Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Mark Manson on Embracing Pain for Personal and Professional Growth | Human Behavior | YAPClassic
Episode Date: March 21, 2025Mark Manson’s journey into the workforce started during a challenging time: the Great Recession of 2008. After struggling with various odd jobs, he shifted his focus to blogging and became a bestsel...ling author. In this episode, Mark explores human behavior, the psychology behind success, and how the critical thinking needed to develop a growth mindset is key to navigating career and personal development in a rapidly changing world. In this episode, Hala and Mark will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (02:40) Mark Manson's Journey to Becoming a Blogger and Author (05:13) The Evolution and Challenges of Blogging (06:39) Key Takeaways from Mark Manson's New Book (09:43) Understanding Hope and the Uncomfortable Truth (14:09) The Thinking and Feeling Brain (20:18) Pain as a Currency of Our Values (22:14) The Concept of Anti-Fragility (30:37) Defining Adulthood and Real Freedom (39:35) Hope in Science and Technology Mark Manson is a three-time New York Times bestselling author and entrepreneur. His books, including The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck, have sold over 20 million copies in 75+ languages worldwide. He has also built a thriving online business, offering courses, podcasts, and one of the most popular self-improvement newsletters. Known for his brutal honesty and dry humor, Mark has established himself as a leading voice in the fields of mindset, self-improvement, and human psychology. Sponsored By: Shopify - youngandprofiting.co/shopify Open Phone - openphone.com/profiting Airbnb - airbnb.com/host Indeed - indeed.com/profiting  RobinHood - robinhood.com/gold Factor - factormeals.com/factorpodcast  Rakuten - rakuten.com Microsoft Teams - aka.ms/profiting Active Deals - youngandprofiting.com/deals      Key YAP Links Reviews - ratethispodcast.com/yap Youtube - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ Social + Podcast Services - yapmedia.com  Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com/episodes-new Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Podcast, Business, Business Podcast, Self Improvement, Self-Improvement, Personal Development, Starting a Business, Strategy, Investing, Sales, Selling, Psychology, Productivity, Entrepreneurs, AI, Artificial Intelligence, Technology, Marketing, Negotiation, Money, Finance, Side Hustle, Mental Health, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth Mindset, Positivity, Critical Thinking, Robert Greene, Chris Voss, Robert Cialdini.
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Hey, app fam. I hope you enjoyed my interview with Mark Manson this week,
in which he showcased
his wonderfully candid perspective on discovering life's deeper purposes.
Mark is the best-selling author of many books including The Subtle Art of Not Giving an
F, and was also on my show way back in episode number 65 during the early days of the pandemic.
And so we decided to give you a double dose of Mark Manson for this week's Yap Classic. In that episode, Mark talked with me about the downfalls of
hope and why we'll never be satisfied unless we face the uncomfortable truths of life head
on. That's deep. He also had some great actionable advice on how to gain more self-control, make
better decisions, and even how to use pain to strengthen your relationships. So enjoy
this hard-hitting classic conversation
with the always entertaining and thought-provoking
Mark Manson.
Welcome to the show, Mark.
It's good to be here.
Thanks for having me.
For my guests who don't know you,
I would like to get some color about your background.
I read some of your blogs on career advice,
and you note that you're living out your dream job currently.
And I say that with air quotes because I know there's no such thing as a 100% perfect job.
So how did you end up becoming a blogger and an author?
Was that something you always wanted to do or did that sort of fall into your lap?
It was kind of an accident. See, I graduated from college in the last crisis we had, which
was the financial crisis in 2008. And there was like zero job market. And I kind of bounced
around a few odd jobs. I lived on a friend's couch for a while and I started doing freelance
web design.
And around the same time I read Tim Ferriss's
four hour work week, which talked about building
online businesses and automating them and you know,
how you could work four hours a week and go live
and play in Argentina or whatever.
I was like hell yeah, I'm in, that sounds perfect.
