The Tim Ferriss Show - #832: The Return of The Lion Tracker — Boyd Varty on The Wild Man Within, Nature’s Hidden Wisdom, and How to Feel Fully Alive
Episode Date: October 22, 2025Boyd Varty is the founder of Track Your Life, which offers a limited number of premium retreats in South Africa’s bushveld, and author of one of my favorite books, The Lion Tracker’s Guid...e to Life. As a fourth-generation custodian of Londolozi Game Reserve, Boyd grew up with lions, leopards, snakes, and elephants and has spent his life in apprenticeship to the natural world. He is also the host of the Track Your Life podcast.This episode is brought to you by:Our Place’s Titanium Always Pan® Pro using nonstick technology that’s coating-free and made without PFAS, otherwise known as “Forever Chemicals”: https://fromourplace.com/tim (use code TIM at checkout) Gusto simple and easy payroll, HR, and benefits platform used by 400,000+ businesses: https://gusto.com/tim (three months free)Wealthfront high-yield cash account: https://Wealthfront.com/Tim (Start earning 3.75% Annual Percentage Yield (APY) from program banks on your short-term cash. For a limited time, Wealthfront is offering new clients an additional 0.65% boost over the base rate for three months, meaning you can get 4.40% APY, limited to $150,000 in deposits. Terms & Conditions apply. The base 3.75% APY on cash deposits as of 09/26/25 is representative, subject to change, and requires no minimum. Tim Ferriss, who’s not a client, receives cash compensation from Wealthfront Brokerage LLC for advertising and holds a non-controlling equity interest in the corporate parent of Wealthfront Brokerage. See full disclosures here.*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsorsSign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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                                        Well, hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of the Tim Ferriss show. And my guest today is an all-time favorite. A lot of people come up to me and say, my God, that episode with Boyd Vardy. WTF, that was amazing. And he's back. And you don't need the context of the first episode, but you should check it out if you have the chance. Boyd Vardy is the founder of Track Your Life, which offers a limited number of premium retreats in South Africa's Bushveld. And author of one of my favorite,
                                         
                                        books of the last few years. It's an easy, fast read, the lion trackers guide to life. As a fourth
                                         
                                        generation custodian of Londa Losey Game Reserve, Boyd grew up with lions, leopard, snakes, and
                                         
                                        elephants and has spent his life in apprenticeship to the natural world. His stories are effing
                                         
                                        bananas. And we have a whole bunch of new stories. Example given, lunch the baboon. Oh, you'll hear all about
                                         
                                        that and much more. He is a lion tracker, storyteller, and literacy and wildlife activist. At the intersection of
                                         
                                        his two greatest passions, tracking and personal transformation. Boyd uses ancient wisdom to help people
                                         
                                        create a purpose-driven, meaningful life. If you can spend time with Boyd, trust me, take the opportunity
                                         
    
                                        and do it. He is also the host of the Track Your Life podcast, which is definitely worth
                                         
                                        checking out. You can find him online at trackyourlife.com.com.za on X at Boyd-V-A-R-T-Y-D-R-T-Y, on
                                         
                                        Instagram, Boyd underscore Vardy. And without further ado, please enjoy a very wide-ranging and fun
                                         
                                        conversation with Boyd Vardy.
                                         
                                        At this altitude, I can run flat out for a half mile before my hands start shaking.
                                         
                                        Can I answer your personal question?
                                         
                                        Now I would have seen an appropriate time.
                                         
                                        What if I give me out of this, I'm a cybernetic organism living tissue over metal endosclerity.
                                         
    
                                        Boydo, good to see you.
                                         
                                        Good to see you, man.
                                         
                                        Thanks for having me back on the show.
                                         
                                        Absolutely.
                                         
                                        And I love your background
                                         
                                        since you have commandeered my recording office in Austin.
                                         
                                        It's pretty surreal.
                                         
                                        I got to say, I like what you've done with the place.
                                         
    
                                        You might just pull in here for a few weeks.
                                         
                                        You know what you're welcome to.
                                         
                                        That's great to see you, man.
                                         
                                        Yeah, I think the last time we were together,
                                         
                                        we were walking in a squall across the Cotswolds.
                                         
                                        That's right.
                                         
                                        That's right.
                                         
                                        Yes, we had our own semi-wilderness adventure.
                                         
    
                                        I mean, there was some wild there.
                                         
                                        There was some wild.
                                         
                                        More cows than I would tend to run into in your neck of the woods.
                                         
                                        I was very, with your badger track.
                                         
                                        You did spot a badger track.
                                         
                                        Thanks.
                                         
                                        That is thanks to Boyd and Vrenius and Alex and all the rest of the actual tracking teachers.
                                         
                                        So let's hop into it.
                                         
    
                                        Now, this is going to be a lot of improv jazz because I wanted to introduce people, of course,
                                         
                                        if they have not heard episode one, which they should listen to.
                                         
                                        to your eclectic collection of stories.
                                         
                                        And I have a number of prompts.
                                         
                                        I do not have any idea what these loot took, except for one.
                                         
                                        So we have JV, firefighting, lunch, Toby Fessent,
                                         
                                        and then we have a number of others.
                                         
                                        Where would you like to start?
                                         
    
                                        Dealer's choice.
                                         
                                        Well, maybe we'll start with something you don't know about me,
                                         
                                        which is that I was the head of an elite firefighting unit
                                         
                                        for a period of time in my 20s.
                                         
                                        and I took over the team from a French foreign legionaire who had some of the most incredible
                                         
                                        personal power you've ever seen in your life.
                                         
                                        Like, when he would walk somewhere, there would literally be a 20-yard radius around him
                                         
                                        where he would project this aura of absolute confidence and intensity.
                                         
    
                                        And you just felt this is an incredibly capable person.
                                         
                                        And this is in South Africa.
                                         
                                        This is in South Africa.
                                         
                                        And our job was we were part of a team called the Habitat Team.
                                         
                                        And our job was to do a number of things on the reserve.
                                         
                                        We had to fix roads.
                                         
                                        We had to mend fences.
                                         
                                        We had to make sure that animals were generally safe.
                                         
    
                                        We had a controlled burning program.
                                         
                                        And then we also had to fight fires in the case that you got a runaway fire.
                                         
                                        And when I took over from Chris, I was probably about 23.
                                         
                                        I was in the phase where as a family business, I was doing every job.
                                         
                                        I was the part-time marketing manager and sales manager.
                                         
                                        So I'd fly off to various travel shows.
                                         
                                        the world in cell safaris and then I would come back to South Africa and I would be on the
                                         
                                        firefighting team and I remember that I was so daunted by taking over from Chris that I had actually
                                         
    
                                        practiced his walk alone in my room a little bit to try and get the cadence and the presence
                                         
                                        right and like literally right off the bat the first incident we had was there's a bit of a setup
                                         
                                        to it and the setup is is that the monkeys had been generally attacking the buffet these are the
                                         
                                        vervet monkeys the vervet monkeys have been all over the buffet they'd been stealing
                                         
                                        things. And so some enterprising staff member had been driving down the road and they had seen
                                         
                                        a sculpture, a paper mashay sculpture of a life-sized lion. And so they had bought it. And in the
                                         
                                        late afternoons and around meal times, they would trot the paper mashay lion out onto the front
                                         
                                        deck that overlooked the river where people were having food and the monkeys would see it and they
                                         
    
                                        would alarm and stay away. And then the paper mashet lion would be picked up and it would be put in
                                         
                                        the bar for storage. So like literally day two, we have a small electrical fire breaks out
                                         
                                        on a socket in the gym. And my team get down there and we instantly realize that we can't
                                         
                                        spray this out. We've got to shut the main power down. So I send one of our team members who was
                                         
                                        a guy by the name of Lucky Im Kunzi. He was named ironically because he was incredibly unlucky.
                                         
                                        He had in fact lost an eye in an incident in the bush. And the way that he handled this is he had
                                         
                                        bought a beanie and he had cut a single hole in the beanie and he pulled it down over his face so he had
                                         
                                        a single viewpoint out of the center of the beanie with his one good eye and he would rock around the
                                         
    
                                        place dressed like this anyway i sent lucky to shut the power down so he ran to the bar where the
                                         
                                        switchboard was and he burst into a darken bar with its hatches closed because it was like late
                                         
                                        afternoon there was no one around he hit the power and he turned to his left and in the bar in the darkness
                                         
                                        was a lion. The paper machet lion was in the bar. So we lost Lucky for about two and a half
                                         
                                        hours because to his mind, and valid in the bush, he saw a live lion in the bar and he just
                                         
                                        disappeared. So I realized we better get down to some training because I felt a certain amount
                                         
                                        of pressure to make sure that we maintained the standards of the French foreign legionaire.
                                         
                                        So I decided that we would get involved in a series of drills and we would keep ourselves at an
                                         
    
                                        elite standard. And the team was made up of, if you think about it, there was maybe like
                                         
                                        10 guys. There was a headman by the name of Isaac and Kontor, who was just incredibly also
                                         
                                        physical, maybe like 6'5 muscular guy. It was Lucky Mkanzi, who was the tractor driver with his
                                         
                                        beanie on. There was myself doing my French foreign legionaire walk. And we believed in ourselves,
                                         
                                        but we weren't quite where we needed to be. And so randomly in the afternoon, I would set up
                                         
                                        opportunities for us to have drills. There was a small soccer field at the back of the camp,
                                         
                                        and I would go and get debris that was lying around. And at random times, I would light a fire,
                                         
                                        and then I would send out the call. And there were all of these kind of calls that was first like
                                         
    
                                        stations, station, stations that send it out on the walkie-talkies. Everyone would run to their tractors.
                                         
                                        They would grab their gear. And then I would scream, positions, positions, positions. The team would
                                         
                                        load into the tractors. They would drive out. They would get into positions. And then I would
                                         
                                        scream, start the engines. And all of these powerful generator engines on the back of the trailers
                                         
                                        would start. And then the fire would start to build and I would scream, spray, spray, spray. And the hoses
                                         
                                        would open and a blast of water would come out. And the fire would be out in moments and we would be the
                                         
                                        heroes of the entire district. So anyway, the day after the incident with the paper mesh a line,
                                         
                                        I set one of these fires and we get the fire going.
                                         
    
                                        And to be honest with you, I had some old that had come off some of the roofs of the lodges,
                                         
                                        and I had built quite a nice bonfire of thatch.
                                         
                                        And it took off a little faster than I had initially expected.
                                         
                                        So we had quite a sizable fire right off the bat.
                                         
                                        Got on the radio, I screamed, stations, station, stations.
                                         
                                        The team scrambled.
                                         
                                        They got their gear on.
                                         
                                        Positions, positions, positions.
                                         
    
                                        The tractors came rolling in.
                                         
                                        I was thinking to myself, this is looking incredible.
                                         
                                        I was walking like a French foreign legionaire around.
                                         
                                        I was giving commanding instructions.
                                         
                                        Open the hoses.
                                         
                                        Spray, spray, spray.
                                         
                                        The hose is open, and an absolute trickle of water comes out.
                                         
                                        By this side, a wind is picked up,
                                         
    
                                        and the fire is now starting to get some wind under it,
                                         
                                        and it's starting to look like actually this fire could get away from us.
                                         
                                        And so my way of handling the situation,
                                         
                                        because the pressure was now building,
                                         
                                        was to repeat all of the commands at a louder volume.
                                         
                                        Station, stations, stations, positions,
                                         
                                        start the engines.
                                         
                                        Spray, spray, spray, spray.
                                         
    
                                        Still an absolute dribble of water.
                                         
                                        And it was at that moment that we realized that Lackey Mkanzi, in the moment critique, had managed to park the back tire of the trailer on the hose pipe.
                                         
                                        And he saw it at the very same time either, and he rolled forward.
                                         
                                        The problem was that the pressure had now built up behind the kink in the hose.
                                         
                                        And when that hose finally filled with water, not only did it knock the hoseman out, but we totally lost control of it.
                                         
                                        It was flailing around like a deadly anaconda.
                                         
                                        the fire was now starting to get away from us.
                                         
                                        The head man who was meant to be spraying the fire
                                         
    
                                        was in a bleeding heap on the floor
                                         
                                        and my French Foreign Legion walk
                                         
                                        was taking me absolutely nowhere.
                                         
                                        That's when I got my first lesson
                                         
                                        in what firefighting was actually about.
                                         
                                        And in fact, it's probably the lesson
                                         
                                        that stayed with me through all of this
                                         
                                        is that when something is going that wrong,
                                         
    
                                        in the moment you think to yourself,
                                         
                                        you know, it can be quite devastating to your ego.
                                         
                                        It can be quite devastating to your leadership.
                                         
                                        but I've come to see those moments as quite positive
                                         
                                        because it does force a kind of reflection.
                                         
                                        And the thing that I definitely learned that day
                                         
                                        and that has stayed with me through all crisis situations
                                         
                                        and everything that I've faced ever since then
                                         
    
                                        is that it's very few people who know how to bring the energy downwards
                                         
                                        when the energy is moving upwards.
                                         
                                        And, you know, somewhere beyond trying to do an impressive walk,
                                         
                                        if you can figure out how to,
                                         
                                        when literally energy is moving,
                                         
                                        upwards, start to create a slowness and a steadiness about your actions, you can start to actually
                                         
                                        do a kind of a powerful energetic jiu-jitsu on things. And so ever since that day, I've been
                                         
                                        focused on when the energy is climbing, trying to slow it down. That's in the category of things
                                         
    
                                        you don't know about me. That is in the category of many things I don't know about you, which is
                                         
                                        shocking, shocking and not surprising at all, given how long I've known you. But I want to say a few
                                         
                                        things. First, what you just said about mastering the ability to bring the energy in a full circle
                                         
                                        back to calmness. That's something that Rich Barton, who co-founded Zillow and many other
                                         
                                        company, Expedia, et cetera, also said about leadership. This was not that long ago on the podcast.
                                         
                                        The second thing that comes to mind is I really think somebody needs to write a scripted comedy
                                         
                                        show based on real life called Lando, just about all of these crazy stories. And I thought I would
                                         
                                        perhaps introduce a new character who would be on the Gilligan's Island of Lando. JV. Do you want
                                         
    
                                        to introduce JV? How do you want to do that? Well, just one comment on what she's saying.
                                         
                                        You know, I think a lot about my kind of like the body of work that I'm involved in now and
                                         
                                        everything I'm interested in as story hunting. And one thing,
                                         
                                        It's about Londa Losey, but it's not just that.
                                         
                                        It's like any time you spend in the natural world.
                                         
                                        It is like a story-making machine.
                                         
