The Daily Routine Guaranteed To Destroy Your Life - Arthur Brooks

CChris Williamson
Mental HealthManagementAdult Education

Transcript

00:00:00Let's say that you're going to design a life for someone to have as little meaning in it as
00:00:03possible. What would that consist of? It would start by waking up when the sun is warm,
00:00:11you know, making sure you don't start your day like before dawn. Make sure you start your day
00:00:15kind of when you get up. Make sure that if you have an alarm clock, there's your phone.
00:00:21Look at your phone before you roll out of bed, right? Then make sure that the first thing that
00:00:25you do is eat a bunch of, you know, highly processed foods, high in sugar. Make sure you
00:00:30get your coffee in the first five minutes. So you get a big dose of caffeine and make sure that you're
00:00:35looking and scrolling on your phone while you're eating your first meal. That's a really important
00:00:40thing to do. Make sure that your whole first hour is neurocognitively programmed to be on the screen.
00:00:46Then make sure that you have a remote job. It's very important that you go to work back in your
00:00:51bedroom and you look at a screen and you look at a screen all day long so that your colleagues are
00:00:55kind of squares on the Zoom screen and you see them sometimes in the clients and et cetera, et cetera.
00:01:01And you don't actually know where anybody lives. You don't have a relationship with anybody, right?
00:01:05It's actually better if you don't see anybody the whole day, as a matter of fact. Now, if you're
00:01:09going to date, make sure that it's swipe right, swipe left, swipe left. And so that you're only
00:01:14getting a two-dimensional understanding of the person that you might want to fall in love with as well.
00:01:17Like no multidimensional, multisensory understanding of who the person is. Make sure you can't smell
00:01:24that person, right? I mean, that's really important because, you know, the olfactory bulb does all
00:01:29kinds of meaning-related things in the brain. So make sure you rule that out, right? And make sure
00:01:33that on your own dating profile, you're lying a lot. That's important too, right? Then let's make sure
00:01:39that for fun, that you're spending sort of the evening not doing anything of real importance. I mean,
00:01:46you're not working on a big project, you're not going out and seeing people, that you're kind
00:01:49of staying in and scrolling and watching YouTube shorts. And if you're doing something that's
00:01:56kind of competitive and achievement-oriented, make sure that it's gaming. Make sure that, you know,
00:02:00it's really oriented toward that. So it's kind of writing your life in disappearing ink.
00:02:05And then go to bed. Make sure you didn't do any exercise. Important not to do any exercise at all,
00:02:09right? And then repeat times where N equals any number that you can conceive of. So that you're
00:02:21never bored. You're never bored. But your life is grindingly boring. See, here's the key. If you want
00:02:28your life to have no meaning, make sure that there's no boredom moment to moment, but that day to day and
00:02:33week to week and month to month, life is boring. That's what you're actually going for. As opposed,
00:02:39if you want your life to be really meaningful, make sure you got plenty of boredom moment to moment.
00:02:44And then your life won't be boring at all.
00:02:47Isn't that a strange paradox?
00:02:48It is. I mean, my great-grandfather, Leroy Brooks, he was born in Olathe, Kansas. He married the
00:02:56sheriff's daughter. John Jaynes was the sheriff. Was strung up by Quantrill's raiders during the
00:03:02Civil War. I kid you not. This is Americana in my family, Chris. And he married Mary Ellen in Olathe,
00:03:09Kansas. And that's pretty much what I know about him. But I'm going to make a prediction about good
00:03:14little Leroy. He never came home to Mary Ellen and said, honey, I had a panic attack behind the
00:03:20mule today. Because his brain was working the way it was supposed to. I promise you that his life
00:03:28behind the mule, looking at a mule's butt, was pretty boring moment to moment. But he was not
00:03:33bored. His life wasn't boring because he was living a real life. But a lot of people today who have
00:03:40figured out a way by checking the screen and living online and living the hustle and grind culture
00:03:45that's been engineered out of Silicon Valley and various other places around the world, Hyderabad and
00:03:51wherever you want, that not being bored from moment to moment gives them the most boring lives possible.
00:03:58Is it the case that ambitious people are particularly susceptible, vulnerable to meaninglessness?
00:04:05So, asking for a friend, right?
00:04:08Of course. Of course.
00:04:11Me too. I'm like a senior version of you, man. Except you're not going to be bald.
00:04:18That's true. I'm going to have to lose a lot of hair.
00:04:20You're going to have to lose a lot of hair. I know. If I had your hair, I'd be President
00:04:22of the United States right now.
00:04:23I think you would.
00:04:26Yes and no. So one of the problems that really ambitious people have is that they don't know
00:04:34how to live with themselves. So ambition, striving, busyness is really a way that people anesthetize
00:04:43themselves because they're very, very uncomfortable. So, you know, I'll give you an example. One time I was
00:04:46talking to a great friend of mine who traveled constantly for work, constantly for work. And his
00:04:52wife was just in his grill. It's just like he had kids and she says that I miss you. And you always,
00:04:59every year you tell me that this year is going to be different. And I realized getting to know this
00:05:04guy really, really well, the problem wasn't that his job made him travel too much. The problem was
00:05:10he didn't want to be home. He didn't want to be home. He wanted to be distracted because his life
00:05:16stressed him out so much. This is what it's like to be a striver is like having this unbelievably chaotic
00:05:23life. And you need to distract yourself all the time. And so sometimes your ambition will be
