The Tim Ferriss Show - #788: Naval Ravikant and Aaron Stupple — How to Raise a Sovereign Child, A Freedom-Maximizing Approach to Parenting
Episode Date: January 16, 2025Aaron Stupple (@astupple) is the author of The Sovereign Child: How a Forgotten Philosophy Can Liberate Kids and Their Parents. Naval Ravikant (@naval) is the co-founder of AngelList. He has ...invested in more than 100 companies, including many mega-successes, such as Twitter, Uber, Notion, Opendoor, Postmates, and Wish.Stick around after the end of our three-person conversation to listen to an exclusive bonus segment that Naval and Aaron recorded with extra practical tips, as well as incremental, day-to-day experiments you can test and apply. It’s super tactical, so you won’t want to miss it. It begins at 02:17:01.Sponsors:Sundays for Dogs ultra-high-quality dog food: https://sundaysfordogs.com/tim (save 50% on your first order) Seed's DS-01® Daily Synbiotic broad spectrum 24-strain probiotic + prebiotic: https://Seed.com/Tim (Use code 25TIM for 25% off your first month's supply)ShipStation shipping software: https://www.shipstation.com/tim (60-day free trial!)*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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up in this episode.
Humans are unique that they are interested in stuff.
And it's actually a deep philosophical question of what is an interest?
How does a person know that something is interesting?
And that is the magic.
Elon wants to preserve consciousness as this light flickering in the universe.
I want to preserve interests.
A kid that's interested in something that is absolutely precious.
And I want to cultivate that.
I want to pour fuel on that fire and anything to preserve that.
And so that's where the adversary comes in.
You will call what you want.
I don't want to step on that or squash that.
I want my kid to see me as a gateway to interests, as someone who just like can make things more
interesting. Anything that I'm interested, they add to it. as a gateway to interests, as someone who just like can make things more interesting,
anything that I'm interested, they add to it.
So if I'm interested in video games, great.
My daughter is interested in YouTube.
And now she's filming and trying to make YouTube videos
and she's interested,
and then she's got to figure out how the camera works.
And then like all this stuff is there.
And so I want to get her like, okay,
let me get you a camera.
Let me get you something to set it up.
Let me get you some, you know, which dolls are you using?
How can I help? I'll hold the camera, right? Let's do a storyboard. Let me get you something to set it up. Let me get you some, you know, which dolls are you using? How can I help?
I'll hold the camera, right?
Let's do a storyboard.
You know what a storyboard is?
Like that's what I mean.
I think taking children seriously could be how do you preserve and augment your kid's
interests and how are you always an enabler and a supporter and a guide and never someone
who's just pouring cold water because that's not right.
Hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode
of The Tim Ferriss Show, where it is my job to deconstruct world-class performers or people
who are thinking on the edges and putting forth compelling ideas that may or may not
be extreme. In the case of this particular conversation
I think you will find some of them extreme but there are often little gems
Hiding at the edges that you can use my guests today are Aaron Stupple. You can find him on X
That is the artist formerly known as Twitter at a Stupple a stu pp le
He is a board certified internal medicine physician.
He focuses on reviving the non-coercive parenting movement
derived from the philosophy of Popper and Deutsch
called Taking Children Seriously.
We'll explain what all that means.
His book, The Sovereign Child,
How a Forgotten Philosophy Can Liberate Kids
and Their Parents, gives practical examples
of this freedom maximizing approach to parenting
gleaned from his experience as a father of five. Naval Ravikant, my old friend, you can find him on
x at Naval, is the co-founder of AngelList. He's done so many things, but I'll try to keep it short.
He's invested in more than 100 companies, including many mega successes such as Twitter, Uber, Notion, Opendoor, Postmates,
and Wish. There's a lot more to Naval but I'll keep it to that and you can listen to my earlier
episodes with him on the podcast by searching naval at tim.blog slash podcast. Now just a quick
disclaimer, this episode is more of a debate than my usual interviews. I push back on a lot
This episode is more of a debate than my usual interviews. I push back on a lot and that is part of the fun.
I hope you enjoy the extra spice.
And if you do like this,
I'm not planning on being combative,
but I do like stress testing ideas,
please let me know at at Tferris on X.
That's T-F-E-R-R-I-S-S.
This episode is a sharp contrast
with the Dr. Becky Kennedy episode on parenting.
And I encourage
you to listen to both, because you'll probably pick up useful things from each of those.
Let's start with the basics. Many parents want to safely increase the range of freedom for their
kids. This is a conversation with someone, Aaron, who has taken a very radical approach to child
freedom, albeit one that is based on a real-life parenting movement. Listeners will find some of his recommendations or practices excessive and extreme.
I think that's very fair to say.
However, you will also likely pick up some ideas for expanding your kid's freedom, creativity
and discovery, at least in some domains like food, sleep or screens.
I certainly took a lot of notes and I'll be revisiting this episode
myself. But first, a few quick words from the fine sponsors who make this show possible. I use all of
their products. So this is not me just shilling. I've tried it all. I've vetted it all. And here
they are. I want to give my pooch, Molly, the best of everything. She is my companion.
She is my guardian.
She's been with me for almost 10 years now, 24 seven.
I want to give her the absolute best
and that includes food, especially food.
It is the bedrock of her health.
That's why I give her Sundays for Dogs,
this episode's sponsor.
Sundays is air dried, which locks in more nutrition
and flavor than other cooking methods, while also making it ultra convenient to store, scoop and serve. As you
guys know, I'm on the road all the time and Sundays is convenient. I no longer have to
spend time prepping meals or figuring out what is best for Molly. I'd rather spend that
time playing or hiking with her. I'm in the mountains right now. She wants to be in the
snow.
Sundays for dogs meets or surpasses industry standards using high quality ingredients.
That's the focus.
Not through synthetic vitamins,
which is what most other dog food companies do.
Sundays knows your pup is an important member
of your family, so they only use USDA grade meat,
which is fit for human consumption.
So, check it out.
Get 50% off of your first order of Sundays.
Go to sundaysfordogs.com slash tim or use code tim
at checkout. That's S-U-N-D-A-Y-S-F-O-R-D-O-G-S dot com slash tim sundaysfordogs.com slash tim.
I've been fascinated by the microbiome and probiotics as well as prebiotics for decades, but
Products never quite live up to the hype. I've tried so many dozens and there are a host of problems
Now things are starting to change and that includes this episode sponsor seeds
DS01 daily symbiotic now it turns out that this product seeds
DS01 was recommended to me many months ago by a PhD microbiologist, so I started using it well before their team ever reached out
to me about sponsorship, which is kind of ideal because I used it unbitten, so to speak,
came in fresh.
Since then, it has become a daily staple and one of the few supplements I travel with.
I have it in a suitcase literally about 10 feet from me right now.
It goes with me.
I've always been very skeptical of most probiotics due to the lack of science behind them and the fact that many do not survive digestion to begin with.
Many of them are shipped dead, DOA.
But after incorporating two capsules of Seeds DSO-1 into my morning routine, I have noticed improved digestion and improved overall
health seem to be a bunch of different cascading effects. Based on some reports, I'm hoping
it will also have an effect on my lipid profile, but that is definitely TBD. So why is seeds
DSO-1 so effective? What makes it different? For one, it is a two-in-one probiotic and
prebiotic formulated with 24 clinically and scientifically studied strains that have systemic
benefits in and beyond the gut. That's all well and good, but if the probiotic strains don't make
it to the right place, in other words your colon, they're not as effective. So Seed developed a
proprietary capsule and capsule delivery system that survives digestion and delivers a precision
release of the live and viable probiotics to the colon, which is exactly where you want
them to go to do the work. I've been impressed with SEED's dedication to science-backed engineering
with completed gold standard trials that have been subjected to peer review and published
in leading scientific journals, a standard you very rarely see from companies who develop
supplements. If you've ever thought about probiotics but haven't known where to start,
this is my current vote for great gut health.
You can start here.
It costs less than $2 a day.
That is the DSO-1.
And now you can get 25% off your first month with code 25TIMM.
And that is 25% off of your first month of SEEDS DSO-1 at seed.com slash TIMM using code
25TIMM, all put together. That's seed.com slash Tim using code 25 Tim all put together.
That's c.com slash Tim.
And if you forget it, you will see the coupon code on that page.
One more time, c.com slash Tim code 25 Tim.
At this altitude, I can run flat out for a while before my hands start shaking.
Can I answer your personal question?
No, I would assume it would be time.
What if I get the opposite?
I'm a cybernetic organism living in a world of chaos. I'm a cybernetic organism living in a world of chaos. I'm a cybernetic organism living in a world of chaos. I'm a cybernetic organism living in a world of chaos. I'm a cybernetic organism living in a world of chaos. a half mile before my hands start shaking. Can I ask you a personal question? No, what is it?
What if I give you the opposite?
I'm a cybernetic organism living this year over a metal endoskeleton.
Me, Tim, Ferris, Joe.
Brother Naval, Brother Aaron, nice to see you both.
And Naval, would you, nice to see you both.
And Naval, would you like to kick us off, grab the reins, go to town?
Aaron Stupel here, who I think we met online.
We met online on various channels, Twitter, AirChat, and just talking about various things.
He came out of the critical rationalism crowd, which is a group of thinkers
that surround David Deutsch and his philosophy. And Aaron struck me as someone at first who
I was like, this man is insane. But I realized in a good way, he's a very ground up, very
principled thinker. And what I really liked about talking to Aaron, who came out kind
of as out of nowhere, is that he will take these philosophically sound
positions that are very controversial and then he will just defend them indefatigably without
tiring. He'll just keep going, he'll keep repeating himself if we need to, he'll explain it from 10
different angles, but he is very tied into the idea of using creativity to find answers to problems and to not using coercion.
And so he would end up in these rabbit holes where I would find myself having to, you know,
usually when I meet someone like that, I usually side with them, I learn from them, and I kind of
try to help preach that to the rest of the world. Here, it was a little bit the opposite. I found
myself in the defensive. I found him too radical, too hard to take seriously. But as time went on, I actually realized he was right about a lot of
things. It gave me that very uncomfortable feeling. And so Aaron actually wrote a book
called The Sovereign Child. He's been espousing a theory around taking children seriously,
which is an older philosophy, but he's, I would say, the best expositor of that philosophy.
But he also
had really great takes on everything from, is AI going to end the world? To, what do
you do if you walk into an emergency room because he's a doctor? To how to run a classroom
because I think he's also been a public school teacher. So I just found him very compelling
person to talk to. And I'm still honestly trying to digest a lot of what he has to say.
And I think some of it has seeped into my life and my family life and some of it still hasn't.
So I'm here to challenge him and interrogate him and to reveal him to the rest of the world.
I will say that this may end up being one of your most controversial episodes for two
reasons. I think one is it really attacks at a core level the entire system we have
around how we view children and raise children. So it's really a big F core level the entire system we have around how we view children
and raise children. So it's really a big F you to the entire system, everything schooling
to parenting, child raising to how do you take care of the most precious thing in your
life. And second, it's a bunch of dudes, it's a bunch of men standing around talking about
this. I don't see the wives or the women. So, you know, you can just call this the bro parenting episode, right?
This is a bunch of dads and potential dads talking about what is the best
way to raise sovereign children.
So let me just start off by maybe asking Aaron, give us a very
quick background on yourself.
And also mention how many kids you have, just so we underscore some bona fides.
Zero.
He actually has zero children.
Zero, zero children. It's all theoretical. I've got five kids ages seven to one. Thanks so much
for those kind words, Naval. I really appreciate that and it's been so much fun talking with you
and your cohort on AirChat and Twitter and elsewhere. I started off as a public school
teacher coming out of college and spent five years doing that and was really kind of deep
into human nature and the experience of young people and formed some pretty
strong ideas about human nature and children and then converted that into
medical school and I've been a physician, practicing physician now for the past 10 years, internal medicine. And along the way I got into one of our mutual heroes, David
Deutsch and his take on Karl Popper's philosophy. And within that, David Deutsch
and his colleague Sarah Fitzclaridge, they both developed this theory on
children and childhood called taking children seriously.
I stumbled upon this with the birth of our first child and I thought, boy, this is pretty
radical and pretty interesting.
After reading more about it and learning more about it, I was kind of faced with, do I apply
this to my own kid?
Because it's very different from the typical kind of conventional view on parenting and
what I'd already been very comfortable with coming out of teaching. The short stories that I did, my wife and I, she is very
open-minded and was open to these ideas and we found ourselves just doing this 100% basically.
And so we've got five kids now, we've been doing this for seven years and it's remarkable. I've
been into philosophy as an amateur for, you know amateur since college, but this was the first time that
was a really strong application of these ideas to my life.
And I can't think of a more transformative, day-to-day, impactful, practical, applicable
set of ideas than this set of ideas as applied to children.
I will say I've incorporated maybe, you know,
call it 30 to 50% of what you're saying.
I was already directionally inclined,
but I've managed to incorporate some of it.
And my wife and I are open to more of the rest,
although it's pretty radical.
So let's get into it.
So this is an example,
the philosophy that you're talking about,
the taking children serious philosophy,
which you lay out in the Sovereign Child, the book, you basically say the kids
have no sleep schedules.
You don't control what they eat.
They have unrestricted screen time.
I'm not even sure I have unrestricted screen time, but your kids have unrestricted screen
time.
You don't force them to go to school. You don't
make them do chores. You don't have rules like don't hit each other. You try not to
mediate sibling conflict. You don't force them to share things. They're not forced to
say thank you or obliged to say thank you or even badgered to say thank you. There's
no real punishment. There's no timeouts or withholding of things. There's no making them spend time with the grandparents
or the extended family.
You don't force them to brush their teeth.
You don't make them sit at the dinner table.
That's optional.
So what are we talking about here?
Do you have children or do you have roommates?
Feral animals.
Feral animals, exactly.
So what is this all about?
Where did this come from?
The typical way of looking at parenting is the question of what do you allow and what
do you disallow?
And almost every view on parenting is a discussion of, well, we allow this, but we don't allow
that.
And these are the methods that we use to enforce these limitations.
And these are the justifications that we have for enforcing these limitations. And what I do, my wife and I do, is we just step away from that question altogether
and instead view problems as they arise and try to find solutions to those problems
rather than appealing to rules.
The way we interact with our friends and our family, you know, the adults in our lives,
we don't apply rules to people. If we're not crazy about, you know, the adults in our lives, we don't apply rules to people.
If we're not crazy about, you know, what we're having for dinner, we don't say,
okay, this is the rule for dinner time.
We instead try to come up with something that works for everybody.
And so you could just start with sleep, you could start with brushing teeth or eating
food.
The idea is to let kids choose what is interesting or appealing to them
and then deal with problems as they arise. Couldn't every parent say, well, I try to do that.
You know, I tried to convince them that broccoli is good and salmon is good and they should eat
their broccoli and salmon and then they get dessert. And so I try to convince them to do that,
but they don't know any better. And I always try, I always try to negotiate with them. But after a
while you sort of give up
because you realize they're just going to eat chocolate
until they explode.
And so I have to cut that off and say, no, no more ice cream.
And you're going to eat your salmon, your broccoli,
and then you can have your ice cream.
And then there's a little bit of fighting and whining
and then eventually they just get used to it.
So what's wrong with that?
I tried to, I tried to negotiate with them.
The thing that's wrong with it is that every time you force your child to do something,
you inevitably set yourself up as an adversary to your kid. So if you're trying to get them
to eat broccoli, you are introducing a difficulty in their life around food. And food is something
that is, you know, crucial to a person's engagement with the world, a young person. And you want them to learn about broccoli for broccoli's sake. If broccoli is good for you,
you want them to understand broccoli for its own properties.
If chocolate is bad for you, if chocolate makes you feel bad, then you want them to understand that
as mediated by themselves, not because you're introducing yourself into that thing.
So you don't want them to avoid chocolate because they're afraid of dad.
You don't want them to eat broccoli because dad makes you eat broccoli at the dinner table
and you can't go up and do what you want to do because you've got to appease dad.
If broccoli is really important, then it's really important that broccoli is not confused.
If eating well is really important, then it's really important that eating is not confused
by what your parents' expectations are. Let me just zoom out for a minute. So if we look at,
say, David Deutsch and his collaborator on taking children seriously, and for people who want more
on David Deutsch, we might have some mentions and sidebars, but Naval and I did an episode
with David. Why did they land on the tenets that they did for taking children seriously?
And can we know that their approach is right? In other words, like, is there any way to even
know that this is a good approach to parenting?
That's perfect.
It's about knowing.
And there's different theories about how do we know when we know something, right?
We call this epistemology, the theory of knowledge.
And Deutsch's perspective on this is that humans are uniquely knowledge creators.
And the thing about children that's similar to adults
is that they're both knowledge creators in the same way.
And the role of the parent is to facilitate the child
as a burgeoning knowledge creator
and not to foil that process.
And things that foil that process of knowledge creation
and discovery are authorities that arbitrarily
thwart you when you're trying to learn about something.
And so that's how they hit on this originally.
Sarah Fitzclaridge was just very interested in non-coercion and raising children with
zero coercion.
She just had that in her mind as a parent and she kind of searched around for schools
of parenting that had zero coercion,
that had no enforcement of rules.
And the person that she aligned with was David Deutsch, who brought this epistemological
perspective.
And his whole argument is that the problem with coercion is that it blocks knowledge
growth.
And your duty as a parent is to facilitate and foster knowledge growth.
That's the entire, I would say, one way of describing the entire premise.
And I think underneath, deep down, we all kind of know that there's this contradiction
between, okay, we teach kids go to school, obey the rules, do what we say, you don't
know yet, you're not ready, you're not ready, you're not ready.
And then all of a sudden, they go to college and there's a complete flip. Like, now you're free ready, you're not ready, you're not ready. And then all of a sudden they go to college
and there's a complete flip.
Like now you're free, now you get to learn
how to operate in the real world,
you gotta think for yourself.
Why can't you think for yourself?
And this whole time you've domesticated them
as almost like animals so that they can function
in normal society.
You train them to eat, you train them to go to the bathroom,
you train them to go to sleep,
you train them to listen to the teacher. And then all of go to sleep, you train them to listen to the teacher.
And then all of a sudden, they're supposed to be independent thinkers and creators and
knowledge generators.
And I think all of us have a story of how some very important parts of our life are
all about undoing all the things we're taught and discovering for ourselves.
And it could be learning how to learn instead of being forced to learn, learning what to
learn instead of the set of subjects we were given in school. It could be finally figuring out proper diet
and nutrition, which turns out to be the opposite of what we were taught. You know, the FDA
food pyramid is still upside down. It starts with grains and, you know, get your bread
and get your rice. And then it kind of goes down from there and meat is at the bottom.
So a lot of it is about undoing what we learned. A lot of us also have the stories.
I personally have a story.
When I first went to college, I ate the worst food you could imagine.
I just ate complete garbage.
I played a ton of games.
It's mostly what I did.
I spent most of my time in the computer lab playing video games.
And I was just so enamored with the freedom.
Not that my mother was all that restrictive in the first place,
but I just didn't have this abundance of food and screen time that I suddenly did in school.
And I think even as an adult,
we're all still dealing with social media addiction.
We're all still dealing with eating more sugar
than we want to.
We're all still dealing with trying to figure out
the proper diet.
We're all still trying to be disciplined enough to exercise.
We're all still trying not to doom scroll all the time.
So there's a learning process.
And so the question is, when do you start that learning process?
And so I think we have this distinction that kids below a certain age, they're like somewhere
between this is going to be controversial, but somewhere between animals and slaves and
ignoramuses.
Right?
Like they're like animals that you to teach them basic things.
So it sticks.
Like you teach a dog, you teach the kid what to eat, when to eat, how to eat, when to go
to the bathroom. And then they're a little bit of a slave because we can order them around.
We're physically larger than them. Even if we're not physically overpowering them, every
missive is backed up with a threat of, or what else? Well, I'll take it away from you.
It's like with the government, the government says, I'm going to write your ticket for jaywalking. What that really means is I'll put you in
jail if you jaywalk because everything is backed up at the end of the day with the ability
to throw you in jail. The same way, everything you say is apparent is backed up with the
ability of force. And without that, it wouldn't exist. And then finally, we just assume that
the kids are not capable of learning certain things fast enough. They have to brush their
teeth. They have to not eat ice cream because it might cause irreparable damage by the time they're old enough. But I think all of these
are valid concerns and they're worth tackling. And you know, we can go more into them, but
I got a whole list of controversial things to go through with you.