                                        You can go out on the most simple walk into the woods,
                                         
                                        and because it is both, how would I say it,
                                         
    
                                        the natural world is not just where meaning constellates,
                                         
                                        it is meaning in some fundamental way,
                                         
                                        and then incidences occur.
                                         
                                        Inevitably, like little things happen.
                                         
                                        And, you know, one of my ideas is that storytelling is,
                                         
                                        awareness, like actually what storytelling is, is paying attention. And the natural world starts
                                         
                                        to just every day generate incredible encounters. Like, if I think of the guests who go out
                                         
                                        at Londa Lose, it's say 60 guests go out. That's 60 people who come back with a diverse
                                         
    
                                        array of stories and incidences that occur on that day. Some of them will be ridiculous,
                                         
                                        some of them will be sublime, some of them will be profound, but it's hard to cast yourself
                                         
                                        versus modern life, which can sometimes feel very staid and like the same things are happening
                                         
                                        all the time. The natural world is a story machine. It's a meaning machine. It's a symbolic
                                         
                                        machine. And people who stare into it, it's like very unwu-woo people, people who've just,
                                         
                                        you know, come out on safari, they come back and they stared into the natural world and they've
                                         
                                        seen archetypal energies that they recognize. When you see a lioness grooming her cubs or you see
                                         
                                        her protecting the cubs, when you see them switch into hunting mode, you can't help but see
                                         
    
                                        these profound symbolic energies that are in us functioning all around you. And it somehow
                                         
                                        it permeates you and you feel yourself in relationship to that in some profound way.
                                         
                                        Yeah, for sure. And we haven't even talked about this. It's something you don't know. I spent a
                                         
                                        week in the Montana wilderness doing outdoor survival training with this just incredible gent who I'll
                                         
                                        highlight on the show in probably a month or two, but it's incredible the density of stories that
                                         
                                        you come back with. Even if you don't intend to gather anything extreme, it's so, I would say also
                                         
                                        for city dwellers, it's so novel at every turn, particularly if you're injecting any level of
                                         
                                        shared privation or hardship, which is sometimes done deliberately, sometimes forced upon you in the
                                         
    
                                        case of like freezing rain and hail and you're trying to make a fire when your hands are barely
                                         
                                        functioning, things like that.
                                         
                                        Just a quick thanks to our sponsors and we'll be right back to the show.
                                         
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                                        Let's, and we're not going to necessarily belabor the point,
                                         
                                        but I just have to.
                                         
                                        press on introducing, I'm not sure which character on Gilligan's Island this would be,
                                         
                                        but J.V. Let's talk about JV, and then we're going to loop back to story hunting and some of
                                         
                                        the connective tissue that connects all of these things. Well, I mean, of all the people who had
                                         
                                        a profound influence on me, one of them was my uncle, John Varty, who went by the name of J.V.
                                         
    
                                        and Javy was a wildlife filmmaker.
                                         
                                        And from the time that I was about six years old,
                                         
                                        I became his camera assistant,
                                         
                                        which to say that he had a streak of wildness,
                                         
                                        he had grown up in the hunting era
                                         
                                        when hunting was still what they primarily did in that area.
                                         
                                        And one thing about someone who grew up lion hunting
                                         
                                        is that it tends to reset your drama meter.
                                         
    
                                        Because if you think about it,
                                         
                                        in lion hunting, there's really only two outcomes.
                                         
                                        a lion dies or a human dies.
                                         
                                        So his sense of danger was dramatically reset by this type of childhood experience that he, that he engaged in as a young boy.
                                         
                                        So at the time that I spent most of my time with him, it was between the age of about 6 and 15.
                                         
                                        He was making wildlife documentaries.
                                         
                                        And I remember I would put my clothes out on my bed at night and then at about 4 in the morning he would show up and he would walk in looking like kind of like Africa's version of
                                         
                                        Texas Walker Ranger, 44 on his hip shirt with cut off sleeves, and he would open the door
                                         
    
                                        of my bedroom here. Buddy, let's go. Like Tim, if you met him now, he would say to you, hey,
                                         
                                        so what do you do? And you'd say, well, you know, I run a podcast. Podcasting. Okay, let me tell you
                                         
                                        about podcasting. He had these sort of arms that stuck out. The Shangan people called him McCorkwan,
                                         
                                        the one with the crooked arms, because he like walked. He looked like a John Wayne walk. Yeah, totally
                                         
                                        John Wayne with his 44. His clothes were always torn to pieces and he started wildlife filmmaking and
                                         
                                        I became his camera bearer from a very young age. And I had two jobs. The one was to drive and like
                                         
                                        a lot of kids who grew up in nature, I learned to drive from the time I was about six years old.
                                         
                                        So one job was drive. The second job was camera bearer. The driving job was tough because like in one morning
                                         
    
                                        we found a pack of hyenas that were feeding on the remains of a giraffe. And one of the hyenas picked up
                                         
                                        a giraffe leg and it started to run across the savannah with this gigantic giraffe leg in its
                                         
                                        mouth and he wanted to get the shot because getting the shot was like the primarily issue of
                                         
                                        every moment he said buddy we got to get the shot now he's set up in the pickup section of a vehicle
                                         
                                        where he's got a tripod up and a camera and i'm now driving and he's screaming faster faster faster
                                         
                                        and then i will speed up and then you'll scream not so fast you're going to hit something
                                         
                                        and he's screaming left cut left cut left cut right and
                                         
                                        And on one of these instances, he said cut left, and I turned to the right, but he was bracing for left.
                                         
    
                                        And so he fell off the back of the pickup.
                                         
                                        And the camera hits him on his head.
                                         
                                        And this put him into a mild rage, which had him chasing me around the vehicle, threatening to punch me in the face.
                                         
                                        And then eventually, like, he would go into a red mist, and then he would come to and say, okay, get off to the hyena.
                                         
                                        Let's go find it.
                                         
                                        And so most of my trauma was around driving him around as his camera bear.
                                         
                                        Then in another incident, he said to me, it was a herd of elephants that were coming down to a waterhole.
                                         
                                        And he said to me, okay, you're going to creep in there.
                                         
    
                                        You're going to get ourselves well positioned on the bank.
                                         
                                        You're going to get a nice, low angle shot of these elephants drinking.
                                         
                                        And so I said, okay, let's go.
                                         
                                        So I'm carrying the camera.
                                         
                                        He sneaks down to the edge, and he grabs the camera, and he starts to film.
                                         
                                        And this big bull elephant turns, and it starts walking towards us.
                                         
                                        and I immediately felt my heart rate starting to go up
                                         
                                        because I could tell the position we were there
                                         
    
                                        not really a lot of places to go.
                                         
                                        His way of handling the approaching elephant
                                         
                                        was to simply zoom out on the camera repeatedly.
                                         
                                        Every time the elephant got closer,
                                         
                                        he just zoomed out of it and pushed it back
                                         
                                        till eventually it was about five or six meters from us standing over us
                                         
                                        and at this point he looked up from the camera
                                         
                                        and he turned to me and said,
                                         
    
                                        hey man why didn't you tell me it was so bloody close and then we got into this freeze off
                                         
                                        where basically it was just a standoff and at some point he whispered back to me and said
                                         
                                        Barry if this elephant comes I want you to crawl into that hole there and there was like an
                                         
                                        abandoned Warren where some war-togs had made a hole and his escape route was for me to crawl in there
                                         
                                        and so it was just like this constant sense of like wait are we are we okay here or are we in
                                         
                                        massive danger he had film camps all over Africa and one of his film camps was in Kenya
                                         
                                        I'll never forget when I was maybe about 10 or 12.
                                         
                                        He put me on the back of the film van,
                                         
    
                                        and he gave me a kind of machete.
                                         
                                        And he said to me, as we drove through the city of Nairobi,
                                         
                                        he said to me,
                                         
                                        Daddy, if anyone tries to grab a hold of any of our camera gear,
                                         
                                        just hit them on the hand with the machete.
                                         
                                        This is like a babysitting Lando edition.
                                         
                                        Then at a certain stage, he moved up to Zambia,
                                         
                                        and he had a film camp up in Zambia,
                                         
    
                                        and he was always trying to get great shots, and he had a knack for it.
                                         
                                        You know, like in the Maasimara where the Vilderbees would be crossing the river,
                                         
                                        you would see the BBC, you would see Discovery Channel that'd all be parked in a certain position.
                                         
                                        On the other side of the bank would be, you know, a million Vilderbees,
                                         
                                        and they all looked like they were about to cross.
                                         
                                        And then John Varty would be parked 400 yards away, seemingly away from the action.
                                         
                                        And at the last minute, the entire herd would turn, run down river,
                                         
                                        and somehow managed to cross right in front of him.
                                         
    
                                        He had a kind of magical knack for being in the right place
                                         
                                        in a real profound sense of how animals move and operate.
                                         
                                        And there was just like a wildness to him.
                                         
                                        He loved being out there.
                                         
                                        He loved the wilderness.
                                         
                                        He later in his career had made a few attempts to rehabilitate cats
                                         
                                        and get them back into the wild.
                                         
                                        So he tried to get a young leopard that had been abandoned back into the wild.
                                         
    
                                        He was involved in a reintroduction of a lion project
                                         
                                        where he found a lion cub and tried to get it back into the wild.
                                         
                                        he did all sorts of things i mean when we were living with him in zambia i'll never forget um
                                         
                                        we were living in the luangua valley with him and he he had a small boat that he would traverse
                                         
                                        the luangua with and the luangua river is the densest population of crocodiles in the world
                                         
                                        and the boat he had had a tiny like two horsepower engine on it so it's just like a dinghy
                                         
                                        right it's just like a little dingy it had like a tiny like the top of the boat from the waterline
                                         
                                        was inches and he would load it with all sorts of things. Then he would hit a sandbank and he would
                                         
    
                                        say to me, buddy, you had to get out and push the boat off the sandbank. And I would like look
                                         
                                        up and down the bank where there were hundreds of crocodiles and I would say, I don't want to
                                         
                                        get out. He said, hey man, get out. Stop being a nafter is what he would call us. But get out, push
                                         
                                        the boats. And then one day he found a young dead elephant. He was kind of maniacal about getting
                                         
                                        shots. He found a young dead elephant that had been washed down the river. And he decided what he
                                         
                                        wanted to do was tow the elephant towards the bank where he could tie it to the bank and then he
                                         
                                        would buy in the grass and he would get great shots of crocodiles coming in to feed on the elephant
                                         
                                        so we get in the boat he's got this piece of rope we get up to the elephant and he says okay buddy
                                         
    
                                        tie the rope around the elephant and then he heads off upstream in the boat and tim when i tell you he
                                         
                                        took full throttle of the boat and with the drag of the elephant we went absolutely no
                                         
                                        nowhere for 45 minutes.
                                         
                                        And only I realized this, because I was looking at the bank, and I could see that we weren't
                                         
                                        going anywhere.
                                         
                                        The boat was in a full plane, and he was just rigorously committed to trying to get the elephant
                                         
                                        to the bank.
                                         
                                        So eventually that didn't work.
                                         
    
                                        We ran out of gas in exactly the same spot.
                                         
                                        So then he sent me to the shore to get some spades, because we didn't have oars for the
                                         
                                        boat.
                                         
                                        So he sent me to get a couple of spades, and we used spades, and we managed to paddle.
                                         
                                        Spades meaning like a shovel?
                                         
                                        Shovels, yeah.
                                         
                                        we managed to row the elephant to the shoreline where we tied it to the bank,
                                         
                                        and for the next four days lay in the long grass there while he shot films of crocodiles
                                         
    
                                        feeding on this elephant. So it was just a baptism into the ramblings of an incredibly wild person.
                                         
                                        So here's a question I may not have ever asked you. I don't think I have. But listening to these
                                         
                                        stories, I can't help but wonder, how do you orient towards safety? Because I think about
                                         
                                        people, for instance, in a modern environment, doom-scrolling every day, they just have this
                                         
                                        slow IV drip of cortisol with no real imminent danger, but this perceived threat that is just
                                         
                                        infused into their daily experience, 24-7. And then you listen to these stories, and you're like,
                                         
                                        okay, and certainly some of the stories in our first conversation for the podcast, you're almost
                                         
                                        dying, being attacked by crocodiles, and this, that, and the other thing. And there's no short list
                                         
    
                                        of these incidents, and then you listen to your adventures with JV or firefighting.
                                         
                                        It's like, okay, on any given Tuesday, you flip a coin, and those could have gone sideways
                                         
                                        in some capacity. How do you orient towards safety or danger, and how has that changed over
                                         
                                        time? It's certainly something I've wrestled with, because after all those years with my uncle,
                                         
                                        there was a double-edged sword to it. On the one side, when I think back of how old I was during a lot
                                         
                                        of those incidences, I remember feeling tremendously out of my depth. And I remember feeling like,
                                         
                                        wait, what are we doing? And I don't know how to handle this. He was of the mindset that you
                                         
                                        should be able to handle anything. I mean, he would walk off into a dangerous situation and he would
                                         
    
                                        hand me a rifle and he would say, buddy, if I get into trouble out there, I'm expecting you to help
                                         
                                        me. And so then I would be left with this like eight-year-old sense of responsibility and feeling like
                                         
                                        I'm going to need to take action against this, but I'm ill-prepared to take
                                         
                                        action against this. And so I found myself quite split in some ways. Like on the one hand,
                                         
                                        I would feel very apprehensive about certain things. And then in other instances, the apprehension
                                         
                                        was always prior to the incident, but then in a situation, I always felt very calm and felt like
                                         
                                        I actually had capability. And I've thought a lot about that now, like, because I always have a
                                         
                                        sense that whatever's going to happen, I can handle it. And that is a gift he gave me, a sense that
                                         
    
                                        we will figure it out in a very instinctual game time live way.
                                         
                                        Like I can be in pretty high octane situations,
                                         
                                        but I'm nervous of it.
                                         
                                        I still have a part of me that feels like I'm going to be ill-prepared for what is coming.
                                         
                                        I feel those two places in myself all the time.
                                         
                                        And I think a lot about recently, obviously I just had a son,
                                         
                                        and I think a lot about what it would be like to build capability in him.
                                         
                                        Because I feel like I have a sense of capability.
                                         
    
                                        I feel like I listened to your interview with Chris Sacker where he was talking about, you know, just like young people needing to have more incidences in their life, needing to have been in a bar and bumped a car and like lived life.
                                         
                                        And I feel very full of that, but I also feel like some of that stuff was I was over my head and that, you know, I've had to manage some of that.
                                         
                                        So how do I orientate towards it now?
                                         
                                        I think trying to build a sense of capability and confidence in whatever I'm doing has become ground zero.
                                         