00:05:28distracting you. Sometimes your success will be distracting you. Sometimes just your overriding
00:05:32need to be special or to be applauded by others is your way to distract yourself from all the things
00:05:38that are actually going on, all the storms and things inside your head, right? And when you have a
00:05:44down moment, then you panic. And that's when the screen comes out or for that matter, that's when
00:05:49alcohol and drugs come out. There's very interesting data from the OECD that show that above average,
00:05:54busier than average people are above average risk in alcohol and alcohol abuse. So you don't think,
00:06:01you think of somebody who's an alcohol abuser as an alcoholic as somebody who's down and out,
00:06:05you know, you know, a bum, right? No, it's more likely to be an investment banker. It's more likely
00:06:10to be a wealthy, successful podcaster. And the reason is because successful strivers anesthetize
00:06:17themselves with drugs and alcohol, with pornography, with screens, with anything that will actually
00:06:22make you like, don't leave me alone in here, man. I don't want to be alone in there, which is why
00:06:28they're strivers in the first place. How often do you think people are pursuing goals because they
00:06:32genuinely want them versus because they want approval?
00:06:36So everybody pursues goals because human beings, homo sapiens, only get satisfaction in their life
00:06:43when they're making progress. It's that satisfaction is the joy of an accomplishment, of making progress
00:06:49toward an accomplishment with struggle. That's what satisfaction is all about. That's why goals are
00:06:55incredibly important and struggle and pain are incredibly important. That's what it comes down to.
00:06:59These are the two things to teach your kids is have goals, accomplish stuff and struggle and don't be
00:07:07afraid of pain. Those are the things that you teach your kids and they'll get a lot of satisfaction.
00:07:10Satisfaction is one of the macro nutrients of happiness, to be sure. The trouble with that is
00:07:14that if it's somebody like you, highly intelligent, super hardworking, unbelievably energetic, then you
00:07:21can actually start fooling yourself into thinking it's actually not about making the progress and the
00:07:25struggle and the hustle and grind of life itself. It's actually about if I finally get that thing,
00:07:31then it's going to be okay. When I finally get that thing. So, you know, I've, I've, I've worked with
00:07:37Olympic athletes and, and, and it's funny because you'll often, they think they're alone in their
00:07:44struggles and you'll say, did you, when you won that goal, were you depressed afterward? They'll be like,
00:07:48how'd you know? Like, cause it's always true.
00:07:50Every other gold medalist. It's literally called gold medalist syndrome.
00:07:53Yeah. It's called gold medalist. And, and what it is, it's all in, in, in my field in behavioral
00:07:57science is called the arrival fallacy. And the arrival fallacy is just like, I, I, I, I got to get
00:08:02there. And when I get there, I'm going to feel that thing. Now, what was the thing I'm going to feel?
00:08:05And this gets back to your question. I'm going to feel like I'm worthy. I'm going to feel like I'm
00:08:10something. I'm going to feel like I'm special. I'm finally going to feel like I'm special. And you
00:08:16don't, and you don't. And that's the problem. That's what a big part of the survivor's curse.
00:08:21You know, what's fascinating about the arrival fallacy? No, one's ever been able to make it
00:08:26popular. So the concept, yes. Yeah. Correct. Has tell me the most well-known book on the arrival
00:08:32fallacy that points it out. Exactly. Yeah, I know. Fucking. So I was on my way out to Australia,
00:08:37texting Mark Manson about this. And I was explaining one of the problems I was trying to navigate with
00:08:42the show, this live show that I was doing. And one of them is that a good bit of it is kind of
00:08:46about the arrival fallacy. It's a PG version because I'm aware that it's chronically the most
00:08:51unsexy topic to ever talk about. Yeah. And his response was, good luck. I've tried to talk about
00:08:56this publicly and every single time it's fallen flat. I know. It's not just not mimetic that people
00:09:02don't want to talk about it. It's not just mimetic neutral that people will accept it.
00:09:07And maybe bring it up or maybe not. It's actively anti-mimetic. People don't want to hear it and
00:09:13won't tell their friends about it. It is. No, I know. I know. It feels, saying to people that
00:09:20are still climbing, which everybody is, the view from the top of the mountain is not as good as you
00:09:25think it's going to be. Feels like you're sucking the gas out of their fuel tank while they're still
00:09:30on the way up. It's like you as a fat person saying to someone who's starving, well, food's not that
00:09:35nice in any case. And it's an unteachable lesson. And the only way that you can learn it is by getting
00:09:40there. And because the alternative to this with the arrival fallacy is that every successful person
00:09:47ever in history has been inducted into some kind of cult that pulls the ladder up after them where
00:09:54everybody gets the same memo, which is, so I know that you, all of the problems that you had,
00:09:58all of the internal voids, your feeling of insufficiency, the chip on your shoulder from when
00:10:02you were a child, your desperate desire for validation from random humans on the internet.
00:10:06I know that all of that was fixed when you got the 30,000 square foot house, but we need to tell the
00:10:12poors that that's not the case. So you now are a part of this elite group of people that are trying
00:10:18to sigh up everybody else into not trying to strive for it. That's the alternative, which is,
00:10:23or is it more likely that that's just the sense that the gold medalists got? And that's not to say
00:10:29that it's everyone, but it does seem to be a pretty big cohort, way more than the people that are
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Key Takeaway

