The New Way Of The Superior Man - David Deida

CChris Williamson
Mental HealthAdult EducationMarriage

Transcript

00:00:00What's happening, people? Before we get into the episode, I wanted to give you a disclaimer.
00:00:03David didn't show his face when we were recording. David's a pretty esoteric guy,
00:00:07decided that he's going to retreat from the world. He's living in a house in the middle
00:00:10of nowhere in Florida, I think. And even though it might have been nice to have seen his face,
00:00:15it's completely on brand. So we've tried to make it as engaging as possible.
00:00:19I hope you enjoy the episode. What is a man of zero?
00:00:24Well, to me, a man of zero is somebody who has come to the point in their life
00:00:31where their motivation has evaporated or isn't there. They feel they still may be very active.
00:00:41They may be married. They may have children. They may have businesses. They might be creative.
00:00:48But under it all, there's just a feeling like, why am I doing this? And part of me would rather
00:00:55not do anything kind of feeling. And I noticed a lot of men feeling that that I was interacting
00:01:03with over the years. And so I wanted to address that.
00:01:08Is this the next stage after the superior man? Is this a spiritual sequel to the way of the superior man?
00:01:17It's a kind of sequel, but it's not necessarily a stage progression. So somebody might go into the
00:01:25phase, I'll use the word phase, of a man of zero. And then after a month, a year, a decade, whatever,
00:01:34they may come back to being the superior man. To me, what a superior man is, is a man who is motivated
00:01:40by a deep sense of purpose. And that sense of purpose might be to discover their purpose. But
00:01:47they're motivated by a sense of purpose, often to serve the world or to give their gift or to make
00:01:55things right. And when that evaporates, or when they no longer feel that, that's the beginning of the
00:02:04phase of the man of zero. Now, it may last a very short time, may last a long time, the man of zero
00:02:10phase. So they may eventually go back to, oh, a new purpose. For instance, for myself, this book emerged
00:02:18out of nowhere as a kind of, oh, I should write this book, I need to write this book. So it just came out
00:02:24of nowhere. And then, you know, the discipline of writing a book, of working with publishers and all
00:02:30of that, that takes effort. So that came up, you know, I was working as kind of a superior man phase
00:02:37for a while. And we'll see if I could get through this interview without resting back.
00:02:44Okay, if you, if you degenerate into total apathy, we'll know that you've gone back into man of zero
00:02:48phase. It's not exactly apathy. I'm glad you said that. It's a kind of, it's a clarity. It's pure
00:02:56presence. It's pure awareness. It's being absolutely present with the moment, but just not having an urge
00:03:01to push and change things. Like you're deeply content with the way things are, but that doesn't
00:03:10stop you from changing things. It just means you're not stressed. You know, most men have a kind of
00:03:15kernel of stress in their gut or their heart or their solar plexus that moves them to do something. Well,
00:03:22the man of zero is what happens when that stress isn't there? What are you moved to do? Like,
00:03:27how does the universe use you? How does, you know, that deeper thing that's beyond you move through
00:03:34you? Because in the superior man phase, one is motivated mostly by their personal sense of purpose,
00:03:42rather than being kind of used by something or much larger, if shape, if size even has meaning.
00:03:50I think it doesn't exactly paint a very flattering picture of where most people's striving comes from,
00:03:59you know? What doesn't paint a flattering picture?
00:04:03The fact that when you get to this restful, um, no longer needing to prove yourself,
00:04:10you notice how much of your ambition and your pushing seems to fall away. What that would suggest
00:04:15is that without some of the drives, uh, needs for validation and recognition, uh, past patterns that
00:04:23are puppeting you, maybe you wouldn't be pushing quite so much. Definitely. But I don't think that's
00:04:30a negative thing. That's just, uh, an evolution, a way of growth. I mean, some of the, some of my
00:04:36favorite music say was probably created by artists who were doing it so they could get laid. You know,
00:04:44like there some, sometimes people do something for money, but it's really a work of art. It's really
00:04:48a beautiful thing that they're creating. Some people have a sense of lack of self-worth, let's say,
00:04:54that they inherited from their childhood. And yet that lack of self-worth motivates them to create
00:05:00real art, really beauty on earth, real beauty on earth. So it's not necessarily a negative thing
00:05:06that people are motivated. It's just at some point I wanted to account for what happens
00:05:11when those motivations are no longer sufficient to move you. Oh, I agree. Uh, the, the world is
00:05:16shaped by people trying to prove themselves to themselves and others. And much of that motivation
00:05:22is running away from something that you fear, not just towards something that you want. It's trying to
00:05:27disprove your doubters or critics or alchemize that chip on your shoulder. Uh, and the world will become
00:05:34fundamentally a better place. But I think when you start to look at it from the perspective of the
00:05:39individual, the one person, it starts to look a little bit different and it does look like a kind of
00:05:46evolution, uh, internally. Well, I guess, I guess what are the indicators that you've reached this stage?
00:05:53Let's say that you were to explain to the avatar of the person that's going through it.
00:05:59How would they know? What, what are the indicators that you're becoming a man of zero or become one?
00:06:05Well, the first part of the book, the man of zero is several chapters dedicated to this. Um,
00:06:16basically you're just no longer motivated like you used to be. You might look at your friends say, and
00:06:25they seem motivated. They seem okay. They seem like they have a reason to get up in the morning and
00:06:32go forward. Why don't you? Um, there's a kind of,
00:06:39well, you could either call it peace or you could call it lack of stress in your heart or in your depth.
00:06:46Um, and many people then, many men then assume that's an issue. That's a problem because they've
00:06:55been motivated, like you say, for many reasons. And suddenly they're just not,
00:07:03there's doesn't move. It's not sufficient to move them anymore. It feels false. It feels like a false
00:07:11life. It feels like they're not living true to their deepest self and temporarily their deepest self
00:07:20wants to do nothing, which to me is a portal. Like if men learned how to do nothing impeccably,
00:07:28so not get on their phone or look at pornography or watch movies or whatever people might do when they
00:07:39don't want to do anything. If instead men just took a moment and really were present, totally aware,
00:07:47like crystal clear, not pulling away, not pushing anything, something emerges from that. So when you're
00:07:55able to just sit or, or you could do walking or it doesn't matter at all, but if you could just be,
00:08:02that being then begins to unfold through your life, through your body and mind.
00:08:09So, and your body and mind are conditioned, like your body and mind are trained a certain way. So when
00:08:14that being flows through your body and mind, it'll look different than when that being flows through my
00:08:20body and mind. Um, I'm not sure if that's any sort of your question.
00:08:25It certainly does. It's a kind of stillness indicator would be you're comfortable with peace,
00:08:32but it seems to me that it's almost like a, it feels like a deceleration in striving is one of the
00:08:38sort of core components here. The need to do, the need to be busy.
00:08:42That's a core component to the, the sense of seeking for something, whether it's self-validation
00:08:50or peace on earth, whatever you're seeking, just somehow dissolves and you're left, you're left with
00:08:58just being. So again, most men, they get to that place of just being and they think it's negative. Like,
00:09:05uh, well, you know, I need to take testosterone or, you know, I need to drink more caffeine or, uh,
00:09:13whatever. They, they feel like they need to do something to get their mojo back. Or in fact,
00:09:18that is their mojo. Their mojo is leading them to relax their body and mind to become transparent
00:09:25to their being, their deepest being. And it take, it could take time. It might not take time. It's not
00:09:31predictable, but once you're living from that place of being, there's a through and through sense of
00:09:37authenticity. There's not a sense like something's lacking that you're trying to fill, uh, or stress
00:09:44that you're trying to release. It's just a fullness of being that's living your life. It's the same,
00:09:50you, you experience it. It's the same force. Let's say that's growing, growing trees and moving your
00:09:58blood. You know, your thoughts are just appearing out of nowhere. Nobody knows what they're about to
00:10:04think. Nobody's actually planning on it. It just, their thoughts come out of nowhere. Their body
00:10:11comes out of nowhere. Their experience of everything, what they hear, what they see,
00:10:15is just appearing. And when they could stay there because they have no motive to move,
00:10:21then that appearance, you know, you begin to see some principles of those appearances, but you're
00:10:27free. Things are appearing. You may act on them, but the essential feeling is one of freedom.
00:10:32Yeah. I think what's really interesting here is it feels like the moment when your success stops
00:10:37feeling meaningful and your striving is no longer rewarding you in the same way. And what you're
00:10:43saying is that some men kind of get to there, they get to this escape velocity where they are in this
00:10:49phase of zero, this man of zero moment. And what they do is because for almost all of their life,
00:10:56where they have taken meaning from has been progress, difficulty, hard charging, driving forward,
00:11:02doing things, making shit happen, fulfilling their ambition. And when it's gone, they don't think,