And so I spent the next couple years trying to actually
build e-commerce sites and like affiliate marketing sites. That sounds perfect.
blogs were kind of like all the rage back then. I started blogging in 2008.
If you wanted people to come to your website, if you wanted the rank on Google, if you wanted,
there wasn't much sharing on social media back then.
You had to be blogging, you had just to like promote these crappy affiliate sites. I had and it turned out
I was much better at blogging than I was
e-commerce yeah, and
By 2011 2012 it was blogging was all I was doing
Yeah, you are such a good writer. So many people like really like your writing style because it's so different
It's like a breath of fresh air. It's like a little witty and cheeky. So props to you. I actually had a website as well. I had an
entertainment news website from 2010 to 2013, and I think that was the height of blogging.
But I couldn't monetize it, and so I shut that down. And your blog is one of the only blogs,
I think,
is just that all of the smaller and medium-sized websites, Blogging's in a tough spot.
So it's a tough spot to start. I don't want to discourage anybody from blogging,
but if you're looking to build a content business,
blogging is probably one of the worst options right now.
If I was starting today, I would start a podcast or a YouTube channel. that are still growing very quickly. Those are the spaces where there's still a lot of opportunity. The big media companies haven't totally figured out what works or how to do
it. And so those are always going to be the spaces where young hustlers have an advantage.
I totally agree. And I'll be more frank with my listeners because I have a more personal
relationship with them. I would totally avoid blogging if you don't blog yet, because unless you're Mark Manson,
who was able from back then when it was at its peak
to get all these subscribers and things,
it's really hard and I would suggest working on something
like he mentioned, like podcasts or YouTube instead.
Okay, so we have limited time and like I mentioned,
your new book, Everything B**** has so much content
and I definitely want to get into some of the key takeaways that I found.
Just to summarize in my opinion at a super high level what this book is about, it's
really about becoming an adult and not just any adult but the best adult that you can
be.
And some people think that like when you turn 18, you automatically become an adult, but
that's not really the case.
13% of adults actually behave and think like adults according to some studies.
We'll get into that later.
I just want to say that I read that book.
It was great.
I felt like I was getting a philosophy lesson with a modern twist, and I really learned
about philosophers I didn't really know much about like Nietzsche and Kant and Plato.
And so I want to just say thank you for writing something
that's like easy to understand for somebody who's not really into philosophy. I want to go back to
when you actually started first writing this book. So it released in May 2019. So I'm assuming you
wrote it like the year before. At that time, why did you think that everything was ****?
Well, it's funny talking about this now when actually there is a real crisis happening
because I think we so easily forget that I feel like that period of 2017, 2018, 2019,
there was kind of like a fever pitch in our culture where everything felt like a crisis,
but nothing was actually a crisis.
Yeah.
People were always freaking out over everything that happened.
Whereas you look out the window and everything's great and job market's best it's been in 50
years and economy's doing great and all the metrics in terms of life expectancy and health
and education are all-time highs. Meanwhile,
you go on Twitter and you would think that the apocalypse was happening.
The book was very much written to address that. What is it about, not just our culture
today, but our generation that we get so worked up about things and trying to put those things in perspective.
And it's ironic because one of the things that I talked about in the book is that there's
a little bit of a paradox where when things are great, you kind of have to make up problems
to be upset about because it's by being upset about things that you give your life a sense
of meaning or a sense of hope. And then it's when it's, things are actually
fucked up as they are right now.
Yeah.
You don't have to go searching for a crisis.
You don't have to go searching for problems.
The problem's right there in front of you.
So in a weird way, crises are almost psychologically easier
for us to bear because we know exactly what to hope for.
Yeah, so it's almost like when things are going so great,
we end up making it worse for ourselves because we imagine things to be so bad or we make things that we wouldn't otherwise think are
bad just to like kind of satisfy our need to have a crisis and our need to kind of like hope for something.
So tell us what the definition of hope is in
your opinion. Like how do you define hope?