I'm going to be the guy on the sidecar chiming in. Do we have more than one case study of
people who have applied this to children for more than
seven years, like 20 years, 25 years, just because I don't personally know anyone who
has parented their children this way. And so I'm wondering if we have like a sample
set of kids who have been raised over 15, 20 plus years using these methods and how
they turned out.
I'm not familiar with a set. I know some folks,
but I don't want to out them individually,
but I'll even attack the premise of the question.
It's relevant that when we think about kids and what is a good way to parent,
we think in empirical terms and in terms of outcomes and research and
scientific tests and sociology and things like that.
But there's a huge problem when you're trying to answer a what is it essentially a moral question
Trying to answer it scientifically and from a research base or an outcomes basis
So a comparison would be feminism, right?
the arguments for women's liberation were not outcomes based arguments and there were people who were saying that you know what if we
Allow women to
control their own lives, then they're going to be worse off, they're going to be depressed, they're going to be, you know, all sorts of terrible things are going to happen. You can imagine the people who were arguing
against feminism in terms of outcomes could create all sorts of arguments about,
you know, what those outcomes would be. And women arguing in favor, or people
are arguing in favor of feminism, in favor of women's liberation, would say, I don't care what
the outcomes are, I want to control my own life. I'm a full status person and I am morally deserving
to make choices and decisions about my life. And the same goes for all, you know, minority issues and human liberation
movements is that they're moral arguments. They're not scientific
arguments. And it's kind of funny.
If you ask most people like, Hey, you know, when you were young, do you wish
your parents had controlled you more or less? I think most people's complaint
would be that my parents were too controlling, right?
Well, are we dealing with some survivorship bias
where you're asking very smart people who have done well
what they would prefer,
then maybe you're not asking people in jail
the same question.
So I want to explore the moral side of things,
but I'm going to just state my maybe placeholder objection
that if we frame it as a moral argument,
then we take certain lines of questioning off the
table. I will just say my interest in asking that question is what does it refer to? One
of you guys is going to know the Lindy effect, just like the durability of things over time.
I just haven't seen much of this. So I'm curious about it.
Actually there is some Lindy evidence. There's some Lindy evidence. Firstly, keep in mind
that historically children hit puberty age of eight, nine, 10, 11, 12. And they were adults at
that point, they were out conquering nations and having
children. And it's only recently that we moved up to 18. And a
lot of struggle for teenage hood is trying to control an adult as
if they're a child. And so you can already see that it happens
at a certain age. Then secondly, it's not an all or nothing
thing. And Aaron lays this out in his book,
which is basically about where can you start. So for example, I'll say with my children,
my children are closer to somewhere we in homeschooled and unschooled. And they wake
up when they want and they sleep relatively when they want. And they do have a lot more
permissiveness around eating and screen time. The amount of screen time they spend is horrific.
I think one of my kids was showing me the other day, he did eight hours of screen time. The amount of screen time they spend is horrific. I think one of my kids was showing good today. He did eight hours of screen time that day, which I think
most parents would have a fit and like one day, eight hours screen time. That's all he
did. So they already have a high level of permissiveness. And I can just say for me
personally that they seem pretty well developed. They're happy, they're healthy, they're pretty
intelligent and they seem to do well relative to their peers. They seem to have less hangups
than I think the average kid would and they have a lot more freedom. But the good news is you don't have to do
this all or nothing. I said all or nothing to be provocative because Aaron's a believer.
He's all the way. But you can start in one area. And so like, what's an example of an
area where you could start, Aaron? The beauty of truth is you don't have to rely on somebody's
study because you know, people who do studies these days, we know how corrupted they are,
right? So we know there's a whole class of people who show up on Twitter
and say source you know as if that's killing your argument like you don't know Harvard
didn't bless this well Harvard wants mandatory education at Harvard so I can't listen to
them they want to indoctrinate my child so let me turn around the question on Univol just
for a second because you mentioned early on you're 30 to 50% incorporated. So what did you incorporate first?
I basically retreated heavily back, okay?
And what I retreated on was,
first, I'm not very authoritarian with the kids.
I never have been.
So if they're around me and they want to eat junk food,
I just hand them the junk food and then I'll leave the room.
So I'm not that responsible.
That's mom's problem.
Yeah, exactly.
So mom and other caretakers might be more restrictive, but I tend not to be, especially
around food, especially when I know what a bad job I personally do with food.
I'm also not that restricted with screen time.
I basically just, you know, after 6 PM they get unlimited screen time and I don't force
them to go to school.
They're a combination of homeschooled and unschooled.
Where I would say I am restrictive is I probably interfere a lot if they're like
fighting, if they're hitting at each other. I'm kind of pushy about like, let's go, let's
go, let's hurry up, you know, we're late, get in the car, that kind of thing. Definitely
the one place where I have a big bugaboo, I think they can get over eating badly as
kids. Young bodies are very resilient and it takes a lifetime to figure out how to eat
well. And I think they can get over even socialization
and emotional hangups and interpersonal conflict. All of that stuff has to be handled on its
own and they have to figure it out.
The two places where I probably interfere a lot is one is I insist on math and reading.
Like you got to do your math and you got to do your reading. If you do your math and reading,
then you're a free individual. Until then, you're a little slave and you don't get to
do what you want. Right? So I'm pretty tough there.
The other one is if one of them is hitting the other, then that's to me is a boundary
that you don't cross.
And I tend to get emotional and tend to interfere.
So those are probably the two places where I'm most restrictive.
But I would say that our kids are closer to wild animals than properly raised children.
But I will say, I think most kids these days
that I run into, most of their friends
who are kind of quote unquote normally raised,
I wouldn't trade places.
Our family has a lot more freedom.
We get along great with our kids.
They're very intelligent, they're very independent,
they're very capable, and they seem to me as well
or better adjusted than any of their peers.
Not to put their peers down,
but I have noticed that all of their peers tend to have a way of getting attention from adults and violating
the rules. And that could be anything from, I'm having allergic reaction to I threw up
to I'm having a meltdown to whatever. And these are all attention seeking behavior to
control adults were normally not controllable. And our kids seem to have a lot less of that.
Maybe it's just anecdotal.
Yeah, I would say the same thing.
Our kids are not wild.
In fact, they do what we ask them to do.
They're very responsive.
Like when my wife asked them to do something, they don't have like a knee-jerk defensiveness.
They're not trying to game us as adversaries or gatekeepers.
It's a very authentic interaction.
And they're very polite.
They say please and thank you to each other.
They bang up against each other so frequently without us trying to intervene that they understand
each other's boundaries.
They're very conscientious.
Obviously, it's a small sample size and there's plenty of other reasons why that might be
the case.
But I would say a lot of people object to removing rules
and say that it's impossible,
a kid will absolutely fall apart.
And a few examples of kids not falling apart
I think does demonstrate that it's possible.
It's possible that removing rules can result
in a very orderly, structured,
and yeah, I would say polite, kind of rule following.
I often say, you know, that I would rather that my kids be disobedient and free and uneducated
than that they're educated and obedient, right?
Because you can always educate yourself.
And most of us who know anything have become self-learners over time.
And learning is always moving target but that independent
thinking that independent streak you can't get back. Everyone I know who is successful in life
has a strong independent streak, no exceptions. Question Aaron, you said rule following but this
is also freedom maximizing parenting philosophy. You also mentioned that if your wife asks for something, the kids will often,
for lack of a better term, comply. So is the teaching then coming from modeling rather
than rules? That's why they say please and thank you. It's not a request. It's something
that you are demonstrating and therefore they're following, or are you explaining the importance
of those things and therefore they end up adopting those behaviors?
We explain when we can, but with little kids, explaining in words rarely works.
And so I think a helpful distinction is it's not that all rules are bad, right?
The rules of chess, the rules of baseball are great.
What's great about rules is when you can opt out of them. And adults can opt out of almost
any set of rules. Rules that adults can't opt out of are called laws and laws are very different
from rules. You can opt out of those too. They're just severe consequences. Right. Well, you can
even, you can stay home, right? Like a man's house is this castle. Like you can avoid the laws of the
road, the rules of the road and just not drive a car. You can ride a bike and walk and, but a kid, a typical kid cannot escape, cannot opt out
of the rule of brushing their teeth, for example, right?
When teeth brushing time comes around, mom or dad will hunt them down and find them and
make them brush their teeth.
So that's not really a rule in the same sense of the rules of chess, where if you want to
say, you know, let's play with different pieces, let's change the way the pieces move, right?
You can adopt those rules or say, I don't want to play chess.
I'm going to go do something else.
So rules are great and actually a huge fan of rules.
In fact, I'm such a fan of rules that I don't want to contaminate rules with this kind of
fake or phony set of rules, which are really, they're not even laws, right?
They are arbitrary, autocratic impositions on a child's life.
Forcing a kid to brush their teeth, I think is a disaster.
People usually think that you have to force rules on kids,
right, it's a necessary evil.
You just have to, nobody wants to be a hard ass,
but you know, when push comes to shove,
they just have to brush their teeth
because kids don't know about cavities, A three-year-old doesn't understand
the concept. And for their own good, right, they would be upset with me later in life
if they have cavities and they said, Dad, you didn't make me brush my teeth and now
I've got awful teeth. You know, they would be rightfully, justifiably upset with me.
And so what do you do in that circumstance? The typical thinking is that, well, it's a
necessary evil
You just have to make them brush their teeth
But the truth is and this getting to the epistemology is that a kid that's not brushing their teeth
Really? That's a problem and the question is are there ways to solve this problem that don't involve me forcing the rule on them and
With any problem there's multiple solutions and brushing teeth is a great example
And with any problem, there's multiple solutions. And brushing teeth is a great example.
What my wife and I do is we try to explore and understand
what is the nature of this problem.
And so maybe the kid isn't brushing their teeth
because they don't like the taste of the toothpaste,
or they don't like the feel of the toothbrush,
or my wife and I'll brush our teeth
and blow our breath in each other's face
and kind of swoon at how good our breath smells afterward.
And then they wanna do that. They wanna have good, you know, how good our breath smells afterward. And then they, they want to do that.
They want to have good smelling breath.
They want to play the breath smelling game.
We'll take them to the store and we go to the toothpaste aisle and let them pick out,
you know, the Paw Patrol toothpaste and the unicorn toothpaste and they get their own
toothbrush.
Like there are so many different things.
Man, I need to go shopping with you.
That sounds great.
Right?
There's, there's, and then that becomes a whole fun thing.
Like, Hey, let's go to the store and you're going to be in charge and let's go to the toothpaste aisle and and you pick out all your stuff
And and today is amazing right there's like different flavors of mouth. There's everything so
you explore the space of these solutions and
You never know when you can find one
And I gave you my own anecdotes on this that are fine go with my older son
I actually managed to explain to him the germ theory of disease.
We watched YouTube videos on little germs eating things and I convinced him like germs
are going to eat his teeth if he doesn't brush them.
So he brushes them.
My daughter, she's really young.
She just sees me flossing all the time.
She loves playing with floss.
It's that simple.
So, each one has their own mechanism how to figure out.
My middle son, you know, he likes the, I think it's a Spider-Man toothbrush.
So it's like a very particular toothbrush he likes.
So he plays with that.
So there's a different solution for each one, but it takes time.
It takes creativity, it takes problem solving and you can't get exactly what you want when
you want it.
Well, it also takes another thing is for them to be open to you, Naval.
Right?
If you were a rule enforcer, you know, keep like, oh shit, it's tooth brushing time.
Right?
Last thing I want to do is deal with dad at tooth brushing time.
Whereas if you're never that enforcer, then the kid is much more like, oh, what are you
doing with the floss?
What kind of toothpaste is that?
They're much more interested in emulating and following the modeling when you are not
this arbitrary enforcer.
I have a rule for myself, which, you know, I do bust my kids occasionally, which I know following the modeling when you are not this arbitrary enforcer?
I have a rule for myself, which, you know, I do bust my kids occasionally, which I know you don't bust your kids, but I do occasionally bust my kids.
But if they come to me with something that they did innocently
that they didn't think was wrong, but is wrong. I never bust them.
Cause I don't want to create that feeling in them. Like, don't go to dad.
So at least I'm not fully enlightened here, but I'm, you know, headed in the, like, don't go to dad. So at least I'm
not fully enlightened here, but I'm headed in the direction. But let's go to some of the harder
ones. Let's talk about like eating or screen time. Those are the tough ones.
Just a quick thanks to one of our sponsors and we'll be right back to the show.
Life in general can be chaotic, but if you're managing
order fulfillment for an e-commerce business, you know that it's its own special kind of crazy
chaos. I've been there. Fortunately, you can relax with today's sponsor, ShipStation. With ShipStation,
you never have to worry about shipping and fulfillment again. Whether you're running a
business out of your garage, as I once did, or you have multiple warehouses, ShipStation is for every phase of your business's growth.
Save hours and money by automating repetitive tasks and get the best shipping rates from
global carriers.
ShipStation's industry-leading, scalable features help you deliver a better customer experience
by ensuring accuracy, faster shipments, and automated tracking updates.
And with up to 88% off UPS and USPS rates
and up to 90% off FedEx rates,
it's the most affordable way to ship.
So calm the chaos, switch to ShipStation.
Start a free trial at shipstation.com slash Tim.
That's shipstation.com slash Tim.
Can I actually, I'm gonna to go mezzo zoom in.
We're going to get to those, but I want to just mention.
So Aaron, this is my first time having this conversation with either of you about this
approach to parenting.
And what I'd like about it is that there's an examination of the problem, right?
We're not jumping to solutions because often the problem is the way we're
looking at the problem in the first place. But I imagine for a lot of people listening,
like, okay, so you have a bespoke,
like Seville row tailored solution to every kid.
That sounds fucking exhausting when if the kids refusing to wear gloves and it's
freezing outside,
just put on your fucking gloves because
I tell you to put them on.
And I'm also, I guess, as a segue from that, coming back to this creativity over coercion.
And when I think of creativity, I actually think of the power of constraints, not a complete
lack of constraints.
That's my personal experience and the experience of a lot of people I interview.
So how do you reconcile these things
or think about any of those?
All right, let me do the gloves first
and then the constraints second.
Yes, it's a lot of work with a kid who wants to go outside
and doesn't want to wear their mittens, right?
And you're going to be dealing with a kid melting down
because their hands are cold
and totally irrational seeming three-year-old screaming,
but also won't put the mittens on even when their hands are cold. And irrational seeming three-year-old screaming, but also won't
put the mittens on even when their hands are cold.
And that's a nightmare.
I'm not pretending that that's not a nightmare.
But the investment upfront pays off in the long run because once a kid understands what
mittens are for and has no confusion about mittens are because mom makes me put the mittens
on, right?
Mittens are because cold hands sucks and I'll wear my mittens.
Once a kid understands that, the mitten problem is solved and you never have to lecture them
about getting ready and what they wear.
Then it's that over and over and over again.
The first time through, it is more work.
There's no question about it.
Exploring the problem, trying to understand.
My daughter brushes her teeth like boom.
My son too.
Pretty much the three older kids
brush their teeth just on their own.
Once a problem gets solved to the kid's own understanding,
it's solved for the rest of their life.
It's also now part of an explanatory framework
that you can build upon.
Rules don't connect to each other.
The only way rules connect to each other
is dad or mom say so.
Whereas knowledge, it's a framework of understanding.
So once you understand you're brushing your teeth because of the germs,
then you also understand why you should shower and why you should use soap
and why you should change your underwear and all those.
Why you take medicine, why you cover your mouth when you cough.
Exactly. It all builds.
They all go together.
And so the sooner you can teach your kids that knowledge, the better.
But there's an age, I would argue with Aaron, like there's a certain age
in which it just doesn't register.
No, no, because the other part of it is that you are the guide, right?
Dad is someone who helps me.
Dad is never someone who busts my balls.
Dad is never an adversary.
Dad is always a guide and a participant in this knowledge accumulation process.
And he helps give me the knowledge that helps me solve my problems is always a guide and a participant in this knowledge accumulation process.
And he helps give me the knowledge that helps me solve my problems and avoid getting sick
or avoid getting a sunburn or bug bites.
It not only builds on itself, the knowledge itself, but the relationship with your parents
gets stronger.
And that's why I'm saying, you know, when we ask our kids to do something, they trust
us.
They know that we have their best interests at heart, not simply because we tell them, but because they see it and experience
it.
So, you have a trusted guide who you kind of understand that we're all in this project
together of like figuring out life and avoiding suffering and pursuing interests and pursuing
joy and developing passions.
There was an old book called The Scientist and the Crib, that title is so good that I think the book is very popular
because everyone wants to view their child
as a little scientist,
even though they treat them like the convict in the crib.
Right?
Like, you're going to do exactly what I say
when I tell you to.
But I think there's a struggle.
People say, well, I don't want to be my kid's best friend.
They have friends.
I have to be a parent.
And then they kind of think through,
well, what does that mean to be a parent?
And the reality is, I think most people would have
preferred more independence when they were kids.
So why not start trying to give it to your kids and doing
the explanation?
But the explanations are hard.
It takes a lot of upfront work.
Let me ask you this, Nival.
Do you think people in retrospect, well, for instance,
like coercion versus non-coercion,
there isn't really a universe in which
most people would find a positive connotation with coercion.
Right?
So if someone says functional medicine,
they don't want to go to a non-functional dieter, right?
So it's like, well, it's kind of a,
it's a bit of a, not a semantic trick,
but you can't really reasonably take the opposite position.
So I'm wondering, do you think that most people who say, I wish I had more freedom when I
was a kid are recalling completely enough or accurately enough to make that judgment?
There's certain things where you can argue the opposite.
So I'll take the other side, you know, for a moment to challenge Aaron's philosophy.
I think brain plasticity is a thing. Like if you don't learn your math or your music or your languages when you're young,
it's a lot harder to learn them when you're older and they're building blocks. So, you know,
my kid may be interested in some physics thing like, oh, why is the sunlight going this way?
Or why is it a quarter moon instead of a half moon? And start trying to explain it. But if he
doesn't have the basics in geometry or math, because he skipped all of that, then he'll lose interest before I can get him interested enough to
figure out the math.
If you're trying to figure out basic math when you're 19, it's pretty late in the game.
Like you're going to have a hard time.
Same thing with literacy and reading.
If you never learn how to put words together and read, then when you finally are interested
and I point you to the book, you can't read it and you're not gonna climb that hill from zero to figure it out. So I'm kind
of stuck in that one. I think I would call it literacy, numeracy, and computer
literacy are the three things that I really want my kids to have and those
three to me are foundational building blocks and everything else they can
learn on their own interest in their own time. So Aaron, are there any
non-negotiables like Navals
that he mentioned perhaps, these fundamental building blocks
that you have reserved outside the scope of the Saavrancha?
And by the way, there's a physical equivalence too.
So I think the three that people fall down on, if I may,
there's actually a lot, but there's brain plasticity
around learning, there's actually a lot, but there's brain plasticity around learning. There's habits,
you know, habits are a big thing. There's social cues around not hitting people or getting to fights
and knowing how to socialize. There's body plasticity, you know, I ate poorly when I was a
kid, so therefore those bad habits follow me forever and my body remembers all the damage
that I did to it. You know, there There's something about the number of fat cells,
whenever it goes down, the size can go down. I don't know how true that is.
There's all these things that are viewed as irreversible and it gets all the way to the
most extreme of the kid runs in the street and gets hit by a car because he were too
permissive as a parent. There's a litany of fears, but I think there is a specific thing
around these things that you have to learn when you're young because you can't change
when you're older or you can't learn them when you're
older.
So a bunch of points to this.
First let's just grant, let's say that's true, right?
There's these non-negotiable things that still raises the question of how, how do you get
your kids to learn these things, right?
If math is essential, you could put a gun to your kid's head and say you're learning
math, right?
And so we could recognize that that would be a bad idea.
Wait, I gotta try, no, never.
Oh, I never thought of that.
So the question is-
Creative problem solving, here it is.
Jordan Peterson has a popular thing
where he's saying that you don't let your kid behave
in a way that makes you not like them.
And like, boy, that really sounds important,
but how do you make the kid do that?
And that is the problem, is that there is no way
to make a kid turn out in any particular way.
Every method of making a kid do something
brings in a whole host of costs.
Every time you're bringing in coercion,
you're not making a kid necessarily do something.
What you're doing is you are raising the costs
of them doing something else.
Right?
If you want them to learn math, you have to raise the costs of them playing video games
or playing baseball or doing whatever else it is.
And so is there a way for them to learn math that doesn't involve you raising the costs
of them doing something else?
And the answer is yes, there's infinite number of ways to solve any problem.