00:11:08oh, wow, I've completed that video game. They think I need to change my conditions with
00:11:14caffeine or imagined or real enemies or higher testosterone level or a divorce or whatever it
00:11:20might be in an attempt to reignite this, the heart of this dead star that is supposed to kind of be let
00:11:28to cool for a little while. Yes, exactly. It's healthy and appropriate for the motivations of your body and
00:11:40mind that it may be in the past to come to stillness and then to discover the truth of what's left.
00:11:47That's so good. So question on this. Why does success eventually feel empty?
00:11:54Well, it only felt full because you had these thoughts and, you know, feelings of lack and goals
00:12:00that you described. Um, there's never anyone who's succeeded any at anything knows that it's,
00:12:07you know, the first thing you discover when you succeed at anything is, uh, uh, okay, you know,
00:12:15I've made zillion dollars. I've got the beautiful woman or whatever their thing is. And there they are.
00:12:21They're the same one. They're the same being. Was that it?
00:12:25That they were before. The question, was that it?
00:12:27Well, it wasn't. I mean, you had to do it. You had, there's no reason to not, like,
00:12:34if you're motivated to make a lot of money or you're motivated to find a partner or to
00:12:41have sex with a lot of people or whatever one's motivation is, you can explore that. I mean,
00:12:46that's what human birth is for to, to explore all the possibilities of being human. But there comes a
00:12:53point if you, if you mature and it could be at any age, a lot of people due to psychedelics and all
00:13:00kinds of things are coming to this point early in their life, but there comes a point where they're
00:13:04just, it's just empty. It feels empty. The tone is emptiness, meaninglessness. They're just, they're
00:13:13there in their mansion, you know, whatever their situation is. And it's like, nothing really has
00:13:20changed essentially. Things have changed externally, bigger house, whatever, but essentially they're the
00:13:26same one. And that's disappointing to people. They think there should be some feel differently.
00:13:34What does that mean, therefore, that becoming a man of zero is more common among people, guys,
00:13:39who have achieved that in order to realize that success is empty, you need to have achieved some
00:13:46success. If you're lower down the sort of ladder, still striving with more unfulfilled desires and
00:13:55goals and accomplishments that as yet you haven't reached, you're more likely to keep playing that game
00:14:00as opposed to arriving at this position of stillness. I think a large percentage of these men have
00:14:08achieved a modicum of success and have come to that point of meaninglessness. However, I think more and
00:14:15more younger men, before they've flexed their muscles in the world, before they've achieved success,
00:14:23often due to a meditative experience or, I mean, people can have these deep experiences now
00:14:28cheaply. So they could have an unearned glimpse of infinity. And they could come to a place of
00:14:37why do anything very early in life before success? And their practice would be the same as the
00:14:44successful person's practices outlined in the Man of Zero book.
00:14:48Yeah, it's referred to as spiritual bypass by some of my friends that sort of do a lot of psychedelics.
00:14:56People go away to the Amazon rainforest, they sit with the shaman, they have this transcendent experience,
00:15:03they touch the divine, they feel the infinite, and then they come back and they're the same
00:15:06prick that they were two weeks ago. There's no integration, nothing changes. They've just had,
00:15:13like visited this peak moment, kind of like a tourist going on holiday to come back and go back to their
00:15:18normal day-to-day life.
00:15:19Yes. And the key insight in that, and psychedelics altogether, is that you said like you're the same,
00:15:30I don't remember what you said, you're the same prick you were beforehand, something like that.
00:15:35The thing to recognize is you are the same one. Whatever that is, you don't have to call it a prick,
00:15:40but you actually are the same one. So, no experience changes yourself, your being, as like, let's just
00:15:50call, you know, it doesn't matter what we could call our deepest being, being, or aware being. It's
00:15:56what's always there. It's what they were when we were five, or ten years old, or it's what's there now,
00:16:01and this moment, and this moment, and this moment. Things keep changing, our experience changes, but that
00:16:06sense of I, or being, is continuous. So, if you could really recognize that, if you could use, say,
00:16:13psychedelics, and go, I'm the same being before I took psychedelics, during the trip, and afterwards,
00:16:21then the practice is to rest as that being. So, the psychedelics themselves may afford healing of
00:16:29different kinds of the body and mind. It may give you visions of kind of parallel worlds to the one
00:16:36our waking state is used to. Those can be interesting, they could be useful, but the one who's having those
00:16:42visions is the same one who, you know, eats lunch and takes a shit.
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00:17:49What's the psychological experience of hitting zero? I imagine this gets confused for depression a lot.
00:17:56Definitely. So there are some cases of true clinical depression, for instance, biochemical imbalances
00:18:05that could be addressed through pharmacological means. Or you can go into a kind of depression
00:18:12because you lose someone you love, or fail at something that you've spent years trying to succeed.
00:18:22Sometimes those are what I would call true depression, but what most people experience in what I'm trying
00:18:31to describe is that they come to a point where their actual life is meaningless. There's no more
00:18:40meaning anymore. And so they feel, what do I do now? And then what they add is a sense of collapse. So
00:18:53being, being, just being your deepest self without collapse is the man of zero. Being, being,
00:19:04and then collapsing, literally collapsing, contracting in your solar plexus, punching over,
00:19:10kind of getting in that dark, you know, what am I doing, mulling things over. That's depression.
00:19:16So if you subtract the doing, if you go to true zero, so you're not even doing contraction,
00:19:23you're not doing slouching, you're not doing the mulling of the thoughts, then what's left is being
00:19:30without collapse. And that's the man of zero.
00:19:33How do people distinguish that in the moment? Because I think the fear that's going to come
00:19:39up, it sounds great. We can rationally identify, well, the main difference is the collapse,
00:19:44the stillness, the deceleration, becoming comfortable with it. But in the moment,
00:19:50you're not going to be thinking rationally at all. You're going to think,
00:19:53where did all of my drive and ambition go? And you're going to look around at all of your friends
00:19:57who you used to work with or compete with or have a rivalry or a friendship with and go,
00:20:04they're still congruent. They're still aligned. Their thoughts, words, actions, beliefs,
00:20:08direction in life is all moving in the same direction. And I don't even know what I'm supposed
00:20:15to do. I don't want to get up. I'm not driven by the same things anymore. This feels like depression.
00:20:19This must be what depression is. So how would you advise someone in the moment
00:20:24to have faith that this is an evolution, not a devolution, progress, not regression?
00:20:32One way, there are several ways, but one way would be to, so let's take this moment now.
00:20:40If you're thinking thoughts in this moment, let's say those thoughts were,
00:20:45my friends are succeeding or my friends, you know, everything that you just said, those are thoughts
00:20:49that are going by. If you can see those thoughts or witness those thoughts, you see them come and go.
00:20:58Like there's a beginning of a thought, there's a thought, it's over, now is another thought.
00:21:02So there's these thoughts that are moving and it's not that difficult to see that you're still there.
00:21:11The thoughts are changing, you are not. You are experiencing those thoughts. The experience changes,
00:21:16the thoughts change, but you are not. And so you, it's hard to put words on, but you sink into that
00:21:24being, or you rest as that being, or you relax as that being, and then you, those thoughts may or may not
00:21:32continue. But if you buy into those thoughts, that's what contracts you. So if you start getting lost in the
00:21:42thoughts or lost in anything, lost in a sexual relationship, lost in your work, but when you get
00:21:49lost in those thoughts, you feel suffering because you're not yourself, true self. You're lost in the
00:21:57stream of thoughts. So the checking is, are you free? Even if thoughts are moving, are you free as they move?
00:22:06Are you the awareness or the space of awareness, however you want to say it, in which those thoughts
00:22:12are moving? And if you can stay there, just rest, relax there. It's effortless. It's just what you always
00:22:19are. So if you feel that effort coming up, you know you're missing the mark.
00:22:23It's interesting that so much of what I think a lot of men do is hide away from the fleeting thoughts,
00:22:36the scary fleeting thoughts, and the patterns that only come up in moments of stillness and quiet by
00:22:44staying busy. So this must be, it's almost like a perfect storm. The drive that kept you busy
00:22:53is no longer there. And as the busyness falls away because you're less driven, the quiet fleeting
00:23:00thoughts come up, which you've been hiding away from for a long time, which is even scarier.
00:23:05And that then gives you more to contend with, which incentivizes you even more to push away
00:23:10the phase of zero, and go back into the drive and the pursuit.
00:23:16It's kind of worse than that.
00:23:17Brilliant.
00:23:19Because we've suppressed a lot. So let's say you told a lie to somebody. This is just one example.
00:23:27Let's say you told a lie to a business partner, or to your wife, or whoever, or maybe just to
00:23:33yourself, but you've told a lie. And then for some gain, personal gain, you know, so you told a lie,