I define hope as some sort of vision of the future that we believe will be better. There
are a couple of things that are interesting about, I guess, that definition of hope. One
is just simply that if we don't have some vision of our future that is better, that's
when we fall into depression
or despair. It's one of the things I talk about in chapter one is that the opposite
of happiness is not sadness or anger. The opposite of happiness is hopelessness, in
the sense that nothing we do matters, nothing that we do will affect any sorts of change.
But the other thing about that vision of a better
future is that paradoxically that it's easier to have hope when times are bad
and it's more difficult to find hope when things are good and comfortable. And
so for me that's I present there's a lot of statistics like you know suicide is
the highest and the wealthiest
and safest countries in the world.
People who once they reach middle class or upper middle class, you see things like depression,
anxiety, mental health issues start to increase.
And that doesn't really make sense.
But when you look at it in terms of the difficulty it comes with hoping
for something better in the future, it kind of explains that.
And so I know that a way that we can kind of deal with the issue of hope is to deal
with something you call the uncomfortable truth and take that head on.
Can you explain that concept to our listeners?
Sure.
The uncomfortable truth is that, you know that in the grand scheme of things,
the vast majority of the things that we say and do
are not going to matter.
Yeah.
It reminds me of when I was at school,
I remember taking an astronomy course
and just learning how vast the universe is and how long the history of the Earth is and how many billions
of people have come before. It's just that feeling of smallness and insignificance. It's
like, wow, and I was really upset over what my mom said this morning. It just seems so
trifling by comparison.
So the uncomfortable truth is just this realization
that like the vast majority of the things
that you spend your energy, time and energy caring about
are not gonna matter in the long run.
And on the one hand,
that can be a very depressing realization,
but on the other hand,
it can be a very liberating realization.
Because it allows you to let go of those things.
But how would
somebody get motivated from that or is your point not to motivate someone from
the uncomfortable truth? Is the point for the person to feel like less stressed
about everyday life? Like what's the point of acknowledging that uncomfortable
truth? Well I think we all spend a lot of our energy avoiding that truth. So we
convince ourselves that some little project
in our life is like life and death important
or something we say to another person is like,
if we embarrass ourselves in front of somebody,
it's like, oh my God, our lives are over.
It's the uncomfortable truth,
it's a scary thing that we avoid accepting,
but if you are able to accept it, it shows
you that most of the things that stress you out are actually not that significant.
And so, it kind of has a little bit of a double-edged sword. It can make everything feel meaningless,
but at the same time, if most of the things that you say or do or pursue
are meaningless, then that means you're completely free to do what matters to you.
There's no excuse to not embarrass yourself or to not fail at something or to not pursue
a dream or to not tell somebody that you love them.
Because we're all going to die anyway, so you might as well live each moment to its fullest.
Yeah, totally.
It gives you some perspective
and also helps you with your priorities
and makes you realize that this big problem that I have
isn't really that serious.
Who's gonna remember it when I die?
So that's a good point.
Let's hold that thought
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Something else in your book that I really thought was interesting was the concept of
the thinking and feeling brain.
And so this is something that people have been talking about for a long time in the
Christian era.
I think that it was people thought that it was more
like the thinking brain that was in control. But now more recently, people are saying it's
really the feeling brain that's in control of our mind. You have this awesome analogy
of the conscious car. Would you explain that to us and help us understand your perspective
between the thinking and feeling brain and how they react with each other. Sure.
So the consciousness car is,
if you think about the two aspects of our minds,
kind of the emotional side of the mind
and then the more rational side of our mind,
most of us operate under the assumption
that the rational side of our mind is like the adult
in the car who's driving and is in charge. And the emotional side of our mind is like the adult in the car who's driving and is in charge.
And the emotional side of our mind is like the obnoxious kid in the passenger seat who
just like won't shut up and is like demanding ice cream all the time.