There's ways of making math fun.
There's ways of just making it fun, making games.
And you can go through all the different apps
and you hear about all this kind of stuff.
In that sense, this philosophy, by the way,
is very active parenting.
So the people who think this might just be neglect,
it's the opposite.
I would say it requires way more time investment,
way more creativity, way more upfront.
In one way, yeah, managing kids with a lot of rules is a ton of work.
This is a lot of work, but also opens up, when it works, it opens up a huge amount of
free time.
That does seem like, and feel free to refute this, but a parenting approach that is perhaps perhaps limited to the educated elite with enough time to operate from first principles
and approach things this way, which is not to negate the value of it, because I think
that there are probably bits and pieces that people can apply.
So there are versions of this that have been done in schools, by the way.
There's a very famous book called Summer Hill about a school in the UK, I forget when, maybe
it's still around, but they've got famous long time ago. But it was very permissive schooling where
the kids ran the school, they decided if they want to go to class or not. The teachers were
just at the same peer level as the kids and were resources for the kids. Now these were
slightly older kids, you know, but not that much older. They were, I think there were
kids in Summerhill who were like six, seven, eight years old. And it was very, very permissive.
It's almost the school equivalent of taking
children seriously or sovereign child kind of
philosophies. So it has been done in even a
caregiver context, but boy, it's hard to get
people bought into this. Supposedly incredibly
successful.
Piggy didn't get killed with a big rock off the
cliff.
Yeah, it's for the same reason that like, you know, anything that goes against the institution, it doesn't get absorbed by the institutions.
Yeah. Sure. Sure. And anything that is status lowering for the people in power tends not to get adopted by people in power.
That's a common thing. But look, yeah, nothing can work for everybody.
I think there are some general principles out of here that are worth thinking through and challenging. Like I said, I've gone through Aaron's arguments
in his book and have adopted some of them. And my wife and I were talking about how we're
going to try some more of them, you know, because if it works, it's actually better
for everybody. I am now much more keenly aware of some things, you know, it's like some things
you learn about and then you become more keenly aware of things as a result. So, I'm much more keenly aware how almost every conflict with a child is about a negotiation.
They're negotiating for something because you have a rule and then you're playing little
king or dictator arbitrary renegotiating the rule on the fly.
And then they go off to the other parent and they try to renegotiate the rule if they don't
like your result or they try to figure out how to work around it.
And when you start noticing that
and you realize how much of your life
is in negotiating rules and creating rules
and routing around rules
and how many interactions around that,
you start developing a distaste for it.
If you didn't used to brush your teeth and floss
like twice or three times a day,
when you get used to that feeling of clean teeth,
then you'll notice when there's a film on your teeth.
But until you get to that point,
you don't notice there's a film on your teeth, right?
Or like if you're aware of your monkey mind, right?
You meditate, then you start noticing like,
oh, my thoughts are running away.
But before you started meditating,
you never noticed when your thoughts were running away.
That's just normal.
So now when you're aware of how much of this
is about creating rules for them to follow,
rules that by the way, you would never inflict on anybody else ever out of love, out of hate,
out of anything. And that's a good litmus test that Aaron lays out, which is like if you wouldn't
do it to your spouse, if you wouldn't speak that way to your spouse, don't speak that way to your
child. So you become more aware. And as you become more aware, you will automatically
make changes is my point. Like you say, you know what, I don't want to be negotiating
a rule with you. Here's the thing. Here's the reason I'm telling you to do it. Take
it or leave it, man. But here's the reason. Like, let's just make sure you understand
my reasoning. And if you don't agree, fine, do what you want. But I do find there's certain
contexts and ages that that works better. Right. So the reason I wanted to have this conversation also is because I've said this
before, I think it was from the documentary objectified, which is about industrial design.
And it was maybe smart design could have been frog design, but they said the designing for
the extremes and forms the mean, but not vice versa. Right. So I like that you, Aaron, are effectively an edge case who's implemented
this to the nth degree. And the hope of having you on the show, especially with Naval, is
that people can take even one or two things. For instance, if they just take, don't speak
to your child in a way you wouldn't speak to your spouse, like that is a valuable principle
that could take a million different forms.
Or if you're solving lots of similar problems, maybe there's a meta problem you can solve once,
right? Like the germ theory of disease, for instance. I assume you're probably in touch
with other people in not just the critical rationalism community, but in the sovereign child and taking children seriously
communities. What are some of the common wins, meaning things that work better than folks
may have expected, and then things that are particularly challenging for folks that you
see not necessarily across the board, but as a pattern?
The hardest thing is sibling conflict.
I think that's the hardest thing
because I can't let my six-year-old beat up my four-year-old.
There's a wide range of aggression
between a harsh word and physically pounding someone's face.
You can block the physical blows,
but there's still a lot of harshness going back and forth.
It's very unpleasant. It's very disruptive to everybody else and just kind of sit back and say,
well, you know, I don't want to coerce anybody is not a good option. You know, when I'm interacting
one-on-one with my kids, I can think of solutions and creative solutions and stuff. But when my two
kids are interacting with each other, neither of them have the background knowledge to be able to solve their problems often.
And so it's very hard to not insert myself into that and confuse that issue, but also
prevent them from spiraling out of control.
And so some things that I do to deal with that is I'll physically block, you know,
when they're trying to fight, I'll
just get in the way and block the blows and kind of let the yelling happen, but prevent
any kind of physical injury.
And another big tip is to always give a kid a place to opt out.
And this kind of goes across the board.
And any of our kids want to get away from things, they can go to their room and close the door
and not have to worry about, well, just be alone.
And this is almost a sacred right for adults,
but kids routinely have zero privacy.
And giving them the option of privacy
gives them the option to opt out of almost anything
and really just avoid a ton of coercion,
avoid the relationship damage
that comes from just being forced to be face to face with somebody that you are struggling
with. That would be the biggest challenge.
You had some good points on this in your book where one was like make sure that the kids
have clear ownership. They're not forced to share things. Just like you don't force adults
to like really share new things.
You don't force the kids either.
They can trade, they can negotiate, but they have clear ownership.
I actually just used this today.
Two items arrived at the house today.
It was a set of Uno cards and a Pokemon box.
I gave one to each boy and I signed ownership.
It said, you can trade and you can negotiate, but there's clear ownership.
Otherwise, if they're sharing, it's an infinite tug of war.
A lot of what, when kids are fighting, they're really negotiating boundaries with each other. And
you as a parent always show up late and then you want to get involved in the middle of
an adjudication. And a good rule of thumb is like, well, would you do that with two
adults? If your brother and your sister were fighting, would you show up in the middle
and start adjudicating? You know, no, if they started hitting each other, you'd probably
stop them, right? So kind of the similar, no, if they started hitting each other, you probably stop them, right?
So kind of the similar rules apply.
If they're hitting each other, you get in the way and you're like, hey, hey, hey, hey,
I don't feel good about this.
But on the other hand, if they're having an argument, you let them have the argument.
If it's really loud and disruptive, you might say, hey, I'm in the house and you two are
being very disruptive.
I'm going to go elsewhere, you go elsewhere.
But just keep it down.
Settle your dispute, but keep it down.
So I think the framework of trying to treat them like adults whenever possible and just
it's better to think of them as adults who don't have the full range of knowledge.
Maybe they're still developing their powers of reasoning because they don't have the full
infrastructure of logic built up.
Neval, let me ask you this.
I think a decent amount and I've spoken to friends of mine with kids who are now, I've
seen them go through high school, college, et cetera.
And in some of these families and even the kids themselves dislike consolation prizes,
right?
Like everyone competes, everyone wins.
It's not a reflection of real life when ultimately people get out into the wild.
So learning to compete and all of the friction and maybe disappointment that entails is important.
And I suppose I'm wondering if you're training your kids to question everything and come
to their own conclusions, perhaps, and maybe, and sure, understand the root kind of reasoning
around things.
But do you expect your kids to be fully entrepreneurs?
And that's that.
Like they kind of create their own utopia as the founder of a company
because otherwise like Aaron, I would imagine at a hospital, there are plenty
of rules, right?
And so how do you teach someone to live in a world without rules in the
household?
Maybe I'm mischaracterizing that you could tell me and then enter a world
where there are lots of rules.
You know how much of a rule breaker I am
and how anti-social I am.
So I'm fully fine with my kids not having friends,
not getting along, not being liked, not fitting in.
I think that's a superpower.
It's a bonus.
Aaron will come to you.
So perfect.
I think the rules of courtesy are a great example.
Being able to interact with people courteously,
with, you know, conscientiously being polite. And there's kind of two approaches to that. You can force your kids to be polite
all the time, in which case they never really understand why, right? They don't understand
graciousness and gratitude. They don't understand the subtleties of those things. And so they're
kind of ham-fisted when they're out in the world. Whereas if the focus is on the reasons for being polite, if you never force them to be polite and instead
introduce them to the concepts,
we use please and thank you all the time with our kids. We ask them to do things.
We never force them. We never command them to do things. And so conscientiousness,
you know, my wife and I talk with each other in the same way that we talk with our kids in terms of
conscientiousness. And they understand, again, not on an explicit level, but in an intuitive way, what these
words are for and how they work, just like they learn all the other words in the language.
And so when they go out into the world, everybody thinks their kids are great, but my kids are,
I think they're quite conscientious.
They say please and thank you.
They'll say things to their grandparents, their extended family, the neighborhood friends.
They actually interact with them, I would say, more adult or more mature than you would
expect.
They're the opposite of feral.
They're never trying to manipulate people.
They're never playing mind games.
They're never defensive.
They're instead just much more authentic.
And I think that's what the thing is that it's always the reasons that matter the most. And when you're forcing your kids to do certain
things, you're saying essentially that the reason doesn't matter. This is so
important that I don't care what you think about it, you're doing it. You are
depriving them of the opportunity to learn the reason. And in place of that
opportunity to learn the reason, you are of that opportunity to learn the reason you are inserting your own
authority as the reason. But you know when they go out into the world you're not there.
So now what's the reason for being conscientious and polite? So all the other rules about the world
and this gets to your point about constraints. This is really a deep and I think fascinating idea
is that knowledge is actually a constraint.
The discovery of DNA constrained the ideas around how biological organisms reproduce.
It's not about the humors, it's not about the vital force, it's this one molecule.
And so that is an enormous step forward and scientists stopped looking for other things
because they had the knowledge of DNA.
Then once you learn DNA and you learn cellular structures and cellular organelles, all of
these things further constrain how life works.
It works by cells and it's these little structures within cells or physics, for example.
Newton discovers the laws of motion.
Those are constraints on how the world works. And then Einstein
fine tunes them. And so as knowledge progresses, the constraints get tighter and tighter and
tighter and knowledge really rules out a lot of things.
The human mind does not just take explanations. If that were the case, then I could just sit
on the other end of chat GPT and get everything I needed and I'd be brilliant. No, we have
to recreate in our minds. We have to fit it into our existing network of theories. We
have to falsify it for ourselves. We have to test it. We have to see how it fits into
our other theories and explanations and carry it with some degree of certainty or some tentative
pseudo probability of whether it's true or not. And so it's this discovery scientific
process all the time.
So when my kids are unhappy, for example, I, you know, I try to like help them out.
But I'm like, Hey, why are you making yourself unhappy?
It's like a hint, like maybe if the environment is making it happy,
maybe that's your reaction.
Or if they ask me something, I'll be like, well, let's guess.
Why do we think that might be the case?
What's the guess?
Oh, okay.
Well, why might that not be true?
And a lot of times they deflect me because there's dad playing condescending scientist, which I know
it shouldn't be. Like it's patronizing. I wouldn't talk to my spouse that way. So I'm
already violating TCS, but I'm trying to do this knowledge creation thing. And you know,
it's actually really fun. So for a parent, one of the most gratifying things is when
you get to connect with your child
and discover something together. And my kids are already contradicting me. They'll say,
well, you promised to do that yesterday and you didn't do it today, so you broke your
promise, dad. Right? Or they'll say, hey, you know, you said this, but I think that's
wrong. It's actually this. And that is very gratifying to a parent. From anybody else,
your ego would actually get hurt
if they said you're wrong.
When your child says you're wrong and they're correct,
your ego actually gets a boost.
You feel better.
That's the weird thing about having children.
That's the genes in charge rather than the body.
Feels great.
So when this approach works, it is incredibly gratifying.
I guess what I'm struggling with is that maximizing freedom is necessary to teach your children
from first principles.
It strikes me as absolutists in a way, I guess.
I mean, because I know scientists and writers who will do what you're describing, Naval,
but they're not going to have a Willy Wonka, sweets smorgasbord at children grasping level in
the house.
But they'll each have different sets of rules for themselves.
You do this.
You interview all these over performers, tools of Titans, you compile all their habits.
Have you found any commonalities?
Is there a single morning routine you would get of everybody?
No, no, no.
Exactly.
Is there even a single creativity routine you would give everybody?
Would you say, okay, you journal for an hour, you meditate for half an hour, you do a cold plunge,
you block off a four-hour block of time, that's how you get things done? No. I wouldn't. However,
for people who have not reached escape velocity, I would say there are some very common effective
starting points, right? If you're cultivating the Petri dish from stage zero, then I would say, yeah,
there are some conditions that tend to produce better outcomes.
Right.
So why not approach it with your kids the same way you approach it with your audience?
Why not say, here's a set of techniques that seem to work.
Here's what works for me.
I'm trying this.
Which one do you want to try?
Right.
But the reality is that kids also have very different motivations.
They're in discovery mode.
They're in play mode. They're not in productivity mode. A lot of our routines that
work well for us that we have built for ourselves, they're not appropriate for the child because
the child just wants completely different things. Most of the time, the child just wants
to play and discover and live in the moment. And in that sense, they're here to teach us
as much or more than we are to teach them, right? If you spend your whole parenting time teaching your child,
you missed it.
Maybe it was the other way around.
You know, it's a really hard problem.
It's unfalsifiable too,
but I would say that the beauty of this approach is that our
current model puts a lot of pressure on the parents to
control the kids and the kids end up with very controlled
lives.
And I actually had my eight year old come to me the other
day and he said,
Hey dad, I'm over scheduled.
I'm really scheduled.
He did it to me twice.
Apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
Right, right.
So, you know, and I sympathize with that because I'm famously unscheduled.
So first he comes up to me and says, I'm really over scheduled.
And my initial solution, this was a few months back, was I went to my wife and I said, he's over scheduled.
Let's just cut all these classes and all this stuff.
Just let him be free.
He's almost hit puberty.
By the time it's puberty, I don't want him to resent us.
I want him to have some agency and he can figure it out.
So cuts the schedule.
So now he came to me again a few days ago
and he said, I'm over scheduled.
So now channeling my inner Aaron,
I just said, figure it out.
You solve it.
Right.
And what happened?
I don't know.
Next level agency.
Maybe they'll come to me now and he'll say, okay, I tried to solve it and this work and
this didn't do any idea.
Dad, I rescheduled all my commitments in your calendar.
All right.
So Aaron, I appreciate you putting up with all the cross-examining.
It's because I'm interested.
It's because I'm interested and I appreciate that you are experimenting with all this stuff.
So I want to do a thought experiment, which is let's flash forward 10 or 15 years.
Your kids are much older and you look back and you say, if I were to do it again,
maybe I would do a B or C differently.
Like if you had to pick some subset of what you're doing as part of this parenting approach,
if something were to not turn out as well as perhaps the conventional, let's just call
it approach, what might those things be?
Oh gosh.
My kids spend an enormous amount of time on YouTube.
I guess I would look at the things that are the biggest outliers compared to typical kids.
And the biggest outliers are YouTube.
Sleep isn't even an outlier.
I think they sleep probably the same as other kids.
The other big outlier is how much sugary junk food snacks they eat.
And the last one is some of their social dynamics
is very different.
Those would be the things I would guess
would be the things that didn't turn out well.
I wanna honor the sense of your question
and really explore this a bit.
What would I want to have done differently?
I guess I would wanna have been more conventional,
but it wouldn't even be setting the limits
because I really, really am happy
with the trusting open relationship I have with my kids.
And so I don't think that's worth the price.
I wouldn't burn the capital of the trust I have with my kids for almost any outcome.
It would have to be pretty dire for me to say it'd be worth sacrificing some amount
of trust with my kids.
A quick example is sunscreen.
My daughter was three, she didn't want to put the sunscreen on and it's like a really
sunny day and we're going to be outside in the sun all day.
And the thought crossed my mind that I just have to force this issue because I can't allow
her to damage her skin or develop a skin condition later on.
But I took a pause and figured out a way for her to wear the sunscreen non-coercively.
Actually, she was putting bug spray on at the time.
And I asked her why she was applying the bug spray and she said, well, I don't want to
get bug bites.
And I said, oh, well, I said, do you know what the sunscreen is for?
I said it's to avoid getting burns.
And she took the sunscreen out of my hand and applied it herself.
But the thought was that even if she didn't do that,
I would rather her get a sunburn that day
and preserve this trusting relationship
that gives me an opportunity tomorrow
to explain to her or connect with her
in a way of why the sunscreen is worth it.
In other words, I think there's an amount of capital that you want to treasure and preserve
as much as possible.
That's one way of looking at it.
The other thing of looking back and having regrets is that there are different ways to
solve it.
I would say, you know, the, let's say the eating thing, right?
There's different ways.
I could spend more time.
I guess one thing I wish I would do now, I hate cooking.
I cannot stand it.
But I wish I spent more time learning how to cook
and learning how to prepare foods that are not junk foods
and exploring with my kids more of the range
of available foods out there and finding something
that fits more the norms of healthy food,
although I have my criticisms of what that means.
But there are other things,
and some of my kids have a very narrow range
of what they eat.
So that's how I'd approach these regrets,
is that I wish I spent some more time
exploring the space of potential solutions.
Not saying, boy, I should have just laid down the law
in that area.
I really do reject that,
because I just do not want to insert myself as an adversary. It's not just my relationship,
but it's the confusion that it causes about the issue. If eating is important, then I don't want
to confuse them about food. If socialization is important, then I don't want to confuse them about
how to deal with others. If what you pay attention to is important in terms of screens and whatnot, I don't want to make a kid's attention about my expectations or something else.
Another way to think about it is for most people who are listening to this, their kids are going to school.
And in school, they're in a rule-bound authoritarian environment.
So are none of your kids going to school?
Correct.
But I wouldn't say our kids are homeschooled.
They're closer to unschooled.
Oh, you define what that means for folks?
So homeschooled is, you know, when you're actively working them through a curriculum
and you're making them sit through classes at home and you maybe have a little pod or
a group and we've tried variations of that.
And you know, we have some tutoring, some drop in classes and I do a lot of math teaching,
but by a lot, I mean like 15 minutes, three times a week.
And,
Wow, impressive.
Fucking up your schedule.
Yeah, it's not a schedule.
It's just arbitrary.
But I would say that, you know, they're actually doing pretty well on the things that I care
about, which is basic literacy, basic numeracy.
Not perfect.
I wish they were better, but there's a lot of screen time involved, a lot of YouTube
involved, but yeah, they don't go to school.
But I was going to say that, and by the way, the stats on homeschool are amazing.
People who actively actually homeschool, their kids are one to two years ahead of even private
school.
Private school kids are ahead of public school.
But the wild stats are unschooled.
There are kids who literally never go to school or never educated at home.
And there are cases of when these kids kind of show up
and they're usually only one year behind public schooling.
I think that's an indictment of public schooling.
Now, is that an indictment of public schooling
or is that an endorsement of really, really,
really overachieving parents
who happen to be able to choose unschooling?
So there's always confounding factors.
But the interesting thing is these kids who are unschooled
when they decide they want to go to college for whatever reason, it takes them one year
to catch up. So instead of the whole K through 12, it takes them one year to
catch up. That's insane, right? You can skip all of K-12 and catch up in one
year. And if you go back to how much you remember from K-12 what was important,
it can be compressed down a lot. There's a lot of wasted time. Anyway, my original point was that your kids are already being subject
to an authoritarian environment most of the time, most of the day, most of the days of
the week, most of the time. So if you loosen up a little bit at home, you can practice
and take a little bit of pressure off and you shouldn't have to worry that your kids
are running around too rule free. And I'm not blaming the school system because it's
the nature of crowd control.
And you used to be a public school teacher, Aaron, you got a crowd control,
15, 30 unruly kids, and they're just running around.
You have to go lowest common denominator.
You have to issue rules.
It's like a stewardess trying to control a plane flight, you know,
that's been going on too long or playing, that's been stuck in the runway.
