that's where my sister had been the whole
time. And my mother was afraid that she was going to hurt the new baby. That your sister would harm the new baby. Yeah, that my sister would harm the baby.
And I don't know where this fear comes from.
There was nothing rational about it.
From my point of view,
there wasn't enough room for another kid.
And so we had to make room
and suddenly one was just replaced with the other.
And that was very weird
because my sister was my best friend in the world.
She looked after me.
We were incredibly close.
And then she was just ripped away.
Luckily, I bonded with my brother.
I could easily see how that could have gone south
where I would have been filled with disapproval
or I would be upset about having that situation.
But he was just really lovely and I love my brother.
But when my brother was three years old, he was removed from the house next. And that was in a really contentious divorce where a custody
battle happened and then my mother tried to implant false memories with me. She had us try
to perjure ourselves in court. And I really feel that this is when my mother and I completely fell out. I refused to
testify against my stepfather and accuse him of abuses that she tried to plant in my memory.
And I think this is important to highlight because a lot of people don't talk about
female abuse. They talk about usually men, but my mother was incredibly abusive in
very interesting ways. You know, it wasn't screaming, it wasn't hitting, it was
neglect, and it was these social manipulations. And unknown to me, I was in
my mother's truck and it was still moving when she made the ask for me to
lie in court. And I jumped out of
the truck and I rolled on the ground and I ran and I ran and I ran and I ran and I ran until I could
find a phone and I called the number that I had on me for our child psychologist that I had no idea
was court appointed. I thought it was just someone my mom was having me see and that I could confide
in him. And I called him and told him what my mother had asked me to do, which was to lie about my stepfather molesting
me, which he did not. And it all happened very quickly after that. My brother was removed
pretty much in the next 48 hours from the home and she lost custody of him. Now, why
she didn't lose custody of me still remains a mystery,
because I was the last child in the house.
That made me like the sole focus of her ire after that.
And I'm also the kid who, you know,
refused to fall in line and tell a lie.
And so we were at odds with each other.
It just was never the same after that.
And we moved to Flagstaff, Arizona. She
quit her job on the reservation as a teacher and decided to become a scientist. So before this,
she had an MFA in arts. And I suspect that she wanted to get another degree in science because
the man that she had divorced was a scientist. She wanted to prove that she is intelligent.
My mother's incredibly intelligent. One of the smartest people I've ever met in my life.
So I don't know why she had to prove this to anybody.
But she went back to school and started taking up many jobs.
So she would have one or two jobs and go to school full-time.
And at that point, I was pretty much left to my own devices.
And she would come home after work.
And that's usually when I would get kicked out
or she'd be angry with how I didn't clean or keep the house and it was just a constant cycle
of being kicked out, the police getting called, me getting picked up by the police,
ending up in jail sometimes. It's a horrible system for kids, by the way,
if we want to get into that topic, into foster care and into group homes. But eventually they had
enough of this. So she left me for a summer and basically she decided to go take a position at
Lawrence Livermore, a summer job or a summer research position. And she wanted me to come with
her but I had to go to summer school and I had to stay in school if I was going to graduate because home life was really, really bad.
And so I told her about my desire to stay home and she said no.
But the next thing that happened I did not expect, which is I came home from school and
discovered a $20 bill on the countertop with a note that said, good luck, and her stuff gone.
And so the landlord showed up and basically said, you can't stay here.
And so I went out on the street and the most miraculous thing happened.
A lot of my life is a series of miraculous things where people have
stepped in at just the right moment to help me.
And there was a woman who is my friend Becky from band class.
It was her mother who saw me sitting on the street corner crying and she pulled her car over and she said, what's going on?
And I just started mumbling to her about what's going on.
And she just said, get in. And she took me home.
I had no idea that Becky's dad was the general manager of Walmart.
I had a nasty shoplifting habit as a young teenager.
And that Walmart I hit up a few times, and I will never forget coming into that home
and seeing that man who was opening his home to me and really questioning my life choices
and moral decisions at that moment really taught me a really valuable lesson I never stole again.
And this family took me in and they tried to actually get
custody of me. They tried to go to the court systems and become my forever home. But my
mother got back and, you know, she has this racket that she runs where, you know, you
have these kids and they're really useful for pre-education, for free childcare, for
free housing. And so, you know, we lived in student housing,
and if you don't have a kid, you can't live in student housing.
You can't have a nice house. You have to live in a dorm room.
So when she came back, she got me back,
and that's when the cycle of kicking me out
started all over again.
And eventually, I got picked up by a police officer
named Officer Pratt.
That's actually something I would love to find through this podcast, if police officer named Officer Pratt. That's actually something I would love to find
through this podcast if I can find Officer Pratt.
Officer Pratt probably did one of the most
single important things in my life in helping me.
He picked me up and brought me to the courthouse
because he arrested me several times.
And this is in Flagstaff?
Yeah, in Flagstaff.
He did something he'd never done before
and he took me to Dairy Queen.
And he let me get whatever I wanted. And I was like, well, this is weird. And then he took me to the courthouse and then he paraded me into the courthouse and he let me sit where the judge sits.
I was like, this is very strange. And he said, would you like some spaghetti? And he brought me
spaghetti. And I'm like, well, everybody's being so nice to me. And then this woman came in and she
introduced herself and she told me she was my public defender. And I was like, well, everybody's being so nice to me. And then this woman came in and she introduced herself
and she told me she was my public defender.
And I was confused about a lot of this terminology
because I didn't understand what I needed
to be defended from.
Like, what did I do to the public?
I remember thinking like, I don't know what this means.
None of this, it's like cosplay as far as I'm concerned.
And, but they basically told me like,
when the judge comes in, you are to stand, you are to say
your honor, you are to say yes, your honor, no, your honor, and you are to sit. And that's it.
Just behave yourself, we got the rest. And I'm like, okay, but I don't understand what's going on.
And then my mother came into the right of the courtroom, and I'm on the left,
and I look at her and she never looks at me. And the judge came in and it all happened again.
This stuff happens so fast and time just,
I don't know, it's hard to explain,
but it changes, it like dilates.
But he looked at me and he said,
Sian, do you want to live in a cardboard box
for the rest of your life?
And he held up some book, which I assume is a book of the law.
I had no idea what he was holding up.
And I said, no, I do not want
to live in a cardboard box. And he was like, is there anything in this book that tells
you that you are above the law? And I said, no, Your Honor, I'm not above the law. And
then he looked at my mother and he said, do you want this child anymore? And she said,
no, I do not. And the gavel just came down and he said by, you know, the power invested
in him and all that stuff and
basically said that I was now awarded the state of Arizona and
What that means in Arizona, it is not emancipation
It's you get assigned a probation officer and you're treated like a criminal if you want to live on your own
Which is very very difficult to do if you can imagine at 15. There's not a lot of people that will hire you
Not people will rent to you. You can't sign a contract either. They basically said you have 24
hours to find a place to live otherwise you end up in a group home. And the rules of living on your
own are you have to be in at nine o'clock. There's a curfew. You're not allowed to have boys over.
You're not allowed to have marijuana. You have to work and you have to go to school. And then the
strangest one of all was you had to have a gallon of milk in your fridge
at all times because they would show up
and that was like sign of adulting
is if you can buy a gallon of milk
and keep it fresh in your fridge
before the expiration date.
It was the strangest thing.
But I walked out of that courtroom,
I saw my mom again twice after that,
but I didn't see my mom leave
and she never looked at me.
She just exited out some other door and that was the end of my mother.
Suddenly I'm a quote-unquote
independent person, not quite an adult. I go out and sit on the curb and I remember looking up at the sky and I said,
oh sky, what do I do?
What now? Because they gave me 24 hours to find a place to live.
They said, if you don't find a place to live, you know, you're going into an unfortunate
circumstance. And so I went through my mental map of how many friends did I have that were adults.
And this one woman named Pam just came in crystal clear and I said, I'm going to walk to Pam's,
I'm going to ask her if I can stay there. that's gonna give me some time and so I walked over there knocked on the
door Pam can I stay here she had no problem she said come in she gave me a
corner on the floor I didn't have a mattress she said I recommend you get a
pillow but here's a blanket and that became my home I think you're gonna see
over and over I didn't see then, I see it now looking back
at all of these precious moments where a person does
something extraordinary at just the right time.
And that's what Pam did and I had my first home.
And that was in Flagstaff.
It was next to the train tracks,
so it was a very strange home, it rumbled a lot.
And we got into a lot of shenanigans with the train
because we were young and dumb, but it was a great home.
What helped save you or put you on the trajectory to where you are today, given those starting
conditions, let's call it. See, you're sleeping on the floor, at least to begin at Pam's house, looking back, what do you think
were the critical moments, decisions, anything at all, if you had to point to one or a few
things that helped to bend the arc of your life to not go to a terrible place? Because
I could see how many people with the experience you
just described could end up junkies could end up dead could end up who knows but certainly
not operating at a very high level and with some very good reasons.
Neglect trauma fill in the blank right So what are some of the things that saved you?
Well, I don't know if you've ever seen those Krusty Punks kids that hang out on
Hayton Ashbury or you see them in every city that has any kind of population and they're usually
sitting around a record store on the ground with a dog. Yeah, sure. Of course. Yeah. Well,
I was one of those kids and I fell into that group in Flagstaff. There was a group of wanderers who came in
and took me under their wing
and started teaching me the way of the streets
because before this I was thrust onto the streets
and I was on my own and I did my best.
You know, I would stay under people's beds,
I would sleep in playgrounds,
I would find any place I could stay.
But once I met some people who are a little more professional
and have a little more time under their belt
at homelessness, I started to learn that there's a whole
world out there of really interesting ways to get by.
For example, you know, there's coffee houses that have
creamer and creamer is relatively free and it has fat and calories in it and they have sugar and honey and if you get those
things and you put them in a cup you can have a pretty nutritious meal so there's
things like that. Once you're homeless you can never be
un-homeless it's really strange. Every time I walk around at a conference or
anything I see all the waste I see if I were a homeless person I could come and
I could have this no matter where I'm at. It's really interesting. But before
I got this house, there was a time where I was homeless and hitchhiking. And my boyfriend
at the time, who was one of these crusty punk kids, he goes by the name Cuddles. They all
had these funny names. And he and I decided we were going to hitchhike to New York.
We got it in our heads from, at the time, Phoenix.
I was in Phoenix.
We set out leaving from a coffee shop in Tempe, Arizona
and ending up in Jemez Springs, New Mexico.
We never made it to New York.
Instead, we ended up in a hippie commune
where they basically had us bury pipe to, you know, justify our
stay there. And then at the time they had psilocybin spores. I don't know if they still
do that or they're still around. Don't want to get them in trouble. But that's how they
made their income. And we lived in this little teeny tiny trailer in the dead of winter.
At some point, I got homesick. I couldn't take it anymore. I
was just like I need to go back to Arizona. I need to be in familiar
territory. This is a very strange place to be and there was constantly different
people showing up. Sometimes the police would come and raid the place because
there were people giving illegal tattoos. It was just non-stop stuff. I wanted to
be away from it. So I talked my boyfriend into hitchhiking back to Arizona
and I almost died on that return trip.
A lot of times you're very lucky if you hitch a ride where someone takes you the full way.
Usually you get like these little partial ways and you have to stand on this, you know, somewhere
and then someone takes you another segment and another segment.
Well, we got dropped off on one side of Albuquerque, New Mexico,
and we had to walk from one side to the other and cross a river.
But crossing a river as a homeless person is actually not that easy
because a lot of the roadways don't have sidewalks.
So we were contemplating some seriously dangerous things.
We were thinking about looking around for flotation devices,
like how are we going to get across this river, you know?
And eventually we didn't have a map.
We just walked and walked and walked
until there was a pedestrian way, which we finally found.
And the reason why this is weird is that it was so cold.
So we were desperate to find heat,
to find some place where we could sleep for the evening
and having no luck.
Eventually we did make it to the other side of the river,
to the side where we would need to get a car heading towards Flagstaff.
And we holed up in a Denny's and we did that for quite some time,
but eventually during a shift change they were just like,
you got to get out of here.
And we went and slept in a dumpster outside of a gas station.
And eventually when the sun rose, we went out to the highway
and we stuck our thumbs out and nobody would stop.
But this RV apparently had gone, I didn't notice it, but had gone by several times.
And he stopped and he opened the door and he said, I'm going to save her, but I guess you're along with the package.
But God told me to save her.
Now what required saving?
What was your condition at the time?
I was developing hypothermia.
So I was on the side of the road and I started to fall asleep and I was getting really warm.
It's not a good sign.
I was getting really warm and very sleepy and happy.
And if you're in a very cold place where it's below freezing and you start to feel those
things that is like a very dangerous warning sign.
And he stopped at just the right time when I thought I was going to lose consciousness
and it was just gone.
It was over for me.
And he pulled me along with cuddles into the RV and they put blankets around me.
They did whatever they knew how to do because they didn't understand what to do when someone
has hypothermia and gave me hot
chocolate and just the next thing I know I wake up in Flagstaff. This guy took me all the way home
and he just told me that it was God that told him and at the time I didn't believe in God.
I had no reason to believe in God and my attitude towards if there was one, was how could a God do this to me
and do this to other people and allow these atrocities to exist in the first place. So I
just thanked him and I was like, you know, I'm so glad that God spoke to you. Thank you so much.
And that put me again on an interesting trajectory because when I experienced homelessness again after
that, I decided I didn't want to rely on other people.
I think the whole experience taught me how my life was just so dependent on spare changing
and the kindness of others and I needed to come up with a way to provide for myself.
And I didn't know how.
I was underage.
I couldn't work.
Minimum wage and age requirements.
I have a controversial view on them.
I'm not saying that people should have child labor,
but I am saying that it draws a line,
and sometimes it's the difference between life and death
for a lot of people.
And for me, I almost died many times
because I couldn't eat
or couldn't have a place to sleep and I was cold
and just you have to get very, very resourceful.
I had to figure out something.
So what I started doing was there's these donation centers
where people donate clothes or they donate books
or things like that.
And I found a place that allowed homeless people
to take three things every day.
So you basically check in and you're allowed to take three items.
And I would go in and find items that I could sell to Buffalo Exchange or I could
take to a bookstore.
So Buffalo Exchange is a fair to describe this.
There's one probably a few miles from where I'm sitting right now,
a vintage clothing store where folks can come in and buy various
pieces of used clothing. Is that a fair description?
Just for people who don't know it.
Yeah. But I developed a really good eye for what people like to buy at the time. And this
was in Tempe, Arizona, where there's college kids. And so college kids throw out the coolest
stuff. The books were great too, because you could get a really nice premium on books if
you could find a good textbook or something like that. But my job was to make $2 a day.
If I could make $2 a day, I could afford a bagel,
cream cheese, if I was lucky a 99 cent whopper,
and if I was extra lucky, I got a bowl of rice
and some vegetables from my favorite Vietnamese joint
over on Mill Avenue.
And that was all that mattered during the day.
And once you were done with that task,
you just got to lay around, swim in fountains,
you know, walk around, take creamers from coffee shops.
I mean, life was grand,
but the seeds of self-reliance were planted then.
And I honestly think the beginnings of my love for capitalism
because then somebody taught me how to make jewelry,
hemp jewelry in particular,
and gave me some hemp jewelry and some beads.
Taught me how to braid them
and I made some really beautiful jewelry
and I would go from table to table.
I was one of those people that would annoy you
during dinner or coffee when you're out on a date
and guilt you into buying a necklace.
And I would sell them and eventually I made enough money
to pay for rent.