And a lot of what we understand as being like a disciplined, mature human being is teaching that kid
and the emotional side of our brain to just shut the up
for like 40% of the time so that the adult,
the rational part of our brain can get to work
and do the right things and be a functioning human being.
But what's interesting is that if you look
at psychological research, it turns out
that we're all very driven.
It's actually the emotional side of our brain is the one that's driving the car.
The thinking part of our brain is very good at explaining our emotional impulses in a
way that sound very reasonable and rational, but they aren't necessarily.
And so really, we are very impulsive creatures. We all make most of our decisions based on
our emotions, based on our feelings. And if we're not aware that we're doing that, then
the rational side of our brain is kind of enslaved by our emotions to always just justify
whatever we feel about ourselves.
And so what I argue in that part of the book is that
instead of working, trying to work against our emotions
or like suppress our emotions or deny our emotions,
we need to work with our emotions.
We need to understand the role that each part of our mind plays.
Because the emotional side of our brain is incredibly important.
It determines our motivation.
It determines our inspiration.
It determines where we feel value and significance in our lives.
And so if we deny that part of ourselves and just try to be rational all the time, then
we're kind of gutting ourselves of the meaning in our
lives.
So what I argue is that we should get the two sides of our brains talking to each other
and listening to each other, which is difficult because they kind of speak different languages.
But in my opinion, that's kind of what emotional or I would say even mental health is.
Having the rational side of our brain and the emotional side of our brain
interacting with each other and understanding each other.
So give us like a real example of doing that. Like a situation where, let's give an example of like you don't feel like going to the gym but you know that you should.
Like what's the knew that you should?
Like what's the dialogue that you should be having in your head?
Right. So if you feel like you should be working out, but you're not,
we've all experienced that before and most of us we judge ourselves.
We're like, man, I'm such a loser, I it as a failure of our rational side of our mind.
But the fact of the matter is, is until we are emotionally motivated to go to the gym,
until we enjoy going to the gym to some extent, we're not going to go. We're always going to find
a reason not to go. In that sense, it's an emotional problem. It's not a problem of knowledge.
It's not a problem of willpower or whatever.
So if we understand that what we can do instead of like trying to will ourselves to the gym
constantly, what you can do is you can set up your environment in such a way in that
you make it enjoyable to go to the gym. So maybe you find a friend who goes to the gym
with you and it's in that way if you wake up and you're supposed to
meet your friend at the gym at 8 a.m., the fear of embarrassment of not being there,
your friend arriving and you not, that is an emotional motivation that will get you
out of bed and going to the gym.
Another way to do it is to hire a trainer and be like, well, I spent all this damn money and I'm going to feel awful if I don't use it.
So it's using your rational mind to create parameters and circumstances that make something emotionally enjoyable to do.
Yeah. It's like tricking your feeling brain into something that you want to do.
Totally.
So another piece of this thinking and feeling brain in your book that you talk about is
how the thinking brain tries to maintain a sense of hope.
And we were talking about hope before.
Can you help us understand the connection with that?
Well, the thinking brain is always, you're always trying to envision some sort of better
future for yourselves.
And whether that's like you as an individual or if it's
the world being a better place or impressing your parents or whatever, like it's, we all
need some sort of carrot dangling in front of us to give ourselves direction and purpose
in our lives. And so the thinking brain's job is to kind of come up with those sorts of things, is to figure out that equation of if I do X, then I will be happy, you know, or whatever.
Okay, so let's move on to another big topic, which is pain and values.
Now, you say pain is a currency of our values.
I thought this was super powerful.
Help us understand why you think that like pain
is what really keeps us motivated and things like that.
Well, generally people like to avoid pain,
but the problem with avoiding pain is that
we only value things in our lives
in proportion to how much we feel we have to give up for
it.
So if you think about a spoiled child, a child that's just given everything he or she wants,
the reason these spoiled kids grew up to be awful human beings is because they never understand
the value of anything.
Everything is just a frivolous thing for them
to experience from moment to moment.