They tell you to put on your seatbelt, not because you're in danger.
It's because they're doing crowd control.
So a lot of schools just crowd
control.
All right. So questions for you, Aaron, I'm going to come back to the junk food,
but since we're talking about school and the lack of school,
let's just say structured external school. Look,
I talked to sort of overachievers for a living.
A lot of them do homeschooling or unschooling,
not seeing your kids, but some of their kids are arrogant, precocious assholes and very
unsocialized. How do you spot check that your kids are going to be able to function in society? And
just to preemptively catch this, Naval, that does not mean rule-following sheep who just obey.
I hear arrogant, precocious asshole and I view that as a compliment.
Yeah, but Naval, also you've built companies, you need to interact with folks, you need
to hire folks, you need to blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So I'm just wondering, Aaron, like how you are thinking about, or even within this community
of people who are taking children
seriously and trying to put the principles of the sovereign child into practice. How
do you suggest people think about this? How do you think about it?
The quickest answer is I had five kids. So I have a built-in socialization schema.
Right, right, right. You have a soccer team. Close to it, yeah.
I was a little skeptical about this, but as my older kids, my older kids get older, they
have very astute, very subtle understanding of the other day, they came across a box that
was from my wife from her childhood.
And they opened it up and they were playing around and they realized, the five-year-old
realized and they brought it into us.
And the five-year-old was saying like, like, we found this box from the olden days and we realized maybe we shouldn't be in this and
Maybe we shouldn't be playing with this stuff
That was incredible and things like that happened all the time is like you just he understood completely on his own
Without us ever lecturing them about this kind of thing
He just kind of understood that oh, wow
This might actually not be appropriate and this is somebody else's stuff and we're kind of thing. He just kind of understood that, oh wow, this might actually not be appropriate,
and this is somebody else's stuff,
and we're kind of just rummaging through playing,
but this might be like their private possession.
So I think a lot of the subtleties
of conscientious interactions can come from siblings
and parents and extended family.
And we live in a neighborhood,
we've got a bunch of age match kids immediately next door
and surrounding properties.
So they interact with other kids quite frequently.
Was where you landed by design being around those types
of families or was that just coincidental?
We were very intentional about where we moved
and we were initially going to live more rurally
because that's our, you know, my wife and I,
our sensibility is a bit more pastoral,
but my wife realized that it's gonna be a little lonely
not having neighbors.
And I was like, oh my God, you know,
I skewed toward Navala, I really prefer,
I enjoy being alone, but for our kids' sake,
we chose a much more residential area
and couldn't be happier with that.
Yeah, to be fair, I like being alone in cities.
I actually live in cities.
I like being around lots of. I actually live in cities.
I like being around lots of people, just not having to socialize.
I would say for our kids, socialization, you know, I think kids are over socialized these
days.
Our kids also socialize with video games.
The best kinds of socialization are more natural forms of socialization when they're socializing
across ages.
You know, there isn't this artificial segregation of third grade doesn't mingle with fourth grade, doesn't mingle with fifth grade. Our kids socialize with
adults a lot, but I do think, for example, when they want to start dating, it's going to be a
real issue. They're going to want access to the opposite sex. And for that, we're going to have
drop-in classes and things of that nature. And maybe like little, they'll join like neighborhood
activity groups that are playing ball or playing games or you know
playing tennis or swimming or whatever. I think about school can you imagine as an adult being
forced in the workplace let's say to be confined with another person who is overtly hostile.
I know school is different than when I was a kid but it's still considered fine to be on a school
bus with people who want to beat you up and try to beat you up.
And that's, you know, you're supposed to just kind of deal with that where as an adult with
40 years of experience with other people, that is unacceptable.
But a kid who doesn't even know how to deal with other people to treat that as like some
sort of learning ground is crazy because they don't have the background.
And by the way, I'm not saying that's the...
I'm not saying you are.
Right?
Sure.
Actually, to put a point on that, you remember Luli, she's a friend of David Deutsch.
She interviewed him and she was raised homeschool.
A very smart, precocious young lady.
I don't know how old she is, but she's definitely younger than me, but she's very smart.
And she was interviewing David and she brought up the story of her homeschooling experience.
And exactly at this point, she mentioned how she would go out with other girls and hang out with
some neighborhood boys. And she would watch how they would all bully each other, but they would
never bully her and her, I think her sister or other homeschool kid, because they knew that the
homeschool kids are there optionally. They can leave any time.
Whereas the other kids, they're bullying, they're going to have no choice but to go to school tomorrow and all be together.
Sell Block D.
Exactly. Exactly. Where else do you do it? It's in prison, right?
So you get bullying in prison and in schools.
You think of it with the cyber bullying also.
Yeah.
The concern about the kids being on the tablet so much and social media and they're exposed to cyber bullying.
How much cyber bullying is derived from being in school?
If you take the school element out of it, how could you cyber bully somebody on Facebook?
It's just like, I'm not dealing with you anymore.
Aaron, how do you think about recognizing that the school bus getting your head smashed
into the seat is different from most of hopefully adult
life. How do you think about building resilience in your kids? They can deal with hostiles.
They can deal with mob mentality. They can deal because they will have to, presumably,
unless they're in some tower with their private tutors as like the heir apparent to the throne
or something. So how do you think about building resilience?
This is one of the main critiques.
And specifically, I mean like social human resilience, interpersonal resilience.
So this is one of the main critiques. And I think this is one of perhaps the main
benefit of this approach is that resilience comes from passion. It comes from an interest,
right? When someone is just absolutely obsessed with some problem,
they have the fortitude, right? The stick-to-itiveness. Nothing approaches the
stick-to-itiveness of somebody who is just hell-bent on achieving something, building
something, creating something. And without that understanding and interest and passion,
then resilience is just about appeasing others, right?
It's about checking boxes.
So if you're in school and you're trying to,
you know, do well in science,
you're trying to do well in science to get a grade,
it's completely different from trying to understand science
so that you can make your robot work
or you can make your Starlink satellites fly.
Sure, agreed. And so if you're talking about resilience with other people, I think probably the
most important thing is self assuredness and nothing damages, I would guess nothing
damages self confidence and self assurance than giving kids a reason to doubt
themselves.
And that is one of the four pernicious harms of rules is that a kid learns,
you know, I'm tempted by lollipops. My inner nature wants lollipops. Something about me
is bad because I want this forbidden thing. I want to use YouTube and that's bad. It's
eight hours. It's too much. You know, kids that want to use YouTube for more than an
hour are bad. They're addicted. They're these vulnerable, fragile people that can't be trusted around iPads and video games
and they can't be trusted around chocolate bars
and they can't be trusted around all of these things
that they just want more and more and more and more of.
And so it tells a kid that they are,
their inner nature, their wants and desires are dangerous
and that they need someone policing that.
And when you're a kid, you need your parent to police it, right?
You need your parent to take the ice cream away, otherwise you're just going to eat ice cream all day long.
You need your parent to take your tablet away.
And ultimately, the conventional view is that the policing from the parent shifts over to being policing of yourself.
You're self-conscious, you're self-aware, you're doubting yourself all the time. And now you are, I think, fragile when you step out into the wider world because
you are worried about your appearance, you're worried about what other people are thinking
about you. Whereas if you instead are confident in yourself, you're not afraid of your inner
nature, you're not afraid that you're going to get yourself in trouble, you don't think
that your own interests are frivolous and disposable. You don't afraid that you're going to get yourself in trouble. You don't think that your own interests are frivolous and disposable. You don't think that you're distracted
like, you know, oh my gosh, I'm gonna spend all day on Twitter. I'm prone to being addicted
to X. If you don't see yourself as that, then you have a much more authentic engagement
with things and you're not worried about what other people think. And you're not trying
to present some alternate persona to other people. I think that's how so many of us get into trouble,
is that we live our lives via a persona with others.
And I think rules give kids a reason to present
a false persona to their parents, right?
Like every kid movie, every great kid movie,
is like the kids are doing their thing
and the parents are saying, ah,
and the kids are kind of appeasing the parents like,
oh no, no, we're doing our homework, we're doing this.
And then really like, as soon as they turn their back,
we're gonna go and often do the fun thing, right?
And it's a given that kids lead these dual lives
and they present a false persona to their parents.
That's like an accepted thing.
But I think it's a disaster for their own self-confidence.
I think it's a disaster for the parents
because kids are entering into this kind of dark,
contraband
world where they're keeping their parents in the dark and that's when they're interested
in sex and drugs and all this dangerous stuff.
And that in fact rules drive kids to hide things from their parents, hide things from
themselves and make them, again, I would say vulnerable and self-conscious.
I agree with that last statement.
I want to come back to junk food as promised, just because I'm imagining this, like putting
myself in my like five-year-old shoes.
And I'm just like, man, I used to go to the penny candy store and walk in and it was just
this cornucopia of delights.
But if Nival's description is accurate, that there's plenty of junk food and it's deliberately
engineered to be easy access for the kids.
I want to understand the reasoning behind this.
Is this because the underlying belief is that if you do the opposite, you are training kids
to have an unhealthy relationship with food?
I guess what is the rationale behind it?
And what is the evidence for that rationale?
Yeah, the rationale is number one, I'm a gatekeeper.
I don't want to be a gatekeeper.
There's harms of being a gatekeeper
and all the false persona and all that kind of stuff.
I don't want my kids trying to get around me,
sneak food, I don't want to be the obstacle.
That'd be just number one.
Number two, I mean, I don't eat lollipops.
I have like a lollipop occasionally and I'll have one.
And the reason why is because your tongue gets raw, it starts to taste gross after a while,
and I don't eat a whole bag of lollipops because a whole bag of lollipops is not a pleasant
experience. And so I want my kids to learn that same exact thing. So I had lollipops,
this is a couple years ago, but it's really funny. I had a bag of lollipops for whatever reason,
and I was handing them out one at a time. And,, the kids, I don't know, like it's dumb
that they have to ask me for a lollipop. So I just dumped them all on the floor. There's
a pile of lollipops and the three-year-old was pulling off the wrapper and licking them
and putting them in a bowl. I got a bowl for her because I don't want sticky lollipop all
over the floor. So I got her a bowl and she would lick the lollipop and then she was just
trying each flavor and she had like 20 licked lollipops in a bowl and she got lick the lollipop and then she was just trying each flavor and she had like 20
licked lollipops in a bowl and she got bored of it and then she went off and that I kept the bowl. I just left it there and it was there for days and what she had done was discover what I already know
what I discovered is that lollipops are gross after a while. One thing we do for fun is we go
to the gas station and they pick out candy.
It's like, let's go get a treat at the gas station.
And it's a fun trip and out we go
and it gets us out in the world.
And there's fun things that start,
interesting things that happen like paying
and here's my credit card
and how do you swipe the credit card
and how much does this cost?
And like real knowledge starts to happen.
But they'll buy like a bag of Swedish fish.
And I'm like, great, you know,
we could be spending money on a museum
or something. We're going to spend money on Swedish fish today. Right. And the scream of things,
it's not all that expensive. And they'll have a whole bag and they'll start eating them right in
the car. And by the time they get home, every single time they've eaten like five Swedish fish,
and then the bag just sits there and I leave the bag there. It's not like I hide it now.
I'll just leave it out in the open and it'll just get neglected for days and eventually I throw it out because
it just gets stale and gross.
Let's say at the gas station, your kid is like, I want a five-hour energy. And then
the other one's like, I want a Corona. What do you do?
So great. Well, the Corona is easy because it tastes gross. So I'd let them try the
Corona totally.
Okay. all right. And the five hour energy is a problem.
So my kid likes Diet Coke.
They haven't had an interest in five hour energy.
If it was early in the day,
I'd totally let them eat the five hour,
drink the five hour energy.
But if it's late at night, I might let them try it.
I would definitely let them try it
and see how much they drank.
And I would be very interested in what they like
about the five hour energy.
In other words, they would usually, they would like the color of the bottle because they don't know what it is.
Right.
So the question would be what interests you about this?
How can I better understand what is attracted to you?
So if my kid wanted a corona, I'd be very interested in how the hell they got interested in a corona.
Right.
So that opens it up right there.
You don't want to distance yourself from their interest in a corona.
Right?
If my kid's interested in heroin, I really, really want to know exactly how they can-
Right.
But you can understand why they're interested without saying, sure, you can try some heroin.
Let's see how much you use.
Yeah.
I mean, there's a lot of ways to deal with it, but some of them are better than others.
So what I would want them to do is not feel bad about themselves for being interested in this thing. I don't want them to think that their interests are dangerous.
And what I really want to do is find out how I can supply them with what they're trying
to get in a way that is safe and doesn't make me freak out. So for example, Diet Coke, my
son loves Diet Coke and I just get him how old is which son?
How old is he?
Well, he's five now, but he's been into diet cokes in these zoos, too
They all drink soda, but he loves black soda and we just make sure there's plenty of caffeine free diet coke
I feel like this is the clip that's gonna go viral on Twitter. Yeah
on Twitter. My two year old's drinking diet coke. It's the thumbnail.
That one does blow people's minds.
Your book is going to be pulled off the shelves.
But I would say on a food basis, I think my kids probably eat, like they have unfettered
access to ice cream. They don't eat ice cream every day. If they do eat ice cream, they
eat, like they don't gorge on ice cream. They eat ice cream. And how much ice cream can
you eat at a time? You do get sick of it after a little while a little kid they'll go days with
that ice cream they'll go days there's a stack of chocolate bars they haven't eaten a chocolate bar
in a good while there's a time where they ate them all the time different kids will be into
you know oreo cookies and like oreo cookies are the thing and all i want to say is if I come back in another life, I want to be a kid in your household.
Yeah.
Maybe, maybe until I develop early diabetes.
So Aaron, let me ask you, and this is open to you as well, but I'll ask Aaron first.
So I'm very sensitive to language.
I think language is really powerful, right?
The labels we use,
I think in both ways we're aware of and in many ways we're perhaps not explicitly aware
of can influence our beliefs and how we basically shape this reality we experience, right? So
the coercion versus non-coercion, like it's a very strong delineation in the favor of
non-coercion, right? Just by setting that up as sort of a mutually exclusive binary choice.
The question I had is about this adversary term or adversarial relationship,
which it sounds like if I framed it in a slightly different way,
used a different label, if we were to make it less negative sounding,
could be coaching. And so I think about, you know, I did a lot of sports.
I think it was formative to who I am and my coaches were certainly
directive, right?
And they would insist on certain things that allowed me to, I think,
realize I was capable of more than I thought I was.
And I view that as a huge positive for me.
So how do you think about the terminology used in taking children seriously or the sovereign child
so that you don't fall prey to framing things so strongly that you have a confirmation bias
for what you want to embrace as a philosophy or ideology.
Does that make sense as a question?
I just, I feel like some of the words are so strong.
No one's gonna say I want an adversarial relationship
with the kids.
Oh no, 100%.
Well, I think the coaching example,
you were able to opt out.
Any team you're on, you can quit
unless your parents are making you do it.
Yep, that's a good point.
Yeah, very true.
And what's crucial in that is that you saw the value in that sport and you saw it from
your own perspective. You understood it. It was based on your own interest in your own passion.
And then you can be encouraged to develop that passion and to pursue excellence, right? And then
when you, as you're pursuing excellence, you're exposed to constraints, right? If you want to
play in the soccer team, you got to be able to run a mile like this. You got to be able to do this. You got to be able to do that. You got to do the drills, put in the time, right? If you wanna play in the soccer team, you gotta be able to run a mile like this, you gotta be able to do this, you gotta be able to do that,
you gotta do the drills, put in the time, right?
All that stuff is excellent.
And the driver, right, and this is the thing, the key,
the key to that is the interest in that,
that you found that fun.
And as long as that is the motivating force,
everything about that I think is absolutely wonderful. And that's the thing you want to cultivate in your kids is the interest and the
passion. And so one way of getting away from the coercion, I don't know if this is
Naval's advice, I try not to use the coercion thing because that gets in this
kind of moralizing view. And instead it says like I think interests are, just
think about like what makes something interesting? Humans are unique that they
are interested in stuff and it's actually a deep philosophical
question of what is an interest? How does a person know that something is
interesting? And that is the magic. Elon wants to preserve consciousness as this
light flickering in the universe. I want to preserve interests. A kid that's
interested in something, that is absolutely precious.
And I want to cultivate that.
I want to pour fuel on that fire and anything to preserve that.
And so that's where the adversary comes in.
You know, call it what you want.
I don't want to step on that or squash that.
I want my kid to see me as a gateway to interests, as someone who just like can make things more interesting,
anything that I'm interested, they add to it.
So if I'm interested in video games, great,
my daughter's interested in YouTube.
And now she's, you know, filming
and trying to make YouTube videos and she's interested
and then she's got to figure out how the camera works.
And then like all this stuff is there.
And so I want to get her like, okay, let me get you a camera.
Let me get you something to set it up.
Let me get you some, you know, which dolls are you using?
How can I help?
I'll hold the camera, right? Let's do a storyboard.
You know what a storyboard is?
Like that's what I mean.
I think taking children seriously could be how do you preserve and augment your
kids' interests and how are you always an enabler and a supporter and a guide
and never someone who's just pouring cold water because that's not right.
Yeah, that's the clip that I'll put at the head of this interview.
That one was very affecting. It changed me what you just said because I have always viewed my own
life as a series of obsessions. And usually I'll idle for a little bit, then I'll fall in love
with something else and I'll just get obsessed over it. And it could be election or the politics
or the news one day, it could be photography the next,
it could be AI, it could be crypto, it could be coding,
it could be, there was a VR, AR time period,
there was a gaming time period,
but there's obsession after obsession after obsession.
And there are also obsessions around working out,
around food, or on this particular kind of diet,
or around dating, or what have you.
And I think it's not unique to me.
I think everyone, when I look at them,
there's usually one or two or three things
that they're obsessed about,
or they're gearing up for the next one.
And fostering that without being didactic about it,
I think is really important.
Enabling it or allowing it to happen.
Even pushing it doesn't work, right?
You tell your kid to be interested in something,
they're not gonna be interested in it.
Just like if I came to Tim and I'm like,
Tim, you gotta get obsessed over this thing.
It's not gonna work.
You're not gonna get obsessed over something.
The most you can do is offer options.
I might try it.
If he started busting my balls about it, then I would.
Because you respect Naval.
Naval's the kind of a person who has great ideas,
who gets interested in interesting things.
He like is pro-fun.
So you're like, oh, I'm open to his suggestions.
I'm not open to my social studies teachers suggestions.
You want to be as a parent,
the kind of person that your kid is saying like, Oh boy,
if you're interested in it, it's probably pretty cool. I wonder what's going on.
How do you, Aaron, I mean, you have five kids,
so maybe there's something in that number that led itself to what I'm going to
ask, but physical education, Maybe there's something in that number that leads itself to what I'm going to ask.
Physical education, sports, teamwork, across ages that might be kind of tough.
There's no right answer here.
I have my own orientation towards this stuff.
But what are your thoughts on all that?
I think sports are fetishized among kids.
I think lots of kids are stunted by spending lots of time
playing sports according to adult rules and adult supervision
and are not allowed the free time
to explore their own interests.
And they get stuck in these status games
where being successful in school means
you're captain of the soccer team or something.
And then you go to college and you never play soccer again, or you play pickup soccer at
most and you spend hours and hours and hours of your formative time playing by adult rules
in this kind of strange arbitrary status game.
I think my kids are quite physically capable and I worry like, Oh God, I hope they don't
get into, I mean, I was into sports when I was a kid too.
I think, I mean, I love baseball, I cherish it, but I want them to play these things only
because they enjoy them and again, you know, their own interests and I don't want them
to get caught up in status games.
Why is sports automatically about status games?
What do you mean by that?
It's not automatically, but in school, there's a certain idea that, you know, it's valuable
if you can score a lot of points on the basketball court
and you're getting a lot of adult approval.
Pete Slauson Oh, you're getting peer approval too and self-worth perhaps, right?
I mean, it could be a pursuit of excellence also.
Jared Slauson Absolutely. Like if you love basketball for
basketball's sake and you really enjoy it, great. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with that.
Again, playing baseball is some of the most fun I've ever had in my life. I don't regret
a moment of it.
But I do regret other sports that I've played
just because that's what you do after school.
And that's what's gonna impress the girls
and that's what's gonna impress the adults.
And I wanna get in the newspaper
and I need these extracurriculars to get into college.
That is an extraordinary lost opportunity
that boy, I wish YouTube was around back then.
And I could have gotten into so many other obsessions
that Naval's talking about.