The other interesting thing that I wanna bring up during this as well is I have two
mothers.
So when I speak about my mother, there's my mother who gave birth to me, but there's also
this guy Cuddles, the homeless guy's mother, who had basically adopted me.
And eventually, I moved in with her.
When I arrived with her, I couldn't look you in the eye.
I would always like look at my feet.
I couldn't make eye contact.
I would not be able to have this conversation
that you and I are having, Tim.
It just wouldn't have happened.
I would shiver constantly.
I was a mess.
But she looked at me and she said,
you're gonna look at me when I talk to you.
You're gonna stand up straight.
You're gonna wear respectable clothing.
You're gonna bathe.
You're gonna brush your teeth.
You're gonna do all the things that your other mother
didn't do and didn't tell you to do.
And she's my mother to this day.
She always gets upset when I talk about mother
because she's like, that's not me, that's not me.
But she's the most amazing woman.
And I still am in touch with her.
And I just was really lucky to have
found a boyfriend who had an amazing mother and you might wonder why was he
homeless? Some people are homeless because they romanticize it. You know I
was out there because I had to be there but he was out there because he read
Jack Kerouac or something. I was just gonna say like Dharma Bums or something.
Yeah he probably just read Dharma Bums and was like I'm heading out. So his
situation was totally different.
And he brought me home to meet his mother.
He was, I mean, this is scandalous today, but he was 19, I was 15.
And she was like, oh my gosh, what are you doing?
This kid is, she's a kid.
But she saw my situation and she saw what I was going through.
And he saved me in so many ways.
He was my protector.
He was my bodyguard.
Like you said, I could have ended up on drugs.
I could have ended up dead.
I could have ended up...
I was in, you know, squat houses where people were shooting a heroin.
But he kept me away from all of this stuff.
And I'm not sure what possessed him to because at first I wasn't even his girlfriend.
I was just his tag-along, you know, buddy that hitchhiked with him and slept in squats with him.
But eventually we became something and then he just looked after me and another special person who just did something really incredible for me.
But when I was on the streets selling necklaces, I also took up a little hobby of spray painting clothing with stencils, and I learned how to silkscreen.
And that's when I met my first customer.
His name's Chris Collins, and I had put my t-shirts
and my patches that I was making of some DIY punk rock bands.
So I was really into these like British punk rock bands
at the time.
And I see this guy walk by with a jumpsuit
and he's wearing a patch from this band called Crash.
I don't know if you're familiar with any of the
old punk bands from the 70s.
Yeah, yeah.
But it said, the nature of your oppression is the
aesthetic of our anger.
I remember exactly what it says.
And I stopped him and I said, hey, I made that.
And he turned around and he sees this homeless
chick and he's like, yeah, prove it.
And I said, well, you bought it at either Eastside Records or you bought it at one
of these places that I would consign them at. And he said, you're right, that
was where I got it. So he sat down with me and he explained that his mother ran
a sign shop. But the most important thing that he did was he asked me to come and
spend time with him on his computer. And I was like,
computers are portable now? This is weird. I didn't know you could do that. And I
blew him off for a while, but a month later or so I saw him at a coffee shop
and he was on a laptop and it was my first time ever seeing a portable
computer and it was like, I don't know, I was in heaven. And I came over to him and
I said, well what can we do with this? And he says, well what can't you do with it?
He's like, let's go get online and I'll show you.
So we found a place to do Dial-Up Connection.
And I remember hearing a modem for the first time,
and he started showing me this thing called IRC
and how I could meet friends from all over the world.
And back then, there wasn't a search engine.
So there was like linked sites that you had to go to
and you had to like discover content.
But I knew that no matter what it took I had to be a part of that world. So he and
all of his hacker friends basically started wooing me over to their side.
They're like you don't want to hang out with these crusty punk kids. You don't
want this life. You want to learn about Unix and you want to do this stuff with
us. You want to be a halfer chick.
And so they basically encouraged me to be bigger, to think bigger, and to start reading
and start studying.
And they bought me books and they got me my first computer.
Again, I credit people, magical moments where people just sort of step into my life at just
the right moment.
And me paying attention, if you will, if I had a part to play in this,
is paying attention when those moments arrive and seizing them.
Just a quick thanks to one of our sponsors and we'll be right
back to the show. This episode is brought to you by Wealth
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So let me hop around a little bit. So I want to bring us a little closer to the current day, and we're probably going to bounce back and forth.
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So let me hop around a little bit. So I want to bring us a little closer to the current
day and we're probably going to bounce back and forth. But the curiosity that you exhibit,
the ability to, I don't want to say put yourself in the right place at the right time, but
somehow increase the surface area to which that type of experience can stick seems to also translate to how you have, I don't even
know if this is the right term to use, but sourced some of your very successful angel
investments. Some of them don't seem to travel what we might consider a typical Harvard Business
School case study type of path.
No. So could you share just a few of those so that people get a taste?
Yeah, I'll start with Uber. The Uber story is really fascinating because it starts with a thesis.
So they all start with a thesis and then eventually I'm just going to say maybe the
universe just puts the people in front of me and I have to recognize they're right in front of me.
You know, obviously you can walk the other way, you can be asleep to what's being presented.
But I developed a thesis around the taxi medallion system.
And I was fairly libertarian, I still am, and was thinking about how when I go out to get a taxi and it's a rainy day
or it's busy outside, why wasn't I getting one? Every time I would get into a taxi I
would ask them, what is your day like? As soon as you get your car, what happens? And they
were like, well I'm already $200 in debt and I've got to make $200 and I've got a, there's
a clock ticking because I have to return the car at a certain time. And this is why
they were driving around like bats out of hell. Everybody would complain about taxi
drivers and how they drove is because they were racing a clock. They were
already in debt. And then I asked them, I said, well do you own this taxi? And he
said, no, you know we rent them. We have to pick them up and pay for them. There's
a guy that has the medallion and this is the first time I learned about a
medallion which is a license that somebody owns that allows you to
operate that car. And it got to the point where these medallions were worth millions of dollars
in some cities. They were worth that much in New York and in San Francisco they were worth a lot,
in LA they were worth a lot. And so what happens is your retirement plan is you rent out your
medallion to someone who doesn't have a medallion and you just make money while you sleep.
And that's pretty much the whole plan of taxi drivers everywhere at the time. And I started
thinking about how it was unfair, this system, just kind of like how I thought minimum wage was
unfair. Because if you create a line, that means that only certain people can cross it. And some
people are privileged and some people are not
Just not to leave that hanging see minimum wage unfair Just another line or two meaning that you should be
Able to charge less and get paid less if you want that to be the case or that it should be higher
when I started working minimum wage was three dollars and fifteen cents an hour and
I would have gladly cleaned your toilet bowl for 25 cents because 25 cents is half
a bagel. Again, I think we need to allow homeless people and people who are in those lower financial
or economic realms to make decisions for themselves because they actually we know how. You know, we
know where that 25 cents goes and how we're gonna use it.
We are very, very acutely aware of every cent in our lives.
And there were so many jobs I wasn't allowed to have.
Now I did end up working at a record store
where they did pay me under the table,
but think about that.
We shouldn't have to break laws.
Like that person shouldn't have to do something illegal
in order for me to make money.
Great, I don't wanna take us us too far field of the through line,
but thank you for that.
No problem.
All right.
So coming back to the unfair aspects
of the medallion system.
The medallion system is incredibly unfair.
And I started thinking about how could you disrupt taxis?
And I didn't have a clear answer actually.
What happened was I was staying at a hotel
in San Francisco at the time,
and I asked for them to arrange a car for me to SFO.
And so they arranged a literary car
and it was a guy named Roger.
And when he picked me up, he told me, he said,
he got to know me and he ended up giving me
several rides to the airport.
But one day he picked me up and he handed me a card for a gentleman named Ryan Graves.
And he said, I don't know anything about investing, but if I were an angel investor,
I would put my money into this company.
I'm driving for them.
And basically it's a black livery car on demand.
You just text this phone number, you get a car.
And I was like, well, how many drivers are there?
And he goes, well, how many only what? Just me. And I was like, well, how many drivers are there? And he goes, well, how many only one?
It's just me.
And I was like, well, how's it work?
And he said, well, they're paying me by the hour.
And I was like, huh, that's interesting.
And he hands me the card.
And at the time I only invested in companies
that were in the Bay Area
because it's the ecosystem that I understand.
It was how I could actually help founders
when they went to raise more money.
You wanna be kind of locally centric
now that after the pandemic that's less true.
So I just kind of ignored the card,
but the next ride he brought it up again,
the next ride he brought it up again,
I started having a collection of Ryan Graves cards.
But then I went to Hawaii to this event
held by August Capital called the lobby.
And at the lobby, this conference is centered
around the most important discussions happen by the pool or in a hot tub or in a lobby. And
there's content, but it's an unconference. The content is every person there is capable of giving
a speech. So I was at this event and everybody kind of retired to this very large
hot tub. There's about 20 people in the hot tub.
That's a huge hot tub.
It was big. It was big. And I got in there and Travis Kalanick was in the hot tub. And
I observed him and he had a very distinct demeanor that I had not seen in any founder.
He had a lot of gravitas. Like if there was someone who was king of the hot tub
that night, it was him.
If he was managing the hot tub, it was him.
You could just tell this is a person who's going to lead.
And he declared in the hot tub that he was working
at some company called Red Swoosh,
but now he was on the bench,
or he started a company called Red Swoosh and sold it.
He was on the bench and looking for his next thing.
And, you know, if you're an investor, a lot of what we do is,
it's kind of like reporters or hackers with zero day wares.
You're looking for secrets.
We are on the hunt for secrets,
for insights that nobody else knows about.
Then I got invited to a dinner with him
and I observed him some more.
I observed how he talked to people at the dinner table,
the opinions that he had. And I just thought this person's remarkable. I don't know what he's going to do, but I'm
going to watch him. About three weeks after, maybe a month after this lobby thing, Jason
Kalkanis held this event called Open Angel Forum. And at the time, he was sharing his
deal flow because it was very much a, you know, there were party rounds, people would get together, pull in money, and a lot of things were done at the earliest stages just by angels.
Now institutions are getting into this game, but in the beginning it was just individuals.
And I see Traumas get up and pitch this Uber cab thing that my driver's been telling me about. And I took it as a sign from the universe or whatever and I wrote to my husband and I said,
we need to invest in Uber cab today, right now.
And he was like, how much? And I said, 75k.
And he said, fine, get us in, get us a meeting.
So I got us a meeting and they ratcheted us back to 50.
But we were the second,
there were only two individuals that were able
to put that much money in at the time.
So it was pretty sizable for that round.
And I really credit Roger because had he not flagged this
for me, had I not paid attention to Travis in the hot tub,
keep in mind Ryan's still the CEO.
I just realized there was something about him
and there's no way he's going to just
raise money for this company.
He's becoming the CEO.
Ryan at the time, Ryan Graves that you mentioned was CEO of Uber and that wonderful man too,
but he became the CEO.
Yeah, that's great.
Great guy.
I have a couple of questions, but I want to share just a few anecdotes for people to add
some color also because a lot of folks are familiar with Uber,
but they don't know the Red Swoosh story. And I'm going to get some of the details wrong,
but I'll just share two things related to Travis, often called TK by folks. So Travis with Red Swoosh
created this company that became very quickly sort of an enemy of all these huge music and entertainment
companies because it was think of it as like an not quite an app store, but it produced
to that amount of blowback and he got served with some type of lawsuit, which was like
$250 billion or something. Not a good day. So then he has to, this actually may have
been the predecessor to red swish
Shuts it down because he doesn't have any choice starts a new company Which I believe is red swish then goes back to all the people who hated him and sued him and makes them customers
So just let that settle in like what type of
Stage magic and charisma and sales ability is required to do that.
Okay, so he did that.
And then Barry unrelated,
but still glimpsed into the personality story.
And I'm getting some of the specifics wrong,
but not by far.
So he was at a friend's house,
I wanna say in trucky.
And he was playing with all sorts of people in Wii tennis.
And he was just slaughtering everybody.
And number one in the world or something. Well, that's the thing. So he was playing with his
non-dominant hand and then, oh, by the way, I'm like top four in the world in my spare time.
I think you can imagine that level of competitive drive. And then you mesh this thing together and
you get arguably the only person
who could have helped build Uber into what it is, right?
I mean, really just one of a kind,
fascinating, fascinating guy.
All right, so I wanna ask you about another one
and I'm going to potentially get the pronunciation wrong.
Niantic, am I getting this right?
Niantic, the makers of Pokemon Go.
Pokemon Go, okay.
So how does this show up?
Oh, this one's a great one.
So the same Chris Collins that met me and showed me a computer started playing a game
called Ingress.
And Ingress was this early game that came out of Google that overlaid on top of the
real world map where you would team up with people and go to really weird remote locations
so that you could cast invisible triangles
over large swaths of land.
I'm simplifying this because there's a storyline behind this,
but you can imagine this,
it's basically a gigantic game of green versus blue.
And we were on team blue, which is called the resistance,
and then team green is called enlightenment.
And we played this game and we were hooked.
And there were people that were so hooked,
they were chartering helicopters to go to remote places.
And what we were creating and we didn't realize
what we were creating was Pokestops.
What time was this?
Like what year roughly, would you say?
Gosh, I'm gonna get the years wrong on this.
That's okay.
I was an Angelist around this time that this was happening.
So I wanna say 2012.
Okay, all right, cool.
2011, 2012.
Just roughly, yeah, around there.
So I picked up this game with my friends.
We started going out every night playing Ingress,
doing walk-arounds, and we would run into,
what's really funny is people who knew
you were playing Ingress on the other side
would come up to you and there's some banter.
People would be like, oh, resistance.
And because we're blowing up each other's virtual things.
And I started asking myself the question, why is Google doing this?
Why is Google making this game?
Why are we doing all this work for Google for free?
They were collecting what's called points of interest, which are not mappable by cars or by sometimes satellites.
So things like tombstones,
where you can then take the text.
And so we were going around taking pictures of everything
and submitting it to this database
that was then used to create Pokemon Go.
Now, how I got involved,
I thought I would invest in this company in a heartbeat if it was not part of Google.
And one day I get a text message from a friend and he says,
they're spinning Niantic out of Google. There's this whole weird thing called Alphabet that's happening.
And Niantic's becoming its own thing. And I was like, you've got to be kidding me.
And I was like, if there's one moment, this is the only moment to strike
where we can go put money into this thing, this is it.
But I didn't know anybody at Google.
I am not Google alumni.
That's probably where my network
is probably the least effective.
And I just didn't know how to reach this guy.
But I'd invested in a company called Hintwater.
I don't know if you've ever had Hintwater,
but there are these-
I know Hintwater, sure, of course.
So I invested in Hintwater and I was helping the founder set up her ticketing system.
She didn't have a support...
Oh, for support, related things?
Yeah, for support. So she didn't have anybody to help her set up her support
system and I knew how to set up Zendesk, so I went in and set it up for her.
And I started noticing all of these weird messages coming in saying, Ingris in the subject line. And so I walked over to her and I said, why is
everybody sending you emails that say Ingris? And she says, well we give out
game codes on the bottle caps. And I looked at her and I said, you're kidding me.
Who over at Ingris did this deal with you? And she said, John Henke, the guy who runs Ingress.
Can you introduce me to him?
Well, sure, why?
I'm like, I just, I wanna go talk to him.
So I emailed him and he said,
come by the office in San Francisco, I'd love to meet you.
We're not looking for any investment, but thanks.
And so I showed up with my best friend Lucas,
who was also a player, and we sat at his doorstep.