00:23:40and now that moment has passed, but you know, you've told the lie that creates a kind of contraction
00:23:46or tension in your body and mind. And when you come to this place of zero, all of those tensions
00:23:56from your entire life, all the ways you've lied to yourself and others, come back to the surface.
00:24:04So you'll be sitting there and a memory of this person you lied to will come up. It could even be
00:24:13deeper than that. So we have a genetic past and an epigenetic past and an ancestral past. And so just
00:24:21even at the mammalian level, we have mammalian, you know, mammals, we're mammals. So, and mammals
00:24:28fight and fuck and run. And so you'll be sitting there and mammalian urges to kill and fuck and they'll
00:24:36arise. And the moments you've lied to people and hurt them, those moments will arise. And they're arising to your
00:24:45awareness to be released. It's a kind of purification. Like you said, they've been stuffing them down.
00:24:52So it is, it's a, it's quite the ride, you know, it's not like a vanilla, you know, so you have to be,
00:25:02that's why I wrote the book because I want men to understand that and be able to tolerate that unfolding.
00:25:11Does real world effectiveness become less for a while?
00:25:18I would say the interest becomes less, but if you've become effective, that stays there,
00:25:24your skills are diminished. So, so your, your skills, what's, what's the judgment by which we're
00:25:30saying effective is or is not here. If it's playing a game that you've now liberated yourself from, then
00:25:36yeah, you're less effective at playing the game, but you've also transcended it.
00:25:40I'm not even sure you're less effective at playing the game. You're just less moved to. But if the game
00:25:44is kind of put on you, you, you might even be more skilled because you're less wound up in your own issues.
00:25:52Yeah, that's fun. That is fun. So, I, I mean, what's so cool about this? I've been doing this live show.
00:25:58Um, I went to Australia, New Zealand and Bali. I just got back from that. And on stage, I was trying to
00:26:04thread a needle that was, uh, potentially really unpopular and also really hard to do. And it was
00:26:10basically warning people of the hollowness of arriving. And it really feels like there's something
00:26:18there in the ether that you're, you've definitely touched with this. And I think I was trying to get
00:26:22to as well. One of the challenges, I think, when it comes to people learning this stuff is
00:26:30if you haven't yet got there, if you haven't yet got to the point where you've felt enough success and
00:26:37achievement to peer over the top of it and see that it might not be all that you thought or you hoped that
00:26:43it was going to be. If someone who appears to have already made it to the top of the mountain is telling
00:26:49you that the view from the top is not that good. What it feels like to you is someone sucking the
00:26:53oxygen out of your fuel tank. And people respond to this with an awful lot of, of distaste. Oh,
00:27:00like what a luxurious position to be in or some other version of, well, if, if I'd got there,
00:27:06that would fix my internal need, my desire for validation that would be solved by the 10,000
00:27:12square foot home or the supermodel girlfriend or the Ferrari or the thousand monthly paying subscribers
00:27:18on my app or whatever it might be. And, um, I think it's, it's a rare person who is able to face this
00:27:27and go, huh, maybe the things that I'm pursuing at some point in future will be hollow
00:27:33as opposed to just, uh, they just need to push harder. They just need to man up and go through it.
00:27:40If they feel they need to man up and go through it, they should. I mean, that's a true phase. So,
00:27:45if somebody really feels that, I would recommend that they man up and go through it. Um, to others,
00:27:52I would say, it's not so much like when you reach the top, like you arrive and then you see it's empty.
00:28:00Right now, in this moment, whoever's listening, I mean, this very moment, feel what's happening.
00:28:07Notice what's happening. There's something happening. You're, you're hearing my voice and your voice.
00:28:12Uh, there's a visual perception they're having, but none of that is changing them. They're the same one
00:28:19listening that they were yesterday or 10 years ago or 10 years from now. And so in this very moment,
00:28:28they can relax or notice that one. And instantly in that noticing,
00:28:35all the stuff they're doing and thinking becomes empty. Not, not in a negative way. It's just
00:28:42stuff that's happening. It's like watching a river, watching the clouds. Um, it's still happening,
00:28:49but it's flowing through you. There's so, so there's no need to feel like when I achieve or when I'm on
00:29:00have arrived right now, you're in that condition, but you may also have motivation. So right now,
00:29:08everyone is in the condition of being aware to some people that is sufficient to other people.
00:29:16They need to add stress and seeking in that way. Do you think self-improvement and the pursuit of
00:29:24self-improvement can sort of delay real freedom, making us believe that we're the unfinished article
00:29:30until even if that's not true, the belief in it means that we put off asking the deeper questions or
00:29:36sitting with the stillness? Um, I don't think, if somebody wants to self-improve,
00:29:44they should. As we said earlier, I mean, that's what makes the world go round. So people,
00:29:49people who are moved to self-improve or improve the world, which tend to go hand in hand, um,
00:29:55they should. There's no reason not to. I don't see it as a block to this. I think
00:30:02sooner or later, most men come to a point of whether, however active they are or however improved
00:30:11they are or not, of feeling its emptiness. Like in, again, in this moment, most men would be able to
00:30:18feel that spacious emptiness, that awareness. It's aware. It's got a, there's an is-ness. It's hard to
00:30:26put words on this, obviously, but a lot of men have experienced it. What changes around sex?
00:30:32Well, a third of the book is about sex, um, of the, the book, The Man of Zero, because a lot could
00:30:39change because a lot of our sex is based on, uh, our past, our mammalian past, as I said, um, our
00:30:49psychological past, the way our parents treated us, our first sexual relationships. Um, as we rest at
00:30:57zero more and more, more stably, more frequently, those no longer motivate you. So what men often feel
00:31:06as they approach this phase of The Man of Zero is less actual desire for sex, but more sexual fantasies
00:31:16coming out of those depths that I described earlier, like that we stuffed down. So they might be sitting
00:31:22there and they may have all kinds of weird sexual fantasies and thoughts, but when it comes to
00:31:28actually having sex and having a relationship, all they know is what they see in their friends or what
00:31:35they did in the past, which is based on these conditionings from their past, their mammalian
00:31:40conditioning, their personal past, their childhood traumas. And those just are no longer an interesting
00:31:46way to have sex. So a lot of men go, you know, I'm, I'm losing my sexual desire. I need to get it
00:31:53back. Whereas, as I describe in the book, there's what turns you on now is not as much,
00:32:03you know, what turned you on before, lingerie and porn or whatever. But a partner, I'll say woman,
00:32:10it could be any sex, but a partner's actual love, her devotion, her surrender. So when you feel
00:32:16someone's devotion to love or surrender, opening their body to love, that brings a part of you to the
00:32:25four that could become sex from zero. Like you're rested at zero. You're, you're not pushing,
00:32:33but from that place comes a polarity or sexual attraction. There's a lot in the book about that.
00:32:39We can unpack it more now if you want. Absolutely. Yeah. I think, uh, the role of
00:32:44sexual polarity, obviously massive part of your first book. And then to see it,
00:32:48you might think that the amount of stillness would kill the polarity, but you're suggesting that that's
00:32:55not the case. Stillness is one side of the polarity. The other side is fullness or energy. And that's,
00:33:04you know, I use the word masculine and feminine. It's problematic for some people, but
00:33:09the way I'm using that word is that the masculine is that unchanging stillness that we can all experience.
00:33:15And the feminine is everything that moves, is life force, is energy, is the fullness to the emptiness.
00:33:24And so as you rest in emptiness through polarity, you tend to attract fullness. So if in a heterosexual
00:33:31relationship, you will tend to attract to you women who are, you know, very active. They like to talk.
00:33:38They like to socialize. Just as you're feeling, I don't want to talk, I don't want to socialize.
00:33:46And so it's important to learn to embrace that polarity, but it's still a polarity. And ultimately,
00:33:51the polarity is being the fullness of your depth, of your awareness and attracting to you a woman who's
00:34:01in her fullness of devotion. That is, her heart is open and full of love that she also wants to share.
00:34:09But she's not driven by a sense of lack. So she loves you, but doesn't need you and vice versa.
00:34:17And that's a very strong polarity. Your depth of stillness is in polarity with her radiance, her power.
00:34:25I see it even coming out as more and more women. I'm sure you know this. You know, there are more girls who
00:34:32graduate high school than boys. There are more women in law school and medical school than men.
00:34:38And I think it's going to keep going in that direction. I think that over time, women will be
00:34:47much and already are. There'll be more women leaders than men. There'll be more successful women than men.
00:34:55The pendulum will swing. And then men will need to learn how to rest as this man of zero in depth,
00:35:02because then they still have polarity. It's very valuable when a woman is very strong and powerful,
00:35:08kind of comes home from work, if we want to use that metaphor, like she comes home from
00:35:12a day of being in the world. And there you are, completely present, rooted in the deepest sense of
00:35:19being, absolutely attentive to her without being clinging, because your awareness is free. She feels