These were forestalled by these activities
that are condoned by adults
because that's what the society does.
Not to say the activities are bad,
but I think it's a disaster if a kid does something
that they're not passionate about.
It's just eating up their time.
A low grade commitment to something is just killing hours of an extraordinarily
creative mind spent doing drills on a soccer team that they're not really too thrilled with.
By the way, one of the common things you find in the biographies of like the super
high end overachiever types is that they just had tons of free time when they were kids.
Newton used to famously sit by the side of the creek and like whittle on wood
and make little water wheels or Osho would just sit by the river for like
nine years his grandma would just let him wander off by himself you know and
when I think back to my own childhood like the time that I got to just spend
reading and not having anyone bothering me and reading whatever I felt like from
a library it was incredible and so it's that huge swaths of free time
to pursue your own curiosity.
And if my kids are really into sports, go play sports.
But I'm not pressuring them or pushing them or valuing it.
We did set up them going to a sports field
and having a soccer coach and being
part of a little soccer group.
And they hated it.
They don't like it.
But they love the playground next door. They love going to the playground, just playing in the playground.
So let them do that.
So the question I have for you, Aaron, I mean, it applies to Neval too, but it strikes me,
it could be off here, but for me at least, to find something I'm passionate about, which
is typically some combination of intrinsic interest, whatever that is constituted of, and some capability.
It's usually some combination of those things.
As a kid, I had to try a lot of stuff.
My mom was very good at exposing me to a lot of stuff and encouraging me to explore things
that I was inclined towards, like marine biology.
I never ended up becoming a marine biologist, but I don't regret any of that exploration. So I guess what I'm wondering is like, because your kids are self-directed in the sense that
they have a lot of time on YouTube and so on, you don't want to force something on them.
How do you think about if you do exposing them though to a buffet of options that they have
the opportunity to kind of gravitate towards something or be repelled by it.
That's what's so great about unschooling is that their day is not sucked up listening
to somebody drone on about social studies.
You know, you have eight hours, seven hours that are free for exposure.
Social studies teachers.
I mean, social studies was boring, man.
I was getting thrown under the bus.
But it's okay.
It's all right. Yeah. I was getting thrown under the bus.
Yeah. Like we started ice skating this week.
It was finally cold enough for a long enough stretch of days and there's a
little skating rink and then, you know, I bought some PVC pipe to make little
things that they can hold themselves up so they can learn to skate.
And then we, you know, cut them up and we're using the ruler and, you know,
they're actually using real math, real numbers for, you know, the different
lengths and then there's the glue of the PVC pipe.
And then I was like, wow, we can actually
build different structures out of this stuff.
We can build climbing structures.
For kids that are as young as mine,
exposing them to a lot of things,
I think that is an important point that you're making,
is that I think as a parent, you are
kind of a curator of cool stuff.
And so there's a world in between forcing them to do things
and letting them do whatever they want
There's a whole range in the middle of saying Star Wars is cool
Skiing is cool. Skating is cool. Cooking is cool
I don't think it is all the stuff they see and you know making films making videos
I mean just on and on and on and on the life is full of all these interesting things
I'll show you the music that I like the movies that that I like, the shows that I like, the humor that I like. And again, if there is not
this false persona, I think kids are more open to, you know, what you have to tell
them about. Dad isn't some sort of like, oh, gotta watch out for this guy. It's
more an interest in what he has to talk about and share. I think conventionally
we outsource this to school and say school's
going to expose them to the interesting stuff. And the disaster there is that school shuts
down your interests. School says, no, your interests are frivolous. You got to learn
math. You got to learn social studies. Then you have to do this after school activity.
Then you have to do your homework. Then you have to go to sleep early and then wake up
and do it all again.
And so you're just shutting down all this opportunity for spontaneous serendipitous
things to come up.
Let me just take a counter position there for a second.
So I was in a really shitty school on Long Island up until about age.
Yeah.
Up until about, well, to their credit, a few teachers were like, you need to get out of
here. And
around 15, I transferred to a very, very difficult, very good private school in New Hampshire.
I up to that point had really disliked studying languages, which meant Spanish. That was the
option. Maybe there was a little bit of French, but I did Spanish, couldn't speak it at all.
When I got to St. Paul's, I had to take a
language, but they had a very wide menu to select from. I ended up choosing Japanese and that ended
up completely changing the trajectory of my life. So that compulsion to choose from a menu actually
helped me. And I could give you more examples of that. So I just want to be careful not to paint all
schooling as this prison-like land of conformity that forces
people to do entirely things that are suffocating.
Schools are well-intentioned and they will get some things
right. In fact, many things right. But the question is at
what cost and what else could you be doing with that time? And I found that with my kids I can teach them
More math get them one to two years beyond where they would be in school with like a minimal amount of
Homeschooling and hanging out like minimal absolutely minimal and you know, I can move the kids at their own speed
I really care about if they're understanding the issue or not. I can do it with Legos with one kid
I can do it with pen and paper with another, and just do it in a very natural
way that suits each of them. And I learn in the process too. So obviously it requires
a luxury of some amount of time. But I would say when school gets things right, you're
taking a one size fits all model and you're just hoping that it kind of landed in the
right way. My language's story is the exact opposite. I was forced to learn Spanish. I was forced to learn French. I hated both. I forgot both instantly. And to the extent
that I learned anything there, I forgot English. I got worse at English. So it wasn't working.
And you know, I'm pretty good at English, right? That's sort of my specialty, crafting words.
And now I actually do want to learn Japanese, but I think we're entering the AI age where
translation is going to get so good so fast that it's almost going to be obsolete. And so I could have, you know,
20% Japanese speaking in two years or my little AI lapel pin that somebody's going to ship
at some point is going to nail it within the next year or two anyway. So our kids are not
going to have to learn handwriting. Our kids don't have to learn how to drive. They probably
don't need to learn how to translate languages unless they get a kick out of the culture
or they want to read Rumi or Borges in the original. A lot
of those tasks are taken away from them. And it takes schools 20 years to catch up. School
is teaching something that's much older and in certain domains, you know, not to beat
on the social sciences of the humanities, but they're teaching a very narrow slice of
what's out there. It's a very opinionated slice and the kids are going to figure it out themselves. To me, what matters is that they have the support, the curation,
as Aaron talked about. I still push them with the basics, numeracy, literacy, computer literacy,
but it might backfire. My kids don't love math, so that's a problem. I'm obviously doing
something wrong, so I have to figure something out. Then again, I didn't love math either.
Right? So, who knows? Well, hold on. I haven't actually heard this from you, Naval, before. So, how did you end up
liking math? I don't changed. I don't. Okay.
I'm not naturally mathematical. Well, okay. Well, hold on. If you didn't
and you don't, how did you end up studying math? Were you forced to?
Yes. But the parts that stuck and the parts that are
valuable are just basic math. You know what it is? I like being good at games. I like being good
at strategy games. I used to be a hardcore war gamer and then I like making money and both of
those require a good understanding of basic math. So because I was always turning over gaming or
money problems in my head, I became good at basic math and the rest of it, I still have to look up
or have to figure it out on the fly as I need it. And my advanced mathematics is very poor, which is part of the
reason why I'm not a physicist. I just never got obsessed with math. It was too abstract for me.
And so it was a necessary evil and I was forced to learn it as a kid. And that's the one place
where I'm actually grateful. I actually have a very distinct memory of being forced to memorize
my times table when I was really young and being really unhappy about it and being really miserable. But then when I look at how
much it served me in life, especially, you know, just be able to do basic math very, very fast,
I'm grateful for it. So, you know, at the end of the day, I don't think I'm making a big leap
like Aaron is. I'm not raising my kids based on some philosophy. I'm just raising them based on,
like, how I would have wanted to be treated, looking back.
And I would have wanted freedom in almost everything,
except math.
So there's lots of stories of people that are in jail
and prison for a long period of time
and they become really good writers.
If the costs of exploring other things
weren't raised so high,
they wouldn't have spent so much time on writing.
Are they really glad that they were imprisoned and forced to become
exceptionally good at writing? That story, that example, doesn't include all the millions of people that have been imprisoned that didn't spend that time
learning anything useful and just came out impoverished people, stunted people. So you take a few people who
excel at something because they were forced to, and they are
grateful for in the past having been forced to learn something to excel at it, but you
are neglecting all of the other branch points and other passions and excellences that they
could have discovered, or they could have become excellent at what they're good at
without this coercive means. Let me just say, I don't know if the jail metaphor is going to help you here, just because,
I mean, not to point out the obvious, but like you guys are outliers in the sense that you have
kids who don't go to school, you have the time and the education to provide all this. I think if
one could make a very compelling argument, if you were just to remove all schooling
and let all kids in the country as of next week, next month, next quarter, unschool themselves,
that it would be an unmitigated disaster.
Maybe.
You know, schooling, formal public education was a force upon us, mandatory public education
was a force upon us during the French and Prussian empires because they're empires,
so they conquer people and they have to assimilate them, and they force assimilate them by putting
them in the schools. And the peasants who were conquered would hide a kid in the basement, raise
a kid entirely in the basement, turn over the rest of the kids, because they couldn't hide them all,
and the troops would show up every morning and take the kids to school. So that's how it started.
And in the original medieval universities, the towers used to close at sundown and the guards used to face inwards because the whole
point was to keep the kids from going outside and causing trouble. So this idea of mandatory
schooling has gotten out of control. Homeschooling is illegal in many countries and many states.
Really? Absolutely. Most of Europe, most of Europe homeschooling is illegal. And even
in the United States, there's a movement like the Harvard's publishing papers about how homeschooling is terrible. And because
there is a view, a pervasive view, maybe even dominant view globally, that you raise the
children for society, not for the parents. So it's fundamentally a freedom pro-American
thing to raise the kids. Yes, for themselves is the next step. And so an enlightened society
would go from, we're raising
the kids for the state to we're raising the kids for the parents to finally we're raising the kids
for themselves. Or we're just not even raising the kids. We're there to help them raise themselves.
None of this is all or nothing. It doesn't have to be done once. And yes, we're outliers and Aaron's
an extreme outlier. But the reality is anyone who's watching this is an outlier also. They're
exceptional individuals that are trying to be exceptional.
No one's watching the Tim Ferriss show, you know, to get what they can get out of the
New York Times or public education.
These are all reality hackers.
These are all people who are trying to hack reality to be exceptional in some way.
So this is a toolkit.
If you're the kind of person that, you know, believes in freedom of speech and the right
to bear arms and
figuring things out for yourself and that you can learn anything, you can do anything, you can win
any game that you choose to play, you can live off the grid, you can go hiking, you can forge your
unique relationships and your unique lifestyle, why not think about raising your kids in the way
that you want? And what this does is this breaks the mold. This says there isn't just
one way to raise children. It's not just autopilot. You put them in track. By the way, the people who
don't homeschool just very selfishly, their lives suck. Okay? Because they have to wake up at six
in the morning. They got to like pack the lunch. They got to drag the kids out of bed screaming.
They got to put them in the shower. They got to bundle them onto a bus. They got to send them off.
Kid comes home. Then they got to like force them to do their homework, put them in the shower, they got to bundle them onto a bus, they got to send them off, kid comes home, then they got to like force them to do their homework, put them to bed,
kid squealing the whole time, they have to argue about what they eat, they can't travel,
they can't vacation, someone's sick, they can't get the time off, like just their lives
are run around the school. It's like, oh, I got to run home this 1pm, I got to put the
kid down, I got to wake the kid up, I got to feed the kid at this time, you know, and
then they don't get along with their kids or kids are fighting and for what?
For what are you doing all of this?
Our kids are no less well socialized.
They're no less well educated.
They're no less happy.
If anything, they're higher in all those metrics.
So why are you putting yourself through all of this misery?
It doesn't work.
Question.
This is a compelling argument and I have a follow up question, which is for you, Aaron,
first, where do you and your spouse have disagreements or maybe that's too strong a word, discussions
around any aspect of taking children seriously or the sovereign child?
We have tons of discussions on how we're going to solve this problem.
Maybe discussions isn't strong enough a word.
Yeah.
Disagreements.
Friction.
Growth opportunities.
I mean, there's things that we used to have that we don't anymore.
What are those?
Well, just like this needs to be a rule.
Like we have to have a rule about this.
And I would basically counter and say, you know, all we have to do, I agree that there's a middle ground.
It's not like it's all or nothing.
There's a huge middle ground to relaxing rules.
And one easy thing people can do right now is just say that instead of enforcing a rule,
we think about it for 60 seconds.
Like just spend 60 seconds and think, is there some solution to this that gets around this problem?
Like there's no drawing on the walls what can we just think for 60 seconds before you
tell the kid no drawing on the walls like can you and 60 seconds is long
enough to solve so many problems it's unbelievable you know start thinking
like oh maybe we could just put paper all over the walls let's do that yeah
we'll put paper on the walls and there now you draw on the paper on the wall
so that was one big thing that my wife and I made progress with was realizing that
we just pause when the mind goes to enforce a rule just pause and
think you know, is there some way around this and
It's gotten to the point now where we don't even go toward the rule.
Just the reflexes like, oh damn it, kid wants to do this and that's going to really cause a mess.
Can we do it like this? Can we do it like that?
I guess that's one answer to your question.
Are there things where you want to take the hands off the wheel and your wife is like,
ah, I would prefer some variation that is not exactly hands off the wheel.
Yeah, I'm more prone to saying hands off the wheel.
She's a little bit more conservative than me.
But the other thing is that she and I are also problem solving.
Our daughter got a hoverboard and it's making marks on the floor.
So the temptation is no hoverboard in the house.
And it's like, well, why don't you want the hoverboard in the house? You're kind of afraid they're
going to fall and hurt themselves. They're going to smash into the furniture.
They're going to make marks on the floor, right? You start going through this and
it's like, okay, well, what if we move the furniture out of the dining room and
I'll clean up the floor, right? Or we'll show our daughter how to clean up the
floor. Like instead of it being like no hoverboard in the house, it's just, you
know, let's just try to understand
what we don't like about this.
You know, my wife and I use this, you know, apart from the kids,
I want to play music.
She doesn't like radio head.
I really like listening to the radio head.
Like, okay, how can, you know, like no radio head in the house.
It's, you know, how can I listen to the music I want?
You listen to the music you want,
have quiet when we want quiet.
It's just not about enforcing rules.
It's about how do we all make our lives better?
I'm my wife's partner in making her life better.
She's a partner in making my life better.
We partner with our kids to make their lives better.
It's everybody trying to find out from their perspective what's not working and how to
make it better.
So what happened with the radio head?
Is everybody walking around with headsets?
That's a problem actually.
I haven't really solved that one.
It's nice to have it on the speakers
and that one's a sticking point.
Yeah, got it.
And I do think one of my rules will be
no hoverboards in the house.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right, Naval, what about you?
Just in terms of parenting style.
We have a no control philosophy in the house with each other, my wife and I, we've had
that for a long time.
She can't even schedule me, I can't schedule her, we don't commit each other.
We don't have big expectations.
She can't make me go to like her parents birthday.
I can't make her go to a business dinner.
We're really non-controlling people to begin with of each other.
So it's pretty easy to align on not controlling the kids.
But that also means that if she wants to control the kids,
she can.
And if I want to control the kids, I can't.
I don't tell her, don't control the kids.
So we actually have very different styles.
And it does cause a problem when like kid wants screen time,
you know, they'll go and negotiate with each party.
And whoever's more lenient will give them the screen time or the ice cream.
So basically I get to be the good cop.
But we are talking it through.
I think especially the book, Erin's book, she has a copy.
I have a copy.
I've read it.
She's reading it.
Both of us find ourselves nodding more than saying no.
And I think we're going to be relaxing more rules and see how it goes.
There is a hump. There's going to be that hump of like the one
week of just eating chocolate and playing
video games.
So maybe we go through them one at a time
and see how much.
Maybe you'll just end up getting diabetes
before your kids do.
But there's a couple of trend lines as a
parent.
One of the things you realize is your ability
to, even if you are fully into the rule
system, your ability to enforce rules breaks
down over time. It's just normal. The kids find gaps. They exploit the gaps. to even if you are fully into the rule system, your ability to enforce rules breaks down
over time. It's just normal. The kids find gaps, they exploit the gaps, they get older
and our oldest is already hitting the age where I couldn't stop him if I wanted to.
I hope he doesn't see this episode by the way, because it's an instant jailbreak.
It's two hours in. I think he won't make it this far.
Yeah. He's gone through a growth spurt. He's quite large now. He could probably overpower me shortly.
So, you know, we're already getting at the point where like, what rules am I exactly going to
enforce and how on earth am I going to enforce these rules that you speak of? And then, you know,
the next one down just wants to copy him and the next one down wants to copy that one. So
there's a jailbreak already happening, a slow motion jailbreak. So I'd rather open the door and let them out and get some credit rather than, you know,
there was a revolt and they escaped and now the view means that forever.
One of the things is there's a feeling that I sometimes get, which I don't know if the rest of you have this,
but when you're around family sometimes, you feel a certain weight, like you can't be yourself.
So there are times when like there's family around, you don't want them around because
you feel a certain pressure.
And it's just like, if your friend was sitting there and doing the exact same thing, it wouldn't
bother you.
But because it's a family member sitting there and doing that thing, it bothers you.
And it's like, why is that?
This person is just sitting there reading the book.
Why does it bother me that this person is sitting there reading the book?
And it's because going back to the animal conditioning part, the one thing I did
get conditioned on was over 10, 15, 20 years, having this person always telling me what to do,
right? Saying, don't do this, do that. And it was always well-meaning and it was always a love,
but they were always watching me. I see. So for clarity, when you say family,
you mean like your parents, not your kids.
Yeah, like my mom or even my brother, you know, who I loved to death or my aunt, you
know, if they're sitting there, I'm just used to having gone through a combination of conflict
and control and negotiation with them constantly that I just feel like I'm being watched.
And I think other people have this feeling too.
And I don't want my kids to have that feeling. When I'm in the room with them, I don't want them to have the feeling that, oh, I might
do something that he's not going to approve of.
And so therefore, he will either say something or even just feel something disapproving.
And therefore, I feel self-conscious.
So I want to have as little of that feeling as possible in my life, in my kids' lives.
So which is why I don't want to bust them. I don't want to be giving them rules. I don't
want to be their enforcer. I don't want to be their warden. Being their enforcer and
warden makes me worse off, makes them worse off, and it completely destroys their relationship.
So I have to figure out how to unwind that.
Same time, I do have to be a parent. They can't run in the street. They got to do their
math. Sorry, Aaron. Maybe we'll get through that. But I do have to arm them for what's going to happen in life.
Judith Harris was this woman, she
did this famous meta study, maybe wrote a book on child
raising, and what she basically concluded was,
it's mostly genetics, it's mostly nature, sorry.
And then the remaining part that's nurtured
is from their peers.
They're raised by their peers.
And it's not really raised by their parents,
because they're trying to adapt to the world they're going to live in, not the world that you lived in. And so my conclusion from that was
instead of trying to control your children, you can be one step removed and control their environment.
And the way you do that is the most important decision parents make for their kids is where
they live. What neighborhood are we living in? What friends are they around? What school are
they going to?
That's why parents are so obsessive
about choosing the school,
because you're outsourcing your child raising
for half the time.
This kid is gonna be raised in the school
by a collection of peers and possibly teachers
out of your control.
So you put a lot of effort into the school.
So the same way, you cure it, their environment.
Like, is the house look more like a library
or does it more look like the sports stadium? Is it messy? Is it clean? So you cure it their environment. Is the house look more like a library, or does it more look like the sports stadium?
Is it messy?
Is it clean?
So you curate the environment.
You curate the expectations.
You curate the opportunities.
You curate the peer set.
You curate the location.
And the nicer way to look at that
is not curate by excluding, but opportunistic by including.
You give them opportunities and new things
to hook onto and obsessions.
So that's the way I prefer to do it.
And then, of course, always lead by example.
If they see how I'm treating my mother, hopefully they'll treat me that way when they're older.
When they see how I treat the waiter at the restaurant, hopefully they'll key off of that.
That's normal behavior.
If they see if I'm littering or jaywalking or not littering or not jaywalking, they're
going to cue off of that.
Kids are very smart.
They know everything you're doing.
Kids are really good at noticing hypocrisy in parents.
So I'll be saying, no screen time while I'm going through my phone.
What is that?
So I thought about this one.
I was like, maybe we limit screen time for everybody.
We literally just say, unless you're learning or studying or whatever, nobody gets screen
time until a certain amount of time.