And we waited, and we waited until we could get a meeting with him.
And we went in and he told us flat out no at the beginning.
But we sat there and showed him how Lucas was a level 16 player, and how many hours we had put into this thing,
and how amazing it was, because we had this insight which is we'd heard
that as an April Fool's joke they'd put Pokemon on the map
and I had this realization that that was gonna be
the biggest game ever and if I could just get a check
in here at just the right time it would be timed perfectly.
By the time we left the office he gave Lucas a desk
and he hired Lucas and he let us both invest in the company.
Okay. So let me slow this down a little bit. All right. So right off the bat, no and no,
no means no. All right. So by the end, one of you gets hired and then you get to invest,
but you're not hired. Now I'm actually more interested in your case, not the least of which
because I'm interviewing you right now, but the, I'm going to hire
you. Okay, fine. Right. Like there's some use for that person. How did you pitch becoming
an investor or why did he let you invest?
I think that he saw that Lucas and I were going to give really valuable input on the
gamer experience. And if I was bringing in someone of Lucas's caliber,
who was, you know, I think employee number 13
or something at Facebook, he's a brilliant engineer.
I think he thought maybe I'd bring in
some more brilliant engineers.
So he was looking at this like the long run.
Right, and it's not like you're not putting in
10 million bucks or taking 20% of the company
or something at that point.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
The other thing is I couldn't get anyone else to it.
Once I invested in this,
I thought I got the deal of a lifetime.
Angelist had just started and they were allowing
syndications and I wanted to syndicate this deal.
And at the time they were approving
whether you could have syndicate a deal or not.
So it wasn't just a free for all.
I wanted to syndicate Niantic and I was told no,
because the only other investors were Nintendo and Google.
And they're like, well, we don't do corporate investors.
And the other thing is nobody could see,
everybody told me no one's gonna walk around
searching for invisible creatures.
And they're like, no one's gonna play this game.
And you're like, yeah.
I'm like, oh, wait and see.
I would argue that it was probably the closest
we've come to world peace in our lifetime
is the day that Pokemon Go came out.
I think it was like July 6th.
I remember it was right after July 4th
and I was in Alaska when it was released.
And even in Alaska, in Juneau, Alaska,
people were running around looking for invisible creatures.
So that's one of my favorite stories
because it really took figuring out
how all the connections work to get that meeting.
And then it took a lot of grit and hustle to get him to let us in. And I do have a key card to
Niantic. So I'm an honorary lifetime employee and I can come and go as I please. I'm kind of like
a weird spirit animal there. That's awesome. All right. So we talked about Uber, side note tying Uber to AngelList after you invested,
I think it was after you invested, they ended up at some point having Uber put on AngelList
and they were turned down by everyone, like 300 plus people passed on Uber because fill
in the blank, right? Well, if we look at it as a
percentage of the current X, Y, and Z market, it makes no sense. Nobody's going to pay that much.
Like these high conviction statements that obviously in retrospect weren't defensible at all.
It's very easy to come up with the reason for no, because a lot of things fail. But I heard all
those excuses too. I'm glad that you are mentioning this
because people have argued with me
that Uber was the hottest thing around.
And I said, no, it wasn't.
Not at all.
Oh no, there were also media pieces probably on Gawker,
maybe on TechCrunch,
but it was like the 1% ride for tech bros.
And it was, I mean, I don't say universally,
but pretty much everybody was like,
this isn't solving a problem.
This is just another thing for people with too much money who think this is a
problem, but they're in their bubble in San Francisco.
I mean, there are a million in one reasons that people said it was a bad idea.
People couldn't see past the black car too.
They thought that one of the objections I saw is everyone doesn't want or can
afford a limo. And I said, well, of course not, but that's where it starts.
Not everyone could ride in an airplane, but now everybody can.
That's the way it works.
Yeah.
And we've seen this play out with Tesla in terms of launching higher priced vehicles
and then using that to subsidize the development of the lower cost vehicles.
We've seen this in computing.
We have the Uber story.
We talked about Niantic.
Are there any other companies from unusual places?
A lot of interesting deals come out of hotels. So I was at a hotel and I had time to kill and my
background is in security. So I'm an engineer, self-taught and my friends taught me and I
started getting an InfoSec. So I noticed some things that other people don't notice about
their OpsSec or their security. And I got on the Wi-Fi and noticed that things that other people don't notice about their OPSEC or their security.
And I got on the Wi-Fi and noticed that all these people were tethering their phones to the Wi-Fi using their real name.
And I see Travis K's iPhone and I look over in the corner and there's Travis Kalanick and I'm like, oh, there's Travis.
And then I see K Pixel and I'm like, K, and then I look over and I see Keith Raboy.
And I see he has a Pixel phone and I'm like, oh, Keith Raboy's Pixel, interesting.
Keep in mind their MAC addresses at the time are also in the clear.
You could track where these guys were if you were very clever.
But then I see this name, Garrett Langley, and it's a name I've never seen,
so I go and Google search it.
And Garrett Langley is the founder of Flock Security. And there's his mug picture of him
and he's in the current YC batch at the time.
And we at Founders Fund had been thinking about
some of the biggest opportunities.
And one of the opportunities we were considering
was somebody needs to come up with some sort of
neighborhood camera or neighborhood association
where people are all pitching in and agreeing to some rules around safety and some equipment
and technology to enable that safety.
And so I started reading about Flock and I'm like,
we didn't think about OCR and license plates.
We thought about cameras.
This is a much better solution.
So I messaged our associate at the time, John Ludig,
who I think is now a partner, that I'd found this guy.
And he's like, oh, you know, that's the company we're interested in a partner, that I'd found this guy and he's like,
oh, you know, that's the company we're interested in.
I said, what should I do?
And he's like, just walk over there, see what happens.
So I walked over and I decided to play the,
I don't know, the magician card, if you will.
And I looked at him and I said, Garrett Langley?
And he said, yes.
I said, I'm Cy and Bannister, a founder's son.
We'd like to bring you in for a meeting.
Sounded very official.
You know?
And he starts looking around and he's like,
cause YC, his batch hadn't demoed yet
and he hadn't seen me at YC.
He's like, how do you know who I am?
He was like looking around, like, how do you know?
And then it was killing him.
And he finally asked me, he said, I'm so sorry,
I need to know how you know who I am.
And I'm like, are you sure you want to know?
And he's like, yeah.
And I said, well, you tethered your phone to the wifi
and it says Garrett Langley's iPhone
and curiosity just got the best of me.
And we ended up getting the last allocation of that round
and sharing the series A with Bedrock.
It's now valued at over $6 billion.
And I tell this story because one of the things that I think makes me
good at what I do and other people is identifying patterns and opportunities
and striking when you see them. And for whatever reason I am gifted with the
ability to make these connections. So a lot of the best deals I've ever done
have these interesting things in common,
which is I see something, I put the pieces together. I'm like, oh, for example,
hint water bottle caps is going to get me in this deal. I had to think very quickly about that.
But same thing here is just, you know, I didn't wait, I didn't email the guy,
I decided to go be a creeper. And it ended up being funny. It ended up being totally funny. Yeah, totally. All right. So I want to do a post game analysis
on another deal of a slightly different variety. And this is game crush and lessons learned.
Ah, yes. Game crush. You could have been twitch. Yeah. Explore this. Yeah, Game Crush was a brilliant business actually.
And at the time, let's put this in perspective, there was MySpace was a thing still, Facebook
came out and was sort of on the rise, Twitch didn't exist, Discord didn't exist, none
of that stuff existed.
There were webcam sites and then there was a site I started called Zivity.
And what I saw was really interesting because they brought women who were mostly women, men also played,
off of MySpace who were a little more provocative and wanted to play more provocative gaming.
And so it was a way for you to pay to play games with girl gamers.
And it was growing like crazy and everything was fantastic. And then they started
getting activist investors who wanted them to get rid of the more adult in nature content. This is
very, this happens with company after company after company. Can you explain just for folks,
the activist investor, just for people who might be curious as to what that is?
An activist investor is someone who invests in a company
and decides that they want to play CEO or operator
and they start telling the founders and the employees
what they should be doing with their company.
And if you've structured your company correctly,
you can take that advice and then tell them to pound sand.
But if you haven't, the power dynamics are not in your favor.
I'll just put it that way.
And then there's people who, because people gave the money, they think they have to listen to them, but then they don't.
And that was the situation. Got it. And for people who want a showcase of granted a slightly different
species of activist investor, I assume you're talking about venture capitalists, maybe private
equity guys. But if somebody wants a great documentary, watch Icon, the
Restless Billionaire. If you want to see what like super hardball activist investing looks
like, you can check that out. Okay. So please continue.
And activists in the district will fire you. You know, that can happen too.
They want to remove the sex appeal and the fringier magic. Is that what's happening?
They wanted to remove the sex appeal and what made this entire product special and the whole
reason I invested it in the first place. They cannibalized it. And so after that Twitch
took off, but they didn't have the right tools or the right anything to be a Twitch. And
they had all these amazing girl streamers, which just jumped ship as soon as, you know,
they could go someplace where they could actually show more than what game press was allowing
What were the rules like what were the?
Constraints that the activist investors either applied themselves or convinced the founders to apply like how did it change the?
Streamers couldn't be in various states of undress. They couldn't even be sexy. They couldn't be in bikinis. They couldn't they wanted it to be
They couldn't even be sexy. They couldn't be in bikinis. They couldn't.
They wanted it to be where technically, I guess, younger people could get on.
But it was never meant to be for kids.
It was supposed to be for adults, adults with adults.
And they just got weird because they wanted to make a very mainstream product.
They wanted to be Twitch. They were onto something.
It's just that the product was never, ever designed to be that.
And I think that they'd stuck to that niche,
they would have done quite well, incredibly well,
as a matter of fact,
because they could have expanded later into something
had they completely monopolized that audience.
Because that's what drove people ultimately
at the end of the day to watch Twitch,
is these girl streamers.
Yeah, that's me.
That's like internet 101, right?
On some level for so many, so many different things.
So let me come back to Game Crush and ask,
and maybe this is a dead end,
but looking back with hindsight 2020,
were there other warning signs prior to the death knell?
Were there other things that you saw
that maybe you overlooked other things that you saw
that maybe you overlooked or things that you observed
where you're like, next time I'm gonna pay
more attention to that?
Yeah, this was early in my investment career actually
and so I was learning a lot of lessons
from that particular company.
The check size that I wrote was rather large for the time.
I think it was like 250K, which was pretty big.
And the warning signs that I saw were
how disorganized the company was
after we did the first closing of that round.
They invited us to a dinner,
which I brought Byron Singerman and a few other people.
And it was really clear that there was
just leadership issues.
But by that point, we'd already committed capital.
You're not gonna change your mind. You can't withdraw anyway. What kind of leadership issues. But by that point, we'd already committed capital. You're not going to change your mind.
You can't withdraw anyway.
What kind of leadership issues?
It was unclear who was the CEO.
I see.
So there are multiple founders.
Yes, multiple founders, always a recipe for disaster.
And they were putting forth someone as the CEO, but it was really clear that he was only
the CEO just for the fundraise.
And after the fundraise, it was a bit of a shell game.
And I've seen this happen.
I learned this, interestingly, with another company,
HQ Trivia, which I would argue is a much bigger disaster
and failure.
And that was due to two founders who ultimately could not
see eye to eye and had a 50-50 partnership.
I broke my rule where I normally never invest in a company where there's a 50-50 partnership. I broke my rule where I normally never invest
in a company where there's a 50-50 partnership
or there's not a clear delineation
of who's the CEO and who's not,
and for a variety of reasons.
Who's the tiebreaker?
Yeah, who's the tiebreaker?
Who's actually ultimately, end of the day, is their fault.
Who are we gonna all point at and blame?
And with HQ Trivia, there was nobody to point at and blame. As a matter with HQ trivia there was nobody to point at
and blame. As a matter of fact it became more of a game of Thrones for the
position and was tragic and ended up with one of the founders dead.
Oh my god. Yeah. But Game Crush was a great learning lesson. I also learned
that just because you commit to something if there was a period of time
in there that I was able to get material information as to a decision that I made
may not be a good one, I have the right to say I'm not investing, which is
something that has been challenging for me because I don't know if you watch
Game of Thrones where they say a Lannister plays their debts while
Bannister pays her debts.
You know?
Yep.
Now you're saying after docs have been signed or after you've wired the
money, if the material items that should have been disclosed before signing,
like if there was anything that I could have figured out before then,
which there were some little things like some little things that were signs,
you know,
I realized then I could adjust and make that decision in the next investment
that I did where I could try to find out more
information. And even if I committed before those docs are signed, it's not done. That was a learning
lesson there because I always thought that my word is my bond. And if I say something verbally,
it's as good as signing something. But sometimes people misrepresent things and they lie.
Sadly true. I have a question going back to that, the hemp jewelry. And I don't want to force a narrative on your story that is not true.
But when you're telling me about some of the deals you've sourced, and I'm sure this applies
to many others, there's a certain level of proactivity and chutzpah in approaching people,
cold approaches, right? Just not seemingly being overly concerned or over
like cogitating on just being a creeper, I think, as you put it, or going for the direct contact
pretty quickly. Does that come in part from the kind of training on the street of making these
approaches to tables, making approaches to different folks, asking for things, or were you out of the box, seemingly programmed to be that way?
Yeah, I think being homeless taught me that a lot of things that people do are suggestions.
When I was homeless and I was selling necklaces, one I learned about rejection, but before I did the necklaces,
I also had a weird job at Greenpeace for a period of time where I was a phone camber.
And I lied about my age and they allowed me to work there.
So that was another funny weird job I had.
But I also did telemarketing as well.
So I did a lot of telemarketing when I was 17, 18,
and then of course, tech support,
dial-up tech support was a thing that I did for a while.
So I spent a lot of time being rejected
and being on the phone and being abused in customer service.
And I don't believe in no until it's the final no.
And I also think that, you know, when you're an investor,
and especially if you start to get good at
it, people want to hear from you, they want the opportunity for you to invest in them.
I just never seen that anything as a barrier. To me, it's like a sport. It's a game. Not
that money is a game, but getting into the deal and winning the deal to me is a sport.
And you're saying that, I'm paraphrasing here, but things that people say are suggestions.
Yeah. Something like that. What does that mean? We apply a lot of our own perception
to everything that everyone says around us. We make up stories that are fiction and a
lot of what people suffer with today are these stories, these narratives that we tell ourselves
and one another.
And I've just always felt like that's something that someone said right now. It's not a hard no.
You know when you hear a hard no. I know the difference between an objection and I just have
a rebuttal for it versus a hard no. And until it's a hard no, there's wiggle room to get something done.
You know, and so I just always felt this.
And it's interesting that you honed in on it,
but it's definitely been a guiding principle in my life,
which is don't give up.
You know, just try different approaches.
You know, maybe you didn't ask the right way,
or maybe you didn't give the right incentives,
or maybe you didn't, maybe it was Monday
and they're in a bad mood.
On Mondays. You know bad mood. On Mondays.
You know, exactly, fuck Mondays.
But you know, all of these things are just things
that we make up truths, but what if they're not true?
So you've got to always question these narratives
that you tell yourself and that other people
are telling you.
How do you do that?
I mean, is it just an instinct at this point
or is there some systematic way that you do that? I mean, is it just an instinct at this point or is there some systematic way that you do that for yourself?
I meditate a lot and I practice mindfulness as often as possible. And I try to remind myself to be conscious whenever I can. And being
conscious to me is being aware and present and being here now. And a lot of times you'll hear that
and it doesn't really mean a whole lot
until you've practiced mindfulness for a period of time
and you start to realize what now is.