00:35:26that is the greatest gift on earth. So she moves from being attracted to a man who, whatever, makes a lot
00:35:32of money and is socially charismatic, to a man whose polarity matches her at the level of being and doing,
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00:36:46Interesting to think about the masculine essence of, I guess, holding frame would be one way to put it,
00:36:55but just being you, just being. And that even if you're not doing as much doing as the woman in your
00:37:03life, the fact that you're able to be so still and so comfortable with it commands a kind of masculine
00:37:10power and respect that kind of means that no matter what happens in the outside world, the protector
00:37:18provider, the socioeconomic balance or imbalance, it's always still you in a position of masculine
00:37:29frame holding. Yes, because awareness is where everything happens. You wouldn't be aware of
00:37:36something unless it happened in awareness, and you're that awareness. So you are the ultimate frame,
00:37:42if you will. And this could even apply sexually. So let's say you're laying in bed with a lover.
00:37:48In the past, you might initiate sex and, you know, you might be kissing and touching and foreplay and
00:37:57building up tension, maybe spanking, you know, lovingly being together in all kinds of playful ways.
00:38:02But for a man of zero, he might be laying there feeling like, I don't want to do anything. I don't
00:38:06want to move. I love her. I love being here with her. I don't want to do anything, no. And I would say
00:38:12to that man, okay, don't do anything. You just lay there in bed, hold her in your arms, but completely
00:38:18feel her. Feel her body. Notice the tensions moving through her body. Feel her emotions. Feel the ongoing
00:38:26yearning in her heart. And in the book, I give details. But you learn how to feel into her effortlessly,
00:38:33just in a completely relaxed way. And then she feels your presence. She feels you feeling her.
00:38:40She feels you knowing her. And that is incredibly valuable, even sexually. So now, you're just laying
00:38:48there holding her with her. But she feels you deeply knowing her, probably deeper than if you were
00:38:54pumping her, you know. So she's feeling this deep sense of you being inside of her. You're still
00:39:00penetrating her, but you're penetrating her with your love, with your feeling awareness. And so sexually,
00:39:08the less you do, the more she feels fucked by you. You said before about how sort of the previous things
00:39:17that men were, would be turned on by in sex. Maybe you could categorize them as a bit more obvious,
00:39:26a little bit more shallow. I can't think of a better word, a little bit more shallow. When you're then
00:39:31talking about sex at zero is much more intimate. Why do you think talking about intimacy when it
00:39:41comes to sex is hard for men? Talking about sleeping with women is pretty easy, almost sort of bragging
00:39:47about what you got up to last night if you're in your twenties. But talking about true physical intimacy
00:39:54as a man, a lot of the time, I think, makes men uncomfortable. Women have a not horrendous
00:40:01archetype for this, you know, the transcendent, deeply desired. It's making love, not having sex.
00:40:08But for men, true physical intimacy and making love is, I don't know, I don't hear many men talking
00:40:16about it. And when they do, I think that there's a kind of uncomfortableness around it.
00:40:20Well, that's a, as you know, a lot of my work in the past has been on sexuality and spirituality.
00:40:26So we could spend, you know, months unpacking this, but Hey, it's your first one. It's your
00:40:32first podcast in 10 years. I don't know whether you knew David, but this actually does last for months.
00:40:36So I hope that you've locked in.
00:40:42That's fantastic. Because of the way evolution works, I'm sure you know this.
00:40:48For male bodies, all they need to do is ejaculate in order to create the next generation.
00:40:55So men are built to be aroused sexually. So sexual arousal, you know, men are almost always able to
00:41:04be sexually, you know, they're fantasizing about sex a lot. A sexual arousal is easy.
00:41:09So it's easy for them to talk about that part, sex. It's easy for them to say what they like sexually.
00:41:30Intimacy often involves emotional sensitivity, feeling the other person, obviously. And most men
00:41:45during sex, because of their evolutionary past gets so wrapped up in the physical sensations.
00:41:50Yeah. Have an erection. I'm going to ejaculate. Look at her breasts. Look at her ass. Like they're
00:41:55they're in this evolutionary churn that most men know. We all know that. So it makes it easy for
00:42:03them to talk about sexuality, but because they're deeply identified with nothingness. So, you know,
00:42:10at the depth of men of the masculine is this emptiness, this nothingness, and the emotions are
00:42:16anything but empty. They're what fill the emptiness. Most men, because they don't really realize how much
00:42:24they love the nothingness, they don't like filling it with emotion. So often a woman will ask a man,
00:42:30like, what are you feeling? And he'll go, well, nothing. And he's not lying. Or, you know, what do you
00:42:38feel about this? And he might say, I don't have any feelings about it. Often they're not lying. They're
00:42:44really feeling this kind of sense of emptiness or not in a negative way. Just it's a nothing. It's a
00:42:51aware nothingness. And they're not feeling an emotion. And so the woman will feel like he's not
00:42:57sharing with me. And the man will feel like, why is she doing, you know, why is she creating a problem
00:43:04when there is none? So there's a big difference between the way in typically the masculine feminine
00:43:11that she can communicate and why that difference is. What is your advice for a guy who wants to move from
00:43:16just having sex to proper intimacy? When one is in the man of zero phase,
00:43:24one of the obvious things is that that beingness or awareness, being aware, is in all beings. Like,
00:43:33you could look into a dog's eye and see their awareness. You could look into, you know,
00:43:41you're feeling that awareness in all beings, including your lover. So feeling like loving the
00:43:50love in your lover or being aware of the awareness in your lover. So she's aware of you, you're aware of
00:43:56her, you're aware of her being aware of you. That mutual awareness is love. Or that mutual,
00:44:02we are the same being. It's not a thought like that. It's just a feeling. Again, you could feel it
00:44:08with an animal. You could feel it with a plant. But that being that I am the same as you at depth,
00:44:15we're different at our surface. Our minds are different. Our bodies are different. But at depth,
00:44:22when you look and say, look into the eyes of a dog even, you can feel love. You could feel them
00:44:28connecting with you. There's a being there. And that recognition of shared being, which
00:44:36we could call love, might manifest as, you know, wanting to be physically intimate in the case of
00:44:43polarity. Unless, you know, you don't necessarily have polarity with a dog, but if you're with a human
00:44:50or a plant, although some people do, you know. But if you have that polarity with a human,
00:44:58and you're in your nothingness, that means you will attract somebody in their fullness. And
00:45:06that connection is love, even though you're playing the opposite poles. So one feels that love and is still
00:45:15and silent, and is not in the mood to communicate emotions. They're not in any mood. There is no mood.
00:45:22And the other is flowing with feeling, bursting with emotions, and highly responsive to life.
00:45:30And those tend to make, you know, a good pair in terms of polarity. So you recognize the unity of heart,
00:45:38I am you. But then you recognize the reciprocity in body and mind. She's radiant. I'm still, you know,
00:45:48she loves to dance. I love to watch her dance.
00:45:53Let's say that there's someone, let's say that there's a man who hasn't yet hit the man of zero thing,
00:46:00that sex at zero also not there. Are there some practices that you think help to push someone who
00:46:13isn't already in stillness, a man that isn't already in stillness, toward sex being a vehicle for
00:46:21experiencing deeper intimacy, and then also perhaps moving through some of the patterns that
00:46:29he has to work through in order to get to that man of zero point?
00:46:34Yes. Um, again, my previous 10 books were focused on this.
00:46:39Congratulations on 11, by the way.
00:46:45You know, men shouldn't push their stage or phase. Like you, you should live it fully. The best way
00:46:56to grow out of it is to grow through it.
00:46:58Yeah, I agree.
00:46:59Like, and so if you really are motivated to just have physical sex, you know,
00:47:07wham, bam, thank you, man, just quick, you know, then if that's where you're at,
00:47:12do it until it becomes obsolete for you. Um, when a man begins to become ready,
00:47:18there are all kinds of practices he could do. One, I mean, I'll say some of them, but again,
00:47:23there's a lot of them. Um, one thing is for him to learn to take his attention off himself,
00:47:30off his own body and onto his partner's body, even in sex and not in sex. So let's talk about sex.
00:47:38So to feel your partner's body more than you feel your own, to feel the tensions and relaxations in
00:47:46your partner's body, to feel the breath moving in and out of your partner's body, to feel the emotions
00:47:51moving through your partner, rather than your attention locked into your own sexual sensations.
00:48:00So one would just be to learn to liberate their attention to at least feel her more than yourself.
00:48:08Um, another thing to do is to create a kind of resonance. So often breathing with your partner
00:48:15sexually. So when she inhales, you inhale and she exhales, you exhale. And then of course,
00:48:20you might need to take catch up breaths because you don't have the same metabolism as your partner,
00:48:25but creating a kind of resonance of breath helps deepen sex beyond the merely physical.
00:48:34Going deeper in the body. So, uh, you know, some men only play on the surface of the woman's
00:48:42body. They kiss her lips. David, I'm going as deep as I can. I'm really trying. I've been