                                        and not just expect things of myself,
                                         
                                        but actually take the time to realize,
                                         
                                        like if I'm doing something new,
                                         
                                        my approach to it would be like,
                                         
    
                                        I should just be able to handle this.
                                         
                                        And I think what I've learned is that
                                         
                                        I need to go slower
                                         
                                        and build confidence and build capability.
                                         
                                        And that has been the ultimate healing on those ones.
                                         
                                        So I'm looking at this,
                                         
                                        I want to make sure we layer in stories,
                                         
                                        but we can intersperse with other things.
                                         
    
                                        So we're going to get to perhaps lunch,
                                         
                                        maybe Toby Fesson,
                                         
                                        no idea what that refers to at all.
                                         
                                        But there's one that I want to pull out here just to see where this goes.
                                         
                                        Learning's from 10 years of wilderness retreats.
                                         
                                        I mean, you've taken so many different types of people on wilderness retreats.
                                         
                                        Certainly you've had many varieties of experiences yourself as a participant, as a guide,
                                         
                                        as a tracker, as a facilitator.
                                         
    
                                        What are some of the kind of main entries in the diary of lessons learned after a decade
                                         
                                        of doing these types of retreats in the bush?
                                         
                                        You know, I feel like I run the retreats every year
                                         
                                        through the winter months,
                                         
                                        and I feel like every year we get more aware
                                         
                                        of what we're actually trying to do on the retreats,
                                         
                                        and we get better at them.
                                         
                                        And I think the primary thing that I've come to really value
                                         
    
                                        is that the faster we can put people into what I would call
                                         
                                        the natural state, the speedier,
                                         
                                        the uptick of transformation. And I think when I initially started creating transformational spaces
                                         
                                        in nature, I wanted something to happen. And I felt like my job was to quickly try and figure out
                                         
                                        where a person was blocked or where there was a kink in the energy and try and rapidly help
                                         
                                        them develop awareness around how that particular blockage, trauma, belief system could be
                                         
                                        transformed. And I feel like I've become way more relaxed with it now.
                                         
                                        In fact, on our retreats now, the first day is into silence and nature.
                                         
    
                                        And I have this idea that comes from Martha Beck, where her take on the natural world is that it's a wordless environment.
                                         
                                        And so if you look at the animals, they don't have verbal minds, so you don't see them thinking past and future.
                                         
                                        You don't see lions lying there thinking, oh, Janine messed up that hunt yesterday, and so we can't trust her going forward.
                                         
                                        And so if you can go into wordlessness, then very quickly people start going into oneness.
                                         
                                        And so the key thing I have found now is get people to be quiet, get them into more wordlessness,
                                         
                                        create an opportunity for them to interact and receive lessons from the natural world,
                                         
                                        and then things rapidly start to happen.
                                         
                                        The other thing is that I would say is that I say now that when people come,
                                         
    
                                        they enter into the Londa Lodilosey Time War, because if you can take away their tech,
                                         
                                        which we now enforce.
                                         
                                        I absolutely will not allow any tech
                                         
                                        because what happens is
                                         
                                        even if a person who's running a company comes
                                         
                                        and they go into silence the first afternoon
                                         
                                        and then we go out the next morning
                                         
                                        and we're tracking an animal
                                         
    
                                        and then they get back
                                         
                                        and they pick their phone up
                                         
                                        and they've got a human resources issue
                                         
                                        back at the company,
                                         
                                        they start to pop out
                                         
                                        because I also think that there's a profound chemistry to it
                                         
                                        as people go into wordlessness
                                         
                                        and the soundscape starts to work on them
                                         
    
                                        as they start to put their attention on living things and start to feel those archetypal energies
                                         
                                        that are in the natural world, literally their brain starts to cascade different neurochemistry,
                                         
                                        their nervous system starts to go more, generally more parasympathetic, and they start to
                                         
                                        enter into a different state of awareness. And in that state, their natural inner knowing
                                         
                                        starts to spit out by, I would say, within the first 24 hours, something in them will start
                                         
                                        to know and it will start to spit out insights and you don't have to work too hard at it.
                                         
                                        The other is if you say to people, I want you to go and open yourself to receiving lessons
                                         
                                        from the natural world. The psyche is so intelligent, especially in a retreat space,
                                         
    
                                        it's funny, like if you have a 10-day retreat, people will orientate perfectly to that,
                                         
                                        10 days, and what will need to occur in that 10 days will occur. If you said it's a two-day
                                         
                                        retreat, they will get aspects of the same thing, but the psyche will know kind of how much
                                         
                                        time it has. In the same way, the psyche will start to interact with the natural world,
                                         
                                        and they will start to see and receive messages that are particular to what they are working on.
                                         
                                        and so really the lesson from 10 years of retreats is don't work too hard allow the space
                                         
                                        allow people's psyche to start to be in relation with the natural world and then insight
                                         
                                        will start to naturally develop very very quickly and people can do this at home if you start saying
                                         
    
                                        I want to go out into the local park I want to go out into my garden and I have a specific question
                                         
                                        and you write that question down and you start asking specifically nature
                                         
                                        could you help me answer that question? It's almost like a Zen co-on. You're holding an intention
                                         
                                        and a desire for certain answers. And then what you see, your psyche will run that through a
                                         
                                        specific matrix and insight will start to develop. Yeah, there are a few things that come to mind
                                         
                                        as you're saying all this. I took a number of notes. One is that I think people bias,
                                         
                                        or certainly I'll speak for Americans, but this is, I think, common in a lot of countries,
                                         
                                        towards the question of what should I do. And it's an immediate tilt towards addition, if that makes
                                         
    
                                        sense. But sometimes you get to where you want to go or achieve a certain state by removing
                                         
                                        the obstacles to that state. So when you were talking about natural state, I was thinking of,
                                         
                                        for instance, when I was on this Montana trip, I had a few friends with me. Some of them had phones,
                                         
                                        some of them didn't even just for taking photographs and i left my phone behind very deliberately
                                         
                                        smart and i feel like if for instance you're not in the bush in south africa if you're not in the
                                         
                                        mountains of montana if you simply take a digital sabbath remove say bright light after sundown do a
                                         
                                        few things where you're simply removing modern conveniences that are actually very unnatural from an
                                         
                                        evolutionary perspective, you start to access this natural state. And what the hell does that
                                         
    
                                        mean? That can mean a lot of different things. But one, for me, at least, that I noticed at
                                         
                                        at Landozi. I noticed it certainly in Montana, you can notice it, simply walking around without a lot
                                         
                                        of the modern technologies that we are very much ill-adapted for at this point, is that these
                                         
                                        older faculties, these very well-developed capacities that we depended on for so many
                                         
                                        millennia, come back online. Maybe they're always online, but the volume is very low. And so
                                         
                                        you start to notice a lot more. And it just fundamentally changes your perceptual lived experience
                                         
                                        on a day-to-day basis. I would say another thing that Londo nails. And what's so cool about it
                                         
                                        is that it is a function of being synchronized with wildlife activity.
                                         
    
                                        And that is really early morning drives.
                                         
                                        So you have the game drives, which are typically what time would you say?
                                         
                                        People are waking up in the morning.
                                         
                                        You want to go out at dawn.
                                         
                                        You want your circadian rhythm to be affected by that sunrise and then and the cool of the morning.
                                         
                                        Yeah.
                                         
                                        So people are generally to get a bite to eat and a cup of coffee waking up, let's just
                                         
                                        call it 30 minutes before sunrise, something like that. And what that means is you are typically
                                         
    
                                        jet lagged. And I think that actually works to the benefit of a lot of folks because you get this
                                         
                                        incredible time dilation. Like your experiential day feels like two or three days because you wake up,
                                         
                                        it's dark, then it gets light, then you come back and have a bite to eat and probably take a nap.
                                         
                                        then you wake up you do another drive if it gets dark and you have this very full spectrum experience
                                         
                                        that makes a week at landa loz you feel like two weeks which is very similar to being in the
                                         
                                        montana mountains or really anywhere in nature where you are waking up with light you are going to
                                         
                                        generally winding down with the sunset and i just find that natural state and i'll shut up in a second
                                         
                                        but bringing those very, very mission critical for millennia faculties online, whether it's by turning
                                         
    
                                        them on or just simply turning up the volume so you notice them to be nurturing and recharging
                                         
                                        in a way that is hard to put words to, right? And you carry that back into the modern world
                                         
                                        with you. It's spot on. I mean, the other thing that I would say, a few things on what you said there.
                                         
                                        the one is so many people arrive on the retreats with a sense of what to do next.
                                         
                                        You know, sometimes someone's built a company and sold it.
                                         
                                        Sometimes someone is changing career.
                                         
                                        Sometimes someone is going through a relationship change.
                                         
                                        And they arrive, as you say, with this desire of like, what's next?
                                         
    
                                        And what has struck me up so much is in order to open to the natural state,
                                         
                                        so often the first thing to do is to let go of needing to know.
                                         
                                        know what that next thing is. So often when I say to people, stop trying to know and stop trying to
                                         
                                        use this retreat to get the next thing. And in fact, let yourself not know and just enter into
                                         
                                        the circadian rhythm of seeing the sunrise and seeing the sunset, watching it go from stars to
                                         
                                        stars. We work a lot now on this rhythm that you're describing. I like to go out early, drop into
                                         
                                        meditation, let the dawn break around you, then intensity. You need to switch on and track. And we need
                                         
                                        to operate well on our feet. We need to be tuned in. We need to listen. Then get back to the camp
                                         
    
                                        and drop the energy again. It's only this Western culture and which is like level 10 energy all the
                                         
                                        time. Everything in nature moves through intensity rest, intensity rest. And as people feel themselves
                                         
                                        allowed to rest, another insight is I think we used to try and do too much on retreats, giving people
                                         
                                        high intensity moments and then spaciousness to be more like an animal, that starts to conjure it
                                         
                                        and then sit around the fire at night and then let the natural world be your teacher.
                                         
                                        The other thing is, is that, and I know that you've had these experiences, it's really become
                                         
                                        quite remarkable to me how many mystical things happen. When I first met Martha and I started
                                         
                                        to understand transformational processes, I was still like a drink of beer, you know,
                                         
    
                                        punch someone in the face type of person. You know, I was 20 years old, South Africa.
                                         
                                        and I did not consider transformational processes or coaching or inner work.
                                         
                                        I had no grounding in that.
                                         
                                        And then also just like, oh, the animals are going to bring messages.
                                         
                                        That was all quite woo for me.
                                         
                                        But I have seen now the most remarkable things.
                                         
                                        You know, one thing that comes to mind is on every retreat,
                                         
                                        there will be magical occurrences with the animals.
                                         
    
                                        A woman will sit in the circle and she will say,
                                         
                                        you know, I grew up in a family of alcoholics.
                                         
                                        and when you grow up in a family of alcoholics,
                                         
                                        it's incredibly dangerous all the time.
                                         
                                        And so what I learned,
                                         
                                        I've learned to make myself invisible.
                                         
                                        I've learned to hide.
                                         
                                        I've never let myself be seen
                                         
    
                                        because being seen was dangerous.
                                         
                                        That afternoon we go out
                                         
                                        and she's sitting on the back of an open land rover
                                         
                                        and a male lion that's been sleeping,
                                         
                                        rouses himself, stands up,
                                         
                                        walks towards the back of the land rover, stops,
                                         
                                        and he looks up at her, he looks into her eyes, and it's just breathing, gazing at her.
                                         
                                        And it's so intense to be looked at by a 400-pound serial killer like that.
                                         
    
                                        It's something so kind and powerful and the presence that that animal projects.
                                         
                                        And she looks away initially, and I say to her, you can look back, and she turns and she looks
                                         
                                        back, and I can feel it's the most profound revealing psychologically that she's ever been involved in.
                                         
                                        And after that, something shifts in her and she's able to start allowing herself to step forward.
                                         
                                        You know, another one that comes to mind is we had a guy come on a retreat and he's sitting in the circle and he says to me, you know, one thing that has happened is since my father died, I've been totally unable to grieve.
                                         
                                        Like, I know that I want to break open, but I can't get to it.
                                         
                                        Like, I just can't cry.
                                         
                                        And for the first few days, that's the case.
                                         
    
                                        On the third day, you know, I'm sort of talking to him.
                                         
                                        I'm checking in on him.
                                         
                                        And we're sitting, you know, Lando's has these kind of decks that you sit out on,
                                         
                                        but there's a thatched area, but it's open.
                                         
                                        And a bird flies into the thatched area and it lands on the little gumpole over his head.
                                         
                                        It looks down at him and it starts calling intensely.
                                         
                                        Very unusual.
                                         
                                        Sometimes a bird will fly through, but this bird flies into the area where they're people and starts calling.
                                         
    
                                        And he looks up at this bird and at the moment he sees it, I see tears come to his eyes.
                                         
                                        and he starts to weep, weep, weep, and for 10 minutes he can't talk.
                                         
                                        And then he looks at me and he says, this is going to sound so weird, guys,
                                         
                                        but you know, my father was an avid bird watcher.
                                         
                                        And this bird, the southern boo-boo, was his favorite bird.
                                         
                                        And, you know, stuff like that is happening so regularly that I can't deny it.
                                         
                                        I just know that things will happen, magic will occur.
                                         
                                        I mean, look, we also had one woman who was describing her trauma and how in her life everything gets taken from her.
                                         
    
                                        And while she's describing that she's eating a piece of toast at breakfast and a monkey literally jumped down and snatched the toast out of her hand.
                                         
                                        But there's definitely a sense.
                                         
                                        And I think that native cultures knew this and I think it's woo-woo to us.
                                         
                                        But if you intentionally start working with the natural world, it knows on some level.
                                         
                                        a field of living sentience, it starts to sense that intentionality and that awareness and then
                                         
                                        things start to happen. And I think people need to be re-enchanted. I think one of the things
                                         
                                        that we're afflicted with is that we are dulled down and we are disconnected from magic. And
                                         
                                        sometimes it doesn't even have to be that woo-woo just to see a leopard and her cubs leap up into the
                                         
    
                                        branches of a marilla tree and to feel like, God, this is the beauty of it. And to have
                                         
                                        that affect you in some profound way. I've just seen so much of it now. I'm a real believer that
                                         
                                        nature wants us to heal. And nature knows when we come to her with the desire to mend our soul.
                                         
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                                        You know, it also strikes me that I'm speaking to myself as much as anyone else, that
                                         
                                        sometimes we tend to want to fight fire with fire, and I'll explain what I mean by that,
                                         
                                        and it doesn't always work in the sense that we have a problem or we perceive a problem
                                         
                                        through our thinking, and so we want to use more thinking to fix that problem.
                                         
                                        Or we think, I just need to try.
                                         
                                        harder and it's like well if trying harder would have solved this it would have been solved by
                                         