But if I impose my own rules on myself, no screen time till math and reading is done
and no screen time till 6 PM, that's miserable.
Why am I doing it to them?
This is a very hard problem.
I'm not saying I have a solution.
There's a lot of hypocrisy.
Trey Lockerbie What core concepts have we not covered?
Or are there any aspects of whether it's taking children seriously, the sovereign
child or just generally a non-coercive freedom maximizing parenting approach that we have
not covered, common objections that you'd like to address, concerns, anything come to
mind? I mean, we've covered a lot of ground, but I don't know the terrain well enough to
know what we've missed.
I would say there's four categories of harm that come from rules that I think are helpful
to make them explicit.
And we've talked about a bunch of them, but one is the parent-child adversarial gatekeeping
relationship.
Every time rules are enforced, that gets brought in.
The other one you mentioned is the child's damage to their relationship with themselves,
their self-policing, self-awareness, and kind of lack of self-confidence because their desires
are getting them in trouble and need to be minded and policed.
The third one is confusion about the issue at hand.
The reason why we're polite is because of the norms of politeness and
courtesy or the reasons why you wear mittens outside or because your hands are cold, not because you'll get in trouble. So when you're introducing rules, you're introducing a confusion
about the issue at hand. The reason why you brush your teeth is cavities and how your breath smells,
not whatever consequences your parents, those will be confusions. And then the fourth category is a confusion in general about how to explore the world.
With rules, it means that, you know, whenever a question comes up in the future, the answer
is to find the relevant authority and do what they say.
Not that you yourself are an empowered person who can figure it out yourself and understand
things. Instead, you defer that, you kind of sit back
and do what you're told.
And it leads to, I think, a more conformist life
and kind of a narrower life.
So I think those four harms are,
it's not that they can't happen,
it's that they happen every single time.
Like when Naval's saying, you know,
if we make a rule that, you know,
none of us are on our devices, right?
Well, then Naval has to be the enforcer of that.
Naval has to be the surveiller. He has to be constantly surveilling.
He has to be judging. And even when everyone's in compliance and everybody's happy,
when Naval walks into the room, people's minds think, oh, well, dad's here.
And now I have to be careful about whether I'm using an iPad or not, right? Just Naval's mere presence causes those four harms when he is or me or anybody, right? When anybody is
enforcing rules, you're perpetuating those harms and those harms are not unavoidable. They're not
necessary evils. They are in every circumstance avoidable and it's not easy to do. It's always a kind of specific situation
dependent context dependent thing. It's a certain problem that's going on but
there are always solutions that avoid those four harms and when you avoid
those four harms you become it's a relationship building, it's trust
building, it's knowledge growing, it's more fun, it's confidence growing and all those
things.
So I feel like there's this bifurcation and it's possible to let go of the harms of rule
enforcement.
That's one thing.
And the other thing is your point on constraints.
Leslie, you want to say something?
No, go for it.
Your point on constraints is that constraints are great when you can opt out of them.
I don't know, I like board games and Settlers of Catan.
I love that game.
And what happened was the creator of that game,
some German guy, he'd go in like in the basement,
working on his game and he'd bring it up and play it.
Klaus Teuber.
You got it.
So he would play with a family
and they would get bored and leave.
And so then he's like, all right, I gotta modify it, right?
And he kept on coming back.
If his family was not allowed to leave
and they had to sit there and play,
he would never learn how to design that game
to make it so goddamn fun.
It was the fact that the family could opt out.
So he was creating a set of constraints.
And those constraints got very, very good
because the participants could opt out.
And those are the constraints that you want.
They are those that you can opt out of.
So when you talk about creativity, right?
Artists will do things like constrain
what the canvas in some certain way,
or say, I can only use this one color,
or I'm only gonna use one type of brush, right?
That is great because the artist isn't stuck with that
for the rest of their life.
If that was a constraint that they couldn't opt out of,
that would be limiting.
But to try out different constraints
and be free to opt out of them at all times
enables people to gravitate toward better
and better constraints,
enables people to modify constraints.
And on a very deep level, that is what knowledge is.
Knowledge growth is finding better and better constraints. The more
you understand the limitations of the world, the better you're able to operate
within it. For example, you know, Amazon is delivering some drone service, right?
They need to understand all the traffic or the self-driving cars, right? To make
full self-driving, you have to understand all of the limitations extraordinarily well.
All the traffic lights, all the roads, all the closures, all the different cars, how
cars work, pedestrians.
And once you're able to understand those constraints fully, then you can build a self-driving car
system and now your freedom explodes.
The better you can understand the constraints, the more power you have. Once the Wright brothers learned the constraints
of the laws of aerodynamics,
then they can build an airplane.
And now you have the freedom to fly
in addition to drive and walk.
So once you learn the germ theory of disease,
now you can develop antibiotics,
and now you can develop sterilization techniques.
And so constraints are things that you want to know about.
And in the world of human affairs, you want to be able to opt out of them to be able to
make them better.
Naval, you mentioned that you find yourself nodding your head more than shaking your head.
What do you most shake your head about?
What do you most disagree with Aaron?
To me, it's just the math and reading thing.
And even there, I'm questioning myself, to be honest.
We just talked about how much math I actually know and how I learned it.
I have two close friends, both of whom were, one of them didn't speak English until he
was much older, and the other one had never gotten to reading books, and the other one
who just never was into books until he was older.
And both of them seem to have gotten obsessed, cracked open the 20, 30 books that really
matter and ignored all the thousands that read that didn't. And they seem just as smart and just as knowledgeable. They've caught
up really fast. So I'm sort of questioning how much those things really matter. You know,
one other point I would sort of make is that I think a lot of the arguments around why
kids shouldn't have unfettered screen time or shouldn't, you know, or should be socializing
are based around them living in a kid world.
And the reality is you can think of either kids as animals that have to be domesticated
so they can learn how to operate in the society that we grew up in, or you can think about
them as little creative learners who are trying to learn how to operate in the world that's
going to exist.
And the world that's going to exist is going to be full of screens.
So I gave up. You've got to use screens. There are going to exist. And the world that's going to exist is going to be full of screens. So I gave up, like, you got to use screens.
There are going to be screens everywhere.
It's like the kids in school right now are being told,
you cannot use AI for your essays.
You can't use AI in school.
It's the most powerful tool ever made by humanity, probably.
It's like the top of that apex right now.
So of course you want to be able to use it.
Everyone's going to be using it.
I was allowed to use calculators. Didn't make me worse at math. It just let me focus on aspects
of math other than figuring out how to multiply and divide extremely large numbers. So I fooled
around with my son on prime numbers and we were like realizing together some fundamental things
about prime numbers that luckily I wasn't wasting time making him memorize all the state
capitals. You sort of have to let kids explore the world as it exists today, not live in
a fake world, not the fake rules of high school and high school sports, not the fake world
of like fourth graders only intermingle with fourth graders, not the fake world of some
external authority telling you what to eat and when to go to the bathroom and when to
sit down and when to wake up and when to go to sleep.
So they're trying to learn how to navigate the real world.
And so I'm getting more to the point of view that I just have to help them do that.
So let me just put, I'm going to put in one public service announcement.
So on the screen side of things, putting aside socio behavioral questions and so on, I would
encourage people to check out there's a Ted Radio Hour mini series,
it's a podcast, one of which in a series called The Body Electric focuses on sort of maladaptive
changes in the optic system from kids being exposed to extended hours, at least that's what
they identify as the causal factor, screen time. So they showcase a school, I want to say it's in Cupertino or Sunnyvale in Northern California,
specifically aimed at sort of reversing or addressing some of these changes in young
kids. And they've sort of tracked these changes with a bunch of epidemiological data and so
on. So anyway, just to put it out there, there may be some very obvious visual changes that can
be attributed to like structural eye adaptations or maladaptations with a lot of screen time.
So people can check out that episode if they want, but that's putting aside all the other
stuff.
Hi guys, Tim here.
Just a quick reminder, very important, stick around after the end of our three-person conversation to listen to an exclusive bonus segment.
Close to an hour that Naval and Aaron recorded with extra practical tips, as well as incremental
day-to-day experiments that you can test and apply.
It's super tactical, so you won't want to miss it.
Enjoy.
What else should we cover guys?
Anything else?
Aaron, I remember you had a thread on eartchat.
What was it?
It was like things to do when you get to the ER, things you got to know about the ER.
What was the thread?
Do you remember?
I work in a hospital and a lot of what I do is I meet patients in the emergency room who
are too sick to go home.
And there's a big transition that happens in the emergency room to having to stay overnight in the hospital perhaps for
You know a couple nights and there's just a lot of things that go on and I find myself, you know
Even in residency I was like boy
It'd be nice to have like a public service announcement for some basic things about you know
What happens when you come to the hospital or the emergency room that people just
generally tend not to know. That's what I talked about. Some kind of basic how to survive the
emergency room and the hospital tips. So let's talk about that. You've worked as a hospitalist
transitioning people from the emergency room into a longer stay in the hospital. What are tips to
survive that transition? If you get to the hospital, what do you need to know?
I mean, obviously, it's a morbid topic.
We don't want to talk about it, but you want to be ready.
If you or someone you know goes to the ER, what should you do?
The first thing is before going to the emergency room, bringing an accurate medication list.
That's probably the most common thing, especially older people.
A lot of people listening to this podcast will be kind of shepherding their older parents
in this kind of environment.
It's often assumed that the hospital has the accurate medication list in the computer system,
but almost always the list that they have doesn't match the actual meds that the person
is swallowing on a daily basis. And so it's probably the most relevant, most important piece of information
that the patient or the patient's family knows better than anybody else.
And so to bring that list, make sure that list accompanies the patient
to the emergency room is just you just can't emphasize
enough how important that is.
And you want more than one copy, because what happens is emergency room is just, you just can't emphasize enough how important that is.
And you want more than one copy because what happens is the family will, if they have the
list, they'll dutifully give it to the nurse or the doctor or whomever.
And the emergency room doctor looks at it and they make their kind of assessment and
then that gets lost.
And then if the person is staying in the hospital for a couple nights, the hospital doctor doesn't
have access to that list
and they're kind of guessing.
That would be the one thing I would say,
the simplest thing is to have more than one copy
of a medication list and make sure that goes
with the patient to the emergency room.
The other easy one is that a lot of times,
patients will just go to different hospitals,
but what you wanna do is have a relationship
with one hospital because they have all your information.
And so all else being equal, unless something terrible is happening and there's an emergency
and you just don't have time to get to your hospital of choice, really go to the hospital
that knows you.
That's, I would just say, enormously helpful because there's a thought out there, understandable
that all the information systems can communicate, but they really can't.
It's very common.
Yeah, no, they don't.
Yeah, sometimes patients and families are caught off guard by that.
I'd say those are the two easy ones.
Then if you find yourself in the emergency room, hopefully whatever problem you're there
can be fixed and you can go home.
But if you're not fortunate enough to go home, this transition happens that people are not aware of, again understandably, is
that there's doctors that only work in the emergency room and then there's
doctors that only work in the hospital. And so if the patient's too sick to go
home, they have to stay, then the hospitalist, which is me, comes down to
the emergency room and starts the whole
process over of meeting the patient, asking them why they're there, how they've been
doing, etc.
And this kind of second history and interview is often made without the supporting family
available.
In other words, a listener to the podcast brings their elderly parent to the emergency
room, the decision is made to keep them in the hospital.
And then the child goes home, the son or daughter goes home.
And then the hospitalist comes down
and now the hospitalist is having a conversation
with the patient and they've already told their story
several times and there's this fatigue that sets in.
And so that hospitalist often doesn't get the full story
in the same way that the emergency room doctor gets it.
The emergency room doctor gets the worried son, the worried daughter, the patient gets
all the information and then when the hospitalist comes through the second time through, it's
often a much more, much less information available.
If your loved one is staying in the hospital, you want to be present for that second interview with the hospitalist.
You don't have to necessarily even be in the emergency room, but have your phone ready,
keep it on, keep it charged, and be available to answer that round of questions a second
time.
Yeah, I think anyone who's had to take someone into the hospital realizes just how frantic
the whole thing is and how
much communication gets lost and how often you have to repeat yourself. And then even my brother,
who has some experience in the medical field also, he would always point out to me like,
they come in and the person who's giving you the medicines also has maybe a disconnect from the
doctor or the hospitalist or the ER, what was already given and what the person's allergic to and what the dosage is and all of that.
So you can really help them with the information flow is what it boils down to.
You have to like write everything down, keep lists and keep presenting it to them and matching
it up against what they know because the whole thing is chaos.
It's control chaos, kind of a miracle that even works.
Yeah, control chaos is exactly, exactly it.
And there's so much information.
It's hard to say like, Oh, do this and don't do that.
The thing that matters, I would say that the simple message that really stands
out is this medication list.
That is like 50% of it.
I'm going to go assemble one after this.
Yeah.
Took a note for my parents just to have that, especially if they're fraying at the edges or just getting older in years.
And Aaron, you had a very good Twitter thread or maybe it was just a long initial tweet
on dementia that I thought was very compelling that we'll link to in the show notes as well.
All right, guys, well, we've covered a lot of ground.
Any closing comments, questions, complaints otherwise that you guys would like to mention
before we wind up close?
There's a hierarchy of knowledge here.
So we got to acknowledge our forebears.
All of this comes down from Deutsch's philosophy.
So beginning of infinity, fabric of reality, great books, although they don't explicitly
talk about children.
Then there's taking children seriously, which I think has a website, FAQ, there's a rich history there.
And then Aaron has a book, The Sovereign Child, that he wrote that is, I'm not going to plug
it, but I think there's a free copy coming out, like maybe next week or something.
It's even going to be free, available online.
So it's not like a big money-making endeavor.
You can just download the PDF and read it, or it's like a buck on Kindle or something.
So it's not a money grab, you can just go get the book and figure it out for yourself.
The book is very detailed.
I would say there's a lot more that's out there, including very specific cases of, well,
what do I do when this happens?
Well, how do you solve that problem?
What's your counter to this objection?
So it's kind of all there.
I wish the kids could listen to this, because I think they might resonate a little bit better because parents come from a different angle.
Educators come from their own angle. I wish the wives would be on here at some point.
Maybe we do a women's episode if there's interest. But it's worth trying. It's worth trying these
relaxation of rules one by one. And it's not relaxation. It's moving from rules to discussions
and problem solving. It's moving from rules to
discovery, learning, and problem solving and trying to solve problems up front in such a way
that then it can sustain itself. I'm definitely making changes based not just on the book,
but also on this conversation. Anything from this conversation that stuck out for you,
Naval? I just need to let go a little bit more. Basically, I need to go turn off the screen time controls on my younger son's iPad. I need to
probably start relaxing some of the food rules and some of the screen time rules.
The math one's going to be tough. I'll have to introspect on that.
Trey Lockerbie Aaron, so the book is The Sovereign Child,
subtitle, How a Forgotten Philosophy Can Liberate Kids and Their Parents.
Where can people find you online if they want to learn more or just keep up to date on your
various pronouncements, discussions, ruminations?
I'm on X, A-Stuple on X.
Really enjoy that and holding some spaces and AMAs. And that's really my main location.
The book has a website and as Naval is saying, there's, I'm going to be
rolling out some various alternative ways to read it, like a web reader
and different ways to organize the content.
Great.
As a disclaimer, I push Aaron to write the book and I'm a donor to the
organization that funded the final copy, but I don't make any money
off of it.
It's not a money-making exercise.
Books don't make money as we all know.
Right.
All right, guys.
Well, thank you for the time.
And to everybody listening, we'll link to everything in the show notes as per usual,
TimBoutBlogs slash podcasts.
I'm sure if you search Stupol, there will be the one and only.
So that'll pull up this episode and you'll be able to find everything and more.
I'm sure we'll add to the show notes as things go along.
And thanks to both of you guys, Aaron and Nival for the time.
And I suppose until next time, folks who are tuning in, be a little bit kinder than is
necessary to others and to yourself.
Try relaxing some rules.
Maybe it's with your kids,
maybe it's with yourself. Naval, go eat some ho-hos. We should have a tequila party.
And tequila party with no math requirement. And until next time, everybody, thanks for tuning in.
And now the bonus segment from Aaron and Naval with extra tactical, practical,
day-by-day experiments that you can apply.
Please enjoy. Thank you for joining again, Aaron. So let's talk a little bit more practically and
down to earth about the taking children seriously philosophy and the sovereign child philosophy.
So let's get tactical for a moment. Let's say we're taking children semi-seriously.
So let's get tactical for a moment. Let's say we're taking children semi-seriously.
And we're starting out.
Oh yeah.
Let's go through what I would consider my big four,
which are eating, sleeping, screen time and learning.
Actually, there's probably a fifth,
which is sibling conflict.
So maybe you can remind me,
we can go through all five of those.
But what is a simple, tactical, easy thing
you could start with on each of
these? So let's start with sibling conflict. What is an easy, simple, tactical change that
you could try to make that takes children more seriously on sibling conflict and would
be a good first step to just see is this working or not?
I think an easy thing would be to create an easy way for kids to opt out.
Often when kids are having conflict, one of them wants to leave the situation.
And a lot of times parents require kids to kind of reconcile and have this forced apology
and be there for the whole thing.
Whereas instead, you would allow the kid to go to their room.
I know some parents who don't have a separate room for their kids or don't have a separate space.
So create a separate space for a cooling off
where they can exit any conflict if they want to.
You also had another strategy in your book,
which I liked, which was just clear ownership.
Even if you can't afford to duplicate or triplicate
or in your case, quintiplicate everything,
you can still make it clear that this belongs to that child and
that belongs to the other child. And this idea of sharing or required sharing isn't necessarily
there because we don't require adults to share with each other. They do it voluntarily or
they negotiate it. And you could possibly introduce the same thing with kids. So that's
a simple one.
Yeah. Another simple one for sibling conflict would be not to reprimand the aggressor in the moment,
just to wait until things cool down and just kind of make it a policy that in the moment
we're going to let tempers simmer down and then talk about things when a kid is more
able to be thoughtful about it.
Yeah.
And this would be true with spousal relationships as well.
You get in a fight with your spouse, you don't immediately start accusing or
reprimanding them. You sort of just try to cool the tension down first.
And then 24 hours later, you can have a real conversation.
Right.
Although in the kids case, by then the emotions pass and they don't really
care as much anymore.
Right.
Okay. So that's great. A set of good, simple tactics on sibling conflict.
And not saying to introduce all of these at once,
but you can start with one and see how it goes. Let's take another one.
How do you think about learning? The child doesn't want to learn and that could take different forms. One could be they don't want to
go to school, they don't want to do their homework, they don't want to study their math.
Is there a simple tactic we could try to get through this challenge?
I think one thing is to just think about the time involved.
And this really goes for everything. I think one simple way to
gradually shift away from rules is just to build in a little bit of time
between when a problem is noticed and when you start enforcing some sort of change.
And so with learning, right?
Like when does a kid need to learn to read?
Let's say reading is absolutely essential.
Can't let a kid not learn to read.
Can't let a kid not learn math.
But when do they need to learn math?
When do they need to learn to read?
I think you realize right there,
there is an enormous amount of time.
And so once you just have some time to think about it,
it takes the pressure off there is an enormous amount of time. And so once you just have some time to think about it,
it takes the pressure off.
And that time also enables fun things to arise
that also bring about reading and writing.
For example, my daughter is having a birthday.
And one thing we decided was,
and we decided she, you know,
we presented this idea to her, she loved it,
that she's in charge of her birthday.
And being in charge of her birthday is doing the invitations.
And doing the invitations requires writing.
So she made all the invitations and it was really quite fantastic, right?
Because there's a lot more to it than just even writing.
There's dates, the calendars, writing the address on the envelope, suddenly streets,
zip codes, states, towns, like all of that, you know, a lot of
civics, a lot of writing, a lot of reading, all is happening in a very authentic, genuine
way built on or structured around her interests.
She recognizes the need to be able to read and write in this context.
Another thing is video games.
A lot of is video games.
A lot of these video games,
the characters talking with the other character
and the words are appearing in little thought bubbles
and you really can't navigate the video games,
some of these video games without reading.
And I think you have that just over and over and over.
Things that are absolutely essential for kids to learn
are very useful and very prevalent. And you really can't do much in
the world without bumping into these things. It's a good point because a lot of times you'll
help your kids with these things. They're struggling with their computer or their iPad,
and you'll fast forward the whole problem for them. But then you force them to sit down and
slowly methodically try to learn almost the same skill set, but
in a very regimented, artificial way.
And so it's always better done in context, which of course requires a lot of parental
involvement, a lot of parental time.