00:48:46trying for my entire sexual life to go as deep as I can. Congratulations. Sorry. Sorry. I had, I had to go
00:48:54on. Was that, do you want me to comment on that? No, no, no, no, no, no. That was just, I'm sorry.
00:49:00I just, the thought arose in my mind and I couldn't not make a deep joke. So, uh, you, you were saying,
00:49:08yeah. Well, well, that's actually true. I mean, a lot of men just at the physical level have an impulse
00:49:16to go deep. They want to press, you know, in terms of actual sex, they want to press their sexual organ
00:49:23deep inside of a woman. The feeling of going deep is the essential masculine urge, going deep into
00:49:31her, going deep into self, going deep into being. So that sense of wanting to go deep is a kind of
00:49:38native expression of the masculine. Jared, you ever considered that you might have a drinking problem?
00:49:44I don't consider a lot, Chris. Well, you drank an entire case of Athletic Brewing Co. last night.
00:49:50But they're non-alcoholic. And that's not a problem? Sorry, man. I just kept chugging
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00:50:40Bottoms up.
00:50:48So, things change and drop away. Ambitions, drives that we used to have may, they're just not there in
00:50:59the same way anymore. They feel hollow. You're not driven to do the same things. You may be more
00:51:04skillful because you're not pushing in the same sort of a way, but the drive to do the thing that you're
00:51:10skillful at may be diminished or entirely absent. There's not a collapse because the collapse would be
00:51:18depression, but there is a kind of emptiness and sitting with that in stillness is important. Also,
00:51:26the way that you show up and the way that you feel around sex may go from shallow to deep. It may
00:51:32feel significantly more intimate, less physical, more bound together. How does this get integrated?
00:51:41What do you do next?
00:51:45Over, it takes quite a while for the stability of your being to infiltrate through the patterns
00:51:53of your body-mind. So, we have all kinds of patterns in our body-mind. We have traumas.
00:52:00We might feel aggressive because of the way whatever our father treated us. We might feel aggressive
00:52:04because we're mammals and we've inherited a certain degree of aggression. Well, as we rest as being
00:52:12more and more as we become stable as recognizing ourselves as that
00:52:17simple awareness or presence, those patterns become integrated
00:52:24naturally, if you will, because tension isn't being added to them. You're not rewinding them tighter and
00:52:30tighter. You're letting them uncoil in the space of your awareness. Now, some people
00:52:38might have such a tight knot in their body or mind that they need a form of therapy. So, they may need
00:52:45a form of somatic therapy to unknot their body. Or they may need a form of cognitive therapy
00:52:54to help them unknot their mind or release a trauma. They might want to do trauma therapy.
00:53:00But all of that is just for to help loosen that relaxation in the openness of their presence.
00:53:09So, over time, it slowly becomes integrated and it's slow. Another thing that people don't really
00:53:15understand is, you know, you could have this kind of recognition of being and yet your body and mind
00:53:22continue with the patterns they have before, and your body is the last to change. Your mind may change
00:53:29first, but you find your body doing things your mind doesn't want to anymore. So, you have to have
00:53:36patience and compassion for yourself and others as these patterns in your body-mind continue to unfold.
00:53:44You might find yourself lying even though you don't want to lie. You might find yourself
00:53:48hurting someone even though you don't want to hurt them. So, you compassionately allow these past
00:53:55contractions that you stored in your body and mind to open in the spaciousness of your present being.
00:54:02And that takes years. I mean, there are all kinds of stories, as you know, of people of supposed
00:54:08spiritual depths who act in, you know, not integrous ways.
00:54:14Pretty much every leader of some spiritual movement or yoga cult for the last, like,
00:54:22three decades has basically, like, 50 decades perhaps has done that.
00:54:26Well, pretty much because it's universal. I mean, it just doesn't change. People,
00:54:32it's a false hope, I guess, for it to change. So, there are some highly integrated people
00:54:41who are not that deep. Some are deep, some are not that deep. But there are also very deep people who
00:54:48are not very integrated. They may have, they may be alcoholics, they may be, you know, cheating,
00:54:55you know, they may have sex with all of their students or, and those, that doesn't mean they're not,
00:55:04they don't recognize the nature of their being. It just means that their pattern has yet to unfold.
00:55:09And you need to be careful. I mean, you could put structure so that pattern doesn't hurt people,
00:55:14or you could make amends as those patterns inevitably hurt people. But that's the usual,
00:55:20that's not the exception, as you say. People have a kind of recognition that they could share with
00:55:25others. And yet, it's just like being an artist. How many artists can essentially create,
00:55:30let's take a musician, they could make divine music, and yet they themselves in their personal
00:55:35life are pretty messed up. I wonder, this is why I said about real world effectiveness,
00:55:42right? That so much of the best analyses, the best philosophy, there's this great line,
00:55:50if you marry well, you will become happy. But if you marry wrong, you will become a philosopher.
00:55:55And I think what that's sort of speaking to is, when you're pushing up against the grain of life,
00:56:04when it feels like you're swimming into the stream, when stuff's just not quite cohesing in the right
00:56:11way, or you still have these patterns to work against, these resentments from your past,
00:56:16this bitterness, this sort of unalchemized, untranscended and included problem. Because
00:56:24things aren't going easily, because things aren't going well, you tend to look at your world and
00:56:30yourself with so much more dexterity and resolution and obsession. That's where the art seems to come from.
00:56:38You know, how many songs have been made that are wonderful and unbelievably deep about everything's
00:56:46going well, and my wife's happy and healthy, and I've got these new kids, and the field outside is
00:56:51really bright today, and the weather's going, it's like, no. So much of what births great creative insight,
00:56:58and that desire to make things at a level that would be unreasonable otherwise, is the fact that you're
00:57:05brushing up against the grain of life. And that's, I think, what I was trying to get at. That as this
00:57:09stuff drops away, maybe your, if your ability to be effective includes your drive to do the thing,
00:57:19your output may change. The outputs that you get may diminish.
00:57:28First of all, I agree with you that suffering is the trigger for a lot of depth and a lot of art,
00:57:34which to me are the same thing. Good art comes from depth. So I agree with you, and that's why I don't
00:57:41think people should rush through these phases, and also why I don't think people should assume
00:57:47someone has depth. It means they're an integrated character. I would say that a lack of integration
00:57:53often creates art more than an integrated human. Can you highlight the difference between somebody who is,
00:58:00how do we identify somebody that is integrated and isn't?
00:58:05The way I'm using that word is that they're socially skilled, they act with deep morality.
00:58:14people who are good people, a man, you know, someone who you could trust. And a lot of these teachers you
00:58:22wouldn't trust, or a lot of these musicians or artists or whatever form they take, you might trust their
00:58:29art, but you wouldn't trust them, whatever, with your wife or with your bank account or with, you know,
00:58:35you have to use your discrimination. And luckily, that doesn't stop. As I said, even when you're
00:58:42rested at zero, those patterns continue, and they continue to cause trouble. And so the source of art
00:58:49that you're referring to doesn't cease. Your access to depth becomes more stable.
00:58:58What role does discipline play after purpose ends?
00:59:06Well, the body and mind continue to require discipline. You know, if you want to
00:59:12become stronger, you lift weights regularly. If you want to think about something more clearly, you may
00:59:20read books. So you may say that X hours a day, I'm going to lift weights or read books.
00:59:27So there's still a sense for your body and mind to train, you know, to learn to golf takes
00:59:35discipline, repetition. So your body and mind still require discipline. But the discipline is no longer
00:59:45to be what you are, you recognize you are what you are. So it's effortless. So the being depth
00:59:55is effortless. If you're doing something, you're missing it. So in this moment, if you're trying to be
01:00:03being, then you're trying, you're not being. So effortlessness is the key to knowing that in this
01:00:13moment, you're just being. But that doesn't mean that within that effortless being, you might still
01:00:19decide, you know, I want to paint something, or my kid needs to be picked up from school, or
01:00:27you know, I want to build a business. And all of those things require repetitive action or discipline.
01:00:33It's a very different sort of drive to get there though, right?
01:00:39Different from what? What's different?
01:00:40Well, in order to do this, it seems like there's kind of bottom-up motivation, which is
01:00:48less conscious, and it's driven by need for recognition. It's driven by past patterns. This is
01:00:54much more dictated. Like I don't need to paint, but I'm going to, I want to paint. I don't need to go to
01:01:01the gym and need to go to the gym is because if my body is better than I will look good to the person
01:01:06that I love and she will find me attracted. As opposed to just, I'm doing this because I want to.
01:01:13Yes. No, I agree with that. Yes. You've been thinking about, how long have you been writing
01:01:19about men and women? 40 some years. Okay. We are, you mentioned it earlier on,
01:01:29at least at what feels like a bit of a transitionary period, especially for men, for women too, but