    
                                        now in some way and absolutely and there's so much canvas to explore that is as you mentioned wordless
                                         
                                        if you're able to even entertain the question of you know what if the path or the relief could
                                         
                                        be found outside of words and concepts right what might that look like and what it might
                                         
                                        look like is spending time in nature. And one of my favorite experiences at Lantolozian,
                                         
                                        as you know, I've been a bunch of times now, is the silent morning drives. And just to explain
                                         
                                        that briefly, or do you want to explain that briefly? Well, maybe I could say two things about that.
                                         
                                        The other is a story comes to mind of a very silly anecdotal story. But one of the things that led me
                                         
                                        to probably all the way to this conversation
                                         
    
                                        is when I was
                                         
                                        prior to my firefighting days
                                         
                                        when I was on the Londa Losey sales
                                         
                                        and marketing team, I found myself in London
                                         
                                        and by day I was seeing different agents
                                         
                                        and I was telling them about Londalersie
                                         
                                        and then we got invited myself and a friend
                                         
                                        who I was traveling with. We got invited to a party
                                         
    
                                        that night and at that time
                                         
                                        I was struggling with very, very severe depression
                                         
                                        and we did that childish thing that you sometimes do
                                         
                                        when you're in your 20s where we decided we would
                                         
                                        go to the party and we would kind of make up fake backstories and like kind of be in character
                                         
                                        for the night. So when people asked me what I would do at that time, out of nowhere, I started
                                         
                                        saying I'm a writer. And I hadn't got even close to writing anything at that stage. I would be
                                         
                                        totally daunted by the process. But when I said it at this party, this total bullshit story I had
                                         
    
                                        made up, every time I said it, I felt a little uptick of energy in my body.
                                         
                                        Not in my mind, not a rational sense that this is what you should do.
                                         
                                        I just literally felt like, oh, this little, like, kick of energy.
                                         
                                        And I decided to follow that little kick of energy.
                                         
                                        And when I got back to South Africa, I sat down at my old computer and I started writing down stories.
                                         
                                        And I noticed that whilst I was engaged in the process of writing, the depression would lift.
                                         
                                        Or I would not be aware of how much just gray I was carrying around.
                                         
                                        I would wake up in my bed and I would have that feeling where you wake up and you just feel like,
                                         
    
                                        oh my God, I'm going to fight to get through this day.
                                         
                                        And I would do my duties.
                                         
                                        I would do all the things I needed to do like with this gray cloud around my head.
                                         
                                        And then I would sit down at the computer and I would start to write out some silly anecdotal story and suddenly something would lift.
                                         
                                        And I would follow that.
                                         
                                        And literally everything that has brought me to here has been following that non-rational energy in my body.
                                         
                                        I'm aware of what makes me feel a little more energized, a little more expansive, and I just
                                         
                                        figure out how to move towards that. Now, in order to do that, you do need some stillness.
                                         
    
                                        And one thing that has become so profound for us is, you know, the safari business is evolving,
                                         
                                        and I think that we're working hard to change what it is. It used to be, you come there,
                                         
                                        you have your guide, who gives you an interpretive wilderness experience, he tells you about
                                         
                                        all the animals, he describes their habits, their gestation periods, he tells you,
                                         
                                        caps you into the biological sciences. That can be so wonderful. And all of that information can be
                                         
                                        more information. So what we started to do in the attempt to take people into deeper wordlessness
                                         
                                        was to say you're going to go out and you are going to be in silence. And hopefully that silence
                                         
                                        pulls you into a deeper place. But what you're also going to do is you're going to watch your
                                         
    
                                        mind and you might be watching looking at something and you might find yourself saying what's going on
                                         
                                        there why is that animal doing it what animal is that what's even happening here just be aware of that
                                         
                                        and try and come out of needing to know which is the primary state of our society right only in
                                         
                                        eastern philosophy do we find our way to don't know mind to the whole western mind is structured
                                         
                                        around needing to know so if you find yourself needing to know let that go and just be in pure
                                         
                                        experience of it. Let the silence work on you. Feel how everything is unfolding with an intelligence
                                         
                                        and you don't really need to rationally know it. Try and feel it at a deeper level. And to a man,
                                         
                                        people report coming back. Some people report feeling incredibly frustrated. Some people said,
                                         
    
                                        you know, I found my mind wondering to wait, when I'm at home, should I catch the six train or the
                                         
                                        five train downtown? Like people's minds go to, did I turn the tap off? Who's looking after the cat? But
                                         
                                        If you can keep them in it, eventually you drop through to a different sense.
                                         
                                        And then as you watch the animals, you drop into a different layer of language.
                                         
                                        And it's what I would call the first language.
                                         
                                        And it's the language of energy.
                                         
                                        And you start to feel how when a leopard turns and looks at you, with the shape of its body, with the look in its eyes, with the way it moves it head, it is conveying energy.
                                         
                                        and you can watch the prey species move through different nervous system states from totally relaxed to
                                         
    
                                        listening and aware to attuned to potential danger and you can feel how as they move their bodies
                                         
                                        every one of those states in their body has a feeling to it and you can feel that feeling in your own
                                         
                                        body and getting to know that feeling is where i think it's definitely more where native cultures
                                         
                                        operated and inside of it is a deep sense of connectivity because you can
                                         
                                        feel yourself relating to every creature once you know that language.
                                         
                                        When you can look at a leopard and without any words between you feel its energy,
                                         
                                        feel what it's conveying to you, you can be in a dialogue like that.
                                         
                                        And I'm sure you've had this, Tim, but in shamanic ceremonies and when I've been around
                                         
    
                                        healers, I remember once asking to my teacher in the medicine space, will you teach me?
                                         
                                        Why won't you teach me?
                                         
                                        And he said to me, well, the feeling is not there yet.
                                         
                                        And I said to him, no, I'm asking you.
                                         
                                        He said, yeah, but I can feel your distrust.
                                         
                                        Whatever you say to me, the feeling you energetically are giving off is still, there's still
                                         
                                        too much distrust.
                                         
                                        And only when the feeling is different between us, will I start to teach you?
                                         
    
                                        And to me, that space was so full of that first language energy, the energy between things.
                                         
                                        Yeah.
                                         
                                        I want to also maybe underscore for folks that this might sound very abstract.
                                         
                                        or esoteric, but there are real direct applications of what we're talking about to everyday modern
                                         
                                        life as well. And a few names that we know in common come to mind. One is Diana Chapman, who we
                                         
                                        both know, of course, and the whole body yes and really tuning into your kinesthetic, your bodily
                                         
                                        sensations for making decisions of various types for choosing things. Could be as simple as something on a menu,
                                         
                                        could be something as high stakes as to say yes or no to a potentially huge business partnership
                                         
    
                                        with a given person, let's just say. And I've had her on the podcast, people can listen to that
                                         
                                        episode for more on the whole body yes and how to navigate that if we don't get into it now.
                                         
                                        Another that comes to mind, as you said, that the particularly, let's just, I'll limit it
                                         
                                        to the United States for now because other cultures are quite different in this respect with
                                         
                                        CS does and so on. But the idea that you wake up and you just go 10 out of 10 from,
                                         
                                        when you wake up to when you close your laptop is anathema to the natural world. That's just not
                                         
                                        how things work at all. And if you engage in, say, going on safari, if you spend time in the natural
                                         
                                        world, certainly if you do any type of hunting, you realize there are these natural rhythms. So if
                                         
    
                                        you go on, let's just say, an elk hunt or something like that, you may spend a few hours
                                         
                                        doing act Y and Z and then just bed down. You're like the animals are bedded down. We're not going to
                                         
                                        find them. They're inactive. It's going to be incredibly difficult. So instead of waste our
                                         
                                        energy, you're going to take a nap, have a snack and take a nap. And I recognize that,
                                         
                                        you know, having a snack and taking a nap may not make sense in between your Zoom calls. But the
                                         
                                        point is that if you talk to someone like Josh Waitskin, another mutual friend of ours,
                                         
                                        who, for those who don't recognize the name, he was my second ever podcast on this podcast
                                         
                                        out of 800 something plus. And he's going to hate this. But he's known best for searching for Bobby
                                         
    
                                        Fisher. He was a very high-level chess player beginning at a very young age, but has applied his
                                         
                                        learning approach to mastery in a number of different fields. World champion in Tai Chi push hands,
                                         
                                        first black belt under Marcelo Garcia, nine-time world champion in Brazilian jiu-jitsu,
                                         
                                        now foiling at a very, very high level on huge waves. And what does Josh say? When he looks at all of
                                         
                                        these world-class performers in these different disciplines, when he looks at the people he works with
                                         
                                        directly ranging from sports at a very high level. I don't know if it's public yet. I think it is.
                                         
                                        Yeah, the Celtics, for instance, all the way to the absolute 1% of 1% in, say, the finance world.
                                         
                                        One of his mantras, and I don't think he'll mind me paraphrasing this, is avoid the simmering six.
                                         
    
                                        And avoiding the simmering six is, if you look at, say, Marcelo Garcia before he's going to
                                         
                                        compete in a world championship mat, they're running around trying to find him because it's five
                                         
                                        minutes to go time and where is he he's sleeping under the bleachers he's taking a nap he's at zero and then
                                         
                                        he wakes up shakes it off and then in the 200 feet before he gets on the mat he switches it to a 10
                                         
                                        and he's going from rest to full engagement he's not sitting in the middle with that ivy drip of
                                         
                                        24-7 cortisol and sympathetic overdrive that is deliberately what he is avoiding and that is in large part
                                         
                                        how he is able to partition resources to engage so fully and dominate competitively.
                                         
                                        And that's also true for people in the finance world who are working in very high-stakes
                                         
    
                                        environments for making decisions around placing trades and so on.
                                         
                                        So it has what we're talking about.
                                         
                                        This is just my somewhat clumsy way of saying that I, every day, I'm sitting in New York
                                         
                                        City, for God's sake, this is, I mean, it is the concrete job.
                                         
                                        jungle, but it is the city that never sleeps, right? It is in some ways the antithesis of living
                                         
                                        at Lando. Nonetheless, I can take a lot of the lessons learned that you see so clearly there
                                         
                                        and you have to squint a little bit to apply it here in such an intense environment, but you can
                                         
                                        and you actually really get benefit very quickly from doing so. So Diana Chapman, Josh Waitskin.
                                         
    
                                        I just want to point out how broadly these themes apply, even if they seem to some people
                                         
                                        listening, maybe a bit exotic.
                                         
                                        Yeah, I know it felt said.
                                         
                                        Fire. I felt like you were just about to jump into something.
                                         
                                        I mean, just the information, all roads in personal transformation lead to the information
                                         
                                        is inside you.
                                         
                                        You actually know it's in you in the way that lions know how to be lions and leopards know
                                         
                                        how to be leopards. If you want to find your way to your fullest expression, it's in you,
                                         
    
                                        it's subtract of making the space to allow that information to come forward. And a big part of that
                                         
                                        is just letting yourself follow the energy of the non-rational energy of people, places, experiences
                                         
                                        where you literally feel your body full of an expansive alive energy. And getting good at following
                                         
                                        that is the ultimate tracking. Full aliveness and other Joshism. Fully alive. Jim Detmer too
                                         
                                        who's also been on the podcast and a mutual friend of ours.
                                         
                                        Let's, as promised, we're going to kind of hop between these tracks.
                                         
                                        I've got lunch and Toby Fescent.
                                         
                                        Where do you want to go?
                                         
    
                                        Or we could choose option C if there's another one that comes to mind.
                                         
                                        Let me tell you about my friend Toby and I.
                                         
                                        So Toby was an Englishman and I'm sure he won't mind me telling the story to millions of people.
                                         
                                        But Toby came on safari with his family.
                                         
                                        And this is quite some time ago now, maybe a good 20.
                                         
                                        20 years ago, came on safari with his family and he had such a great time and he had such a great
                                         
                                        energy and attitude about him that he managed to convince us to let him stay on as a kind of
                                         
                                        general hand around the camp. And so when his family flew off, Toby stayed on and he immediately got
                                         
    
                                        integrated into the village of Londalosie and he picked up all of the worst jobs. He had to clean
                                         
                                        the lanterns that get put out every evening. At one stage, he was painting an ablution block. And just every
                                         
                                        time I saw him, he was on some kind of like errand around the camp. One day Toby and I was sitting
                                         
                                        down at the staff canteen and a radio call in that some guests had reported that they had seen
                                         
                                        a snake in their room. So myself and another ranger said, okay, we'll go handle this. And Toby said,
                                         
                                        guys, do you mind if I come along? Said, Toby, come with us. And so we jumped into a golf cart,
                                         
                                        which sort of is how people get around in the back of house of the reserve. He jumped into a golf cart
                                         
                                        and we went up to the Rangers room
                                         
    
                                        to fetch our snake catching stick
                                         
                                        which had picked up the name 50-50
                                         
                                        because it was a bit of a Heath Robinson.
                                         
                                        It was a piece of PVC pipe
                                         
                                        that someone had run a lamp cord through
                                         
                                        that had made a kind of noose.
                                         
                                        And the way that it worked is you would get the loop
                                         
                                        at the end of the stick around
                                         
    
                                        and then you would pull on the cord
                                         
                                        and technically it should tighten up
                                         
                                        and catch the snake in the noose.
                                         
                                        But it was a little bit niggly in certain places.
                                         
                                        Sometimes it wouldn't close all the way.
                                         
                                        So it had picked up the nickname
                                         
                                        and 50-50. So we grab 50-50 and a big kind of like black dustbin and we jump into the
                                         
                                        golf cart and we drive down to the room. Toby's hanging on the back of the vehicle. We get down to
                                         
    
                                        the room and there are two German guests who are looking somewhat shocked and I'm going to be
                                         
                                        honest with you Tim. I gave them my most powerful don't worry. I'm here now. The safari guide of
                                         
                                        the year has arrived. You don't need to worry. I'm going to go in there and sort the
                                         
                                        situation out. And so they were left standing at the door and myself and Toby and the other
                                         
                                        guide went in. And it's very rare to have a snake in a room, but sometimes a little house snake
                                         
                                        or a green variegated bush snake will get in. So we're walking around and I noticed the suitcase
                                         
                                        on the rack, an empty suitcase. And I flipped the lid open and what rose out of the suitcase
                                         
                                        was one of the biggest black mumbas I've ever seen in my life. It kind of levitated out of the
                                         
    
                                        case. Do you want to explain why that isn't your garden variety gardener snake?
                                         
                                        A black mamba is not only is an extremely venomous snake, but it is highly mobile and very
                                         
                                        difficult to handle in a confined space. And if it bites you, die quickly. So myself and Toby and the
                                         