And so anything that I tell you happened, it's gone.
You can't go back to it, I can't do it again.
It's a fiction that becomes something in my mind
that people put too much weight
on that fiction.
I'm not saying that nothing matters.
A lot of things matter.
But the human mind and the ego is so capable of spinning up fictions and creating narratives
that we hold as truths to the point where it leads people to paralysis. The amount of time, so I'm at
a convention right now, that I've heard people apologize to each other for saying something
rude in the past and the other person not even remembering it. And I'm thinking about
how this poor person carried around that trauma with them for how long. I've heard it twice
now because right now there's this something happening in the world that I'm really excited
about though is that people are starting to apologize
and starting to own being wrong
for the first time in a long time.
And I think one of the things that I am hyper accountable.
So I take responsibility for my every action
and ideally my every thought.
And that's really hard for a lot of people
because it's easy to be a victim,
it's easy to say that things happen to you or the circum,
I easily could have rolled over and said,
I was homeless, woe is me, I can't succeed in life.
And instead I was like, this life is just a big old game
and we've got to play it.
And a lot of it is cosplay and suggestions. When I was younger, you know, this life is just a big old game and, and we've got to play it. And a lot of it is cosplay and suggestions.
When I was younger, I saw these people dress up in their suits.
And you just want to realize they're grown children dressing up in suits,
adulting, you know, it's a costume.
So I look at everybody walking around in their costumes with the narratives and
the stories they're telling themselves. And, and I like to analyze it.
And I like to think about it a
lot.
No, I think it's worth if you're open to it, just mentioning
where you are. So what is this conference?
Yeah. So I'm at her reticon. It is put on by my alumni at
Founders Fund.
You say your alumni, you mean portfolio company?
No, my, uh, the people I invested with. So I was a
partner at Founders Fund for four years.
I got it. Got it. Got it. The other GP is Yeah. So the other GP is, and some of the founders I invested with. So I was a partner at Founders Fund for four years. I got it. Got it. Got it. The other GPs, the general founders.
Yeah. So the other GPs. And some of the founders I've invested in are here.
And Earl Palmer Lucky is here and I invested in Enderil and there's a few
others. There's TrueMed that's here.
Mind Bloom, which we invested in that does psychedelic medicine,
ketamine therapy for PTSD.
Why is it called Hereticon, right? Heretic conference?
It's because some of the best ideas
look heretical at the time.
When people claim that they can do something
that is indistinguishable from magic, for example,
they might be labeled a witch back in the day.
When you make a technological advancement,
it is indistinguishable from what looks
like witchcraft sometimes.
And then people, in order to get to the best possible answers, technological advancement. It is indistinguishable from what looks like witchcraft sometimes.
And then people, in order to get to the best possible answers, we need to have debate.
And so this conference is about people debating in completely oppositional viewpoints. So
there are people here who are hardcore atheists. There are people here who read tarot cards.
There are people who are anti-AI and there's people here who are
AI is going to save the world and it might even bring the second coming of Christ.
It runs the gambit. I mean it's just so exciting and one of the things I love about it, Tim,
is it really reminds me of early 90s tech futurism back when we thought everything was possible and
what we were going to build and it didn't turn into any of that. I would argue that you know social media and things like that
did not do what we set out to make them do. But for the most part I had thought
that this optimism had died you know because of things like Uber because of
the backlash against tech people that we had become pariahs. But this has this
feeling of it coming back together
and people are discussing the things that matter again
without the fear of being canceled.
And I think that's the other thing that happens here
is it's Chatham House rules.
I think some things are leaking out on the internet,
but for the most part they're not.
And you're encouraged to be yourself
and you're encouraged to be respectful
and you're encouraged to make friends across the aisle.
I dig it.
How large is it?
How many people attend?
JG.
There's about 500 people.
And Founders Fund pays for the whole thing.
So our hotel room, I'm in a hotel room right now that's paid for, our meals are paid for.
It's just incredibly generous for them to give this gift to the community.
I know they source deals out of it.
I know they get something out of it.
But at the same time, I know how much effort it takes to roll up your sleeves and do what
Mike Solana has done.
And it's probably my favorite conference I attend by far.
It's my number one favorite place to go.
You mentioned a company a while back that I do want to touch on, and that is Zivity.
I mean, I'm reading here, right?
OnlyFans before OnlyFans.
I do like the
general magic of pornography. People require a lot of background on general magic, but
people can look it up. Actually, Tony Fidella on the podcast, people can dig into that to
get a whole bunch of background there. But why Zivvy? And then what happened and what
did you learn from it?
Can I go back to the very beginning of when I discovered my very first porn?
Of course.
How could I say no to that?
Yeah, I mean, I think it goes back to that.
So it's a great story, but I got a summer job.
I want to say I was 11, 12.
I know this is going to sound disturbing,
but it's really not.
I got a job watching a wolf dog,
which is basically a wolf, and you don't watching a wolf dog, which is basically a wolf.
And you don't own a wolf.
Like they're very, very wild and untamable creatures.
I don't know if you've been to a wolf sanctuary,
but you can't let them.
Yeah, I've been around wolves.
Yeah, so you know.
And this guy said, okay, all you have to do
is come over to my house, you open the door,
you go to the freezer, you get out a steak,
you microwave the steak and you crack an egg on it
and you leave it in the door frame
and Wolfie will just show up.
And I was like, okay, I could do this.
You know, and it was a great summer gig.
I love that somebody, some guy, right?
It's like, you know what I'm gonna do?
I'm gonna hire an 11 year old
and then leave this 11 year old alone with this wolf dog.
Yeah.
Just putting steak in the doorway.
Exactly. This is a great idea. Exactly. Just putting steak in the doorway. Great idea.
Exactly. So it was, this dog shows up and this dog is so pig and I'm so small and they have these
fierce looking eyes. And this thing, I'm like, this thing could eat me, but she would come in
and she would eat the steak and she would roam around his apartment and stare at me
and then she would you know do her thing and then eventually leave and then I could lock up and then
go. But Wolfie didn't come, she doesn't work on a schedule, so I would go over there and sometimes
have nothing to do. So I started going through this guy's drawers, his cabinets, his books, his
everything. There was nothing to do. It was so boring.
Eventually I found a Playboy magazine
and I looked in there and I was like,
that has to be the most beautiful at the time.
These were vintage Playboys.
Depiction of the human body I had ever seen.
Because before this, I thought that the Sears Robux magazine
was like the sexiest thing I'd ever seen,
the underwear section.
And this was like, holy cow, this is next level, women are beautiful. And I dreamed about being
beautiful like that someday. I was like, you know, I want to be beautiful like that. I want to be
like that someday. And beauty back then in those magazines was very natural and very accessible. You could be that beauty.
Whereas the beauty of Playboy later,
when Hefner was older, became a very unaccessible beauty.
But my mother also is an art teacher
and she kept around all of these books
with these Chinese sculptures
where they were doing very, very lewd sexual acts.
And so to shock my friends at school,
I would sneak these books to school
and show them in the locker
and sometimes charge people for it.
You know, come look at my porn in my locker.
So, you know, I really, really felt
that it was a beautiful art form
that deserved a little more respect
and that started very, very early.
When I set out
to start a company, at the time there was MySpace and then there was a
competitor which became a friendly competitor of mine called Suicide Girls
that had launched. And I tried to start Zivity before Suicide Girls even, but
then Suicide Girls started and I was like, well they're doing a fine job. I
don't need to start a company because Suicide Girls is doing most of what I wanted
But what they didn't do was I didn't like the financial model of how they acquired content and how they treated the artist
so what they would do is they would buy a
Photoshoot that an artist did for $500 and you would sign a release for your likeness and your name and they pretty much owned
It in perpetuity. So if I'm cyan on Suicide Girls, I can't be cyan anybody's place else. And so a
lot of these young women had no idea what they were signing. Yeah. And then they would get famous.
And then they would use these images and they had stage shows and all sorts of things. This is pretty
standard though. They weren't doing anything wrong. It was the industry standard. It was the Hollywood standard at the time.
And I thought to myself, there has to be a better way.
There has to be a way where photographers and models
can have a fan interaction that's meaningful
and then the fan becomes a patron
of the art that they're making.
And at the time there was webcam girls, they did exist.
And you could buy packages and they've got some portion
of the package, but their micropayment system
was not really a thing.
And so we started coming up with,
we didn't know what to call it.
It was technically tipping,
but we didn't wanna use the word tipping
with the content that we were putting on Zivity.
So Zivity was a nude, fully nude platform with no sex acts on it actually.
And we didn't want to call it tipping because we didn't want to equate ourselves
with a strip club. We wanted to bring up the class of what was happening more.
So later on, Patreon figured out it's called patronage and Kickstarter figured
out it's called backing somebody.
But we didn't have the marketing language so we called it voting.
Now voting was a very very confusing word of a call to action for anybody
because you're not supposed to stuff a ballot box, you're not supposed to vote
multiple times. But we were encouraging people to vote
multiple times because each vote was basically worth a dollar and then
when you cast that vote or you voted 70%
went to the artists and was split between the photographer and model.
Eventually we started bringing in makeup artists and costume designers. A lot of
people don't realize that a lot of these really really beautiful photo shoots
involve a lot of people. There's a lot of people there and then they you know the
compensation chain is complicated.
But the person who does the hardest work is the model.
So the model is the one who talks to the fans.
And what I figured out with Zivity actually, which OnlyFans has figured out and a lot of these other platforms figured out,
is it's about not about the content at all.
Because over and over again I would get told, why would anybody pay for this? Content's free.
It's all over the
internet. There's porn everywhere. What isn't free is the real human interaction
with the person. And we figured that out with Zivity at the very end, but I shut
down Zivity when I was at Founder's Fun. I ran it for 10 years. We were the first
company of our kind to raise venture capital and And we couldn't see eye to eye, the board, myself,
the executive team on what Ziviti should be
because people thought it was about beauty,
it was about an aesthetic,
and I argued that it has nothing to do with beauty,
that nobody really cares about that.
Because they wanted to editorialize it like Playboy.
And I had this insight, which ended up being right,
which is anybody can be a model,
and anybody can be a model and
anybody can make money as long as they have more than one fan.
And we did register a domain called Top Fans and we did experiment with what OnlyFans is,
but what happened is I just ran out of gas.
I ran out of the ability to run that company and I was far more successful as an investor and I was tired of fighting. I was really,
really tired of fighting everybody. I was not allowed to be in the Apple App Store.
I wasn't allowed to advertise on Instagram. I wasn't allowed to use normal payment processors.
I wasn't even allowed to have an office at WeWork. I was protested at tech conferences.
There were women who would come and protest me.
Why would they protest you?
Well, back then, it was a lot more controversial
to do what we were doing.
And they thought that my mere presence at a conference
meant that I was gonna pornify them in some way.
Like I was gonna start taking pictures of them
or taking my top off or I don't know.
I don't know what they thought,
but they thought that I was going to do something.
And Facebook actually asked me to come and speak to a group of engineers.
They had a wonderful event and I was the headline speaker and there was a protest that happened and they held a protest across the street.
And at our event, we did nothing but talk about code and engineering.
And at their event, they did nothing but talk about porn.
To this day, laugh about. But I never envisioned
Zivity becoming as big as OnlyFans though. I think OnlyFans has really proven and hit a nerve.
And one could argue that maybe it remains to be seen whether a product like this is a net positive
for society or a net negative, but we did succeed at enabling this freedom, which
I still think is valuable because a lot of people need this kind of freedom so that they
can put themselves through school, so that they can buy their first home, so they can
start a family and not everybody is blessed with being able to get certain types of jobs
and this gives them that flexibility.
I hesitate to ask this question, but I'm so curious because you're very good at embracing your weird
self and you're very forthright in your opinions and you have controversial, or I should say maybe
uncommon takes on things like minimum wage, what you said earlier for instance, as one of many
examples.
So feel free to take this question wherever you want to go, or if it's just a bad question,
we can abandon it.
But how do you relate to sex?
Like, how do you think about sex and sexuality?
It's such a broad question, but I feel like it would be neglectful of me not to ask.
Yeah, I love this question because it's, we don't talk about it enough, to be honest with
you.
And it's, you you know along with eating and
Pooping and everything else that we do sex is up there
I mean it's how we have babies and how we express our love and how we connect with people and we don't
It's so stigmatized. I don't think it should be but I became sexually active when I was 15 and
Despite finding the pornography and everything like that, it was later in my teenage years.
And I was so disappointed. I thought, why did everybody make movies and write poetry and build a Taj Mahal for something so awful?
And I had a very negative view of sex. So negative that I started experimenting on boys. And this is maybe terrible, but this is what I did,
is I was determined to find that one connection that was worthy of writing a poem for.
You know, there has to be somebody. There has to be something. And it just didn't work. Like,
I would try different things. I would try different scenarios. I was like, well, maybe I need to be in
the racquetball court or I need to be over here or there.
I thought it was situational.
And then eventually I developed feelings for somebody
and I didn't realize that that was the missing ingredient.
I was like, wow, feelings for someone else.
That's a concept.
And I broke up with this guy immediately.
So it was my first love and it was a communist. Interestingly,
he still is a communist. He has the hammer and sickle on his arm and everything and I still love
him to this day and we're still friends. But I saw myself worrying about him, like where he was,
what he was wearing, did he eat, has he slept? I started asking myself all these questions that were so weird. And I just didn't have time for them.
I had to survive.
And when you have to survive, you can't worry about someone else's well-being
because you're drowning yourself.
Like you can't worry about someone else drowning.
You have to put your oxygen mask on first.
So I broke up with him and left.
And I put him in a little snow globe.
I like to call it a snow globe of emotion
because it taught me that that was possible,
that someday I could love someone
and maybe that person would love me back.
But I didn't have time for it then.
So when I got into tech, I did date
and I had some long-term relationships
and then obviously there was the homeless relationship
with cuddles that lasted a long time.
And my relationship to sex was just kind of like, it's fun.
And it's just something you do,
but it was never earth shattering.
It was another, I never wanted to build a Taj Mahal.
And that was my bar.
I was like, that guy, that woman must've been something.
You know, to erect a monument to her that is just so grand,
like she must have been very, very good in bed, is what I thought. Right?
So, I got my hands on books, magazines, Cosmo, everything, and it wasn't until probably my mid-20s
that my relationships to sex changed and I started
having a much more positive outlook on it and enjoying it. But it took some time because in
the beginning I just thought, how did the human species survive? This is just awful.
Because when you're young, you don't really know what you're doing.
BD Yeah, no.
AC But when you get older, if you're lucky and you find the right partner, then you do.
So I'm going to switch gears.
And I want to talk about rolling the dice, but not metaphorically.
Literally, I want to talk about rolling dice.
And I'll just let you take it from there because I might want to spend quite a bit of time
on this.
Okay.
Dice rolling is a lot of fun.
How did this even come up?
How did this even start?
Yeah, it came up during the pandemic.
So during the pandemic,
the world was kind of divided into two camps.
There was the people that were first responders,
critical responders, critical infrastructure
for the country who had to continue to go to work.
So they were in their own kind of suffering
and their own kind of experience of the pandemic.
And then there was people who were forced to pause.
And I was one of the forced to pause people.
And so I started reading all of this early 1920s
esoteric philosophy and-
Hold on, hold on.
How the fuck does that happen?
Why that?
Gosh, I don't even know where to jump off here to tell. I go in rabbit holes and I go deep down these rabbit holes until I'm satisfied.
And then I go down another one, another one, another one.