01:01:34especially for men. I think women had a big transitionary period about 50, 60 years ago.
01:01:41What do you see or what are you hopeful for and worried about with the current culture around men?
01:01:50I wouldn't say I'm worried about anything, but I would say that as women take over the functions that
01:01:59men once had, men will have to find the deeper reason for being. And that deeper reason is what
01:02:07we've been talking about this whole time to frame everything, to hold everything, to be presence,
01:02:13to be depth. So whatever somebody's doing, your presence deepens them. So their doing becomes deeper.
01:02:21And that involves a different form of self-worth, if you will. You're not measuring yourself on how much
01:02:29money you have or how much weight you could lift. You're kind of measuring yourself on, if you want
01:02:34to use that word, on your stability, be what you are, and rather than getting lost in thoughts or in activities.
01:02:43What's the core of masculine essence, in your opinion?
01:02:48Well, the way I use that term is identifying more with the emptiness aspect of being than the fullness
01:02:57aspect of being. So the feminine is all into growth and change and flowering and fullness
01:03:10and eyeing. And the masculine is more oriented to timelessness and peace and being. So there are two
01:03:21different orientations, emptiness and fullness or presence and radiance. There's different ways of saying it.
01:03:31Yeah. It feels to me like you've lived 30 different lives. I did a little bit of research. Apparently,
01:03:38you instructed in artificial intelligence, research neuroscience, developed yoga techniques
01:03:43for intimate relationships, wrote PhDs that got an award from the French government, published academic
01:03:52papers, studied spirituality, and then wrote 11 books as well. I'm sure I'm missing an awful lot.
01:03:59But what's the through line with this? You're kind of, especially now with not showing your video,
01:04:07living in the middle of nowhere, in God knows where, with trees that are blocking your internet
01:04:11signal. You're almost sort of this esoteric masculinity wizard working on this stuff for so long.
01:04:22Like what, what's the through line? What do you want your career to be about and be remembered about?
01:04:33I don't really think of it in those terms, but there's definitely a through line.
01:04:40For whatever reasons, these things, this desire to understand reality or who I am or who we are,
01:04:47has started very, very early in my life. Very early. I mean, I remember being in the
01:04:53crib. I remember being diapered and feeling like, ooh, you know, like there's, I remember learning what
01:05:00perspective is or crawling on the carpet at my grandparents' house and realizing what size meant,
01:05:08like some things were bigger than others. Like I, it's just something I've been interested in
01:05:14all of my life. And so at some point in my life that led me to mathematics. I, I developed the
01:05:21Indicational Calculus, which is a calculus of distinctions, how distinctions arise in consciousness,
01:05:28published papers and that. That also, that became biology and immunology.
01:05:33Um, I worked in labs. I worked in a sleep lab to study sleep and dreams. Um, they, these were all
01:05:39unfoldings to me of the same thing. And during all of that, my main interest is just like, what is
01:05:46this? Like, what is the nature of being, of reality, of me, of the world? Like, why are we here? What is
01:05:52the meaning? And not in an intellectual sense, but to, to be able to do it, to, to write a computer that
01:05:58could think back then I was working on early artificial intelligence or, uh, you know, in the immune
01:06:03system I was working as, how does the immune system recognize self from other, you know? So I was always
01:06:09motivated by that. And through that, I was also meditating and doing yoga. Like you said, I had a yoga
01:06:15school, um, but all of those to me were the same thing. They were different ways just that my personality
01:06:25manifested this discovery, manifested this, uh, exploration and still is. So for the last couple
01:06:32of decades, I've been, it just naturally came. I've been living in mostly silence and a kind of retreat
01:06:39like life, but, uh, not because I'm avoiding anything. It's just, I succeeded at everything.
01:06:44You know, I accomplished what I needed to accomplish. And it came to a point of
01:06:49being of rest. And that's where this book came from because the men I was seeing were struggling
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01:07:51What is it that you attribute your ability to stay in touch with what you're truly interested in to?
01:07:59I never had an option. I don't know how to say it. It hurt me too much. For instance,
01:08:13when I went to college at 16 years old, I entered a program that was a combination of medical school
01:08:18and undergraduate school at a very young age. So I was going to medical school very early and studying
01:08:25science and all of these things. And at one point, I remember just sitting there in the library studying.
01:08:30You know, I was dissecting brains and labs. I was in it deep. And suddenly, it was just like,
01:08:36I can't do this anymore. Like, I've outgrown this or it's become obsolete for me. As much as I loved it
01:08:45until yesterday, today, it's done. And I, for some reason, I was able, I mean, I didn't just quit,
01:08:52you know, I let things go in an easy way, in a responsible way, but it became clear to me
01:08:58that that phase had ended. And usually, I don't know what the next phase is. I spent
01:09:05a year living under a tarp on a beach on a deserted part of Hawaii with no money at all. And
01:09:14that out of that year came my first book. So I didn't know that. I just thought I'm done. I'm
01:09:20going to just live under a tarp cheap as possible. So I did. And then I just started writing. I didn't
01:09:27plan on it. And I began to realize that if I could surrender to that process and not be lazy to really
01:09:35put in the work as things arose for me, that what I created from that place of depth was worth something
01:09:43to people. So I learned to make a living doing what I love.
01:09:46Hmm. I don't know if that's answering your question. It does. I think it might be difficult
01:09:55for you to, to see why waking up one day and feeling like your work in the lab is no longer fulfilling you
01:10:05in the way that it used to, but not continuing because of sunk cost fallacy or loss aversion or
01:10:13fear of what people will say or not being able to beat your previous career or whatever. It seems like
01:10:19that comes pretty naturally to you because the pain of being out of alignment is greater than the pain of
01:10:28change. But I don't think that that's the case. I don't think that's the case for most people.
01:10:32I think, I think most people are pretty ridden, riven by that stuff.
01:10:38Yes. I would say that the pain of living an untrue life for me exceeded the fear of what might
01:10:46happen if I do. Yes. Yes. So, so, you know, I was willing to risk everything because I just didn't
01:10:53have a choice. Like it hurt so much, literally hurt. Like my body hurt every, you know, going to do these
01:11:02things, hurt to do. I don't know how to describe it, just the pain itself. Suffering, like you say,
01:11:12is the root of a lot of exploration and creation and art. And the suffering just became so intense that,
01:11:19you know, when I ended a phase that I had no choice but to allow the new authenticity to find a way to
01:11:26express itself. I, uh, I did a retreat. Do you know who Joe Hudson is by any chance? Are you familiar
01:11:32with him? I don't. So Joe is a
01:11:38spiritual teacher makes him sound. It's far too, too dimensional for what he does, but, uh, Eastern,
01:11:43Western, lots of therapeutic modalities does retreats. He's also, uh, head of human culture,
01:11:49open AI. He's Sam Altman's coach. He's also my coach. And, um, he is, he's a wonderful,
01:11:54wonderful, wonderful man. And I did a retreat. It was my first sort of deep emotions bootcamp retreat.
01:12:01And I did it on a flower farm in, uh, Santa Rosa in California last year. I did it in,
01:12:07I did it in September and I haven't done Hoffman process. I haven't done IFS. This is the first
01:12:12thing of its kind that, that I've done. And, you know, by day four of seven, you're pretty cracked
01:12:20open by day three of seven. You're getting them by day four of seven. You're pretty cracked open 12
01:12:24hours a day, working on anger, working on grief, working on sadness, working on upright communication
01:12:30and apologies. And it's what you said earlier on about the pain of when you tell a lie, sort of,
01:12:35it comes back to get you when you get to this, this phase of zero, because that was kind of like speed
01:12:43running to zero, uh, without the psychedelics. And what I found when I got out was all of the ways
01:12:52that my patterns and incongruence, and like just all of the things that I did in the world,
01:12:59the conversations that I would have with, with my staff and the small ways that I might,
01:13:03I might lie because I didn't want to hurt their feelings. Um, I, I didn't want to say something that
01:13:08might make them uncomfortable. So I didn't say what was just true or my truth, uh, or the way that I
01:13:15might deal with a friend who was late for dinner or, or, uh, an interaction with somebody that I just met
01:13:22or whatever, all of these different ways, there was this, and you use the word constriction,
01:13:27which is the perfect word for it. There was this sort of tightening and it feels like,
01:13:32it feels like a wet rag. If you imagine a wet rag, that sort of goes from the back of your mouth to the
01:13:38middle of your stomach. And it, it feels like some, it feels like someone sort of twisting like this.
01:13:44And, um, I'd never had, I mean, I always, I try not to lie as best I can. And I'd always known that
01:13:53it was something that didn't make me feel great. I'm a horrendous lie. I'm a really, really
01:13:58unsophisticated liar. And this extra level of sensitivity, you know, this attunement that I had
01:14:07from stripping away, opening my heart, doing all of this work for, you know, a full week just meant
01:14:14that that, that level of sensitivity to the, the, the rag being, being squeezed inside of me was so,