                                        other guide, we went for the door at the same time. And I remember the three of us kind of jammed
                                         
                                        in it as we were trying to exit the room at high speed. Three stooges. I might have reached
                                         
                                        forward to grab their faces to pull myself through.
                                         
                                        We got outside and I said to the Germans, there's a big snake in there.
                                         
                                        And they said, yeah, we told you.
                                         
    
                                        And so now we face with a bit of a dilemma and they're watching us.
                                         
                                        So we decide, no, okay, we know what we're dealing with now.
                                         
                                        We must go back in.
                                         
                                        And so we make our way back in.
                                         
                                        And now we are tiptoeing around the room and we're flipping up cushions and we're pulling bed spreads off.
                                         
                                        And what the Germans see standing outside is they see like a pillow fly out the room because you don't want to lift it slowly.
                                         
                                        You want to kind of like rip it open and see what's under it.
                                         
                                        then they see a chair fly out, then they see like a duvet come flying past them. Toby at this stage
                                         
    
                                        has positioned himself for maximum discomfort. He's close enough to be in the way, but he's not
                                         
                                        close enough to be fully helpful. And he's giving us a running commentary on the dangers of black
                                         
                                        numbers. He's saying, if they bite you, he will die instantly. Their venom is deadly in tiny quantities.
                                         
                                        I'm like, Toby, you are not helping the situation. Can you please shut up? And I remember at one stage,
                                         
                                        we pulled the duvet cover off the bed,
                                         
                                        and the bed had an electric blanket on it,
                                         
                                        and the cable of the electric blanket came off,
                                         
                                        and it made like a snake-like motion
                                         
    
                                        and all of us reared backwards.
                                         
                                        And eventually we saw the snake under the bed,
                                         
                                        and my friend managed to get 50-50 down there,
                                         
                                        and he gripped the mamba.
                                         
                                        Now, what you normally want to do
                                         
                                        is you want to get it behind the head,
                                         
                                        then you grab it behind the head,
                                         
                                        and then you put it in a bag.
                                         
    
                                        He managed to grab it mid-body,
                                         
                                        and it was maybe a two-and-a-half-meter snake.
                                         
                                        And so that mumba went full propeller on the end of the snake catching stick.
                                         
                                        It was like whipping around.
                                         
                                        And part of them is they've got this incredible, elastic, powerful body.
                                         
                                        So it was like a lot of snake whipping around on the end of the stick.
                                         
                                        And then it turned and it curled its way up the stick.
                                         
                                        But 50-50 held it.
                                         
    
                                        And eventually its head was about that far from my friend's hand, but he had it.
                                         
                                        Like six inches from the hand.
                                         
                                        Terrifying.
                                         
                                        And we decided it's going to be too much to try and get it into the bucket.
                                         
                                        so we're just going to ride it out the camp. And so now we make our way out past the perturbed-looking
                                         
                                        Germans and we go to the golf cart and I'm driving. And you have to imagine a standard sort
                                         
                                        of golf cart. I'm driving. My friend is standing next to me and he's holding the stick out
                                         
                                        with the giant snake on it. And then Toby jumps onto the back of the golf cart. And we start
                                         
    
                                        making our way out of the camp and we're kind of like bouncing along. Just as you exit the camp,
                                         
                                        there's kind of a gateway where there's an electric fence that keeps the elephants and the buffalo
                                         
                                        out. So as we approach that, my friend who's thinking about the snake that's six inches away
                                         
                                        from his hand, he pulled the stick in to allow for us to pass through these two pillars of the
                                         
                                        gate. When Toby on the back looked to his left, the black member was now fully adjacent
                                         
                                        to his faith with about three inches between him and the snake. And Tim, Tim,
                                         
                                        from where I was driving, I remember looking to my left, and the golf cart was going quite
                                         
                                        fast, and I saw Toby take off in my peripheral vision. And as I looked to my left, his feet
                                         
    
                                        were passing where the roof of the golf cart was. He had exploded off the back of that
                                         
                                        golf cart. It looked like someone had shot a rocket into space. As I drove off, because I kept
                                         
                                        moving, I looked like he was still heading in a vertical direction over a bush.
                                         
                                        It must have been a good, like in a high jump term,
                                         
                                        it was a good, a solid five to six foot vertical explosion.
                                         
                                        And the last I saw of him, he was like peering out and disappearing over the bush,
                                         
                                        like a frisbee falling.
                                         
                                        And remember we got out of the camp and we released the snake and the snake went off into the bush.
                                         
    
                                        And my friend and I looked at each other.
                                         
                                        We were absolutely wide-eyed and we turned and we began to make our way back into the camp.
                                         
                                        And as we came through the gate of the camp, standing in the middle of the road,
                                         
                                        with a look of shock and awe on his face was Toby.
                                         
                                        And we drove up to him.
                                         
                                        And the first things he said to me, I'll never forget it.
                                         
                                        He looked me dead in the eye and he said,
                                         
                                        that was incredible.
                                         
    
                                        Shortly after that, he went back to England and he had to,
                                         
                                        I think he went and studied briefly,
                                         
                                        but very quickly he came back to South Africa
                                         
                                        and he became a safari guide.
                                         
                                        And he actually now runs a travel company.
                                         
                                        You can look him up if you're in the UK.
                                         
                                        and you want to come to Africa, I think it's called Bonamy Travel.
                                         
                                        And I always think that so often what emerges out of these stories is not what you think.
                                         
    
                                        You would think that an encounter like that would be like, I'm packing up and moving back to the UK,
                                         
                                        but it was actually quite the opposite.
                                         
                                        He moved back to Africa, became a safari guide, and still runs a safari company to this day.
                                         
                                        And I think about that often, like things that have gone wrong that I would thought that would be the end of people
                                         
                                        turn out to be the adventure that everyone's looking for.
                                         
                                        So just to talk about calibrating danger differently, you like running.
                                         
                                        Alex also, MasterTracker, liked running, and you guys just go running outside of the gates,
                                         
                                        right?
                                         
    
                                        You just go for a long, nice run.
                                         
                                        Now, typically, for instance, if you run into a bear or wolf or a big cat, you don't
                                         
                                        want to run.
                                         
                                        Like, run is what prey do.
                                         
                                        Yeah.
                                         
                                        This is a strong prey drive signal.
                                         
                                        but you guys were training very intensely for what can you talk about this yeah we can this is
                                         
                                        fucking wild in any case i'll let you introduce it because it's just so on some levels hard to believe
                                         
    
                                        and hard to envision also you mean persistence yes i do my friend alex is one of the best
                                         
                                        trackers in the world in my opinion he's authored many books on it he's the founder of the tracker
                                         
                                        Academy. And his singular mission, Alex Fondinherfer, his singular mission has been to preserve
                                         
                                        indigenous wisdom, particularly the art form of tracking. And I think in Southern Africa, he's done
                                         
                                        more to teach, train, and preserve tracking than anyone else. And what started our journey to be
                                         
                                        with the Bushmen people in the Kalahari was he went up and he ended up spending a few days with a
                                         
                                        group of Bushmen. There's a lot of different names. Some people refer to them as the Sand People. They
                                         
                                        asked us to call them Bushmen. They said, we are the Bushman people. Please call us Bushmen. So that's how
                                         
    
                                        I will refer to them. And during that time with them, he was blown away by the ecological
                                         
                                        intelligence of this group of people. These guys tracked a porcupine one day for like 10 kilometers.
                                         
                                        They would sleep around the fire at night. Now, normally when you sleep out in the wild at
                                         
                                        night, someone keeps watch. And so Alex asked them, who's going to keep watch? And they were like,
                                         
                                        actually sort of perturbed by this.
                                         
                                        They would say, well, why would we need to keep watch?
                                         
                                        And this is in a full-on wilderness area.
                                         
                                        Alex said, well, what if an animal comes?
                                         
    
                                        And they're like, an animal will never come here without us not being able to feel it.
                                         
                                        Literally, if a hyena walks pie or something, one of them will wake up.
                                         
                                        So they're attuned at a very different level.
                                         
                                        And Alex saw this and he was blown away by it.
                                         
                                        So that was the initial trip.
                                         
                                        And what resulted in that is a request was made that we would come back as a group and
                                         
                                        expedition and we would assess the skills that were still kind of alive and functioning. We wanted to
                                         
                                        get a sense of what was possible still and what people still knew how to do because the Bushman
                                         
    
                                        people are probably the most persecuted native people on the planet. You know, they've been displaced
                                         
                                        from everywhere. And so it was to go and say, like, has their initial tracking knowledge been lost
                                         
                                        or what still exists? So that was what initially called us to the area. And we spent a few days
                                         
                                        starting to assess that process. And it was quite remarkable because Bushmen people now are living
                                         
                                        in a very interesting way. They mostly live in the towns. They've been pushed off a lot of their
                                         
                                        land and they do various jobs in farm, labor, etc. The governments of some of those southern
                                         
                                        African countries provide a stipend of like $400 or pula or rand. So you would think that a lot of the
                                         
                                        indigenous skills had been lost because a lot of people are on this kind of like, it's not the
                                         
    
                                        doll, but it's like a government supplement. And yet about 70% of the food that most
                                         
                                        Bushman communities are still getting, they're gathering from the desert. And so they're living
                                         
                                        in this kind of urban way, and yet underneath the surface, if you connect in, there's still this
                                         
                                        way that they are living in tune with the desert. One thing about the Bushman people is that they
                                         
                                        never stored food, unlike other, you know, various tribes who would have like a storehouse
                                         
                                        where they kept food. To them, the desert is their storehouse, which is quite an amazing
                                         
                                        idea. There's just like, there's no sense of needing to hold or store because it's an abundance
                                         
                                        psychology. There's everything you need is there. And when you say it's desert, just for people
                                         
    
                                        who are trying to conjure an image, I mean, it's desert. It is like a little scraggly bush here
                                         
                                        or there, at least based on the video I've seen, but it's very much a desert environment.
                                         
                                        There's areas where it's like semi-arid where you have these harsh bushes,
                                         
                                        and then there's other places where you are in red beach sand.
                                         
                                        It would be akin to walking on the beach.
                                         
                                        It's so sandy.
                                         
                                        There's places where ground squirrels have these huge colonies.
                                         
                                        So as you walk, you fall down because the ground underneath has been hollowed out.
                                         
    
                                        So it can be very, very tough operating there.
                                         
                                        And so we spent a few days with different groups of bushmen,
                                         
                                        and we were taken out into the desert,
                                         
                                        and we watched this incredible energy of people moving very slowly through the desert and they
                                         
                                        will dig up a tuba or a root, they'll cut a section of it, everyone will eat some of it, and then
                                         
                                        they will replant it back into the desert. They'll never take a whole piece of food. They'll take a
                                         
                                        portion of it and then they'll put it back under the soil to grow. And walking, particularly with the
                                         
                                        women as they gather, I had this feeling that we could have been 300 years in the past or 300 years in the
                                         
    
                                        future. There was such a strong sense that whatever happens, these people are attuned to their
                                         
                                        environment at a different level. And then what emerged out of that is we were invited to
                                         
                                        participate in probably the oldest practice of hunting that exists on the planet, which is
                                         
                                        persistence hunting. Persistence hunting, there's accounts of it across many, many different terrains,
                                         
                                        including in the snow where the snowshoe tipped the advantage towards people, but it is the pursuit of an
                                         
                                        animal until the animal tires. And so in order to do it, you need an incredible skill set.
                                         
                                        One, you need an unbelievable fitness. You need to be able to move for a long period of time
                                         
                                        and in the peak heat of the desert. Two, you need to be able to track at a level where you're
                                         
    
                                        tracking it at a run. That can be easy in parts of the desert, but man, it is not easy at midday.
                                         
                                        I thought it would be easier in desert sand. It's not easy because as the sun gets to 12 o'clock,
                                         
                                        you want to be doing it at peak heat. It throws no contrast onto the ground. I was going to say
                                         
                                        no shadows, right? No shadows. We were invited to be a part of this and we were seeing, you know,
                                         
                                        is this still alive? Is this who knows how to do this? Just to throw some numbers out there,
                                         
                                        if you can indulge people with Fahrenheit, well, give people Celsius and Fahrenheit, if that's possible,
                                         
                                        it's asking a lot. But when we're talking about a persistence hunt for the Bushmen, what type of distances
                                         
                                        or time are we talking about?
                                         
    
                                        Like how long does it take
                                         
                                        and then what kind of temperatures
                                         
                                        are we talking about?
                                         
                                        You know, Tim, it's really interesting
                                         
                                        because I think in the one
                                         
                                        that Craig Foster filmed,
                                         
                                        it was around 30 kilometers
                                         
                                        over about five or six hours,
                                         
    
                                        something like that.
                                         
                                        But what I discovered being there
                                         
                                        is that there's this incredible equation
                                         
                                        and the equation is
                                         
                                        heat on one axis
                                         
                                        and time on the other.
                                         
                                        So as the heat
                                         
                                        climbs, the amount of time reduces. The distance goes down. The distance reduces. But then there's
                                         
    
                                        also an interesting factor, which is what type of season has it been? Has it been dry for a few
                                         
                                        seasons in a row or have you had a rainy season because the condition of the animal has a huge
                                         
                                        effect? So one thing that happened while we were there is that they're on the back end of a number
                                         
                                        of years of droughts. That was a big kind of factor. So that's all going on. And what emerged is that we
                                         
                                        were invited to be a part of this, but it hadn't been done in a very, very long time.
                                         
                                        And so there was some discussion around who knows how to do it and whether it's still
                                         
                                        alive. People who we had asked around had said, no, no one does that anymore. The older
                                         
                                        generation who knew how to do it was lost. So there was a, there was conjecture around whether
                                         
    
                                        anyone even knew if this was still possible. So we got on the first day, and what was amazing
                                         
                                        about it is to the Bushman people, it's called the Great Dance. That's the name of the dock,
                                         
                                        isn't it? Yeah. The Great Dance. Craig Foster, just for people who are like, do I know that name?
                                         
                                        My Octopus Teacher was his most famous work. It's a great dance because there's a tremendous
                                         
                                        act of faith in it and it's part of the mythology and the spirituality of the Bushman people
                                         
                                        because it involves being engaged with the animal at a very deep level and
                                         
                                        transferring the animal's energy to you. That is ultimately what happens. So you are moving with
                                         
                                        the animal, you're tracking it, you're running it, and you are with the spirit of that animal,
                                         
    
                                        and you are with spirit itself. And then spirit is, as you are closing in on the animal,
                                         
                                        it's giving its energy to you. And the final act of giving from great spirit and from the
                                         
                                        spirit of that animal is the actual killing. And one thing that will happen is as guys are
                                         