Achieving lasting satisfaction requires embracing the struggle of progress and accepting moments of boredom, rather than using constant hustle, screen consumption, or the 'arrival fallacy' to numb internal discomfort.

Highlights

  • High-performing individuals face an above-average risk of alcohol abuse compared to the general population due to the tendency to use alcohol as an anesthetic.

  • The 'arrival fallacy' is the persistent, mistaken belief that achieving a specific future goal—like winning a gold medal—will fundamentally fix one's internal feelings of worthlessness.

  • Human satisfaction comes from the process of making progress toward a goal, specifically through struggle and accomplishment, rather than the attainment of the goal itself.

  • A life devoid of meaning is often engineered by eliminating all moment-to-moment boredom through constant screen use, remote work isolation, and superficial digital interactions.

  • Meaningful lives paradoxically require frequent moments of boredom, as these periods allow for genuine engagement with reality rather than constant digital distraction.

Timeline

Engineering a Meaningless Life

  • Starting the day by scrolling a phone and consuming high-sugar, processed foods creates a neurocognitively programmed day of screen dependency.
  • Remote work and two-dimensional digital dating apps eliminate necessary physical and multi-sensory human connections.
  • Constant engagement with short-form content or gaming prevents essential downtime, resulting in a life that feels grindingly boring despite having no actual moments of boredom.

Designing a life with minimal meaning involves removing all empty time and replacing it with continuous stimulation. By prioritizing immediate digital gratification and eliminating face-to-face interaction, individuals remove the capacity to develop deep, sensory-based relationships. This daily habit cycle effectively causes a person to live in a state of perpetual distraction while avoiding the necessary boredom required for a meaningful existence.

The Striver's Trap and Anesthesia

  • High-achieving, busy individuals often use their ambition and work to distract themselves from internal stress and emotional chaos.
  • Data from the OECD indicates that individuals with higher-than-average busyness have an elevated risk for alcohol and substance abuse.
  • The need to be constantly occupied serves as a defense mechanism to avoid being alone with one's own thoughts.

Ambitious people frequently struggle to exist in silence, leading them to use work, travel, and digital screens to anesthetize their internal discomfort. This avoidance behavior extends to substance use, where high-status professionals are statistically more vulnerable to addiction than the general population. Rather than genuine desire, much of the 'hustle' culture is a strategy to flee from inner emptiness and the fear of solitude.

The Arrival Fallacy and Human Satisfaction

  • Human beings derive satisfaction exclusively from making progress through struggle, not from the final outcome of a goal.
  • The 'arrival fallacy' occurs when individuals incorrectly assume that reaching a milestone will permanently resolve feelings of insufficiency or need for validation.
  • Discussing the reality that the 'view from the top' is underwhelming is notoriously difficult because it threatens the motivation of those still climbing.

Success does not grant the sense of worth or specialness that strivers anticipate, leading to disappointment after major accomplishments—a phenomenon well-documented in elite athletes. The topic remains 'anti-mimetic' and unpopular because it contradicts the belief that future success will solve present internal voids. Genuine happiness lies in the macro-nutrient of satisfaction gained from the effort and pain of the journey, not the arrival at a destination.

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