01:14:23it was so fucking hypersensitized. It was insane. And, um, I kind of imagine, I just have to assume that
01:14:29this is, this is maybe what it's like to be David Data, that that level of sensitivity to the pain,
01:14:37the pain of misalignment. I was having a conversation yesterday about why, why I'm glad that I get such
01:14:42bad hangovers, which is, uh, the cost benefit analysis or the, the, uh, reward punishment balance
01:14:51for me for drinking alcohol is just way off. It was never great. And now I'm in my thirties and, and
01:14:57it's, it's gotten even worse. I'm kind of glad because what that means is the likelihood of me
01:15:03ever becoming an alcoholic is super low because the pain, I wouldn't even be able to get to the
01:15:06point of dependency because I'd be so miserable after day three or four. I mean, I can't,
01:15:10I cannot fucking do this anymore. Um, this, what you have here is maybe, and if you do the work,
01:15:18the opening, the freeing, uh, the, the attunement, that's kind of the same thing.
01:15:25It's a very high level of pain when you do something that you shouldn't be doing.
01:15:31And that whether it's through, uh, training or just a, a, a, you know, fortune gift that you've
01:15:37been given, uh, means that when you start to do stuff that's out of alignment,
01:15:40you feel it very harshly. And that has pushed you through what to, to me from the outside looks like
01:15:47again, 30 different lives that you've lived, but to you just feels like, well, I was just,
01:15:52I was following what I was interested in. I wanted to understand myself and the world around me.
01:15:56And I kept going. I was trying to keep that rag on twisted. Yeah.
01:16:02That you described the wet rag. So, you know, you, you did a process a week long, whatever process to
01:16:09feel that which is great. Um, but you can also feel that at, at any time. So right now you can feel the
01:16:17extent to which, uh, area of your body from your throat down, or which is the typical place people
01:16:23feel it. I talk about that in the book a lot, the Man of Zero book. So that contraction in the front of
01:16:29the body from your throat down your solar plexus and down even deeper, that's the sig, that's a signal for
01:16:36you and many men that they're out of line. Now, if their mechanisms like their need for self-worth is so
01:16:44intense, it could push them to ignore that for years and years. And then you'd have to do it. You know,
01:16:50you have to go to a training and have it unpacked, which is very useful. I've done those kinds of
01:16:56things. So you, you could do it in an intensive kind of way, or you can, or, and you can learn to
01:17:02feel that tension, constriction, contraction as it's happening. And, and you're reading that it's like
01:17:10a meter. It's like flying an airplane by instruments. You're feeling the tightening of that and you're
01:17:15going, okay, you might not be aware of why it's happening, but right now I'm living off the mark.
01:17:21I'm not living on point. And then they accumulate less, but it doesn't matter how you come to that place.
01:17:30Like you said, I mean, you could do it through a process, which you did, which is great. You could
01:17:34do it through, some people feel it through psychedelics. Some people just feel it through
01:17:38the school of hard knocks, just the pain in their life. But yes, that contraction,
01:17:43specifically in that part of the body, the front, the solar plexus, the belly, the chest,
01:17:48is a sign that you're not relaxed as your depth. It's a sign that your depth is living you.
01:17:55Something's living you. That's not your depth.
01:17:57Yeah. That's the lead indicator. And the lagging indicator is that you end up in a life that you're
01:18:03not supposed to be in, but that I think it's going to be difficult for you to get to the life that
01:18:08you're not supposed to be in if you haven't denied the wet rag being twisted for quite a long time.
01:18:13Yeah. I don't know how long, but yes, they go hand in hand. If you ignore that twisted rag.
01:18:19That's just, it's the constriction, it's the tightening, it's the tensing. And it's different
01:18:25for different people, right? Mine sits right in my stomach, right at this sort of just below my solar
01:18:30plexus. It sits right there and it just feels like someone's twisting it, but sometimes it moves up to my
01:18:35throat and sometimes it moves down. And, um, yeah, I get it.
01:18:41Yeah. That, that contraction is the main sign and different men, as you say, not only feel it in
01:18:47different places in their body. Usually they feel it where you feel it in the front of their body,
01:18:54kind of near their solar plexus, but they may not feel it in their body. Some men have that contraction
01:18:59in their emotional body. So they become emotionally unwell, not just physically twisted or, but
01:19:08emotionally twisted. Some men experience it in their, if you will, mental body or intellectual body. So they
01:19:15start thinking strange thoughts are all twisted up intellectually, mentally. Um, so there's different
01:19:24dimensions that men can feel that contraction in and different men feel it primarily in different
01:19:32dimensions. And that's the dimension they should focus their work on.
01:19:36That's interesting. Speaking of that, I, I know, and I appreciate you, uh, not encouraging people to
01:19:44growth hack or speed run their way through phases that they're not yet in, right? That kind of you'll
01:19:49get there when you need to get there. And the dose that you need to take in order to get to your next
01:19:54level of development sort of arrives at the pace that you're moving through life. And maybe trying to
01:19:58speed run that is actually not, not a great, a great idea, but across all of the modalities
01:20:05that you've tried, all of the different techniques that you've employed, what are the ones that you
01:20:11attribute the most amount of, I don't want to use the word progress. Cause that sounds like more speed
01:20:18running, but the most amount of development to what are the ones that you come back to the most or the
01:20:23ones that looking back, you go, wow. Like those things that I did were, were very worthwhile and I'm glad
01:20:30that I did them. Well, again, this is different from man to man. So I wouldn't want any man to model me
01:20:37or you, or, you know, the, every man has to discover this for themselves. But for me, um, I would say one
01:20:43intimate relationship. So I've been in long intimate relationship and having a partner.
01:20:52So you described that part of your body twisting, but it could be your partner twisting, it could be
01:20:58your partner contracting as a reflection of you being off. And it's harder to bypass your partner's
01:21:08complaints, your partner's contractions. And so I would say that the wisdom of my intimate partners,
01:21:16just in their natural reflection and depth and love has probably informed me, uh, one of the most.
01:21:24And then together with that, I would say working with a teacher and, you know, I've worked with just
01:21:31a few teachers, long-term teachers. I don't mean just a learning guitar or something. I mean, so long-term
01:21:38teachers usually could reflect to me areas that I can't see myself or that I'm not willing to, um, and, and
01:21:46lovingly continue reflecting that to me until I pick it up. So I would say that my relationship with,
01:21:53you know, a loved one, a intimate partner and a relationship with a teacher more than a specific
01:22:00technique. Although, you know, I've, I, as I said, you know, I had a yoga, I've done a lot of things
01:22:07like Hatha yoga and Tai Chi and Qi Gong and moving energy through my body. You can also feel those contractions
01:22:12as you can. So feeling that contraction in the front of the body, learning how to open that feeling,
01:22:19what's forming that. Um, but in, for me, the love, my partner's love and my teacher's love would
01:22:27probably be the most effective ways that I, I know what you mean, using the word effective.
01:22:34But yes, those would be the modalities. Yeah. If you marry wrong, you'll become a philosopher,
01:22:38but if you marry well, you will become a yoga teacher. Is that your?
01:22:48David, uh, let's leave it there, mate. You're, you're wonderful. Your work over the last, you know,
01:22:53however many decades has just been so great. And, um, it's great to speak to you. You know,
01:22:58you didn't need to do this. I, uh, I really appreciate you giving me your time. If, if,
01:23:02if you give what's this an hour and a half, if you do 90 minutes, a decade of, uh, of podcasting,
01:23:08I, uh, I hope that this one was worthwhile.
01:23:12Well, you seem authentically and genuinely committed to truth. Um, that's pretty rare.
01:23:19You know, you're, you're good at what you do. You know, you have this podcast,
01:23:23you've been highly motivated to create this thing, but you're also, your heart is in it. And so I
01:23:29felt moved to connect with you like this, mostly because I agree with your heart. I, I resonate
01:23:34with your heart. I appreciate you. I appreciate you too. I, uh, this podcast is a thinly veiled
01:23:42autobiography masquerading as a conversation with, you'll be episode 1100, maybe over the last eight
01:23:51years. So, uh, yeah, this is the, this is the vehicle that I've chosen at least for now. And,
01:23:57um, I, I'm trying to find out what's true. I'm trying to understand myself and the world around me.
01:24:03And I'm asking people who I think have got at least a few of the answers. And if I can hold on to 1%
01:24:09of all of the stuff that I've learned, then I, you know, you said about teachers, I guess I'm just
01:24:14cycling through to, I'm serially monogamous with, uh, 1,000, 1,100 world experts on a variety of
01:24:21different topics. And we'll see what sort of horrendous Frankenstein's monster gets, uh,
01:24:26constructed out of this by the time that I finish. Fantastic. We'll trust your heart in the midst of
01:24:31all of it. And you'll go the right direction. Beautiful. David, you're wonderful. And, uh,
01:24:35let's keep in touch. I'd really love to keep in touch with you. Appreciate you, mate.
01:24:38Me too. Thanks, Chris. Thank you very much for tuning in. If you enjoyed that episode,
01:24:43another one that I know you love, it's just here.