And this particular one gripped me because I was interested in mysticism.
And I started reading works by Alastair Crowley,
which led me, which I'm sure you're familiar with him,
which led me to this weird publication that he published,
which also led me to a weird short story
called The Magic Glasses by Frank,
I forget his last name, it'll come to me later, but.
I'll find it.
It's really, really great.
I'm making a movie based off of this short story.
So it's actually a really great story.
And Frank Harris, Frank Harris. Yeah. So by Frank Harris, I highly recommend reading this story.
It's fantastic. The rest of Frank Harris's stuff is a little more challenging. So he
was a cowboy who at the age of 14, basically ran away from home. And the in-vogue thing when you
ran away from home in Europe was you ran off to America. Like that was your big F you. It's like I'm gonna go get on a ship and
you'll never see me again. So he ran off to America. He ended up falling into some amazing
intellectual groups of writers and he wrote one of the smuttiest books of the time called My Life
and Loves, which was banned worldwide. And it was an account of every single sexual encounter that this guy had.
And it's a fantastic book, but again, tough to read because he
was also a cattle rancher.
He became a cattle rancher and he ended up killing people for cattle.
And it's hard to tell what's real and what's fake, but back at the
time this might've happened, you know, that might've been real.
But what led me down this rabbit hole was because I
was trying to ask a very important question, which is a question I hope that
everybody asks, which is why are we here? Why do any of this, anything that we've
talked about at all, like what is the purpose of any of it, has been a question,
a rabbit hole that has continued throughout
my life, continues, probably will continue till the day I die. It'll be an unanswered
question. I have some answers, but mostly it's an unanswered question. And I started
playing with artificial constraints. It first started with my clothing. I realized I can't
be like Steve Jobs. I can't be Mark Zuckerberg.
I can't just wear a uniform and flip-flops
and call it a day.
I would feel dead inside.
I just couldn't do it.
How does the applying constraints relate to Frank Harris
and the why are we here question?
The story about Frank Harris that magic glasses
when you read it is about trying on different perspectives and seeing the world in a new way.
And if you were to be able to put on a pair of magic glasses that allowed you to see the world in a magical way, would you do it?
And for how long would it be magical before you just relegated those glasses to your drawer of all the other tchotchkes and novelties that the human brain grows bored of. And I started looking around at all the novelties in my life and all the
things I had grown bored of and all of the perspectives I had tried on and
tossed into the drawer. And I started looking at my wardrobe as being an
interesting side effect of novelty. And so I started thinking about that story and thinking about my closet.
And I love clothes. I just love them. I love expressing myself with clothes. I
love costumes. I love cosplay. I love textures. I love fabric. I love fashion.
And so I've always had this guilt around loving these things. And so I tried to figure out how to be the best minimalist maximalist I could be.
And so I started playing all sorts of forcing function games.
And it came out of reading, you know, Gurgie F. and Frank Harris and Alistair Crowley and all these things.
Dice rolling oddly came out of all of that.
So I went to my friends and family and I said,
I am tired of picking out my outfit every day,
but I can't get a uniform, so can you guys pick a theme?
And so the first theme was plaid,
and I was plaid from head to toe.
So everything, underwear, socks, shoes, hat, gloves,
it didn't matter what it was, it had to be plaid.
And when you go into a store and they're like,
can I help you?
And you're like, do you have anything plaid?
The answer is usually, I have two things,
like two items of clothing or three items of clothing.
So it automatically forces you to not buy things
and to constrain yourself with this weird pattern you picked for the season.
And- Okay. So when you say season, how long are you wearing plaid for?
Three months. Yeah. It was brutal. It was brutal. So that wasn't enough. I had to learn all about
plaids. Like what is plaid? Is a check a plaid? Is gingham a plaid? What makes a plaid a plaid?
It's really fascinating. So the second season I hated the most which was polka dot
That was awful and I'll tell you why polka dots awful because most prints and fabrics
The polka dots are either printed and layered on top of the fabric
But they're never woven into the fabric and so polka dots are usually made out of really cheap fibers
so polyesters and
Things are really hot and sticky and gross.
So in each of these cases,
are you ending up with like 12 storage units
full of plaid and polka dots stuff respectively?
No.
Okay, so it constrains the volume as well.
It constrains the volume.
And it got to the point where,
I mean, I can't wear a polka dot again,
probably for the rest of my life.
If you ever see me wearing polka dots,
like I've gotten over the trauma,
but plaid was one of my favorites actually,
because learning how to wear mismatched plaids,
but the thing that was really interesting
was when I'd go into a store,
how people would be delighted and just light up
when they saw what I was wearing.
They would just start laughing and giggling.
And I realized that clothing could be a source of joy not just for yourself
But for other people so it's like minimalism plus joy or like reduce
Decision-making and increase joy at the same time correct. That's a great way to distill what I'm obsessed with right now
How do the dice come into this?
I don't want to cut off the story after I ran this experiment for a year and a half and I learned a lot about
cut off the story at all. After I ran this experiment for a year and a half,
and I learned a lot about what I like and don't like
and what kind of fashion suits me and doesn't suit me
and which friends to allow to pick my wardrobe
and which not to, I started looking at my dining choices
and I started looking at my holiday choices
and my driving choices.
And I started asking myself the question,
do I even make good choices?
Now you would think that because I'm successful,
the answer is yes, I make great choices.
But I make choices just like any other person that are ingrained choices formed out of habit.
So I wanted to see what would happen if I became more random.
What happens if you introduce random to your life and you start to eliminate choice?
Are you as successful? Are you as joyous?
How much of what we do is really because we're brilliant
or is because that's just how the cards fall?
Well, I have not been led astray by the dice a single time.
So how it works is,
let's say you and I wanna go to dinner, Tim,
and I'm like, what do you wanna eat?
And you're like, I don't know.
And we go around and we do this thing
that everybody does for five minutes,
trying to decide.
So this is why I wanted to get into the dice because this literally,
I had one of my closest friends text me yesterday.
We were talking about decision fatigue and he's like,
you more than most people are exhausted and get very frustrated by tasks or
assignments,
like choosing a restaurant where there is no right answer.
Correct.
Right, because it can chew up so much fucking time
and energy and there's so much tail chasing
and back and forth.
Anyway, rant complete for now, but please continue.
Yeah, so.
Right, so we're trying to decide what to do for that.
I can help fix this for you, Tim.
I'm so excited to introduce you to dice rolling.
So I wear dice around my neck
and I take them everywhere I go
and this gives me,
you know, one through 12. Obviously you can get multi-sided dice and you can come up with all
sorts of different options. You can use dice to even just do coin flip type stuff because you can
do odds or evens. But you and I want to go to dinner. We can't decide even on a genre. So,
but maybe we hone in on Italian.
Like we're making some progress here.
So we basically put Italian into OpenTable.
We roll the dice, whatever it lands on,
we are committed, we are gonna go.
It doesn't matter what the reviews are.
If you cared about the reviews,
then you could have constrained it by reviews.
You set the parameters, right?
But the thing is, every one of these choices
shouldn't take you longer than a minute.
So you can move on with your life.
And every time I've gone to these places,
it's been better food than I could ever imagine.
I meet random people that are so incredible.
I've gone on strange road trips
where I've just had the most magical experiences. And
the list goes on and on and on and on. My life has only been improved by taking myself out of
the decision-making process because I am the hindrance. What other examples could you give
of situations in which you would use the dice? Right? Because there's also a question of at what
point do you introduce the random, right? Because you could decide on like genre, reviews, geography,
and then before you know it, you've spent a bunch of time on this decision anyway, and
then you introduce randomness at the end, the savings isn't necessarily super great,
nor is the breadth of the randomness, so to speak. So what are some other situations where
you might use the dice?
LS- Road trips, are're great for road trips. So
I went on a road trip one time where I rolled and landed on something called Pioneer City, I think in
California, Pioneer Town. And what was the list? I'm sorry, just to know how this works. Thrift stores. So you're like best thrift stores in the United States? Yeah, in California. I had some time to
kill and I was driving from Nevada through
the Palm Desert and then to Southern California.
And so I had time.
And so I put that in and I rolled, I don't know, like a 13 or whatever, 12, and it landed
on this thrift store in a place called Pioneer Town, which is a ghost town, old Western town.
And then the only thing that's there is this thrift store
and some weird little store that sells water.
It's it.
I mean, good to have water.
And a harmonica, I got a harmonica there,
I still have my harmonica.
But I went in and the experience was spiritual for me.
Like when I roll the dice, it puts me in places
and it puts me in a frame of mind where
anything's possible and anything at any moment can happen.
And you just have to be ready for it.
You have to not be thinking about what you're doing tomorrow or what you did yesterday.
You're just there.
And you're going to trust that whatever the dice is going to throw at you is going to
be amazing.
Could I see what's around your neck again? Because as a former D and D player, I have tons of experience with dice.
I'm just curious.
Are they two separate?
Yeah.
Let me get it open for you.
They're little dice and they come out of this little cage.
I don't know if you can see them.
Oh yeah, I see it.
Yeah.
And so they're teeny tiny dice and they're in this little cage and then the
cage lock and it just, the little locket that I carry around everywhere.
Okay, that's cool.
And I introduced so many people to it and they've started adopting it.
I use it for giving public talks.
I've done it for public talks, which is I'll have the audience scream out 12 topics and
then whatever the dice rolls on is what I start with.
And then we just go through the dice.
And so it's not an order.
And it makes things much more fun.
Picking what movies to watch.
You get movie paralysis.
And the one thing I haven't done yet
is make business decisions with dice.
But at some point I might.
I might would do it probably with my own personal money,
wouldn't do it with my LP's money, full disclaimer.
But interestingly, when I started down this dice experiment,
my friend, Penn Jillette, who's a magician,
wrote a book called Random at the exact same time.
And that book is a bit graphic, but it involves a guy
who basically has to come up with a million dollars in a very short period
of time and he uses dice that make all that money for him and then some. But it's exploring the same
thought experiment, which is, I guess the question is, do you believe in free will or not?
And-
Oh boy, we're Sam Harris when we need them.
Right? And how much of what we're doing is consciousness versus not, and how much of our patterns actually hinder us
versus open us up to possibility.
I think that's the big one.
For people who might get lost, like me, honestly,
I've listened to so many discussions of free will
for and against, and I can't make heads or tails out of it.
I wish I were smarter.
But the last question,
I feel like I can wrap my head around and grok. How much do our habits and patterns help us versus hinder us? That's a good question.
And this is where dice rolling really comes into play. Now I have a very hard rule, which
is I never ever say, oh, I don't want to do that. And then I don't do it. I'm a little,
if you will, religious about the dice and whatever it lands on I do no matter what. So I even do house
cleaning chores that I don't want to do and I use the dice. So I'll put like six
things on a list and maybe there's one really fun thing that I really want to
do and then five things I really don't want to do and the dice almost always
land on the things you don't want to do. And that's actually great because I don't betray it.
I get through the thing and then I roll again.
And then eventually at some point,
I might land on that sweet treat thing I wanted to do.
You know, and then I'm excited.
I'm like, yay, I get to watch a movie finally
after doing my taxes and everything else.
But yeah, I mean, I really wish people would
try more things like this because I think people think that the way that
they are is unchangeable, that they are static, that they have no ability to
break their habits or form new ones. And introducing something simple like this
that allows you to make decisions quickly, move
through life fast, and then puts more joy in it. It just seems like a win, win, win.
Yeah. I love this idea. I'm going to try this. I would love if it's possible. I don't know.
Who knows? Maybe you had this made by an artisan in Siberia, for all I know, but the locket
with the dice, that would be good. Right?
I mean, I can locket with the dice, that would be good. Right?
Cause it's in my pocket or something.
I can send you one of these.
Oh yeah.
Yeah. I would love, I would love to travel.
Yeah, they make them in San Francisco.
There's an artist that makes them
and be happy to send you one.
Oh, amazing.
And get you dice rolling.
That would be great.
I'm in.
I'll probably going to get a placeholder set
because I have a trip coming up this week
and it's very last minute for me. I was just kind of like,
fuck it, throw caution to the wind. I'm going on this crazy last minute international trip and
it's the perfect opportunity to use dice. A lot. So I'm going to, I'm going to try that.
So you said you're religious about it. So religiously random. You mentioned Pendulet,
who I've had on the podcast,
brilliant guy, credible weight loss story too. Oh yeah. The potato diet. And I think fair to
describe as a militant atheist. I think that's a fair description. When you were talking about
being saved on the side of the road, so long ago in this conversation, I want to say the wording you used
was at the time, I didn't believe in God because this driver brought up God. Now to me, that implies
there might've been a change. There has. And interestingly, I was so nervous to call Penn
and tell him that I was no longer an atheist. And I thought,
I didn't know what to expect. And he's coming out of the closet to Penn.
And he was so sweet about it. He said, who cares? He's like, you're a person and you're a kind person.
And if you're a little woo woo, whatever, he's like, I'd rather be around a good person who's woo-woo than an unkind person who's atheist. So, and he also has seen, if you look at pictures of me before
my spiritual change and after, night and day, I am healthier, I look younger, I have more energy,
I'm happier. Everything has been better since I became a spiritual person.
When I was an atheist, everything Crowley and all of these guys. AC For people, just because you've invoked the name
Aleister Crowley a few times, could you just brief, doesn't have to be superfactual detailed,
but who is this person you've referred to a number of times? And then how on earth, I mean,
does that lead to the spiritual change? He's an occultist leader who practiced what you might consider witchcraft or magic. And I said
magic in quotes because obviously there's going to be atheists and people that don't believe that
what Alex deCroley did was real. He had a very big following and then a lot of fractures that came
out of those followings of people who- CB And massively popular.
LS And massively controversial.
LS And he was controversial because he also showed up in weird outfits and he-
CB Yeah. And he was kind of like the Nixon, Timothy Leary dynamic and so much as like Nixon
saying this guy's the most dangerous person in America. I feel like Crowley also occupied
a similar mind space.
LS Yeah. A lot of people thought he was a Satanist and he was not. As a matter of fact, a lot
of what he studied was the teachings of Christ and he talked about Christ a lot. And I think
a lot of people don't realize that New Age stuff and occultism and all of this early
stuff actually is deeply rooted in monotheism and has nothing to do with Satan anyway that I could discover other than
they theorize that there are dark energy forces or dark spirits out there and people who know how to harness dark energy and
Alistair actually worked in what we call the light and so he wanted to repel people because what he was teaching
Wasn't for everybody. He actually didn't want you to read his stuff.
He did not want you to follow him, but there's a lot of
wonky stuff from there.
How does this lead to radiance?
Yeah.
How does this is the question on everyone's mind?
I got my hands on every book, every movie, every everything I
could find from that time.
And I realized that people in the early 1900s
were onto something.
They were onto something about what life is really all about.
All of these great works that people wrote back then.
And when you say back then, just to time frame it,
I looked it up.
So Alistair Crowley was born in,
she also wrote it down and then I lost track of it, 1875, died in 1947.
Yeah. So that period of time was a wackadoodle time where people were publishing all these
crazy books and practicing these occult practices and running around in weird robes and looking
like Harry Potter and doing some psychedelics too. So some of them did psychedelics and some of them
did use THC or half hashish as part of their
ceremonies or things that they did. But a lot of it was sober and
what they were trying to figure out is is there a veil? Is there something beyond what we can see and what we know and
is it
supernatural or can it be explained by science later? And
a lot of them believe that it could be explained
by science later, that actually it's just undiscovered science.
And I became really interested in those people in particular
and I really went down a rabbit hole with this author
and philosopher named Gurdjieff.