So what do you think about that?
I mean, does TCS take a lot of parental time, which a lot of parents just don't have?
Yes and no.
The simple answer there is that enforcing rules takes a ton of time. And not just
time, but anxiety and stress. You know, managing somebody else. Stressful time. Yeah. The iPad is
the best babysitter ever designed. If you're not too concerned about the second order effects,
or if you don't necessarily view them as negative, if you just view them as they are what they are,
then it is the best babysitter ever designed. It's the best adult sitter ever designed.
We're always on our phones scrolling and we're constantly criticizing the doom scrolling on the
phone, but then we continue doing it ourselves. So our words don't actually match our actions.
Yeah, I could talk about that one. I think the unique thing about the iPad is that it is the most customized device, right?
Like if you go back in time, right, if you buy a car, you're going to get the same Sahanda
Civic that everybody else gets.
If you buy a Walkman even, right, you get the same Sony Walkman that everybody else
gets, maybe a few different modifications.
But with an iPad, you can modify this thing endlessly for a very wide variety of activities.
And it's so easy to reduce the iPad down to a piece of glass with light behind it.
Right. It's a portal into the internet. It's a portal into all the media that exists.
And it's a springboard to interests, right? It is a platform for discovering and creating and kindling interests.
And from those, you can attach reading, writing, math.
There's cooking shows, like kids cooking shows.
My youngest daughter is really into cooking.
This is not part of TCS philosophy,
or this is not the full TCS philosophy,
but I think as a parent, you could do partial things.
You could say, here's an iPad, it's curated.
I picked what's on there.
Oh yeah.
But within that set, you can just use it.
Or you can use it within these hours, right?
But within those hours, it's relatively unstructured.
Absolutely.
And not browbeat kids over playing chess
versus playing video games.
I actually grew up really disliking chess and backgammon
and Go and all of the standard smart kid games. And I
just loved brainless video games and lots and lots of them. But over time, my taste got more and more
sophisticated. And so if someone had forced me to play chess, I think that would have been a
pretty miserable childhood. That's another just big general point that I think is lost. There's a difference between describing the kind of ideal
end state, right? Kind of the goal of this like freedom maximization state. And that's a different
question from how do I get from the state we're in now to that goal ideal state? And a sudden change
is a bad idea. And so I'm not advocating suddenly just ripping off
all the rules and shifting to a free for all.
Instead, the recommendation of the thought
is that you want incremental changes.
How can you make small modifications,
small reversible modifications, that lead in a direction
to a state of more freedom and lead in a direction to less rules.
That is the goal of parenting, right?
Like eventually a kid goes off to college
and is in a state of very few rules.
Do you want that to be a sudden shift?
Do you want rules to suddenly be withdrawn?
Isn't it ideal to withdraw those rules,
to wean off those rules earlier and earlier in life, gradually?
Well, actually, one of the things we're already seeing in response to your book,
people talking about it on Twitter, for example, is they will say, well, my kids are teenagers,
too late. And so there's an abdication there. It's like once they're teenagers, there's no rules
anymore. They're just kind of doing whatever they want. I try to enforce certain rules just
by owning the house that they happen to live in, but even there it's frustrating.
So by the time they're 10, 11, 12,
your rules are all gone anyway,
or being ignored for the most part.
So are you gonna tear that bandaid off
or let them tear it off?
Or are you going to gradually relax the rules
in anticipation of what is to come?
Yeah, I think it's a safe thing, right?
If we're worried about this being risky, it is a
safe thing to be thinking about how do I gradually relax my rules so that my kid can be independent.
I'll make an analogy in medicine, right? A lot of times somebody's very sick and they're on a lot of
oxygen or they're in the intensive care unit and they're on the breathing machine. And what they've learned is that you have to give patients the opportunity to breathe on their own
and see if they don't need the machine.
And so there are dedicated trials every morning for everybody who's on a breathing machine is to try them
on minimal settings and see how they can do.
And you don't want to have a person on maximum life support any longer than they need it.
And the only way to tell is to pull it back a little bit.
And so I think of taking children seriously is you're constantly pulling back the support just a little bit
to see if they can make it on their own. That's always the goal.
How do I gradually, safely wean off the support.
It's not a recommendation to withdraw all the support suddenly and see if the person
can sink or swim.
That's not the idea.
I would recommend against that.
How would you relax sleeping?
What is the first rule you would rule around sleeping?
So sleeping, how would you do this gradually, right?
I think one thing is you kind of recognize that the bedtimes are arbitrary, right? There is no manual that says 6 30, 7 30, 8 30. It's usually a 30,
right? Maybe it's 7, 8, right? Why isn't it 8 15? Why isn't it 7 15, 7 18, right? So
sundown to sunrise, sundown to sunrise, right? So why not just say, you know what, why don't we relax this by half an hour?
You know, if the kid's bedtime is 7.30,
let's try eight o'clock and see what happens.
You could tell the kid, look,
we're just gonna do eight o'clock for a week
and see what happens.
And just honestly, just pay attention.
Did the sky fall or was it kind of okay?
And then if it wasn't okay,
the beauty is that it's not gonna be okay for some people then that raises the question
This is the epistemology it raises the question. Why wasn't okay? And now you're investigating
What is wrong when my kid doesn't get enough sleep? And then how do we fix that?
I also think a lot of this ties into adult sleep habits
It's strange that they're being forced to go to sleep when you're awake for the next
four hours.
Yeah.
The reality is in my house, if we turn all the lights down, if the adults go to sleep,
the kids will scurry to sleep.
They don't want to be awake by themselves.
It's scary that they're at their age.
They're bored and it's scary.
Oh, it's scary too.
Yeah, exactly.
And then in the morning they'll sleep in, they're young, they'll sleep longer.
But as an adult, if you really want them to go to sleep early, just go to sleep early yourself. But that's easier said than
done. Well, it's another thing you could try, right? You could try saying, no, I'm just going
to go to sleep and see what happens. Let's turn the lights off and go to sleep and see what happens.
So yeah, like basically many experiments like that. And then also on the waking up side, what time do
they need to wake up? Is there any way I can build in some extra time in the morning?
And often you're stuck because you got to go to work, but there's breakfast. Can
breakfast be made the night before? Can I figure out a way to minimize my kids
routine so they can wake up an extra 15 minutes, an extra half hour? And then your
kid was probably gonna notice
that you are working hard to try to get them more sleep.
What an interesting message that sends.
Like, hey, I really want you to be able to sleep in
in the morning and damn, you gotta get up for school,
but it takes a half hour to get breakfast
and to get changed and everything.
Let's pick out your clothes tonight.
You wanna do that or I can pick them out for you.
And to be fair, I think every parent views themselves
almost in service to their child at some point,
and they're always trying to help the children.
And they try these things early on
and then it gets frustrating and life gets busy
and they just eventually start establishing rules.
And society sort of makes it easy for the establishment rules.
They give you a set of rules and books.
They tell you like, oh yeah, my kids are doing nap time at this time.
So you kind of go along with the Joneses and then school, of course,
and work and schedules establish rules.
So a lot of this actually also means you as an adult unburdening yourself from rules.
And this goes to larger points about try to live a less scheduled life.
If you have the choice and the luxury, try to pick jobs where you can
control your time much better.
And then that allows you to not have to control your kids' time as much.
If you want to maximize your kids' freedom and therefore their ability
to learn and solve problems, you have to maximize your own freedom as well.
That's the journey for everybody.
Let's go to eating.
That's a tough one.
In your book, you sort of embrace this fully.
You were just like, yeah, they have access to everything. They just eat whatever they
want, whatever they want. They might live on a diet of Oreos and chocolate bars for
a little while until they figure it out. I'm not willing to go there. I don't think most
people are. So where do we start?
A great way to start is always the kid's interest. And it'll be interesting to know what kind
of foods they are interested in, what forbidden foods are they interested in chocolate?
And you know, you could explore are there foods with chocolate that don't make you
uncomfortable, right?
Instead of Oreos, are there, you know, I don't know, hot cocoa?
Yeah, dark chocolate.
Yeah, no, dark chocolate.
Yeah, chocolate made with honey.
There is definitely a hierarchy of chocolate.
Okay, yeah. So if you think there definitely a hierarchy of chocolate. Okay, yeah.
So if you think there's a hierarchy of chocolate, you could explore the hierarchy.
Another thing is, you know, exploring yourself.
Like, what are you worried about with these particular foods?
You know, a lot of times with the chocolate and the sweets, it's that the kid will get
hyper.
And there's an open question about whether that is true or not.
And you could just let the kids eat the sweets and see if they are in fact
more hyper. It is definitely the common belief. I personally have not seen it. I haven't seen a
correlation between sugar and hyperactivity, especially past a very young age, maybe early,
early, early on. But I think as soon as they're sort of choosing their foods, I don't notice a
hyperactivity around food. I think it's more around just calories and nutrients
and less around something magic with sugar.
But everyone's different.
I don't get runner's high either.
So it's a variable thing.
Yeah, I mean, I think people already do have
loosening of rules, right?
There's usually like something like,
oh, okay, after you eat your meal,
you can have your dessert.
And then within dessert, it's not like you've laid out exactly how many ounces
and how many calories and so on, but anything that gives a child more choice,
more freedom, maybe choices of desserts, maybe even saying, okay, you can eat
your dessert now, but then you have to eat your food later.
And if you don't the next time you don't have that freedom.
I know there's a little, this antithetical, it's sort of like better conditions in the. And if you don't, the next time you don't have that freedom. I know there's a little bit of this antithetical,
it's sort of like better conditions in the prison,
if you will, right?
But nevertheless, you can start by relaxing
some of these things.
I will say our kids don't have complete freedom
in whatever they wanna eat, whenever they wanna eat.
But we're gonna start moving more towards that,
but part of it is we'll just restrict
what kinds of foods are in the house, period.
And that's for the adults' sake too, because I've noticed that my wife and I end up eating
a lot of the kids food and it shows up on our waistline because we don't have the metabolism
of a 10 year old.
Another thing you could do is just see how much they eat.
Would they in fact overeat ice cream?
Often there's a treat during the day and let's say there's cookies and there's a limit to
how many cookies.
Just like notice, you know, if there's a limit to how many cookies just like notice you know if there's no limit how many cookies do the kids eat it just
might be that they don't eat that many cookies or you could take a week and say
you know what let's just try a week and not put any limits on things and see how
much the kids eat and one thing I think with food is to what I noticed with
family with kids around food
is that they would try to get the kids to eat
in a certain way to forestall problems later on.
Like you want the kid to eat now
so they're not hungry later,
but they're get hungry later anyway.
So you had two problems.
You had the kind of the fight about eating now,
and you had to deal with the hunger later,
where maybe they're not going to be hungry later.
In other words, maybe the problems
that you're envisioning around food won't show up.
Yeah, it's also not how adults eat.
Like I don't stuff myself at 5 p.m.
so I won't be hungry at 8 p.m.
I do control my own eating based on what I'm hungry and what I'm not. There's
a natural signal. And I think there's some frustration because parents often have to cook
and there's a certain amount of time when the food is ready. So the creativity might be in changing
the kind of food that you make or if the kids are old enough even teaching them to cook a little bit
for themselves or having the food ready to go but the final step isn't done until they are hungry.
I mean, if you just wait long enough, they'll be hungry.
So that'll solve that.
Just like if you wait long enough, if they're eating Oreos,
they'll get stuffed and they won't want to eat anymore.
And I think all of us have some story from our childhood
where we over did it on something and then we learned our lesson, right?
Whatever it was, whether it was a drug or alcohol or food or sugar or what have you.
What are some other common objections and tactics that you found to be useful in those cases?
I think basically another way to build in more freedom is to not focus on rules and instead
focus on blocks of time. I notice that my parents, when they're interacting with my kids, they're not
trying to get them dressed, they're not trying to get them
dressed, they're not trying to get them fed, they don't have an agenda, they're just spending
time with them.
And it's pretty magical, the things that would emerge.
And I'm asking myself, how come they're not doing that when I'm spending time with them?
And that's because in the back of my mind, I'm always thinking, you know, this thing
is coming up, dinner's coming up, they gotta get dressed to go outside, they gotta go to bed. And so I'm constantly in
a state of managing them. And if I more clearly kind of pretend to be in grandparent time,
I just spend 10 minutes not trying to get them to do anything. And instead being with
them and trying to help them explore, anything and instead being with them and trying to
help them explore, you know, help them with whatever they happen to be interested in.
Agenda-free blocks of time where you basically say...
Agenda-free blocks of time.
Yeah.
I'll start the planning for dinner, you know, in an hour or in 30 minutes.
I'll start figuring out how to get them into a car in an hour.
But right now I'm just going to spend agenda-free time.
So there isn't always this threat looming over them
where at any moment mom or dad
could be forcing them to do something.
There is some free time,
some play time for the adults frankly,
in addition to play time for the kids.
Yeah, exactly.
The other one would be in general,
it is trying to understand the problem.
Whenever there's something that you want your kid to do,
there's always a benefit, there's always a value
in finding out what it is about the thing
that they prefer to do.
Yeah, I think what this boils down to is
rather than just slipping into rules, going on autopilot
and absorbing the rest of the rules that are laid down
by social norms and conventions, you should always be trying to freedom maximize your kid.
You should always be testing to see if they're capable of handling themselves and not necessarily
to exactly your requirements, but just not getting injured or getting into some short-term
trouble by constantly relaxing rules and looking for creative solutions to solve the problem.
And the book is full of ideas to do that And the book is full of ideas to do that.
The philosophy is full of ideas to do that.
Some people like you are living 100% and your children are being treated like little guest
adults running around your house.
And in my case, you know, maybe it's 60% of the way there and, you know, I've gone there
from 40% of the way there, maybe we'll get the rest of the way there.
And I'd be interested in learning more tips, more hacks, more tricks, more attempts, more
changes.
But it is grounded in a coherent philosophy around these are essentially adults with less
knowledge.
And it is our job as parents to help them learn to navigate the world and to do that in a
gradual incremental way rather than laying down the rules and running their
life for them until they're suddenly either thrust into the real world and
then have to figure it all out from scratch including how to control their
own screen time and control their own eating control their own sleep schedule
and all of that or when they become teenagers they just rebel against you and then they go and do the exact opposite of everything you force them to do
and resent you afterwards. In terms of incremental change, the thing that I tell my friends a lot
is I suggest that whenever they want to make their kids do something, they try it in a different way.
In other words, there's a uniformity to rules,
like you have to wear your mittens when you go outside,
or you have to wear shoes when you go outside.
Instead, just try different things.
Or one is like getting the kid in the car
and putting the kid in the car seat.
And you could try explaining what we're doing.
You could try giving them an iPad,
try some snacks in the car.
You could try putting on a movie on the overhead thing in the car.
You could try making a game.
Let's race to the car, right?
You could try...
Yeah, you could try having told them about it beforehand,
maybe gotten their consent on what time you're going to leave.
Exactly, yeah.
You could try going for a walk for 10 minutes together,
and then get in the car as opposed to just jump straight in the car.
There you go.
If the car, if we're going to work or going to school,
we can build in a trip beforehand.
School's a bad idea.
But if we're going somewhere on an errand,
oh, you like going to the playground.
Well, let's go to the playground.
Then we'll go to this thing and then we'll come home.
In other words, if you're always trying new things,
then even if you're failing and you force the kid, that's
completely different than saying, you've got to do what I say.
We're getting in the car, get in the car.
When I say something, you have to listen to me.
That is kind of a guaranteed failure.
Whereas trying something new every time has the possibility of succeeding.
It's more about discovering.
When you succeed, you learn more
about your kid's interests. Your kid sees you as a more fun person. Your kid sees you as somebody
they're more willing to listen to and take their advice. I think that's a big thing is that
instead of enforcing the same rule in the same way every single time, you think of a new way
and just try something new each time.
At the center of all this, there just seems to me that even as adults, we are still struggling
with the same issues and we're trying to protect our kids from struggles that we ourselves
never quite exit.
I still struggle with screen time.
I still struggle with sleep time.
I still struggle with eating. I still struggle with doing my chores. Yeah, constant struggle.
And it's a struggle that's been ongoing my entire life and I've learned and I've changed.
But yet my kid is supposed to follow orders and then miraculously develop a habit that
I never did. Or even put it differently. It's hard to know how to sleep. We can just admit
that. Many adults we know don't sleep well. What is the solution? It's hard to know. It's hard to know how to sleep. We can just admit that. Many adults we know don't sleep well.
What is the solution?
It's hard to know.
It's hard to know for yourself the best way to sleep.
Now how do you know for somebody else the best way to sleep?
That is the trick.
It's hard to know for yourself the best way to eat.
It's really hard to know how somebody else should eat.
And just over and over and over, adults struggle with screens.
Exactly.
What should a kid's relationship be with screens?
The truth is, not even the truth, from a safety perspective, the one thing that kids have
that we adults don't have is the kids have a trusted guide.
When sleep is going really bad, they have an adult that can help problem solve.
When food is going really badly, they have an adult that can help problem solve. When food is going really badly, they have an adult that can help problem solve.
If it's about being overweight, if it's about being hungry,
if it's about not finding foods that they like, at least you have an adult that you
can talk to and you want to preserve that openness and that trust.
And that's really the way that I see it with my kids.
I see it as a safety issue that I want to make sure that my kids always see me as somebody
who can help when they're having a trouble with anything in life from food to the neighbor,
to a girlfriend, to drugs.
What about what's a really popular fear today, popularized fear, the current moral panic
around addiction?
So it was a time when it was about kids being addicted
to television, before that it was kids being addicted
to radio, there was a time when kids were even considered
addicted to books, I think young Abraham Lincoln
maybe just pointed out in your book,
his parents hated that he was always reading.
I remember when I was a kid,
my mom would yell at me to go outside and play
because I was reading too much.
She meant well obviously, but yeah, I don't like playing with other kids. I like reading and I was
reading what would be considered junk reading by today's standards. But the current one
is screens. Things like TikTok and Instagram and YouTube are completely weaponized. These
are basically very short form content. They're dopamine, you know, flooding your brain with
dopamine, can't look flooding your brain with dopamine,
can't look away, addicted to it, locked in. What do you say to that?
Yeah, without being cavalier about it, what I would challenge people who are worried about screen
addiction and video game addiction and internet addiction is to say what would be a thing that
somebody could really like a lot and be upset when it's taken away from them
that they're not addicted to.
In other words, having a girlfriend or a boyfriend
who breaks up with you, is that an addiction
when you're separated from that person
and you have longing and you're irritable
and you keep on thinking about them?
Or is there something else going on?
And so I think the word addiction is expanded.
That used to mean something that created biological withdrawal symptoms where literally your receptors
are down regulated and you couldn't function at all normally. And you would be completely
in a helpless state unless you got the drug back.
Right. Regardless of the contents of your mind, if an alcoholic is separated from alcohol,
they're going to go into a physiological
withdrawal regardless of what they think about alcohol, how much they want to quit, how much
they agree, etc. Same thing with a smoker, a nicotine addict, etc. Whereas there are
people who play a lot of video games who just get bored of video games or get bored of that
particular video game and walk away from it or you know,
being addicted to like fast food. That was a nice, a common one. The people that will stop eating a
lot of fast food and immediately start feeling better. And so just because you are partaking
in something repeatedly doesn't mean you have a physiological dependence on it. I will say compared
to my friends, my kids have a lot more freedom in terms of what they eat
and how much games they play.
Like they probably play video games
four, five, six hours a day.
And I've noticed that the older one, the eldest,
his tastes have expanded.
He's gone from eating mostly desserts and chocolate
and ice cream and noodles to now he's at least moved
towards bacon and toast and olives and pickles and you know,
started developing some more sophisticated flavors or flavor palette. And in the video game genre,
he's gone from the very simplistic video games to now he wants more and more open-ended worlds.
He wants more building. He wants more exploring things like Roblox and Minecraft are much deeper
games than some of the very narrow games. We're just kind of doing the same thing over and over,
but just not to say he doesn't do the mindless games from time to time,
but just like an adult, his flavor palette is expanding.
His taste palette is expanding. And as these very, very simple things,
their ability to surprise goes away. Even with TikTok, I would bet.
I don't use TikTok and you know, I use YouTube a lot,
but YouTube shorts don't appeal to
me.
Once in a while, if I'm very busy, I'll scroll through one, two or three, but very quickly
you realize there's sort of these empty little snacks.
There's not enough there.