It's only when you're able to go through
some sort of challenge or hardship
that you are able to understand
what is worth sacrificing for and what is not.
It's only once you've lost something
that you understand how valuable,
how meaningful it was in your
life.
And so, I just through all my work and all my books, I consistently make the argument
that pain and suffering is important.
Yes.
And not only is it impossible to get rid of pain and suffering, but we need to have pain
and suffering because psychologically, it kind of like the fuel that generates
our sense of meaning and importance in the world.
And so it's not a question of getting rid of pain, it's like choosing better pain, essentially.
Totally.
Yeah, and we can go back to the workout example.
The more you put yourself in pain with working out, the more you're able to keep working
out and kind of like build that strength.
And everything is pain.
When you're happy, it's just like your pain is alleviated.
When you're sad, it's just your pain is amplified.
So let's talk about anti-fragility.
This is a really cool concept that you have.
And basically it means that we need to kind of, like you said, choose our suffering and
be okay with choosing pain and not avoiding it.
Can you tell us more about that?
So antifragility comes from Nassim Taleb.
It's a really cool idea where he talks about how the opposite of fragility or being fragile,
it's not necessarily being robust.
It's actually being antifragile, which is you gain from pain or disorder in
your life.
And so if you look at things like the human body or the human mind, the human body and
human mind are actually, they're not resilient, they're anti-fragile.
The reason you get stronger at the gym is because you are breaking your muscles down
and making them stronger.
The reason that you get better after
failure is because you are breaking down a lot of your assumptions and beliefs and your
fears and building up better experiences over them.
And so, in that sense, by actually inviting certain amounts of pain and struggle into
your life, you make yourself a stronger individual with far more potential. And one of the big arguments of the book is what I fear is that in our
culture, there's been such a... It's becoming so taken for granted that we're all supposed
to be happy and we all deserve to be happy and we all deserve to be happy
and we all deserve to have a great easy life and nobody should suffer and all this stuff.
And it's, yes, we should try to get rid of injustice. We should try to get rid of people
who are predatory or people who are evil, but you shouldn't try to get rid of suffering
because suffering is necessary
for growth. It's necessary for making people stronger, more resilient, more mature human
beings. And so what I fear is that as our culture kind of has turned towards this obsession
with positivity and feeling good all the time, we are losing that ability to grow from our
pain and our failures.
And I think you say this in the book, you say that everything you do, everything you We are losing that ability to grow from our pain and our failures.
And I think you say this in the book, you say that everything you do, everything you
are, everything you care about is a reflection of your choice, your relationships, health,
work, emotional stability, your integrity, your breath of your life experience.
If any of these things are fragile in your life, it's because you've chosen to avoid
pain.
I think that's so powerful because it's so true.
The way that you grow is through pain.
Let's stick on that a little bit.
Tell us about how pain helps you grow
and how if you don't choose to accept pain
and if you avoid pain, how you kind of stay as an adolescent
and you don't ever really grow up to be an actual adult.
Tell us about that.
So I think for me, and I define this in the book,
but like what defines an adult,
or just being a mature, healthy individual,
is that ability to understand what is worth suffering for
and when is it worth suffering for.
In a simple example of like, say, a romantic relationship.
For that relationship to grow,
you have to understand when a fight needs to happen.
Some people, and I think kind of younger,
more idealistic people,
their idea of a good relationship
is a relationship where you just never fight.
But it's like, that's not a healthy relationship
because that means you're hiding things,
you're pretending things are not happening.
And that makes you more fragile as a couple.
Whereas if you get very good at noticing the things
that need to be addressed and being able to address them,
even though you know you're gonna fight about it,
you know it's gonna be painful,
you know you're gonna be angry at each other
for a day or two, if you're able to do that,
you actually become a stronger unit for it.
Yeah, your bond is stronger.
It's the same thing in business.
If you've got employees that are messing up, you can't pretend they're not messing up.
You have to say something.
Or if you've got a coworker that's screwing around, you have to say something.