And Gurdjieff I believe was Greek
and his understudy was named Alspinski.
And Alspinski wrote a book called, I think
it's called The Curious Case of Ivan Ossican, which is what Groundhog Day is based off of.
And I was studying at the time kind of what made Bill Murray make the art that he makes.
And without asking him, I like to form my own opinions,
you know, just like, what did I think it was?
It was really clear that, you know, I didn't watch
any of his movies until the pandemic.
I did a lot of stuff in the pandemic I've never done,
but I hadn't seen Groundhog Bay, I hadn't seen
Caddyshack, I hadn't seen any of these movies.
And I just-
What about Bob, I hope.
Right, so what about Bob?
The man who knew too little, broken flowers.
Like, I watched them all.
And I realized that this is an artist
who's on a mission to teach us something.
He wants us to learn something.
What is that thing?
And I noticed he kept repeating a phrase over and over again
in a lot of his movies, which is it just doesn't matter.
Now, if you look that up,
that's a nihilistic sounding statement.
It just doesn't matter.
And taking on the surface, you would just assume that it was a nihilist thing and that's
what it means.
But if you go under that and you actually look at the root of the philosophy of which
that statement is coming from, it goes back to what we were talking about in a previous
conversation about the fictions that we make in
our mind. And I realized that my mother is a fiction. The mother that left me, that left the
$20, that gave me up to the court system. I haven't given her a chance to know who she is today. I
don't even know who she is today. But I carried around this grief, this suffering, this loss, this story.
And I was harming myself every day by carrying that story inside of me. And so I started watching
this movie called The Razor's Edge, which is based off of a novel by Somerset Mom, I think it's how
you say his name. And there was a 1930s version of the movie and then there's a version that Bill Murray did. And Bill Murray's was very interesting to me because I believe that he
agreed to make Ghostbusters 2 in exchange for them making this movie that he wrote.
The Razor's Edge.
The Razor's Edge, yeah. And it's a very low budget film because they didn't give him a
ton of money to do it
and it involves many locations and period stuff and that's all very expensive.
So, and his acting is, you know, he's built. He did a great job.
But at the same time, it's not going to be the best produced film he's ever made.
But it explores all of these ideas around Gurdjieff's philosophy around suffering and what suffering is.
And there's a line that he says in the movie when someone he loves died and he is trying
to comprehend it and he looks at this woman who was previously his fiance and she explains
this whole story but the woman's dead.
You can't bring her back and he just looks at her and he just says well it just doesn't matter and in that moment when I watched that movie I had
this energy at the bottom of my spine basically shoot out the top of my head
and there was a bunch of people in the room when we were watching the movie and
they all paused you know they paused the movie and they looked at me and everybody said, what was that? And I was like, what
was what? Because I thought maybe they got chills too, you know, maybe that line hit
them hard like it hit me hard. But no, it was a singular event only for me in that moment
that impacted the whole room energetically where everyone's hair was standing on end at what just happened
to me. And from that day forward, nothing has been the same. It's like a veil got lifted
on the universe around me and now I see things that I never was able to see before. I am
able to see art and poetry and all sorts of things. It's almost as if some sort of PTSD veil that was
in my body got lifted because I started believing, or believing is a weird word, I don't like to use
that word too much, but I started suspecting that there's something bigger out there than all of us
that we're in a simulation or we're in some kind of something. The randomness in the dice actually
taught me a lot of that because things start to get really magical and you can't explain it
But it's beautiful and you're just like I'm along for the ride. I'm on some weird Earth school is what I've determined
We're all in Earth school and we inhabit human bodies
But we're nothing but an energy life force inside of them and that life force does not dissipate
And it doesn't go nowhere, it goes somewhere,
doesn't disappear. Life force does not disappear. And do you want to hear about a really strange
spiritual experience that I had? Because I think you'd like it.
Pete Slauson Of course I do. I mean, I'm keeping track here.
It's like Crowley to Gertrude, to Ospensky, to the concept of Groundhog Day, to Bill Murray,
to Just Doesn't Matter. to Gurdjieff, to Ospensky, to the concept of Groundhog Day, to Bill Murray, to just
as a matter-
Welcome to my mind.
... to what seems like, I mean, I didn't know anything about this, but you've probably
read a million things about it. Anyway, we're going to come back to the spinal thing because
it's like, huh, that seems to be what some people might describe as like a Kundalini-
Some people call it Kundalini awakening.
I was just going to say a Kundalini awakening.
When I explain to people what happened to me, they go, oh, you had Kundalini. And I'm like, huh, I had no idea what happened to me.
I don't really know what that is. I've just heard the phrase, but you said strange spiritual
experience. I do want to come back to this placeholder Kundalini awakening just to know
how you now make sense of that. Maybe we start there and then we can go to the other spiritual
experience. Like how do you explain to yourself
what happened in that instance?
I thought I was losing my mind. I thought she did. Yeah. I had a lot of sympathy for
people who have mental health issues and end up in hospitals on 51 50s because I realized
we're just a hair away from being crazy. Every one of us. And because it wasn't just that energy
that shot through me, I mean, that itself was just powerful.
And then the realization, the epiphany
that I was carrying around this fiction
and that I was responsible for that fiction.
I was spinning it up and my ego was spinning it up.
And I experienced ego dissolution for the first time.
And- Was this at the same time that you're watching this movie? It happened right afterwards and it was very sudden and it was frankly scary.
And so I started getting visions of places to go, started having dreams that
were predicting people calling me, talking to me. I started knowing what people were going to say
before they said it and all sorts of strange things
that I can't explain.
And like I said, maybe science someday will discover
that we have a form of communication as human beings,
as animals that we're unaware of.
Humans can only see a certain amount
of perceptible light and sound.
So it's not completely out of the question that we can't see or hear certain things that
are happening around us. But the veil for lack of a better term was lifted and
when I turned away from my practice of meditation and mindfulness that veil
would come back down. When I was introspective and thinking about the
bigger question which is what is the meaning of life and what is my purpose in it, which it answered for me, I know what
my purpose is now, before that I was adrift.
As an atheist I thought there was no point.
We just have to be good people.
We have to get by.
We have to love one another.
I knew that love was a universal thing that we should all strive for, but I didn't have
a purpose. And after this
experience I suddenly had one. And my purpose is very simple, which is to
spread joy, to lift other people up around me, and to do my best in my own way
to end poverty. Now I'm not responsible for ending poverty. I think we're all
responsible, but it informs a lot of my investment decisions now.
It informs, I realized I was already doing a lot
of these things anyway.
But I became a more service oriented person.
I started becoming more a part of a bigger whole.
Whereas before I was more of an individual.
And now I realized that I'm part of something much bigger
and much more beautiful
than I ever could have possibly imagined.
So I'm imagining that you've done a ton of reading
after having this experience.
Furthermore, I imagine you reached out to anyone
you thought might be able to shed light on this
in some capacity
and talk to those people. Let's just say there are a bunch of people listening who are atheist
or maybe they describe themselves as agnostic, which I think is a bit of a slippery term,
frankly, because theist says, I believe in God or gods. And if you can't say that, then
you are kind of by definition an atheist. But I'll let agnostic slide.
People are listening and they do feel somewhat adrift or rudderless or choose your metaphor
without North Star in their current relating to the world.
They would love to have a purpose.
They would love to feel like they have a purpose.
What advice would you give to these people? Because it sounds like I would imagine,
even if they were to watch this movie,
that fewer, none of them would experience
the same thing that you did.
It's not repeatable.
You have to be in the same place.
So what do you do, right?
If you're hearing this and you're like, you know what?
I yearn for that type of purpose.
You have to face something very ugly, which is yourself.
You have to look inside and see who and what you really are.
And then you have to love yourself,
even when you don't like what you see.
When people used to say practice self love,
I thought it meant go eat bonbons
and go see a good movie and smoke a joint. That was self-love,
you know? But it wasn't getting me anywhere. And I was like, this whole self-love thing is jive.
It's just not working out. But I didn't realize that self-love is learning how to give yourself
unconditional love. And the best way I've learned how to give yourself
unconditional love is imagine yourself as a ball of light.
And then take that ball of light and visualize it
outside of your body and cradle it like it's a baby.
Now, when you look at that baby, would you hurt that baby?
Would you do anything to hurt that baby or harm that baby?
Like, would you kill the baby?
Would you, you're just a ball of light. I think when you start looking at yourself that way and
you start talking to yourself and I'm cradling right now and trying to show Tim like I'm my ball
of light and you start to realize that all of the things that we experience are often, well actually
they all are a simulation in our mind that we start to talk about ourselves a certain
way. And you would never hurt a ball of light until it's an awful piece of crap.
Like why do we tell ourselves we're an awful piece of crap? So the other thing
is that we're the only species or animal on this planet that punishes itself more
than once. You know we ruminate and think constantly about
what we fucked up on or how we could be better,
when in reality we'd be better served if we just let it go.
So if you want to experience something like this, and I do warn you that
a lot of stuff leads to things that can be jarring and very scary if you're not
ready for them yet. There are psychological events that can happen that
are sometimes indistinguishable from mania and everything else. So you just
have to be careful. But I found my path to this by looking inward and trying to
know myself and then taking accountability for all my ugliness. And
once you get through that and you forgive yourself
and you love yourself, there's nothing but light on the other side. But really it's about
love. You know, at the end of the day, it's about love. Which sounds trite. Everybody
says love is the answer. Like, what does that even mean? But it absolutely is the answer.
You can put something metaphorically speaking on a billboard message quote anything to
impart or display could be an image somebody else's quote to great great masses of people
what might it be? I mean it's the same concept that was explored in The Matrix and in lots of different fiction.
It's just to wake up.
Wake up.
If you see it enough times, maybe you'll understand what it means.
If you wake up out of bed and you're awake, you think you're awake, but you're actually
not.
You're in a form of sleep.
And that sleep is what's called your mechanical automaton sort of actions that you take that are in response to
what's being thrown at you in the world, what nature gave to you and what nurture handed to you.
And you just accept it and so you're just sleepwalking through life.
And the moment you take the reins and you become the narrator of your own story and sometimes the captain, then that's when it's a transformational change.
Take it.
That ties back into dice rolling, right? Like dice rolling is a way to stay awake.
Staying awake and staying conscious and staying present is a practice you must practice every day.
And if you don't, then you just have to accept the cookie falls,
how it crumbles or how, what are some cliches?
Pete Slauson Except how the cookie crumbles.
Jodi Well, it's accept how the cookie crumbles,
but you could introduce a little more random. You could go to work dressed as Spongebob Square
pants as I like to say, but people don't. There's a lot of things you could be doing that you're not
doing.
Another movie that actually really helped me in my life
was the movie American Beauty with Kevin Spacey.
And I was probably in my early 20s when that came out
and I came out of the theater and I sat on the floor
and I said, my life is a broken record.
I'm stuck in a groove that I can't seem to get out of.
I'm gonna break up with my boyfriend and switch my job."
And the movie inspired that.
Art has a way of being at the right place at the right time for you.
And sometimes you really do need to switch things up and you need to get out of your
groove because you're your own worst nightmare. How did you end up and maybe you don't know, but how did you experience a stroke
and what effect did that have on you? So yeah, I was at Founders Fund when it happened
and I experienced it as the worst headache of my life. It was a migraine on a scale of
one to 10. It was like a 15. It was like the worst headache you could possibly have and it progressively got worse every day and the doctors just treated it as a migraine
because I was young. When you're young and you're experiencing a stroke it doesn't make
a lot of sense to people and so they start going down this decision tree and they're
like it obviously has to be either a cluster headache or a migraine or something like that.
So I was treated for a migraine. I went to the ER. Again, they treated me for a migraine, didn't give me
a CT scan. And eventually I started seeing double. I started falling. I always like to
say you don't want to actually feel what gravity feels like because there's falling and you
have resistance and then there's falling with no resistance. And falling with no resistance
is really spooky. And so you're standing and then you're down. It's just like there's falling with no resistance. And falling with no resistance is really spooky.
And so you're standing and then you're down.
It's just like there's nothing to keep you up.
And so that started happening to me.
And I went to a second ER,
I had to wait in the ER for six hours,
but eventually again, magical woman came over
and rubbed my leg and she said,
I think you're having a stroke.
Cause at this point, nobody knew what was wrong with me.
And she raised the alarm bell, and then suddenly I
was put in a CT scanner, and they
discovered that I had what's called a DVST, which
is a deep venous sinus thrombosis, which
is clotting throughout the entire center of my brain
and down my jugular, my right jugular.
And I was moments away from death
by the time they found it.
And that definitely helped kick me off on this quest,
because when you're in a hospital for a couple of weeks,
which I was, and you come outside,
the very first thing that hits you is air.
Like that first breath of air, I mean, there's air in a hospital,
but there's really no fresh air.
And suddenly you realize that the most important thing in the world is not what
you thought it was. It puts everything in perspective. It's like okay first it's
air then it was the Sun on my face which brought me to my knees like I started
bawling. Because what if I never ever got to experience the Sun again? You get
really grateful and filled with gratitude for everything.
But we're human beings, we love novelty,
you go back to sleep.
So I had a deep appreciation for life,
but as soon as I was walking again
and I was somewhat normal again,
I started living the same way again.
And I knew that if I kept living that way, I would die.
What do you mean by that?
It was really clear that I had put myself in this position.
Oh, die physically, you mean?
Yeah, I put myself in this position through avoiding all my suffering,
avoiding my trauma, working through it, working as hard as I could, avoidance,
avoidance, avoidance, avoidance.
And then it came clear that I had to have
some kind of therapy. I had to do something because I couldn't keep running
away from this ghost of a mother. And I had to find something that worked and
talking to therapists never worked. Psilocybin worked. Psilocybin helped a
lot. I did a couple of hero doses of psilocybin that taught me quite a bit
about myself and they were super helpful. You know, IFS, I started looking into integrated family systems and that helped a lot.
But really it was meditation and philosophy that got me over the line.
Whatever works, man, just go out and really study yourself and know yourself. Like know
thyself is an important mantra for a reason because I do honestly believe we're in school
and when you start realizing, oh I'm in a school and all of these hard knocks in life are just lessons,
you think about them very differently. Who would your go-to philosophers be who helped you in that
period in those early chapters of this, let's call it awakening. And then what type of meditation
do you practice?
What does it look like? You can tackle those in either order.
Yeah.
So I tried all sorts of different types of meditation apps and none of them
really stuck with me.
I would get hung up on people's voices and you know,
there's a critic inside of us and I would criticize everything.
So somebody turned me on to Tibetan throat singing and that's what did it.
Did not see that coming. So are you then the one singing or are you listening to
Tibetan throat singing? Both. I do both. So I chant along with the chants. I moan
along with the moaning to the best of my ability. I listen and I don't do the bead counting.
How did you find Tibetan throat singing?
Was someone like, you know what, I know you've tried everything,
but try one more thing.
Embracing random, you know, sometimes the universe gives you,
if you're paying attention, exactly what you need.
So a friend of mine went to the Telluride Bluegrass Festival
and they had some Tibetan throat singers there
and he brought me back a necklace.
And he said, look at this necklace,
and it was one of the most beautiful things I'd ever seen and I was like, well I'm gonna go check
these guys out and it was a huge unlock, huge.
But again, your mileage may vary, like try different things and see.
I think the biggest mistake I made with meditation was trying to treat it like a sport or it
was something that I had to judge myself.
I mean you're approaching it all wrong if you're entering meditation, I think, that way.