Key Takeaway

When the drive for achievement fades, a man can transition from the 'superior man' phase of purpose-driven striving to a 'man of zero' phase, where stillness and pure presence replace stress-based ambition as the primary guide for life.

Highlights

  • A 'man of zero' is someone whose previous motivations for success and striving have evaporated, leading to a state of pure awareness rather than clinical apathy.

  • The phase of the 'man of zero' serves as a potential portal where, if a man stops distracting himself, he can live from a place of authentic, effortless being.

  • The feeling of a 'wet rag' being twisted in the torso, specifically from the throat to the solar plexus, acts as a primary indicator that a man is living out of alignment.

  • Sexual intimacy at the stage of zero involves penetrating a partner with presence and awareness, which often proves more impactful than purely physical, goal-oriented sexual activity.

  • Integration of this phase requires patience and compassion as conditioned patterns, traumas, and ancestral responses continue to unfold through the body and mind over years.

Timeline

Defining the Man of Zero Phase

  • The man of zero feels a loss of motivation despite maintaining a seemingly active life.
  • This phase is not a permanent state of apathy, but a state of clarity and pure presence.
  • The superior man phase is driven by purpose, while the man of zero phase arises when that purpose-driven stress evaporates.

The man of zero is a man whose internal kernel of stress has dissolved. While most men rely on this stress to move forward in business and life, the man of zero finds himself at a standstill. This transition is not necessarily a regression but an evolutionary step toward discovering what remains when personal ambition is removed.

Identifying and Experiencing Stillness

  • The lack of motivation is often mistaken for clinical depression, but the core difference is the absence of collapse.
  • True stillness involves being present without the urge to push, change, or contract the body.
  • Success often feels empty because the sense of lack that drove the pursuit remains unchanged after achievement.

Men often encounter a 'no-longer-needing-to-prove-yourself' phase and fear it is a loss of mojo. However, if one learns to be still without contracting, it becomes a portal to deeper authenticity. Achievement in the external world often fails to fill the internal sense of lack, leading men to this moment of emptiness.

Navigating Misalignment and Intimacy

  • A physical sensation of twisting or constriction in the solar plexus signals when a man is out of alignment.
  • Intimacy shifts from being purely physical to being a deep, knowing presence between partners.
  • Stillness does not kill sexual polarity; it acts as the stable masculine foundation for the feminine's radiance.

The transition to a man of zero exposes past lies and traumas that were previously suppressed by busyness. Intimacy becomes a matter of feeling the partner's emotions and awareness rather than focusing on physical sensation. This creates a stronger connection where the partner feels deeply known.

Integration and Ongoing Practice

  • Discipline is still required after purpose ends, but it becomes effortless training rather than stress-based striving.
  • Integration of this phase takes years as conditioned patterns in the body slowly unwind.
  • The most effective modalities for development are long-term intimate relationships and guidance from a teacher.

The body is the last element to catch up with the mind in this transition. Even if one recognizes the nature of being, old patterns will still manifest as physical tensions or habits. Patience and the honest reflection provided by a partner or a teacher are essential for managing these patterns until they fully release.

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