Totally.
There are so many instances, you know, everywhere you kind of look in life, there's like a skill
set of understanding what pain is necessary for growth to occur and then having the ability
to step into that pain.
I loved the fact that you brought up how like pain can strengthen relationships.
So just to relate to that a little bit,
my listeners don't really know this,
I haven't really shared this,
but I shared it on LinkedIn, but not on my podcast.
I actually went home to take care of my whole family
who got coronavirus.
So like my mom, my dad, my brother,
and my brother was home from California,
and we haven't spent that much time together
in a long time, you know?
And it was such a hard time,
but now I feel so close to my brother and my mom
and everything because it's like,
we like went through that crazy time together
and we'll never forget that.
And it sucked, it was horrible,
but at the same time, like my relationship,
particularly with my brother, is like so strengthened
because we went through this horrible experience together.
So it's just, it's funny how like, even if it's a horrible experience, there's always
some silver lining and actually like that kind of pain can grow a really big bond.
Absolutely. And it's, I talked about this in my first book, Subtle Art. I said that
if you think about the most important experiences of your life.
Probably three out of four of them were negative experiences.
A breakup, a death, losing a job.
They're horrible in the moment, but when you look back on them years and years later,
you're like, wow, I'm so for that happening. So you say that living well does not mean avoid suffering.
It means suffering for the right reasons.
So tell us, what do you suffer for?
What suffering do you do to provide value in your life?
Well, I stay inside.
That's one way I suffer for the right reasons.
I think there are a few fronts.
One, I think the most obvious example is just my career.
So it's writing is, I mean, it's fun a lot of times, but a lot of times it's suffering.
I'm finishing up another book right now and I went back to revise a chapter that I hadn't
looked at in a few months and I just looked at it and I'm like, this is terrible. This is absolutely
terrible. And it's just, it's like almost heartbreaking. Like I had to take the rest of
the afternoon off because to have something that you've been working on for over a year
and you think you're almost done and then you go look at like an early part of it and you're like,
wow, that's, I can't publish that. That is awful. It just flattens you.
And I think writing is, it has its emotional struggles
that a lot of people just don't,
I seem to be constituted for it.
I like being alone.
I like working by myself.
I don't mind rewriting something like eight different times.
And so that's a form of suffering that I'm well adapted to
and that I even get a little bit of a sick pleasure out of.
And so that's kind of why it's become my life is,
one thing I always say in my talks is that it's not,
being good at something is not
because you enjoy it necessarily.
Being good at something is you enjoy the sacrifices that are involved in it.
Totally.
In a way, the thing you end up best at is just the pain you can tolerate better than
most other people.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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Totally.
And that's kind of like back to like you're in your dream job.
Not every job is perfect.
It's like what job do you enjoy the most?
Like even the shitty parts of the job can you tolerate the most? That's how you find your dream job. every job is perfect.
Your dream job's going to suck about 30% of the time. We all have to do taxes.
There's just no such thing as a job that is fun every single day.
So I do want to talk about the difference between a child, an adolescent, and an adult.
You say it's not how old they are or what they do, but why they do something. Can you unpack that for us?
Sure. So when I go through this, I'm summarizing. There's a field called developmental psychology, and so I'm kind of just summarizing this entire field.
But basically, the human mind develops in a series of stages.
We don't just come out of the womb knowing how to drive a car and send an email.
just come out of the womb, you know, knowing how to drive a car and send an email. So when we're kids, we're generally very, everything we understand about the world and understand
about life is very much just derived from pleasure and pain. Toys make us happy, candy
makes us happy, falling off the bed makes us sad, We don't really think past that.
Kids aren't able to think about the future.
They aren't really able to reason about the past.
They aren't able to think about other people's feelings
or what other people might do.
It's just all they know is this is fun, this is not fun.
I want to do the fun thing.
As we get older though, we start to realize things.