There are different kinds of meditation, some that even allow and permit thoughts to flow freely
and you're supposed to look at them and pay attention to them and then there's types of meditations where you're supposed to clear your mind.
I think people get really scared of meditation because they think of a blank canvas, a blank mind, and that really scares them and frightens them.
And once I got over that and I started realizing that's not the point of it, at least it wasn't
for me, I can now meditate for six hours at a time.
Oh my God.
I'm doing my 10 minutes twice a day.
I'm pretty happy with myself for now.
Yeah.
I mean, my coworkers laugh at me because they'll take me someplace and I can sit still for
an abnormal amount of time.
And I think that's when you process all of the inputs
that are being thrown at us,
how you can synthesize the information
that's been handed to you or even countered
is by those moments of stillness.
And so even if it's 10 minutes a day, it's something.
You know, it's not about length of time or anything,
it's about the effort.
It's not the size that matters. Yes, it's not about length of time or anything. It's about the effort. It's not the size that matters. It's not the size that matters. So I will say also that whether
it's with exercise or meditation, any new habit or something you're trying to build as part of your
new programming, the difference between doing nothing and something is the biggest zero to one,
right? That's the unlock.
So if you're going from not exercising to exercising, it's like, okay, don't set yourself
up for failure, making the pass fail an hour a day.
Do 10 pushups every other day.
Start there.
Five blocks.
Same with meditation.
The difference between zero and 10 minutes once a day or twice a day is in terms of quality of life for me, huge, enormous.
And if I want to add more time, great.
But what I shouldn't do is set the pass fail at an hour a day.
And then when I don't have an hour to not meditate, just reduce the scale, right?
Reduce the scope. What about philosophers? Any folks you might point people to?
I'm a big fan of Gurgia. He, he's not for everybody and he's very confusing a lot like
Alastair Crowley or Crowley was a wackadoodle person who
Like to drive people away when they came up to talk to him if he didn't like you he would say obscene things
Just so you would go away
This is George Gurgie F. Fergie. Yeah, G you are D J I E F F. Fergie. Yeah Yeah, George Gurdjieff. G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-F G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-F G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-F G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-F G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-F G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-F G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-F G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J-I-E-F-G-U-R-D-J- Are you the captain of your ship or some rogue process? I have a Unix background, so I like to think of things
as cron jobs or automated processes.
But is there a rogue process running you
or are you running yourself?
And I think you'll discover if you do a lot
of introspective work that you are not in charge.
So one of the concepts that he talks about is
sort of like a horse carriage.
There's a person who's driving the horse
and then there's the horse,
obviously. There's the carriage. But there's also the narration of what's happening.
And it's even taking control of that inner narration. Like, where does that even come from?
Are you in charge of that? Are you letting it run amok? Is it determining, which is your ego,
is it determining where you go, what you do, what's
next or are you doing that?
So, Gurdjieff delves deeply into those concepts and more.
Ouspensky, which is his underling, which is a Russian philosopher and I really, really
recommend reading him, loved to think about, and again, I'm self-educated so I say things
wrong sometimes, but Nietzsche?
Yeah.
Okay.
He had a concept called the eternal recurrence, which is, yeah, that we're stuck in a constant
loop until we learn how to be good people. And that's the premise of Groundhog Day.
And it might explain deja vu. It might explain why you've done something and you're like,
I feel like I've done this before. I've met that person before because maybe you have.
And that's what they talk about in their philosophy. And it's pretty interesting.
The eternal recurrence can get super confusing. It features quite heavily in the unbearable
lightness of being by Milan Kundera, which I highly,
highly recommend to folks. And I'll just read a quick thing about Gurdjieff also for folks who
may be interested. So this is Georgi Ivanovich Gurdjieff, born 1867 in what was formerly Russian
Empire, now Armenia. And he was a philosopher, mystic, spiritual teacher, composer,
and dance teacher. He taught that people are not conscious of themselves and thus live
their lives in a state of hypnotic, quote, waking sleep, end quote, but that it is possible
to wake into a higher state of consciousness and serve our purpose as human beings. And
it goes on. He also has a great look. He's got the bald head with the strong man, old
man, like old timey strong man mustache.
All right. So I'll include links to the names you mentioned as well.
Any particular book that you would recommend people start with if they wanted to dip their toes in the water, but maybe something that's like a gateway drug and maybe the
user friendlier option.
What do you think?
There's a book that he has called Beasel Bub's Tales to his grandson.
Beasel Bub, that's a word I haven't heard in a while.
All right.
And then, you know,
Al Spinski's The Curious Case of Ivan Ossican
is about a guy who falls in love with a girl,
but he has to pursue his career
because he wants to be able to provide for her. So he decides to put off being with her so he can pursue his career because he wants to be able to provide for her.
So he decides to put off being with her so he can pursue his career,
but he misses his moment and she marries another man.
And he's so distraught that he goes to a magician,
and the magician is Gurdjieff in the book,
and says, can you please send me back to age 11 so I can do this all over again?
And I will not make the same mistakes again.
And Gurdjieff, the the magician says, actually, you will.
You'll do everything the exact same again
because you can't help yourself.
You may deviate slightly, but you're going to end up
in the same place without her.
And so the guy is insistent and he sends him back
to 11 years old and sure enough, he makes every mistake
exactly the same.
Sure as shit, groundhog day.
Gets back to finally to the magician who says,
wow, you're lucky that you made it here
because you could have lost me.
You could have made a wrong decision along the way
and then I would have disappeared too.
He goes, what if I told you that the wedding was fake
and she got married to upset you?
And he's like, what?
She's not married? And he's like, no, she's
really not married. And he's like, well, I want to run off and be with her now. And he
goes, ah, that'll end badly. And he's like, why? And he said, because you haven't done
the work, right? You've realized that you need to change, but you haven't done anything
to actually change. So he says, come with me and spend a few years with me.
And then maybe you might have a chance of being with her.
But otherwise, all paths lead to you not being with this woman.
So the movie is Groundhog Day.
I believe it's what Groundhog Day, from my research,
is based off of, is that book.
But it's just a beautiful tale.
And I think that you can't take these things literally
like Philoctophan.
And to be clear, when you say based on,
you mean Groundhog Day the movie and not the
holiday. Right.
Not the holiday. The movie.
OK. And Gurgie of the Wikipedia page is very,
very extensive. So that's going to be my stop.
Number one. In addition to figuring out how to get
some dice saying we've covered a hell of a lot of
ground. I am
I want to tell you about the experience I had that
you leave. Oh, yes, of course. After I had this awakening,
I started getting this really weird vision of an Irish man and it was like a cartoonish
Irish man and it was hijacking me every moment. I couldn't think about anything else. It was
like a lucky charm. Yeah, like this guy going like this, you know, like with his fists in the air and he's like a fighting
Irish man. He's a caricature of an Irish man. And I was like, I do not know what this means,
but I'm going to go do something about it. And so I went to my husband and I said,
I noticed that the Celtics were playing the Warriors and it was the finals in Boston.
And so I made the excuse because it was the only Irish thing I could think of at
the time and I went to my husband and I said I want to go to the Celtics game
and he was like what is wrong with you you hate basketball that makes no sense
and I said I know it makes no sense but I'm getting this weird sign that I need
to go to the Celtics game. So he bought me the ticket. I didn't even choose the ticket and I had a knowing, I'm gonna call it a voice which makes people
worried sometimes they're like oh you're hearing voices and I want to get locked
up, but I have a knowing, I'm just gonna call it a knowing, that basically told me
that I didn't need to bring anything with me to Boston that everything would
be given to me. All I had to do is bring my wallet and my ID and just show up. So my husband brought me
the ticket to the game and I show up and I go into the arena early because I have a little
bit of agoraphobia. I'm an introvert. And so now they don't call them Paulways at sporting
arenas, they call them portals. So I had to find my portal. I go through my portal, which is already weird in sci-fi
anyway, you're in a portal.
And I go and find my seat and the whole arena's covered
in chairs covered with green shirts.
And I'm disoriented, I call my husband, I'm freaking out,
he's like, look, you chose this adventure, you're in it,
good luck, and he hung up on me.
I was like, ah.
So I see down this aisle that there's one chair
that doesn't have a shirt on it.
So I said, I'm gonna go down to that chair
and I'm gonna use that number as my reference point
and then I'm gonna work out from there where my seat is.
I get to the chair and it's mine.
And I look around the whole arena
and there's not a single other chair
that doesn't have a shirt.
And I was like, okay, that's a weird start to this trip.
By itself means nothing.
And all of a sudden, this song comes on
over the loudspeakers, and usually at a basketball game,
they play a song for 20 seconds.
But this time they played this whole song,
and it was Phil Collins, I Can Feel It in the Air Tonight.
And I had this weird superstition as a little girl that when that song came on, it was going to be a good night.
It was a weird superstition. It's just everything's going to be all right because Phil Collins is here.
And he sings that song and it comes on the airwaves and it's just everything's going to be okay.
And it was in that moment, because keep in mind I'm having this Kundalini whatever going on with me,
that I realized that I wasn't completely
without superstition.
I wasn't completely without belief because I still believed in Phil Collins.
And so then I said, okay, well, what if I just start to be hyper present and I start
paying attention to what happens around me?
What if I am in a simulation and this is a video game?
What will the video game reveal to me?
Well, that's when stuff got weird. So this guy to the right of me came in
and he's wearing a Celtic shirt
and he sits down next to me and a guy to the left of me
comes in wearing a warrior shirt.
The guy to the left of me stands up taught
and like a military person when they do the national anthem.
You can tell a little bit about him because of this.
You can be like, okay, well, he might be a veteran
or he's very least patriotic.
The guy to the left of me from the Bay Area
didn't stand up for the national anthem.
He sat it out.
When Kathy Gifford got up
and started talking about gun control,
this is the woman who was shot in Arizona,
the guy on the right sat down,
the guy on the left stood up and started cheering.
So just so I can keep them straight, now the guy from the Bay area, the liberal guy stands up.
Yeah, he stands up for gun control. Yeah, the guy to the right sits down for gun control.
And I realized I'm in the middle of America. I'm in the middle of the great divide of what
divides our country. And it's like representing and playing out right in front of me with these
two guys. So they started fighting over me because it started with the game with the Celtics winning.
And so the guy from the Celtics was talking shit to the guy from the Warriors.
And the guy from the Warriors team was just this insufferable entitled person.
Like when he showed up, he took all the green shirts and threw them.
And I ended up with a green shirt finally. And he's like, I don't need these. I'm a champion.
I got plenty of, I mean, he was just rude. So the guy on the right at some point about
when the Celtics start losing, the Warriors start winning,
he starts getting angry and I can tell,
you can just tell the tension
that a fist fight's about to happen.
So he looks at me and he says, are you with him?
This is which guy, sorry.
The Celtics guy.
Oh yeah, the Celtics guy, okay.
Yeah, he's like, are you with him?
And I said, no, I'm not with him.
And he goes, well, who are you with him? And I said, no, I'm not with him. And he goes, well, who are you with? And I was like, well, basketball. And he goes, what? And I said, yeah,
I'm here for basketball. And he looks at me like you were absolutely freaking out of your mind,
woman. Like you bought a ticket to the finals game, the last game, you flew across the country
because he asked me where I was from and you don't even have a team?
I was like, no, I don't have a team,
just here for basketball.
So the guy to the left hears this and he goes,
oh, the Moyers guy and he goes,
you're about the meta game, I get it.
And I was like, well, what is the meta game?
And he starts teaching me all about the meta game.
And then I get a knowing.
What the fuck is the meta game?
Oh, it's paying attention to like the popcorn people,
the business. I see, I got it.
Of basketball. I see.
Meta within meta within meta within.
Yeah, sure.
I mean, you can find lots of metagames.
Got it, got it, you're into the metagame.
Okay, uh-huh.
Yeah, so I told him, I said, well, maybe I am.
And so I started playing the metagame with him.
And the guy to the right,
I got a knowing again, a weird intuition,
a voice, if you will, that said to turn around
to him and tell him that their main player, the Celtics, and I don't know his name, but
when he comes to the Warriors and he comes to the Bay Area, he brings his three-year-old
son and to tell him that his favorite player is a good father.
And so I told him this and all of a sudden you could see all the angst and the anger
in his body just disappear.
It just softened and he wasn't fighting anymore.
Now this is, I can't do it.
This is the Warriors guy?
Celtics guy.
Sorry.
So he told the Celtics guy about the Celtics player.
Got it.
And all of a sudden, because he's losing, I got the sense that he probably scraped together
money to come see his team win finally on his home turf and it was like a dream come
true for him and it wasn't happening. And so I took a moment to give him love and then
that was it. And then I thought this can't be the reason why I came to Boston is to start
a fight between two sports guys. This cannot be why I got a weird vision of an Irish guy.
This cannot be it. So I went back to my hotel room and I got
a bottle of water and I go up to the front desk and I say, can you build this to my room?
Room 340. And the person behind the desk looks at me and says, you don't exist. And I said,
excuse me? And they said, yeah, you don't exist. And they pull their monitor around
and tap on it. And they're like, see, there's nobody in that room.
There's nobody in room 340.
I said, I guarantee you I'm in this room.
I guarantee you I have a key to this room.
I guarantee if I go up there, my stuff is still there
unless you got rid of it.
And they were like, nobody's been in this room for a week.
I'm like, that's not possible.
It's just not possible.
So I call my assistant and I put her on speakerphone.
I'm like, tell me the number for our reservation.
She rattles it off, the guy puts it in.
Sorry, you don't exist.
And I'm like, okay, this is getting weird.
Well, I'm just gonna go to my room where I don't exist
and what do you want me to do with this water?
And he said, keep it.
I was like, okay, that's really strange.
So I went to sleep and the next day I woke up
and like any good science experiment, I went back down to the front desk and there was a different person there and I grabbed a KitKat bar.
And I went up to them and I said, can you put this on room 340? And they said sure and they said the same thing again. You don't exist.
Well that really put me on tilt because I was like, this is getting weird. What do you mean I don't exist?
I was like, what do you want me to do with the candy bar? Keep it. Remember I said I went there and I had this
premonition that everything would be given to me. So I start walking around
the neighborhood and I'm looking for another shirt. So I've got a Celtic
shirt that the guy, the Warriors guy threw at me. But I need another shirt
for the next day because I'm there for three days. So I got to find another
shirt and I wanted one that wasn't made in China.
So I went around from store to store to store
looking at labels, finally gave up
and I end up at this food court
and I hear Phil Collins play.
And that stops me in my tracks.
I'm like, again, you don't normally hear Phil Collins
two days in a row.
That's weird.
Groundhog Day Redux.
Right, and so I start recording it,
but all of a sudden I look over to the right of me
and there's a guy dressed in all white.
He's got a white hat on, white glasses,
white shirt, white shoes,
and I think he was wearing blue jeans.
And I have this feeling that I know him.
I'm like, how is it possible that I know that guy?
It's not possible.
I'm like, sign, stay on target, find your shirt.
But there was this pulling, this magnetism,
this knowing, this feeling,
this voice. I don't know what you want to call it once you have one of these awakenings, but it is
unmistakable that if I didn't go over and talk to him, the whole point of coming to Boston was for
nothing. And I was like, okay, so I wander over to this guy and he's talking to a young man
and I said, I'm sorry, do you mind if I bother
you? Do you know me? And he looks at me, he's like, no, I do not know you. And he looks
at me like I'm crazy because I kind of am.
What I like is that you were like, do I know you? Do you know me?
Yeah, do I know you? No, I said, do I know you? That's very Cheyenne.
And he's like, I don't know you.
I've never met you.
You don't know me.
And I was like, well, are you a VC?