                                        involved in it, it's a very funny superstition, but it's symbolic. They won't jump
                                         
                                        over a log. Because if you jump over a log, you are expending energy and you're pushing energy
                                         
                                        back at the animal, whereas actually you want to be drawing the animal's energy to you. So there's
                                         
                                        this very interesting rhythm that guys get into. So anyway, we go out and we're looking for
                                         
                                        tracks in this huge area. There's no tracks. There's no tracks. And the energy of everything
                                         
    
                                        is kind of like dialed down. And you know, there's like, there's one guy wearing a Barcelona, a C,
                                         
                                        t-shirt. There's one guy in full traditional gear. It's like it's a full mix. It's not out of some
                                         
                                        idealized sense of how this is done. It's like, you know, game time, real life situation.
                                         
                                        And then we come on to a herd of kudu's fresh tracks. What is a kudu? Can you paint a picture?
                                         
                                        A kudu is a, it's a very tall, regal antelope. And it has kind of large spiraling horns.
                                         
                                        And kudu is there are desert adapted antelope. A kudu is not that well adapted for the
                                         
                                        desert. So there are certain animals that you wouldn't try and do this with because they're just
                                         
                                        too adapted to the desert. For example, of Hemspok, literally the way that it breathes, it cools air
                                         
    
                                        through its nose. Kudus are not adapted, so they're susceptible to the heat. When this group that
                                         
                                        we were with of incredible trackers got onto the track of this herd of kudu, the whole energy shifted
                                         
                                        and it went from quite lackluster to like someone had flipped a switch. And suddenly these guys
                                         
                                        started to switch on and they went into archetypal hunting energy. And when I say to you that
                                         
                                        I have become very interested in energetic archaeology, I feel like there is so much energy
                                         
                                        latent underneath anything that modern life allows us to get close to. And when you see these
                                         
                                        guys switch into hunting energy, you feel this energy that is in every single one of us, but we never
                                         
                                        need. We don't access it because we don't need it. And suddenly the first guy shifts into a dog trot.
                                         
    
                                        starts kind of trotting on the track, and then the second guy starts to run, and these guys
                                         
                                        start to move. And now you have to do a lot of complex things. One, you have to track, you have to
                                         
                                        stay on your kudu because the herd quickly breaks and a single kudu breaks away. That's the weakest one.
                                         
                                        So the guys are onto that one. Then you have to navigate, you have to run. There's such an
                                         
                                        equation, you have to have a sense of where you're going. And all of this together, and
                                         
                                        At a certain point, it becomes this incredible act of faith, because you have to fully commit.
                                         
                                        I am running into that desert.
                                         
                                        I'm running away from water.
                                         
    
                                        I'm going in that direction, and I don't really know what the outcome is going to be.
                                         
                                        I don't know the condition of this animal.
                                         
                                        I don't know the heat.
                                         
                                        I don't know the terrain.
                                         
                                        I've got to just go and follow.
                                         
                                        So it becomes a real act of faith.
                                         
                                        And as I say, like, you're running away from water in the desert, and that can be a big fact.
                                         
                                        And you don't know how far are you going.
                                         
    
                                        And it's hot.
                                         
                                        And on the day we did it, I don't know what the Fahrenheit is, but it was 47 degrees when we started.
                                         
                                        And so at the front of that group, Tim, there's like a, there's an energy that develops amongst
                                         
                                        that group of hunters. And I can tell you that if you drop out of it, it's kind of like a peloton.
                                         
                                        If you fall out of it, you will never catch that group again. But if you find yourself in it,
                                         
                                        it's almost like you can ride the energy of the group. How would I describe it? It's kind of like
                                         
                                        a ceremony. You just, you don't know what's going to happen once you're in it.
                                         
                                        and so I managed to find myself on this occasion in the center of the group and these guys were tracking so fast and they're running and as a group if the animal cuts one way someone on the left will pick up the track and as it cuts to the other way that someone else will cut onto it so they're working as a team but as you run you're also dropping people because the heat is building too much and it's just so intense and then also people are going into different psychological states so one of the Bushmen religious
                                         
    
                                        practices is to go into trance. And you can feel yourself wanting to go there. For the first
                                         
                                        hour of it, I was in a totally neurotic state. I was in my head and I was thinking to myself like
                                         
                                        it's too hot. You know, I'm going to die of heat stroke. There was this voice running. This is,
                                         
                                        we're going too far. We're not going to get, find our way back. I'm going to get separated from
                                         
                                        these guys too far out. There's no water. It was just this, just total neuroses. And then
                                         
                                        somewhere in there, I started to feel myself going into a different energy, and I felt that
                                         
                                        the only way to do this was to let go of these thoughts and let my body just go until it couldn't
                                         
                                        go anymore. It was weird because it's not often that you, I mean, great athletes talk about
                                         
    
                                        this, which I am not, but there's kind of like, you're reaching for a place, and some athletes
                                         
                                        know how to get to that place, and I felt myself go through the layer of mind neuroses
                                         
                                        and let go into like, I'm just going to let my body do what it knows to do.
                                         
                                        From that place, I tapped into a level of energy that felt like it was coming out of the
                                         
                                        earth, that felt like it was coming from the group, that felt like it was coming from the
                                         
                                        animal, and we went for about another two and a half hours from there.
                                         
                                        And you're just like, you're glowing red, the guys are tracking at one stage.
                                         
                                        I found myself on the front of the track and you can feel the animal moving up ahead of you
                                         
    
                                        and you have to keep moving. You have to keep it moving. And then you'll get a glimpse of the,
                                         
                                        we've got a glimpse of the kudu and then it disappeared for another 40 minutes. We're just
                                         
                                        on the tracks. Then we got another glimpse and it disappeared for another 40 minutes.
                                         
                                        As it gets closer, the guys start to feel that the energy is transferring. They are starting to get
                                         
                                        the upper hand. And as they feel themselves getting the upper hand, the younger guys start to run
                                         
                                        harder and faster.
                                         
                                        And at this stage, I had lost my teammates, my friend James and Alex, I had lost them.
                                         
                                        And then suddenly Alex was in front of me, which is a classic Alex move.
                                         
    
                                        And what it happened is, what I didn't realize is the kudu had run in a dog leg.
                                         
                                        And so where he had been behind me, suddenly he was in front of me.
                                         
                                        And suddenly the kudu was directly in front of him.
                                         
                                        And as that happened, the entire energy shifted again and the guys just found another gear.
                                         
                                        and it's quite amazing to witness it
                                         
                                        and then eventually the animal is so tired
                                         
                                        that it literally just stops
                                         
                                        and it gives itself to the hunter
                                         
    
                                        and those moments where the animal will run no more
                                         
                                        and the bushman's spirit
                                         
                                        there is something so profound about it
                                         
                                        because you can't be there
                                         
                                        and not be in a profound state of respect and receiving
                                         
                                        and you are also so close
                                         
                                        to the truth of where your food and the survival
                                         
                                        of the village comes from. You're not strolling down the meat section at Whole Foods. You are
                                         
    
                                        right on the call face of what it means to take life and to take the energy of another creature.
                                         
                                        And after the animal goes down, they put sand on it, which is symbolic of a blessing onto the
                                         
                                        animal and thanking the animal for what it has given them. When you eventually emerge out of that
                                         
                                        energy, it could have been one hour, it could have been 10 hours, you're in such a different
                                         
                                        psychological space and you have been involved in an energetic that is totally primal
                                         
                                        and that is ceremonial. There's no other way to describe it. You are in a current of energy
                                         
                                        from the earth. That particular kudu, how much would you guess it weighed? Any idea? So probably
                                         
                                        around the 180kg mark. Oh, that's a big boy. Yeah.
                                         
    
                                        Yeah, I would need to check that.
                                         
                                        Yeah, 400-ish pounds, yeah.
                                         
                                        Yeah, when that kudu is cut up, a little bit less than 400, maybe.
                                         
                                        When it's cut up, every single piece of that animal is taken and eaten.
                                         
                                        From the time the guy started working on the carcass, it must have been 15 minutes to every single piece of that animal.
                                         
                                        And then how are they, are they just carrying it on shoulders?
                                         
                                        I mean, how are you guys actually getting that back to camp?
                                         
                                        Yeah, and then you put the haunches on your...
                                         
    
                                        like all different array of carries and everyone and walks it out. And then you've got
                                         
                                        still obviously got a long way to go from there. What happens when you guys get back to
                                         
                                        home base? Well, what was amazing about it is there was a strong sense of pride amongst the
                                         
                                        hunters. They hadn't done it in a long time and they wanted to show that they still knew how to
                                         
                                        do it. And it was almost like that they had remembered an aspect of something that they had done for many,
                                         
                                        many generations. There was a beautiful energy to it. And then back at camp, it's just immediately
                                         
                                        that food starts to get eaten. Yeah, I bet. What I came away with is that if you were to look at
                                         
                                        Bushman culture now, on the surface, it appears very diffuse, but the actual skills are very much
                                         
    
                                        alive. And they're simmering just under the surface, this incredible ecological knowledge of how to
                                         
                                        live in harmony with the desert. And if AI does wipe us all out,
                                         
                                        I'm pretty sure that Bushmen people will just walk back into the storehouse of the desert and be
                                         
                                        really, really comfortable there.
                                         
                                        Yeah, if you want to see modern polite behavior disintegrate very quickly, just go to a place like
                                         
                                        San Francisco.
                                         
                                        I remember the power went out for two days, two and a half days, and people were very, very
                                         
                                        civil in the beginning and walking around the street, greeting one another, and then people
                                         
    
                                        realize their food is going to thaw, their food is going to spoil.
                                         
                                        and agitation and aggression start to percolate very quickly because people don't know what to do,
                                         
                                        right? They have no idea what to do if the basic architecture of convenience is removed.
                                         
                                        I've thought about it a lot and I think that all the things you imagine to happen,
                                         
                                        people are so much closer to primal wildness than they ever realize.
                                         
                                        And survival starts to kick in and then I think there'll be a Y junction.
                                         
                                        And some people will go into survival of the fittest, and then others will move into states of
                                         
                                        collaboration for like good reason, protection, food, safety.
                                         
    
                                        So there'll be like, it'll be interesting to see how it breaks down.
                                         
                                        You can get into some good prepper stuff.
                                         
                                        Exactly.
                                         
                                        Just pro tip.
                                         
                                        Make sure you have water.
                                         
                                        Water is number one.
                                         
                                        You're going to need water a lot sooner than you're going to need canned lentils.
                                         
                                        And by the way, if you have any dried canned food, you're going to need some water,
                                         
    
                                        for a lot of that. Make sure you have your water and your jet boils or something along those
                                         
                                        lines. It's also amazing to see how little water the Bushmen people can operate on.
                                         
                                        It must be absurd. Their evolutionary track must have prepared them so well for that. I would be
                                         
                                        dead within 24 hours. We had one morning on the same trip where we found tracks of a cheetah,
                                         
                                        and we were quite keen to show the guys some of our tracking skills, and it was a camaraderie
                                         
                                        amongst trackers and we were with the 70 year old man and we're following the single cheetah
                                         
                                        and it kind of turned into like mildly competitive at the front. So if someone lost the track,
                                         
                                        the next person would be on it. And then if you stepped off it, someone else would be on it.
                                         
    
                                        And for the first like two hours, we were quite effective. And then these guys just started to
                                         
                                        put a clinic on us as it got hotter and hotter. We ran out of water. We were like climbing
                                         
                                        under these thorn bushes lumbering along and they were just like cruising through the desert.
                                         
                                        And by 11 o'clock, the 70-year-old guy was walking us off our feet.
                                         
                                        And we had drained our water bottles and we were like, we need to get back home
                                         
                                        because we need to get water.
                                         
                                        He hadn't had a sip all morning.
                                         
                                        And we were like, okay.
                                         
    
                                        Wow.
                                         
                                        Yeah, you win.
                                         
                                        No contest.
                                         
                                        No contest.
                                         
                                        All right.
                                         
                                        So I want to hop to two different potential leaping off points.
                                         
                                        You can tell me if one of these makes sense or if there's something else we want to hop
                                         
                                        to and you can follow whichever track is appealing.
                                         
    
                                        being a resolved figure seeking the wild man you want to pursue either of these what do you think
                                         
                                        or we could take options see off menu no i mean i think the wild man is a powerful theme
                                         
                                        and it comes down to this idea that i've come to think of the wild man as awareness like self-awareness
                                         
                                        awareness of all the different layers of energy that are inside you and then also access and so when
                                         
                                        those two things start to come together, you start to see a real type of presence, the type of presence
                                         
                                        that you see in the natural world. And I'm really become interested in conjuring more of that in my
                                         
                                        own life. How do you liberate different layers of energy in yourself? Like in my definition of
                                         
                                        presence would be access to the moment. And particularly now working in a lot of these men's groups,
                                         
    
                                        the idea of conjuring the wild man is it's wildness in the sense.
                                         
                                        that it is in tune with life force, but it is also wildness in that it is access to the moment.
                                         
                                        And what I mean by that is to have your wild man fully available means that
                                         
                                        if you are required to front up in some ways and protect something and be able to be assertive
                                         
                                        and aggressive, you have access to that.
                                         
                                        But if the moment is calling for a tremendous amount of softness or tenderness, you also have
                                         
                                        access to that. So trying to figure out how to develop access to as many moments as possible
                                         
                                        has become kind of a central piece of exploration for me at the moment. And to become resolved within
                                         
    
                                        that is now as a father, I think a lot about figuring out how to be available through a full
                                         
                                        spectrum of masculine experience to my son, to my wife, to my family. Where do I run into blockages
                                         
                                        in myself? Where do I start to feel like I really want to be here, but I don't know how to show up
                                         
                                        in this moment? That's what that exploration has become primarily about. Let me ask you a question
                                         
                                        related to that. So if we think about access to the moment and sort of full spectrum access
                                         
                                        to these different emotional sensitivities, let's just say.
                                         
                                        I know that's a bit of a clumsy way to word it, but let's just say that.
                                         
                                        How do you personally think about co-locating you and your family?
                                         
    
                                        And here's what I mean by that.
                                         
                                        The way that I have tried to solve for this,
                                         
                                        what I've realized is that in a place like New York City, where I'm sitting,
                                         
                                        and it's got accosted by this very aggressive, probably mentally unstable person yesterday,
                                         
                                        in huge crowds of people, right? A lot of a feeling of like collective cauterization,
                                         
                                        if that's a word, but just people have dropped down walls and I put on sort of a protective
                                         
                                        armor that seemingly disallows me to access all of these different sensitivities because
                                         
                                        it just seems like suicide to be too porous in an environment like this. So whether I wanted to
                                         
    
                                        be open or not, I don't think it would be good for me necessarily.
                                         