We start to realize that sometimes something is pleasurable now, want to do the fun thing.
last time I did that I got sick and I felt awful. And so kids start to understand that there are repercussions for things. They start to understand that there's cause effect. They
understand that other people have thoughts and feelings that are affected by their actions
as well. And so around late childhood or early adolescence, maybe around ages like eight, nine,
ten, kids start to figure out that the world is very transactional.
If I agree to do what mom says today, she will reward me tomorrow.
And so the adolescent phase is very much built off of a life of managing transactions, of
understanding that if I behave in these certain ways, people will be nice to me and I will
get good things that I want.
Now the transactional approach to life is fine. We all need to be able to do it. We all need to
be able to think through those things. But the problem is that it kind of objectifies everything.
So if your approach to all of your relationships is, well, I'm going to say this to Hala because
I know she likes to hear that. So if I say this, she'll like me. That's great if I'm going to say this to Hala because I know she likes to hear that.
So if I say this, she'll like me.
That's great if I'm trying to get a favor from you, but if I'm trying to be a friend or if I'm a family member,
that's a really crappy way to have a personal relationship with somebody.
That everything they say to you is based on what they think you want.
You can't really operate in life that way.
And you run into the same thing, if you look at businesses, for instance,
some people are very good at the transactional game of,
okay, if I put this product out or market it this way this will make me a lot of money, but am I screwing over my customers?
Am I willing to screw over my customers or am I willing to break a law to add profit to my bottom line?
You start running into situations like that.
And so it's only when you get to adulthood that you understand that sometimes you simply have to willingly take on pain
that you understand that sometimes you simply have to willingly take on pain for no other reason than it's the right thing to do. That it's better for you in the long run, it's better for society in the long run, it's better for the people you care about in the long run.
And so a lot of kind of like the highest virtuous concepts that we've had throughout human history, things like honesty, charity, compassion,
these are all things that can really only be attained in adulthood. honesty, charity, compassion.
These are all things that can really only be attained in adulthood.
I have to be willing to sacrifice myself for my family or willingly sacrifice myself
or give up potential profits to make sure my employees are taken care of.
Those sorts of actions and behaviors can only occur once you've kind of transcended this transactional view of the world.
And so that's the adult view.
Yeah, and if I remember correctly from your book,
to think and act like an adult, you need to endure pain,
you need to abandon hope, and you need to let go of the desire
for more pleasant and fun things.
And you have to act unconditionally.
That's something else that I remember.
Yes, the unconditionality. Yeah. And the thing about adulthood, I mean, I go kind of
hardcore on it, but I think people should understand that it's like an ideal. And I
even mentioned that often this kind of ideal, this like selflessness of adulthood is something
that's been canonized and crystallized in religious myths and heroes
and stories and things like that.
Like, none of us are actually like fully that way all the time.
Yeah, it's impossible.
We've all still got like our inner child that like just wants to drink ice cream for the
next three hours.
You know, and then we've all got the adolescent in us who's like, maybe I can scheme a little
bit and get a little bit more for myself. Like it's those things never, you never completely leave those things.
It's like what point of the spectrum are you on? Totally. So one of the other topics, there's
so much content in your book. I'm actually having a hard time like trying to grab everything
that I need to talk about. This is definitely one of the hardest interviews that I've had
in terms of that of tying everything together.
But one thing that I wanted to talk about is fake freedom versus real freedom.
I thought this was really important for my listeners to understand your perspective on.
Can you talk to us about that?
Yeah, I feel like this is very important in this day and age, and especially in the US.
I think if you look historically, the idea of freedom and liberty is not what we traditionally think of it today.
Today we think of freedom and liberty as simply being able to do whatever the hell we want when we want to do it,
without being constrained by any sort of outside force whatsoever.
In my opinion, this is a very childlike, entitled version of freedom. whatsoever.
The truth is that we all live in a society. We all have to make compromises because we are all better off for it.
And the truth as well is that when you do indulge everything you want, it makes you
more fragile.