It might be enough if you have no time or if you're just mildly interested in a topic
and you want to see the most sensationalist thing on that topic, but very quickly you
actually end up moving towards some subject
where you have interest and then you dive deep and then you go to longer and longer
videos and God forbid, you might even end up in a blog post or a book. So they're good
for exploration, but not necessarily for diving deep.
In fact, I think when people talk about these horrible addictions, it's always someone else
that they use as an example. You rarely see anyone come forward and say, yes, I am a complete TikTok addict.
I can't peel my eyes away.
I consume it for eight hours a day.
I consume complete junk and none of it has any redeeming value.
And when I look away, my body goes into extreme withdrawal and I'm just looping on the same
thing over and over and God, the Chinese have just invented the perfect algorithm to keep me trapped in here for the rest of
my life and I'm done.
It's not that you do see people throwing themselves into alcohol recovery
programs voluntarily.
You do see people trying to get off of drugs voluntarily saying to their friends,
Hey, please help me get off this drug.
You don't see that at all with Tik Tok zero, never.
So nobody's admitting it.
It's always
somebody else they're pointing to, which is why it kind of makes me feel a little bit more like
it's a moral panic going on than it is true addiction underneath. The thing about the social
media apps, the idea is that they're addicted to likes and badges and things like that. But a like
requires you to understand who the like is coming from. Like a teenager who gets a like from a love interest is going to be much more interested
in that than a like from some random classmate or somebody that they don't know.
It's not like the stimulus for a dog, ringing the bell and giving the dog a treat.
It's just the content of the sound of the bell and the taste of the treat and there's
no understanding at work. But with social media, treat. And there's no understanding at work.
But with social media,
there's an extraordinary amount of understanding at work.
And to get the light in the first place,
you have to create something like worthy,
which means you have to stand up for the noise.
And it could be anything.
Right, you just stand up for the noise.
It could be a photo, it could be a joke,
it could be a string of text, right?
So this is nothing like the dog and the bell
and the conditioning.
This is how can I present myself to my peers in a way that makes me interesting, which
is what happens in school all day long.
School is all about presenting myself to my peers and looking for feedback.
And there's plenty of risks that go along with that.
And with social media, you actually as the parent are there.
You're not in school.
I don't know what's happening. You know, I said my kid was at summer camp or even in
kindergarten and I really don't know and I'm you know, I'm trusting others. I
think it's a step forward in safety that my kid is interacting with people on her
tablet in a way that especially if she doesn't see me as an adversary, she wants
to show me how it's all going, I can see and participate easier. Well, I think a lot of parents would actually be happy if their
kid ended up as an influencer creating amazing content. But how are they going to get there
unless they create bad content first? And how are they going to create bad content first until
they've consumed enough content that they have a sense of what they're interested in and what their
taste is like? Especially if we're headed into a world of AI
making everything that's been done before easy to redo
and robots, then your taste really matters.
Judgment matters.
I learned strategy by playing a lot of war games
and I use strategy for things like trading
and building businesses.
And to me, at least just like sports,
there's leftover training for physical combat
from older societies, gladiators and Olympics,
and then playing basketball as teamwork and so on.
And that trains you so if you need to get
into a martial conflict, you can go to war,
you're athletic, you're fit.
This is in your off season, your training,
in your on season, you might be fighting or hunting.
The same way I view video games and books and media as training for
intellectual combat. You're getting ready to go build a business and go solve a problem or go
build something new and to do that you have to know what's out there and how people have built
things and presented them before. Even to the extent that I've been successful on Twitter,
it's by being a good communicator of new ideas. New ideas I absorbed from all over and then
communication comes from just having read and consumed a lot and having paid attention to what's
really good and what's not. I didn't go to a class on how to write tweets. I just
read a lot of authors and a lot of poems until I found the best ones and I
started really appreciating what set them apart from the rest and then I just
absorbed that and it's only much much much later that I went back and read the
so-called greats like Shakespeare and Yeats and so on. I was like, oh, that's why they're
so successful. Oh, now I get why they're masters of rhetoric. But I didn't know that. I just read
a lot and some part of my brain just absorbed it. There's a famous Rick Rubin clip going around
where he says like, you know, he's basically rewarded for his taste. Well, how did he get
that taste just by listening to a lot of music? And I'm sure his parents thought he was an absolute goof off when he was listening to
music all day long.
But sometimes that's what it takes.
With the total freedom.
Yeah, as far as tactics for screen use with kids, I think one easy thing to do is to just
be interested in what your kid is watching.
Obviously, it's easier with younger kids, but just sit down and watch with them without
any judgment, without any, you know,
I'm gonna take this away and just kind of like
ask about the characters, ask about the story.
And as you find what the kid is interested in
in this content, you can recreate that content
outside of the screens.
You can buy the characters, right?
The toys that represent the different characters.
And now you have the characters to do imaginative play
if that's more important to you
that the kid is having that
or can interact with grandparents or other family members
or you with the characters.
And so it pulls the experience out of this passive consuming
what's on the screen and now you're actively doing it.
And you never know,
just sitting down and watching the stuff with a kid,
you never know what ideas will come to mind.
There is a level of fakery that goes on there though.
Sometimes you end up interrogating kids like,
hey, what's your favorite ice cream?
The kid you just look like,
why are you asking me this question?
You wouldn't ask it to an adult,
not unless it's some girl you're hitting on
or some famous person you're trying
to make conversation with them.
And it'd be very awkward.
But we do that to our kids all the time, right? We ask them questions where we're not really
interested in the answer. We're just trying to either solicit conversation or get them to think
a certain way or we're leading the witness and it's painful. Yeah. No, I think it's more, can you
tell me what do you like about this? Why is this interesting? What's this guy doing? What's this
character doing?
But I think the hard part there is the genuine.
You have to genuinely be interested.
I don't think kids are dumb.
They see right through that.
A lot of times like we'll have visitors or guests and they're kind of trying to make
conversation with the kids and it's painful because they're asking questions where they're
not genuinely interested in the answer.
And the child's response, maybe the child doesn't see through it in a reasoned way, but they instinctively know this person's not interested in the answer. And the child's response, maybe the child doesn't see through it in a reasoned way,
but they instinctively know this person is not interested in the answer,
because the child themselves is not interested in the answer.
And so it ends up being a very awkward, stilted conversation.
A lot of parents are scared of the infantile content that their kids are watching, right?
Like, Cocoa Lemon, Cocoa Melon, Cocoa Lemon,
is this like endless YouTube thing
that just is so vapid and empty.
And I think what's important there is that
it's empty for us because we're 40 years old
and have seen these stories a thousand times
and these things are very boring to us.
But there was a time where this was cutting edge, you know, an age where
this was so new and interesting. And eventually they get tired of it. You know, it may take
weeks, even months, but that's what their mind is ready for. And so you want them to
get accustomed to that and then move on to the next thing. You can't just insert a deep, rich piece of content, like a movie or a show
or a book. You can't start de novo. You can't just start there. You have to kind of work
your way up. And so I see a lot of my kids consuming media is working their way up, just
their sense of humor.
Yeah. If the addiction model was completely true, then the 40 year old adult will still
be hooked on cocoa melon and wouldn't be able to get off of it.
Exactly.
Exactly.
But they moved on.
And flipping that around, Elon Musk is playing his video games, right?
Yeah, absolutely.
To your point.
Diablo player.
Is this a distraction for him or is this training for geopolitics, right?
It's hard to say that that's a distraction for him.
I would bet the vast majority of the hackers in the software industry have at
one point or another been obsessed with games. Yes.
It's just at some point they take their obsession with it from consumption into
creation. And as a society,
we value the output because it's so measurable and so easy to see,
especially after the fact, we don't value the inputs because it's a messy process.
You don't know what's going in there.
Exactly.
Another thing is this idea of situational awareness, like at work and I guess working
with teams, you know, being a productive participant in the workforce is being able to assess priorities.
And we all know of blockheads at work or in other regards
that are just like single-mindedly focused on one thing and can't see the
bigger picture. And I think that's one of the values of games is that you're
taking in new information and you're reassessing and you're you're
strategizing. Strategizing is reprioritizing. And I think that is a
massive skill for anyone to be able to adjust your
priorities as life changes. It's always changing. Once you get married, your priorities shift
and you have to learn how to account for your in-laws and account for your new job and account
for your new neighbor and your kid is now doing this, playing soccer. And you're just,
you're always trying to move things up and down this kind of hierarchy or schema of importance. I think games are
a big part of that.
And I think if you, to your point about adults, if you see an adult who's following a lot
of rules and enforcing a lot of rules, that's not an adult you want to be around. That's
a bureaucrat. We don't respect that in adults and adults, we want you to have created your
own rules for yourself which are dynamic
and evolving and follow them based on your objectives. You have to have the social skills
to figure out what other people's rules are and how to navigate through those and it's
a dynamic situation that changes all the time and not imposing your little rules on everybody
else like a hall monitor. So I think with adults, we don't value it.
In fact, what is cool?
Cool is someone who authentically breaks the rules and gets away with it, right?
Not in a harmful way, but gets away with it.
Cool people don't listen to your rules.
At the same time, if someone breaks the rules too much or breaks the wrong rules, they end
up in prison.
So it is a thing about navigating.
Like, for example, one of the things that's hard with kids is explain to them, oh yeah, that's a rule
that society has, but we break it.
Or this is a rule that society has,
but you absolutely cannot break it.
And try to do a distinction with it too is very difficult.
Exactly, in this circumstance,
we're gonna break the rule,
but in that circumstance, we're not.
And understanding how those circumstances have changed.
Is you're also vulnerable if you're rule following.
I know lots of people who play by the rules, get a job, and then get laid off.
And now you're in big trouble because you kind of have stuck with these expectations.
Whereas people who kind of allow themselves to be distracted, have multiple and varied interests,
are able to fall back on other career options, other skills, or are just constantly evolving
in their career instead of kind of sticking with this diligent conformist. You know, you may
be achieving a lot of the right outcomes, but still be vulnerable and at risk to change.
Yeah. And it's not to put parents down. I mean, I think all parents want their kids
to be creative problem solvers. It's just lead with creativity and problem solving rather
than lead with the rules. And a lot of the rules are just well-meaning, brought down
from society, you know, nap time at 1 PM. Yeah. Let the kid cry it out. Don't sleep
with your kid. I think in your book, you mentioned you didn't sleep with your kids because you were afraid of SIDS. In our case,
it was the opposite because I grew up in India. Everyone sleeps with their kids when they're
growing up and has been doing it for 100 generations. We don't have any concept of
not sleeping with your kids. It's considered barbaric to let your kid cry it out so they
feel like a tiger is going to eat them. And then when they finally give up, you come back in.
Right.
So it's funny because a lot of the modern rules around child raising, I think are just actually counterproductive.
For example, there's been a lot of propaganda that formula is better than
cow's milk formula didn't exist a hundred years ago, look at a list of
ingredients and formula, it's seed oils and it's just garbage, right.
And that I'm going to see it as a process.
It survives at room temperature in a powdered form
for a long period of time.
Like it's not food by any rational definition.
So I think there's a lot of modern rules around,
don't sleep with your kid, force them to nap,
give them a consistent nap time,
formula is better than cow milk,
things like that, which are easily challenged.
These should not be rules.
These shouldn't be rules any more than the FDA food pyramid or rules that cardio is better for you than weightlifting or weightlifting
is better for you than cardio or that natural immunity. We had this during COVID, herd immunity,
natural immunity is worse than vaccines. I don't know if you remember that, by the time
when your natural immunity wouldn't count, you had to go get a vaccine, right? So I'm
not sure I would follow the rules that fast because even if you think rules are good and even if you think rules make your life more convenient,
a lot of the rules that you're being fed are actually just flat out wrong. So you have
to be creative yourself and figure it out anyway.
When do you encourage that questioning in your kid? It's quite interesting, right? Do
you encourage that when they go off to college? Do you encourage them to question when they're
teenagers? Wouldn't it be nice to be able to genuinely encourage the questioning from the beginning, you know,
as early as you can? And it doesn't mean that it's just, you know, sink or swim. There's an
alternative. You're still involved. You're still trying to solve problems with them,
but you're not giving them this idea that there's one set way of doing things until you kind of
reach a point where you get to question them, you know, later on in your life. Yeah, you have to teach them from the start that all
information is subject challenge. All new information starts out as misinformation.
There's no such thing as perfect knowledge. People on the internet are constantly struggling.
People in life are constantly struggling. Who do I believe? The latest thing came down. Is this true?
Did Trump really do that?
Did Biden do this?
Is there really a UFO that they're hiding over there?
Were the pyramids giant batteries?
Is it many worlds interpretation or is it observer collapse quantum theory?
You're always debating, you're always trying to figure out what's true and what's not.
And that's the central challenge to life.
And if we could just say, oh yeah, bad misinformation, well, great, you figured out a truth machine, which is impossible. You figured out what's true
and false in advance, you can ban whatever is false. Fine. Then you basically declared
yourself omniscient and the world doesn't work that way. Children, just like adults,
are constantly going to be struggling with trying to figure out what's true and what's
false. And if your evaluation sensors on that are dialed too loose, then you may end up
believing in completely false things and having a tough life. But if that are dialed too loose, then you may end up believing
in completely false things and having a tough life.
But if they're dialed too tight, then you're just following a bunch of rules and you can't
absorb new information as it comes along.
And the best way to figure out how to tune that is to basically just constantly be learning,
to be a learning machine and to embrace being a learning machine and embrace being wrong.
And so, yeah, I mean, look at how many parents disagree
with their kids throughout their lives, right?
There'll be different political persuasions,
they'll have different sexual orientation,
they'll have different belief systems,
they'll have, one will wanna say,
okay, let's go live in the woods,
the other one's like, no, I'm gonna go live in this big city,
I'm never gonna get married or I got married
and had kids, I'm never gonna have kids.
You're constantly gonna see that you're not going to align with your kids.
And trying to control them the first nine years of their life, expecting some magical outcome,
where then they will turn into miniature versions of you is misguided. By the way,
you're no longer adapted for the environment they're going to live in. You're adapted for
the environment you live in. If we were adapted identically to our parents,
we would not survive in modern society,
which is why kids tend to end up listening much more
to their peers than they do to their parents.
And I think one of the hacks here is you curate
their environment, you curate their peers,
rather than trying to curate their thinking,
and you're trying to curate their eating
and their sleeping and so on.
Anyway, not to get too abstract, this is a good series of tactics, hacks.
Thanks so much, Aaron. I know you're active on Twitter.
Let me give you one more that I think might help.
Everybody wants their kids to be happy, creative, or productive in some way, and independent.
These are outcomes that most people would agree on.
And leaving independence aside,
because kids can't be independent.
I think that taking children seriously looks at saying,
well, can we make them happy and creative or productive
early on in the beginning,
instead of waiting until they're in college
or they're in their 20s to now,
it's your time to be happier creative.
Like why not work on that from the beginning?
In other words, take that outcome very seriously early on
instead of filtering in other outcomes and expectations
and then hoping that happiness and creativity
tumbles out of that later on.
It's just simply saying or prioritizing
these crucial outcomes from the beginning.
And then happiness and creativity cannot be forced.
That's the amazing thing about it.
As an adult, if you were saying,
I want to become happy,
you can't find somebody who can make you happy.
If you say, I want to be happy,
I'm going to go find someone who's going to make me happy.
I'm going to find a girl or a boy who's going to make me happy.
I'm going to find the job, I'm going to find
the right car that's going to make me happy.
We all know that that is a failed endeavor.
We are not able to make our kids happy either. You cannot make another person happy. A person
must discover this internally. You can't make somebody creative or productive. They must
discover their own interests and their own passions.
You can't be creative on schedule either.
You can't say here's a clock starting the timer.
You have to do your creative work down.
You can't be forced to be interested in something.
It has to be internal.
Interests are always internal.
You could be exposed to something
that you agree is interesting,
but you can't just be forced to be interested.
And so I think those crucial outcomes,
it's a safe way of looking at the world
to say how can we embed these crucial outcomes
at the beginning, rather than waiting
and hoping they're the result of schooling,
of the right nutrition, of the right health,
of the right screen relationship.
It's a way of flipping it around
and saying how can we start with happiness and creativity and fostering it instead of forcing it?
I know there's a lot of grind porn on the internet these days where people are like,
you've got to grind, you've got to like set four hours aside every morning to write and
then, you know, two hours to meditate and then you have to keep grinding and working
and then 300 hours or 10,000 hours later, you're a genius and then
you get it out.
But the reality is every person I know who is super creative, who has done incredibly
creative work, they spend lots of time goofing off, lazing around doing nothing.
And then they got obsessed with something.
And when they were obsessive, they weren't doing the structured two, three, four hours
a day.
They were just working on it every waking moment and obsessing over it until they did it. And then they were back to being
lazy. And I think that's a much more natural model for how humans work. And as you said,
there's no happiness outside of yourself. Can't be forced to be happy. No one can make
you happy. Can't be forced to be creative. Can't be forced to be interested. These are
natural emergent properties of someone who is interested, relaxed and free.
Yeah.
Amen.
Great.
Thank you so much, Aaron.
It's fantastic as always.
Thank you so much, Naval.
Hey guys, this is Tim again.
Just one more thing before you take off and that is Five Bullet Friday.
Would you enjoy getting a short email from me every Friday that provides a little fun
before the weekend?
Between one and a half and two million people subscribe to my free newsletter, my super
short newsletter called Five Bullet Friday.
Easy to sign up, easy 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, 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.
I have been fascinated by the microbiome and probiotics as well as prebiotics for decades,
but products never quite live up to the hype.
I've tried so many dozens and there are a host of problems.
Now things are starting to change and that includes this episode's sponsor, Seeds DS01
Daily Symbiotic. Now it turns out that this product Seeds DS01 was recommended
to me many months ago by a PhD microbiologist so I started using it well before their team ever
reached out to me about sponsorship. Which is kind of ideal because I used it unbitten so to speak,
came in fresh. Since then it has become a daily staple and one of the few supplements I travel with. I have it in a suitcase literally about 10 feet from me right now. It goes with me.
I've always been very skeptical of most probiotics due to the lack of science behind them and the
fact that many do not survive digestion to begin with. Many of them are shipped dead.
DOA. But after incorporating two capsules of Seeds DS01 into my morning
routine I have noticed improved digestion and improved overall health.
Seemed to be a bunch of different cascading effects. Based on some reports
I'm hoping it will also have an effect on my lipid profile but that is
definitely TBD. So why is Seeds DS01 so effective? What makes it different? For
one it is a two-in-one probiotic and prebiotic formulated
with 24 clinically and scientifically studied strains that have systemic benefits in and beyond
the gut. That's all well and good, but if the probiotic strains don't make it to the right place,
in other words, your colon, they're not as effective. So SEED developed a proprietary
capsule-in-capsule delivery system that survives digestion and delivers a precision release of the live and viable probiotics to the colon, which is exactly where you want them to go
to do the work.
I have been impressed with SEED's dedication to science-backed engineering, with completed
gold standard trials that have been subjected to peer review and published in leading scientific
journals, a standard you very rarely see from companies who develop supplements.
If you've ever thought about probiotics, but haven't known where to start, this is my current
vote for great gut health.
You can start here.
It costs less than $2 a day.
That is the DS01.
And now you can get 25% off your first month with code 25TIMM.
That is 25% off of your first month of SEED's DS01 at seed.com slash tim using code 25tim all put together. That's seed.com
slash tim and if you forget it you'll see the coupon code on that page. One more time seed.com
slash tim code 25tim. I want to give my pooch Molly the best of everything. She is my companion.
She is my guardian.
She's been with me for almost 10 years now, 24-7.
I want to give her the absolute best,
and that includes food, especially food.
It is the bedrock of her health.
That's why I give her Sundaes for Dogs,
this episode's sponsor.
Sundaes is air-dried, which locks in more nutrition
and flavor than other cooking methods, while also
making it ultra convenient to store scoop and serve. As you
guys know, I'm on the road all the time. And Sundays is
convenient. I no longer have to spend time prepping meals or
figuring out what is best for Molly. I'd rather spend that
time playing or hiking with her. I'm in the mountains right
now. She wants to be in the snow. Sundays for dogs meets or
surpasses industry standards using high quality ingredients. That's the focus, not through synthetic vitamins, which
is what most other dog food companies do. Sundays knows your pup is an important member
of your family, so they only use USDA grade meat, which is fit for human consumption.
So check it out. Get 50% off of your first order of Sundays. Go to sundaysfordogs.com slash tim or use code tim at checkout.
That's S-U-N-D-A-Y-S-F-O-R-D-O-G-S dot com slash tim, sundaysfordogs.com slash tim.