                                        in New York City in most places to have that level of kind of openness. So I do spend a lot of time
                                         
                                        in cities. I find cities exciting, but I block out, you know, a few weeks of the year where I'm just
                                         
                                        completely off the grid. And hopefully at the very least keeping these sensitivities from atrophying
                                         
                                        too horribly. Like I'm working the muscle in these blocks of time that I put out. There are other
                                         
                                        people, of course, who just live in a more peaceful, perhaps, environment that allows for this
                                         
                                        type of exploration and expression and experience, right? And it doesn't need to be the middle of South
                                         
                                        Africa. It doesn't need to be in the middle of the mountains of Montana. It could just be in a
                                         
    
                                        peaceful suburb. It doesn't need to be. Or in a, like, a chiller city, than New York City,
                                         
                                        potentially. How do you think about this for yourself? I think about it probably through
                                         
                                        discernment. Like, I think of that it's wise to be somewhat armoured in the environments you're
                                         
                                        describing. But what I see in groups now a lot, this has become the core thing, is I see,
                                         
                                        particularly in men's groups, a desire to be more available, but actually not knowing how to,
                                         
                                        not having the access and the literacy to know what that would even look like. And so you don't want
                                         
                                        to go into extreme tenderness, you know, in the middle of New York City, you probably want to be
                                         
                                        exactly where you are, but you want to know that you can open to deeper levels in the right
                                         
    
                                        context. And you want to know what has kept you out of that, which would usually be some kind
                                         
                                        of conditioned response, something that you learned to do, a way you learn to freeze or shut down
                                         
                                        when things became overwhelming. And then you want to figure out how develop more options for
                                         
                                        yourself in that moment. So the trauma to me is freezing, right? Anytime you've been
                                         
                                        forced into some kind of traumatic situation, it's characterized by a reduction of options.
                                         
                                        And so in order to cultivate more presence, one is you have to be present to the fact that
                                         
                                        you're frozen and actually be able to feel like, okay, in this moment, I want to be more connected,
                                         
                                        but I don't know how. So first, to be present to that. And then second, to start to figure out
                                         
    
                                        what other choices would look like and literally other things you could do in that moment
                                         
                                        to move out of the frozen state.
                                         
                                        And that's where I think the men need other men than the wild man is somewhat a collective
                                         
                                        exploration, men being with men, particularly in wild places, that it just naturally starts
                                         
                                        to emerge.
                                         
                                        You don't have to work at it too hard and it doesn't have to turn into a drum circle if you
                                         
                                        take a bunch of guys out into a wild place, their psyche starts to relate to that wild place
                                         
                                        and they start saying, I can't tell you why, it's intangible, it's energetic, but something
                                         
    
                                        about this has something to do with me. I can feel myself in a way here in the presence of that
                                         
                                        waterfall and that mountain and that lion and the process of being out. I feel, I can feel myself
                                         
                                        and then the conversation starts to open
                                         
                                        and you're able to start to say like,
                                         
                                        okay, where are the places where we run into blockage
                                         
                                        and if we want to be wild, we need access to the moment,
                                         
                                        just like in the way that an innocent animal has access
                                         
                                        to it knows what to do in any given situation.
                                         
    
                                        Like, leopards are not in their heads.
                                         
                                        If they want to be aggressive, they're aggressive.
                                         
                                        If they're caring for their young, they're caring for their young.
                                         
                                        If they need to set a territory, they do it.
                                         
                                        It flows out of them.
                                         
                                        Creating spaces in which that can naturally start to occur.
                                         
                                        has become really interesting to me.
                                         
                                        How do you think about, well, side note for people,
                                         
    
                                        I don't know why this popped into my head,
                                         
                                        but if you're like, man, I'm never going to see a leopard.
                                         
                                        I was like, you can get a little whiff of leopard
                                         
                                        if you go to the movie theater and the popcorn is burnt.
                                         
                                        It smells like leopard urine.
                                         
                                        So that's just a, if you want to take a big, big inhale.
                                         
                                        When leopards mark their territory, they spray,
                                         
                                        and it has the almost exact scent of popcorn.
                                         
    
                                        it's really wild i remember i was like i was like nah that's not possible and then we were driving at one
                                         
                                        point i think it might maybe it was surcent but one of the trackers that we were with held up a hand
                                         
                                        to stop the car and i was like holy shit there it is i feel like i'm sitting in the movie theater
                                         
                                        that's crazy and in any case i'll leave that there but what do you think the trappings of some
                                         
                                        personal development or men's groups are and the reason i ask and this is not a strong position
                                         
                                        I'm taking, but it's just a thought, is that there are many side effects to a, and many benefits, too, of a highly
                                         
                                        individualistic society, right? So if you, in the case of the U.S., you take this Protestant work ethic,
                                         
                                        rugged individualism, this lionizing of the self-sufficient, independent person, there's a lot of
                                         
    
                                        production that can come from that, right? Like productivity, there is frequently some degree of
                                         
                                        collateral damage from a collective perspective. And that's not too woo-woo. Like collective could just
                                         
                                        mean like in your family. Like if you trained yourself to be sort of a cold-blooded business killer
                                         
                                        with blinders on and that's the gear you learn to use is sixth gear. If you don't have some degree
                                         
                                        of flexibility and you're very good, which is very common, this applies to I think men in a lot
                                         
                                        of fields, women probably too, but I think especially men, compartmentalization. So when you
                                         
                                        you're able to increase your pain threshold, compartmentalize certain things, lock certain things
                                         
                                        away can make you very, very, very effective as a performer. But in an interpersonal respect,
                                         
    
                                        it can be compromised. Okay, the reason I'm bringing all this up is that I think about, say, let's just
                                         
                                        take, for example, men who want more access to different states and sensitivities. And I'm like,
                                         
                                        okay, well, why do they want that? Well, they might want it because they want to be able to better
                                         
                                        listen and interact with their partner, right? And just for the sake of argument, let's say that's a
                                         
                                        female partner. And I'm like, okay, well, I agree with that, right? This has been one of my homework
                                         
                                        assignments for the last two decades. It's getting better at conflict de-escalation, which I never had
                                         
                                        a good model for. I made a lot of progress. I'm quite more work to be done. There's also, I feel like
                                         
                                        maybe that this perceived necessity on the part of men is a reflection of also a society in which
                                         
    
                                        you have a couple within which each person expects the other to be kind of everything for
                                         
                                        them. So it's actually we need more community solutions where it's like, okay, look, if you
                                         
                                        expect your man to be just like one of your girlfriends that you're going to have a chat
                                         
                                        with, like you got the wrong animal probably, right? And then if the dude is like, why can't
                                         
                                        you just be a dude let's be dudes it's like well maybe you just have you got the wrong animal
                                         
                                        which is part of the reason why i block out for these weeks when i do these trips they're almost
                                         
                                        always all men trips right because that's that type of experience in modern day i think is
                                         
                                        largely absent or disallowed outside of maybe a few sports context and similarly if a couple
                                         
    
                                        is in isolation right putting aside the child rearing aspect of this and the challenges that entails
                                         
                                        I suppose this is very meandering, but I haven't verbalized this before.
                                         
                                        To what extent do you feel like personal development for, let's just take the men's group
                                         
                                        as an example, should focus on the individual and that kind of access versus trying to
                                         
                                        figure out some like structural solutions and scheduling and blocking things out so that they
                                         
                                        have access to more people outside of their partner.
                                         
                                        Does that make sense?
                                         
                                        Yeah, I think it does.
                                         
    
                                        I think there's steps to it.
                                         
                                        I think the first step is both partners developing more literacy away from the partnership.
                                         
                                        So I think it's first work in the eye.
                                         
                                        There's an inevitability and a necessity to that.
                                         
                                        Then once you start to get more skills in the eye, you want to bring that to the we and you want to start to practice.
                                         
                                        And I actually think that one of the issues with relationship is that our model for it is still
                                         
                                        like built on the romantic traditions and it's like you're going to fall in love and then,
                                         
                                        you know, he has this beautiful thing, whereas relationship to me now is way more an active
                                         
    
                                        practice space. But you have to be working yourself and together. So those two things have to go
                                         
                                        together at some stage. The problem is that you need your blind spots revealed and you need
                                         
                                        people who have more access to help guide you into new choices and new ways of being.
                                         
                                        You need something from the outside to help you see what your blind spot was. Very often you
                                         
                                        need something to offend your own pattern or your own blindness and help you see it in a different
                                         
                                        way. And then you bring those awarenesses to the group. And then I think,
                                         
                                        hopefully what starts to emerge out of that is there's what the relationship wants to be for
                                         
                                        others and ideally it should turn into a place of service not just for your direct family but for
                                         
    
                                        the larger community where you start to know we have something unique to give to the community
                                         
                                        and I think when enough people start to take that up that's where you could see like systemic
                                         
                                        models for change but I think masculine essence needs other men to
                                         
                                        to liberate itself more.
                                         
                                        And same with feminine essence needs other women
                                         
                                        to liberate itself more.
                                         
                                        And then to bring those two together
                                         
                                        with more awareness becomes part of the funness
                                         
    
                                        of the game, I think.
                                         
                                        Look, you know, I'm a junkie for personal development stuff.
                                         
                                        So I'm kind of like,
                                         
                                        I feel like I'm in an AA meeting
                                         
                                        for like personal development addicts.
                                         
                                        But what I would say,
                                         
                                        I'll tell just a brief story.
                                         
                                        So on this Montana trip,
                                         
    
                                        keeping in mind, I keep using that example
                                         
                                        because it's most recent.
                                         
                                        But this is, I'd say at least three or four times a year,
                                         
                                        there's a trip of some type with guys and in this case small group it's like four or five guys
                                         
                                        and at one point we're sitting around a fire at night just rapping and talking and talking and
                                         
                                        then one of the guys said he's like I just figured out why fire is so important for guys and we're like
                                         
                                        why is that and he goes because we don't have to make eye contact we just look at the fire and we can
                                         
                                        have all these really deep conversations whereas in most circumstances like if you're staring
                                         
    
                                        deeply into another guy's eyes. It's kind of an aggressive, it's just this ingrained kind of
                                         
                                        aggressive defensive dynamic. She's staring at someone's eyes, you're going to make out or kill
                                         
                                        each other. Yeah, right. You know that old joke? You say to your buddy, hey, do you want to go
                                         
                                        and sit by the lake and talk for six hours? It's like, no, it's like, do you want to go fishing?
                                         
                                        Yeah, let's do that. Yeah, right, exactly. And so, I've harkening back to what you said about,
                                         
                                        like don't try too hard right knowing and this is more an open question but as i get older and
                                         
                                        as i see some of the trappings and weaknesses or insufficiencies both the necessity of and the
                                         
                                        necessity of like direct head-on personal work i wonder what the ratio is between sort of deliberate
                                         
    
                                        like microscope work so to speak and like the indirect work this is going to sound really
                                         
                                        crass, which is like building a raft and going fishing, which we did with like handmade lures
                                         
                                        and all this stuff, while telling like fart and dick jokes, right? It's like it doesn't seem
                                         
                                        serious. Like no one would put that in a book and be like, okay, step number one, like come up with
                                         
                                        three of your favorite dick jokes. It's not going to be in any self-help book. But nonetheless,
                                         
                                        it seems to do a lot of lifting. And there's the bonding and, you know, the older I get,
                                         
                                        the more I think that it's like, okay, we can look at the 27 different options for improving
                                         
                                        ourselves and ultimately, why are we doing that? Well, it's probably to achieve like some
                                         
    
                                        emotional state to improve our quality of life and the quality of life of, say, our family members
                                         
                                        around us. Okay. Well, like having in the case of these trips that I'm describing, right,
                                         
                                        some guy time where you're not necessarily, I mean, there is some goofing off, but there's generally
                                         
                                        shared projects and like shared suffering of some type and a lot of exertion like you said it's like
                                         
                                        yeah let's sit by the lake and talk for six hours no thanks yeah but let's go fishing and by the way
                                         
                                        kind of do the same thing okay great let's do it that the answer is like it's the relationship stupid
                                         
                                        and the content is secondary to like the spending of time in a particular way 100% and you don't
                                         
                                        have to work hard the only thing that I would say is a little bit of context to it if you
                                         
    
                                        you have a few guys in the group who have done the work of developing a little bit more access
                                         
                                        and can make reads, then you don't have to club it. You know, you can mostly be talking shit
                                         
                                        floating down the river, but then occasionally, with a little bit of context, someone can say,
                                         
                                        hey, here's what I see you being blind to. You can tell me to fuck off. You can take it on board.
                                         
                                        It can go anyway, but here's how I notice you show up. Do you know that you do that? Now, if you
                                         
                                        just try and weigh in on that, it's like, fuck you, leave me alone. But if you've had some time
                                         
                                        together doing some real stuff, like there's an opening there that I found the rate of download
                                         
                                        to be incredibly high. The community piece is that no one has all the answers. Personal development
                                         
    
                                        work, for personal development work's sake, is just fucking self-indulgent. But once you add in the
                                         
                                        dynamic of relationship, as you said, then there's love and then there's care. It's like, you know,
                                         
                                        what I'm saying to you is coming out of care. It's coming out of a piece of my journey.
                                         
                                        And what you find is everyone has a peace for everyone then. The community is more intelligent
                                         
                                        than the individual. And that's where the major unlock start to have where someone who's not
                                         
                                        even in the role of facilitator or leader says, hey, you know, there's a way in which you show up
                                         
                                        that makes me like not feel like I can trust you. I'm just telling you by way of feedback. I don't
                                         
                                        know whether you want to take that on board or not, you know, things start to happen. And if you've
                                         
    
                                        rafted a river together, you tend to take more than you were just jettison. With the example that you're
                                         
                                        there are lots of ways to communicate that, right? I mean, you might just be like, hey man, I could be
                                         
                                        making this up as a story, but like, have you ever considered A, B, or C? Because if you're going to
                                         
                                        use the language of, say, the 15 commitments of conscious leadership, you better fucking make sure
                                         
                                        the other person has an idea what the hell you're talking about. Amazing toolkit, but you kind of have
                                         
                                        to agree on the language beforehand. So we're coming up on roughly time, but I want to make sure that
                                         
                                        we do perhaps two things. One is maybe add one more story and then cover anything that you'd
                                         
                                        like to touch on that we haven't covered. What do you think is a good kind of bookmark story here?
                                         
    
                                        I have lunch the baboon down. Let me tell you about lunch.
                                         