It makes you a weaker human being.
It makes you a more susceptible individual to outside forces.
In chapter eight of the book, I spend that whole chapter arguing that we need to redefine
freedom the same way that the philosophers and the Greeks and Romans understood it, which
is that freedom is the ability to choose what to give up. Freedom is choosing what you will
sacrifice. And so freedom is not sitting on the couch eating whatever the hell you want
for the rest of your life. Freedom
is actually getting up at six in the morning and going to the gym because by building up
your body, you are actually giving yourself more options for the future. By limiting options
today, by choosing which options you're going to limit today, by choosing not to eat Cheetos, you are giving yourself more
options in the long run. And so freedom is actually, it's a personal form of discipline.
It's a constant choice of what sacrifice am I going to bring into my life and what is
going to be important to me. And so in that sense, I see things like, and I just have
to bring this up because we're in the middle of it now. There are people protesting during be important to me. can't smoke next to a pregnant person, or you can't smoke in a restaurant.
You're fine if the government tells you you can't scream fire at a theater.
How is this any different? At some point you have to accept that
freedom is not about what you individually want,
it is about what you are individually capable of sacrificing and giving up both for yourself and for the
greater good.
And also because I think you talk about this in your book that if freedom is variety or
unlimited experiences, you'll never be satisfied.
You'll never actually be free because you'll never be satisfied.
There'll always be something else that you're trying to attain and so you'll never really
be free.
You say that freedom isn't what you can experience, it's what you can limit yourself to.
I think that's really powerful stuff.
Okay, so the last question I'm going to ask, it's on the last chapter of your book.
You ask us to abandon hope all throughout the book, but when I was reading your last chapter,
it's clear that you have hope in science and technology and AI.
And you imagine the world in the future where AI has taken over humans and ultimately does a better job of running the show than we do.
And that's terrifying, but then it's oddly hopeful.
So talk to our listeners about this world that you imagine in the future with AI?
Well, first I would argue that it's not even the future really. It's already happening.
I think AI runs the world better than humans in many ways already.
You know, the last chapter is a little bit tongue-in-cheek. It's a little bit just me being a little bit crazy
and being like, you know what, let's see how far I can take this.
One of the more tragic things I talk about in the book is that ultimately we do have
to hope for something, but our hopes inevitably end up causing everything to be f***ed.
Everything is f***ed, which is why we need hope, but then it's our hopes are what cause
everything to be f***ed.
So it's kind of this vicious cycle that
keeps happening. And it's just kind of an inherent part of our psychology. There's not
really any way around it. And so really the message of the book is like, since we can't
get rid of hope, we have to just be very, very careful about what we hope for. And the last chapter is kind of my very, very careful, slightly facetious
hopes, which is just that I personally think, you know, one of the cornerstones of my personal
philosophy and kind of all my work in general is that humans suck. Like we are just, we're not... The human mind is not very well equipped to handle global, ethical,
moral questions. If you look at human history, it's just full of violence and screw ups and
disasters. So it's my starting point is like, if there's any way we're going to kind of
save ourselves from ourselves,
it's going to happen via science and technology in some form.
So that is the thing, the one thing I dare to hope for, although I am also very skeptical of my own hopes.
Yeah, well, I hope our AI masters are nice to us.
Exactly. They're not evil. Okay, cool.
So the last question I ask all my guests is, what is your secret to profiting in life?
Secret of profiting in life?
I think if you just make it a habit to give more value than you consume, good things will
happen everywhere.
It'll happen with people in relationships. It'll happen in business. It'll happen with people in relationships,
it'll happen in business, it'll happen in your own life. Like it's just build a habit of give
more than you take. I love that. That reminds me of David Meltzer. Thank you so much, Mark.
You have such great content. Your books are amazing. I would highly recommend everybody
to go get your latest book, Everything is F***ed. You can find it everywhere. And thanks so much for your time today.
Thanks for having me.
Thank you.
Thank you.