And he goes, no.
And I'm like, are you in the tech industry?
No.
Did you ever live in the Bay Area?
No.
And I start asking all these questions.
And finally I'm like, I'm sorry, I'm being rude.
What are you guys up to?
And he says, well, I'm talking to my friend here because he has a startup and he's got a company that he's building and I'm trying to help him with it.
And I was like, oh, so you are in the tech. And he's like, no, no,
I'm not in technology. And I was like, well, what do you do?
And the guy's like, I'm a t-shirt entrepreneur. I go, no way.
You're a t-shirt entrepreneur. Okay. What kind of shirts do you make? And he says,
well, you can have as many as you like if you can guess what they mean.
And so he lays them all out on this table, and each one of them is a different color,
and in the middle of each shirt is a square with another color in it,
and then there's this weird hex code and then some weird Latin root name.
So I deduced by looking at it that the hex code was probably a color,
and the Latin root name was some kind of condition.
So that's what I told him.
I said, gleaning from what appears to me
as a condition and a color.
And he goes, yes, each one of these shirts
represents a type of color blindness.
And then he looks at me and he goes,
you know, we all live in different realities.
And I was like, what?
And that's when the guy in white says, Cyan Bannister.
And I look at him and I'm like, oh,
we do know each other.
And he said, yes, I met you
in the basement at TED
several years ago, like
ten years ago, or eight years ago.
And there was a big party
going on, and there was a bunch of
people who,
not even a bunch of people, a handful of people,
I want to say like a dozen people that went into the basement to hide. And I was one of
those dozens people. I was down there with like Linus Torvald.
Hiding meaning like escape the crowds.
Escape the crowd. Yeah. So I'm down there with Linus Torvald and all the people who
don't want to be around crowds. And this guy walked in and all of a sudden the movie of meeting him played in my
mind and it must have played in his at the same time because we were answering
each other's sentences and I said I was leaving because the party was still too
big and there was too many people coming into the introvert space and as I was
leaving you were coming in and I said hi my name's Cyan Bannister. I like your outfit. And he said, hi, my name's Tango. I like your outfit, too.
Is this where the introverts hang out? I said, yes. Have fun. I'm leaving.
That was the end of our interaction. So I said, have you ever met again after that? And he said, no, we'd never hung out a single time after that. And he's like, but it's okay I died five years ago
and I was like what do you mean you died five years ago and he said well I have a very strange
heart condition it's a very rare heart condition that Einstein also had and the only person who
could operate on me is here in Boston. And so he told me, the surgeon, that he couldn't leave
Boston and he tells me I'm stuck in Groundhog Day.
I can't go anywhere because I can't be more than 10 minutes
away from the surgeon otherwise I might die.
And I was like, well, tell me more about this death
that you had, he said, well, they had to lower my heart rate,
they had to stop my heart and kill me
in order to do this operation.
So I wasn't even sure if this guy was alive.
Okay, I'm having a really weird time mentally.
And so I'm touching him and I'm like, are you real now?
Are you alive now? Do you exist?
And he's like, I'm not really sure if I exist or not.
He goes, I always ponder this question.
So anyway, I take my two shirts, I go back to my hotel room.
I get, we exchanged phone numbers, by the way.
And I run the experiment again,
and there's another person at the desk,
and I still don't exist.
And so I call my assistant, and I'm like,
get me out of here.
I think I can't handle any more of this.
I think I need to be around loved ones
because I'm losing my mind.
And so she tries to get me a flight out,
and every flight she books me on gets canceled.
So I messaged a spiritual friend of mine and I say, I'm in Boston.
What do I do?
And he says, you might enjoy a duck boat ride.
Good spiritual advice.
Right.
And so I get angry.
I'm like, I'm not going on a duck boat in this condition with my mind doing all this weird stuff. Are you crazy?
And my assistant says, well, you never have not listened to him before. Why are you not listening to him now?
So I was like, fuck it, get me a ticket to a duck boat.
So she gets me a ticket and if you go to these duck boats in Boston, it's first come first serve.
You don't get to choose your duck boat. You just get on the duck boat, you know, but the next duck boat is yours.
So I get on this duck boat and there's nobody on it.
And so I take a seat that looks like it's made
for a single person and it's facing sideways.
So it's not facing front or back.
And it's definitely not the captain, it's not the wheel.
So I take that seat and this guy gets on the boat
and he says to me, are you the new narrator?
And I looked at him and I said, no.
And he goes, well, unless you want to narrate,
you got to get out of my seat, because that's where I sit.
And I was like, okay, where should I sit?
And he's like, right in front of me.
Sit right in front of me. I said, okay.
So then the captain gets on and the captain drives the car
until it becomes a boat and all these families file on.
And suddenly, he's got a microphone and this guy starts talking to only me, only me.
It's like everyone on the boat disappears.
And he looks at me and he says,
when you think that you're so important or so big
and your ego starts getting the best of you,
go to the planetarium.
Realize that you're part of a galaxy among galaxies
and you're just a little piece of dust clinging to a rock.
And he starts telling me story after story.
And, but what was really interesting was that he started
breaking down Gurdjieff's philosophy on a book.
What?
Yeah. And I was like, this is getting really strange.
And I'd love to know what the rest of the people were thinking too.
They're just like, what the fuck did I pay for?
Yeah. Well, I don't think, I think they were going back to sleeping.
I think they were asleep and they really weren't paying attention to anything he
was saying. They were just like, he was moaning on, droning on to them.
But for me he was dropping like truth bombs.
So we're about to go in the water and he looks at me and he goes,
are you ready to be baptized? And I said, I think so. Yeah, sure. Let's do this.
And he's like, okay, great. Because there's a decision in life where sometimes you have
to relinquish control. You have to surrender to someone else or to something higher. And
right now is that moment where you can get off this boat and be on dry land, but once we're in the water, I'm in charge. You are no longer in charge. Can you surrender?
And I was like, I surrender? And we go into the water and the sun, remember I told you that the
sun was the second thing after air? The sun hits my face and I just start sobbing. And it felt like being baptized. It felt
like I was being touched again by something profoundly beautiful, profoundly reaffirming
of life, profound about my purpose and my place in this world. And then he pulls up to a mental
health institution in Boston. I don't know if you've seen this
building, but it's like this horrible, brutalist building.
He pulls up to it in the amphibious duck boat.
Yes, in the amphibious duck boat.
Okay.
So, the boat pulls up to this mental health institution and he says to us, you know, sometimes you're just having a conversation with God,
or with the universe, or whatever, and you're on a spiritual path but people think you've lost
your mind and you're crazy and they lock you up in that place. And he goes, I don't know how you're
going to get better if that happens. And he said, but there's beauty everywhere and it's hidden in
plain sight and if you look at that building, long enough,
something really pretty will emerge from it.
And then he started using kind of like a kid-like voice,
which triggered all the children on the boat to go,
a frog.
And I was looking at this building and not seeing a frog.
And I was like, okay, I'm looking for the frog,
I'm looking for the frog.
And all of a sudden, a frog emerges from the building.
And once you see it, you can't unsee it. So if you go to Boston, look for the frog and all of a sudden a frog emerges from the building. And once you see it, you can't unsee it.
So if you go to Boston, look for the frog building, there's a frog that shoots out
of the building. And then you're like, wow, there was a frog there the whole time.
And he explains to me, he said, you know, when we're children, we see all this
magic. We're plugged into it.
We're part of the source. And as we get older, we start cosplaying, obviously, and
start putting on these costumes and we start telling ourselves these lies.
And we lose touch of this magic that's just right there in plain sight, because we become
calcified to it. And when we got back to the duck boat, he asked me to stay. My first instinct as
a woman is I'm being hit on. So I'm like, oh crap.
So I'm the last person off
because I was the first person on.
So I'm like, I have no way.
I always do like threat assessments.
I'm like, shit, how do I get out of here?
I'm stuck.
And so I'm like, what is the worst
that could happen with this guy?
Like, I'll just stick around and talk to him.
He could be interesting.
So I get off the boat.
He asked me to wait.
He says, wait on this bench.
And I said, okay.
And then I watched him for 45 minutes
go to each individual person that worked
at this duck boat company and hold their hand
and thank them for showing up that day.
Thank you for driving the boat and giving it 100%.
Thank you for taking the tickets and giving it 100%.
He goes on and on and on and on.
And then he eventually gets back to me and I said,
are you a manager? And he's like, no. And gets back to me and I said, are you a manager?
And he's like, no.
And he looks at me and he says, why are you here?
And I'm like, well, a spiritual guide of mine
told me I needed to go on a duck boat ride.
And clearly I did.
And then the voice, the knowing happened
and it said to tell him something,
which is ask him why he's a duck boat narrator. So I did. I said why
are you a duck boat narrator? And he said well I have ADHD and I'm a comedian and
I can't hold down a job and I started doing this job because a friend of mine
was a duck boat narrator and I got hooked because I started telling stories
that I hoped would improve a family's life one tour at a time. If I could reach one person a day,
I feel like I've done the work. I feel like I've done great work. That I have a purpose in this
world. And then the voice says, tell him he's doing God's work. So I'm like, I don't know
what I'm supposed to tell you this, but you're doing God's work.
And then tell him that someday his wife will understand.
And when I did that, this man welled up and cried.
And the boy said, his tears are not for you.
You need to leave now.
So, I said, your tears are not for me.
Sorry, I got to go. I got to leave now. So I said your tears are not for me sorry I gotta go I
gotta leave this place and that's when he said you're beautiful he said you are
really beautiful and the voice says I'm just a mirror you're the beautiful one
and when I got back to my hotel they suddenly knew who I was and I was able
to leave but until that point I did not exist and I
was in this weird time work of weird events that kept happening like the
person dressed in all white you know and things were just being given to me.
Things being given to me happened for a few weeks after that like people were
giving me sandwiches and giving me necklaces and giving me really weird
stuff. And the only thing that I can think of is that when you have a spiritual experience like this,
you just show up in the world differently. You're more inviting, you're more open.
You know, I'm trying to think of the science. At the end of the day, I like to think about science
and how this all could work. And I think there's probably an explanation for it.
But ultimately, I think we're connected on some sort of a level that we
don't quite understand because we just don't understand E. But I just want to
share that story because it's one of many stories that has happened to me
since I watched that movie. That's just one of you many. And the miraculous thing
about Tango is Tango texted me and he's now traveling the world.
He had amnesia and the encounter with me brought back all his memories.
So that's wild.
Yeah.
What an amazing life you laid.
You and your husband and what a broadly and intensely curious life you have led.
Curious, not in the like raisin eyebrows, strange sense,
but curious in the very literal sense of
engaging with things around you
and seeking out the things that stick out,
seeking out the things that blend in.
I've just been struck over
and over again by how relentlessly curious you are. I think that is a virtue. I think that is,
I think that is a real virtue. Sayan, this has been an incredible conversation. We've covered
a lot more than I expected to. And is there anything else you'd like to leave my audience with,
Is there anything else you'd like to leave my audience with,
point them to, request of them, anything at all that you'd like to add
before we wind to a close?
Yeah, I'm writing a book.
You mentioned my sub stack in the beginning
and my sub stack, if you go and read it, it's free.
You don't have to pay.
The only reason why I charge anything
is if anyone wants to leave a comment,
they have to pay to leave a comment.
So if you're going to be unkind, you got to pay me.
I learned that from Zivity, but what it is, is it's source material for my book.
And it's me remembering things like a child, the story about, you know, my mother
and the $20 bill is in there.
There's all these stories in there.
And it's me doing this search internally for you know how I could be a
better person and how I can show up in this world in a better way and so I
recommend a lot of people get a lot out of it. There's a lot of stories that you
might resonate with. I love hearing from people and when I get the feedback that
a story resonates I incorporate it into the actual physical book. So I am working on a book and I'm about halfway done with it. And so my
call to the audience is to keep encouraging me to finish it and to keep
encouraging me to write on Substack because I get disheartened. I get sad
sometimes writing these stories. I'm human. But I think that I want to write a story that isn't
about business, but it is about philosophy. And it is about some of the lessons that I've learned.
But I found that in order for philosophy to really hit home, you can't be obvious. So you
have to tell a tale. And so it's a tale of my life. but hopefully at the end of it, it unlocks something inside
of you, the reader, that helps you in some way in the way that the razor's edge helped
me.
If I could have one razor's edge moment with a human being, I will feel like I have really
achieved something in life.
Uglyduckling.substack.com.
Why Ugly Duckling?
My mother was very devastatingly beautiful
and at least I thought so.
And I think that that beauty gave her,
it opened a lot of doors for her
and also allowed her to manipulate people with her beauty.
And she tried a weird tough love approach
with my sister and I,
and she basically told us we're ugly.
And she said, you're very ugly, so you better be smart,
because you're not gonna find a good man
if you're not smart.
And if you don't find a man,
at least you can provide for yourself.
And when you hear that as a little girl,
I took it to heart,
and it definitely gave me a sense of dysphoria.
It detached me from my body.
And I just thought I was just the ugliest creature that
ever lived. But she told me that someday I'd find my swans because I was just an ugly duck among
ducks searching for my swans. And I didn't know what it meant, you know, she kept telling me this.
And so really it's about overcoming the fear of that narrative and looking for my swans.
I am turning into a swan.
I mean, the person you're talking to right now is becoming a swan, finally, and shedding
that narrative and shedding that story.
And so that's why it's called Ugly Knuckly.
Well, I think of you as a swan and I can see it and I'm so grateful for the time that
you've offered in this conversation and the stories that you've shared and the
vulnerability that you showed so thank you for that very much.
Thank you Tim, thank you for all that you do and for opening people up and for
sharing stories and you're clearly on a mission and you have a purpose, a really
great purpose and I want to hear about and you have a purpose, a really great purpose.
And I want to hear about after you do dice rolling for a while
because I know you take things to the next level.
You know, you don't half-ass do anything.
So I want to see what comes with your dice experiments.
Yeah, for sure.
I will gladly share and there's a lot to explore here.
For people listening, there's a lot that we will
be linking to in the show notes, as always at tomb.blogslash.podcast.cyan, C-Y-A-N,
Cyan Bannister, at scientist, C-Y-A-N-T-I-S-T on X and L for uglyduckling.substack.com. Check it out.
I've been very impressed with your writing and
encourage people to take a look and to continue encouraging you to write more. And for everybody
who is tuned in, I'll give you my usual sign off, which is until next time, be just a little bit
kinder than is necessary, not only to others, but also to cancel.
It is basically a half page that I send out every Friday
to share the coolest things I've found or discovered
or have started exploring over that week.
It's kind of like my diary of cool things.
It often includes articles I'm reading, books I'm reading,
albums perhaps, gadgets, gizmos,
all sorts of tech tricks and so on that get sent to me by my friends, including a lot of podcasts, perhaps, gadgets, gizmos, all sorts of tech tricks and so on that get sent to
me by my friends, including a lot of podcasts, guests, and these strange esoteric things
end up in my field and then I test them and then I share them with you.
So if that sounds fun, again, it's very short, a little tiny bite of goodness before you
head off for the weekend, something to think about.
If you'd like to try it out, just go to tim.blogslashfriday, type that into your browser, tim.blogslashfriday,
drop in your email and you'll get the very next one.
Thanks for listening.
Way back in the day, in 2010, I published a book called The Four-Hour Body, which I probably
started writing in 2008.
And in that book, I recommended many, many, many things.
First generation continuous glucose monitor,
and cold exposure, and all sorts of things
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After consuming this product for more than a decade,
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Wake up, water in the shaker bottle, AG1, boom.
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