                                        Tim Lunch was a baboon that picked up the nickname Lunch
                                         
                                        because he started showing up at lunchtime
                                         
                                        and he started causing absolute havoc around the camp
                                         
                                        lunch even worked out how to break into the kitchen
                                         
                                        and I remember once being in the kitchen
                                         
                                        and the chefs had barricaded one of the doors with some rocks
                                         
                                        and the door was literally vibrating
                                         
    
                                        and every time it was being forced from the outside
                                         
                                        every time the rock would slide and the door would open a little bit more
                                         
                                        and then this furry hand came in and gripped the handle
                                         
                                        and then lunch burst into the kitchen
                                         
                                        and he walked across to the counter where there was a cake
                                         
                                        and he picked up the cake and walked off on his hind legs
                                         
                                        holding the cake in his hands.
                                         
                                        And just for people who don't have a picture of a baboon,
                                         
    
                                        I mean, I find those things pretty fucking terrifying.
                                         
                                        A baboon is a formidable, he's like a three-foot, muscular, hairy dude
                                         
                                        with long canines.
                                         
                                        Yeah, yeah.
                                         
                                        There's this thing in animal intelligence,
                                         
                                        and you probably even know this better than me,
                                         
                                        but there are these modes of awareness.
                                         
                                        There's I know, then there's, I know, you know,
                                         
    
                                        then there's I know that you know.
                                         
                                        So it's like the first awareness is just, you know,
                                         
                                        I'm aware of you, that it's I'm aware that you're aware of me.
                                         
                                        That's like higher level.
                                         
                                        So sometimes I would walk through the camp
                                         
                                        and lunch would be like involved in some kind of mischief.
                                         
                                        He would be breaking into a guest's mini bar.
                                         
                                        And then he would see me and he would know that I knew that he was up to me.
                                         
    
                                        mischief. And then he would kind of pretend to just be like loitering around. Nothing to see here,
                                         
                                        just being a baboon in my natural environment. I remember the other day I was going through some
                                         
                                        notes on my desk and I found a minute from a meeting. And the literal minute was like we need to get
                                         
                                        new crockery and cutlery for tree camp. Land Rover number eight needs to be repaired. His troop needs
                                         
                                        to fear our troop. And basically it was like someone deciding that they needed to try and
                                         
                                        scare lunch out of the camp. And so for a period of days, I decided I was going to like chivie him
                                         
                                        out of the camp. And it was elaborate because every time I tried to chase him, he would hide. He got
                                         
                                        into the mini bar. He drank some booze. I found him sitting in the pool one day. He was just like
                                         
    
                                        causing general chaos. I had a little BB gun that I decided that I would shoot him with. And the one
                                         
                                        day I found him, he was sitting on a guest's Audi that was parked in the car park. And when I
                                         
                                        aimed the gun at him, he just lay flat against the Audi like I dare you.
                                         
                                        So he was up for no good.
                                         
                                        Anyway, the one day I'm sitting in the office and the phone rings and my sister picks up the phone
                                         
                                        and she starts talking in that very intent way.
                                         
                                        I can't believe that.
                                         
                                        Royalty.
                                         
    
                                        Yes, of course we can.
                                         
                                        And everyone in the room was like eavesdropping because it sounded so intense.
                                         
                                        So she hangs up the phone and she says, Boyd, Prince is coming to Londa Losey.
                                         
                                        and this is like a tremendous amount of excitement
                                         
                                        and there's like months and months of prep
                                         
                                        and set up to the arrival of the prince
                                         
                                        there's like endless amount of logistics
                                         
                                        a satellite dish has to be put up
                                         
    
                                        so that the prince can stream certain sports games
                                         
                                        there's a special chef that has to come in
                                         
                                        there's a whole lot of things that need to come into the boutique
                                         
                                        so that there can be unique shopping experiences
                                         
                                        at one stage there's talk of lengthening the runway
                                         
                                        so that a jet can land
                                         
                                        but going backwards and forwards
                                         
                                        and you know, you liaise with these kind of like entourage liaisons.
                                         
    
                                        So there's like just, it's all happening.
                                         
                                        And eventually the day arrives that the prince is arriving.
                                         
                                        And we were quite pleased with ourselves because we were on top of all of the logistics.
                                         
                                        A special face cream had been flown in.
                                         
                                        And I remember the first three or four planes that landed were just entourage and luggage.
                                         
                                        And then eventually the prince was coming into land.
                                         
                                        And Bronwyn said to me, my sister, she said, boy, you need to run down to the room.
                                         
                                        final thing we need to do and you need to put these cold face cloths in the room. So I grab my
                                         
    
                                        radio, I run down to the suite and as I'm running down, the walkie talkies going off. The prince is
                                         
                                        10 minutes out, 10 minutes out. Prince has landed. He's now eight minutes out, eight minutes out.
                                         
                                        And I get down to the suite and I open it and it opens into a kind of living room and then you
                                         
                                        go through a kind of a lock area where there's a cupboard into the main bedroom and then into the
                                         
                                        bathroom. And as I get there, I notice that the door is slightly adjacent. So I think to myself,
                                         
                                        it must just be that the housekeeping have left the door open. I walk through, I come through
                                         
                                        the bedroom, and as I get to the bathroom, standing at the bathroom counter with a bottle of
                                         
                                        papaya hand lotion in his hand is lunch. And as he sees me, and I block the doorway, he starts
                                         
    
                                        downing hand lotion. He starts chugging it into his mouth. It's like a mango papaya hand lotion. He
                                         
                                        even gets a streak of lotion across his top jar, and then he realizes that he's in a confined
                                         
                                        space, and he drops the jar of lotion, stands in the glass, cuts his feet a little bit,
                                         
                                        and launches himself in a full dive across the bathroom at the giant panel of glass
                                         
                                        across the bath where you can look out onto the river. He smacks the glass, his hands come down,
                                         
                                        he puts a bloody handprint on it, he pushes back off the glass, he flies onto the ceiling,
                                         
                                        And now he starts to make baboon noises.
                                         
                                        Bow, bow, bow, bow.
                                         
    
                                        And at the same time, he starts to use the patented baboon technique for getting out of dangerous situations,
                                         
                                        which is to massively release your bowels.
                                         
                                        And so for a few seconds, this baboon bounces around, causing absolute chaos,
                                         
                                        knocking over bar salts, he's standing on the faucet, his hands are bleeding,
                                         
                                        there's lotion, there's crap everywhere.
                                         
                                        He's barking at me.
                                         
                                        Then he turns, and he comes at me.
                                         
                                        and Tim, I remember I let out a little scream,
                                         
    
                                        and I leaned back and he flew in slow motion past me
                                         
                                        and in mid-air he turned and he looked at me as he went past
                                         
                                        and he had like a look of like savage glee on his face
                                         
                                        and lotion like down across his jowl.
                                         
                                        He landed on the bed and he bounded across the bed
                                         
                                        with these bloody handprints,
                                         
                                        released another massive turd
                                         
                                        and then ripped the front veranda doors open
                                         
    
                                        and dived off the front veranda
                                         
                                        like a stockbroker in a recession
                                         
                                        and the whole time it's still free
                                         
                                        and he disappeared into the river
                                         
                                        the room as I looked around the room
                                         
                                        I cannot tell you what a baboon in a confined space does
                                         
                                        the room looked like the Texas chainsaw massacre
                                         
                                        there is blood and shit and lotion
                                         
    
                                        and baboon hair
                                         
                                        there's a turd on the pillow
                                         
                                        and it smells strongly of baboon
                                         
                                        and it looks quite human-like
                                         
                                        because baboons have very similar
                                         
                                        like pause to humans.
                                         
                                        So there's like a bloody handprint on the wall and like someone's grabbed the faucet with
                                         
                                        it.
                                         
    
                                        So it looks like someone's been murdered in there.
                                         
                                        And the walkie-talkie goes off.
                                         
                                        The prince is now five minutes out, five minutes out.
                                         
                                        I call my sister on the radio.
                                         
                                        I said, Brodman, you've got to get down here with the housekeeping team.
                                         
                                        This is an absolute shit show.
                                         
                                        So she comes down with a group of chambermaids and housekeeping ladies and they start to go ham on
                                         
                                        this room trying to get it back in.
                                         
    
                                        to working order.
                                         
                                        Meantime breaks out on the main reception area of the lodge
                                         
                                        as the staff of Londa Losey try and delay the prince from coming to his room.
                                         
                                        Hello, Your Majesty.
                                         
                                        Could we offer you a quick wine tasting?
                                         
                                        No, I just arrived.
                                         
                                        I want to go to my room.
                                         
                                        We would like to take you straight out on a safari right now.
                                         
    
                                        There's a leopard with a kill nearby.
                                         
                                        That sounds good, but I'd like to go to my room.
                                         
                                        Okay, what about the ladies' choir who like to sing.
                                         
                                        songs and do traditional dancing.
                                         
                                        He's like, no, I'm going to my room.
                                         
                                        And what saved us, Tim, was in the middle of this
                                         
                                        elaborate, faulty towers-esque pantomime.
                                         
                                        A hippo walked out onto the rocks in front
                                         
    
                                        of the camp in the midday light.
                                         
                                        And the people of Landerlozzi acted like they had never
                                         
                                        seen a hippo before in their life.
                                         
                                        People started screaming, oh my God, a hippo.
                                         
                                        We never see hippos out of the water.
                                         
                                        Someone go and fetch a spotting scope.
                                         
                                        Someone brought a telescope down, and that brought us
                                         
                                        about 15 minutes.
                                         
    
                                        while the prince took in the hippo staff were acting like the hippo was the most amazing thing the world had ever seen anyway eventually we can stall him no longer and he comes down to the room and literally as he comes in the room the chambermaids slip out of the sliding door in the bathroom and they get into the long grass around the suite and they've got mops and buckets and baboon shit in their hair and as one they just drop down into the grass they just like disappear and lie there in absolute possum
                                         
                                        status. And there's this incredible moment where the prince comes into his room and it, you know,
                                         
                                        smells of room spray and everything's clean and the mirror has been put straight. And he walks out
                                         
                                        onto the front veranda and he looks out over the river and the hippo calls nearby, oh, oh, oh.
                                         
                                        And it's just everything is quiet. And he's like, it's so good to be out here alone for
                                         
                                        thousand miles of every direction. And he turns and walk back into his room and 12 chambermaids
                                         
                                        rides up out of the grass around his suite. And that is the day that lunch really got us.
                                         
                                        Lunch the baboon.
                                         
    
                                        Lunch the baboon.
                                         
                                        Holy shit.
                                         
                                        What a story.
                                         
                                        One day we were out, this is another true story.
                                         
                                        One day we were out, a bunch of guides talking about a bunch of guys out together.
                                         
                                        And we drive out.
                                         
                                        It's like an afternoon.
                                         
                                        We've all got off.
                                         
    
                                        We're drinking some beers.
                                         
                                        And there's like a rocky outcrop.
                                         
                                        And the rocky outcrop is like a small hill and it's silhouetted against the skyline.
                                         
                                        And we see lunch literally silhouetted on a rock up against the skyline.
                                         
                                        And he's with a lady baboon.
                                         
                                        and he's doing some very naughty things to her.
                                         
                                        And I swear, Tim, when he saw us,
                                         
                                        he put his one hand up in the air like this
                                         
    
                                        and gave us like kind of a high-five look.
                                         
                                        Oh, L'Anthaloosie, protector of all things.
                                         
                                        There have to be moments when you're like,
                                         
                                        ah, just want to blast him off that rock
                                         
                                        and be done with lunch.
                                         
                                        It's amazing to live amongst the animals.
                                         
                                        The other day, I mean,
                                         
                                        other day I was sitting watching a water,
                                         
    
                                        he was grazing up on the runway.
                                         
                                        I literally saw a thought occur to him,
                                         
                                        and he turned and he began to walk.
                                         
                                        He walked like two kilometers down to the camp,
                                         
                                        and I followed him in the hallway,
                                         
                                        and he made his way to where a woman was washing some clothes,
                                         
                                        and she was hanging them on a washing line,
                                         
                                        and the water is dripping off the clothes onto the ground,
                                         
    
                                        and it's making this little flush of green grass,
                                         
                                        and literally he knows that's a good place to go and get some green grass.
                                         
                                        And so there's this thing about living,
                                         
                                        close to the animals like that, that you notice, there's an intelligence to it.
                                         
                                        And it's almost like your community expands to include the trees and the animals
                                         
                                        and these unique personalities that you get to know.
                                         
                                        And it's not just a random baboon, but it's like, that's lunch.
                                         
                                        And it's not just a random leopard, but we know this leopard.
                                         
    
                                        She allows herself to be seen.
                                         
                                        We have a relationship with her.
                                         
                                        And that's a very, very deep and beautiful way to live.
                                         
                                        Yeah.
                                         
                                        And just to underscore what you just said.
                                         
                                        about leopards like if you see a leopard that leopard is allowing you to see them and if they want
                                         
                                        to vanish even in short grass snap of the fingers they are gone it's just beyond incredible to
                                         
                                        see that happened where you're like okay they couldn't hide themselves if they wanted to like
                                         
    
                                        that grass is too short that da and then they turn back and they're like eh had enough of you guys
                                         
                                        and boom they're just completely invisible it's remarkable to see boyd anything you'd like to say
                                         
                                        before we wind to a close, where can people find you? Where should people go to learn more about
                                         
                                        all things, Boyd? Yeah, thanks, Tim. People can go to Boyd Varty.com to find out about retreats and books,
                                         
                                        Cathedral of the Wild and Lion Trackers Guide to Life. And yeah, that's the best place to figure out
                                         
                                        if you want to come on a safari or if you want to come to Africa, that's also a good way to do it.
                                         
                                        Boyd-V-O-D-V-A-R-T-Y-R-T-Y.com. Good to see you, buddy.
                                         
                                        good to see you man thanks so much for having me on yeah absolutely and everybody listening we will
                                         
    
                                        link to i'm not sure exactly where we're going to link to we'll link to some names and other things
                                         
                                        we'll link to uh the highlight reel of lunch the babboon i'm kidding we'll link to all things
                                         
                                        mentioned that can be linked to in the show notes as always at timblog slash podcast if you
                                         
                                        search boyd b-o-y-d both episodes will come up this is episode number two definitely if you enjoyed
                                         
                                        this also listen to episode number one and until next time as all
                                         
                                        always be just a bit kinder than it's necessary. Why not? It doesn't take a whole lot of extra
                                         
                                        effort and the payoff is enormous. Kinder to others and also just a tad bit kinder to yourself
                                         
                                        because it goes both ways and you can work those muscles on both sides. And thank you for tuning
                                         
    
                                        in. 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 1.5 and 2 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 podcast 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.blog slash Friday. Type that
                                         
                                        into your browser, tim.blog slash Friday. Drop in your email and you'll get the very next one.
                                         
                                        Thanks for listening.
                                         
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