19 Lessons From 1100 Episodes

English
CChris Williamson
정신 건강자격증/평생교육결혼/가정생활

Transcript

00:00:00Hello, everybody. Welcome back to the show. It is episode 1100, and that is a number that I
00:00:07did not think that I would get to. I don't think I've done 1100 of anything apart from these
00:00:11podcasts. As is tradition, I've put together a list of lessons that I've learned from the show
00:00:16and from writing and reading and life over the last six months since the last one of these that
00:00:21I did. I'm going to go through them today. So let's get into it. First up, I started thinking
00:00:27about obsession and why no one understands obsession. I think literally no one understands
00:00:33why obsession is the way it is. Discipline, motivation and obsession are three words that
00:00:38get thrown around quite a lot. And I think most people misunderstand all three. Because of that,
00:00:44they miss some very big lessons about how life actually works. So here's the simplest way to
00:00:49separate those three out. Discipline is I will make myself do the thing. Motivation is I want
00:00:56to do the thing. And obsession is I can't not do the thing. So all three produce the same outcome,
00:01:04right? The thing gets done. But the internal cost couldn't be more different. And the difference
00:01:09is primarily around friction. So discipline is friction accepted. You don't want to do the thing,
00:01:16but you do it anyway. You lean on effort, willpower, routines and environment and design and past patterns
00:01:23and habits and drag yourself over the line. It's mostly under your control, which is why it's so reliable.
00:01:29If you're willing to pay the price, discipline will always show up. But the problem is that the price
00:01:35is high. Discipline is really expensive. It burns energy, creates resistance, feels heavy. It works,
00:01:42but it's a grind. Motivation is friction reduced. You want to do the thing, so the resistance drops.
00:01:49You still need effort, but you need less of it. Motivation comes from desire, the circumstance,
00:01:56novelty and identity and community and emotion. And you can try to kind of manufacture it with
00:02:03goal setting or visualization, community support and celebrating micro wins or me and Alex Hormozy
00:02:10compilation videos and heavy metal music. Sometimes it works, but sometimes it doesn't. Motivation is
00:02:17unreliable because it's kind of downstream of how you feel. When your mood dips, motivation just
00:02:24fucking evaporates. It's useful fuel, but you can't build a life that depends on it. And obsession
00:02:30is friction inverted. So remember, we've got discipline, friction accepted, motivation,
00:02:37friction reduced, and obsession is friction inverted. You don't need to make yourself do the thing.
00:02:43You can't avoid doing it. You don't push. Instead, the work sort of pulls you toward it. It invades your
00:02:51thoughts. It follows you into the shower, into the car, into bed. And when you're tired, it doesn't
00:02:56disappear. Obsession is kind of like motivation's poltergeist big brother who just never stops haunting
00:03:04you. And because you can't switch it off, that's why obsessions with negative pursuits like politics
00:03:10or porn or a toxic ex can be so destructive. The reason that obsession is so powerful is simple.
00:03:18It's basically permanent free motivation and discipline. You get output without negotiation and
00:03:24you get action without having to tap into any willpower to the fuel source equivalent of hitting
00:03:31a superstar in Super Mario. So this is why obsession produces such disproportionate results in a short
00:03:37window of time. And people look at the output and assume superhuman discipline when in reality,
00:03:46if you're obsessed, the work felt almost unavoidable. People admire discipline and envy motivation,
00:03:53but very few understand obsession. And because they don't understand it, they waste it.
00:03:59So here, I think, is the part that people miss. Obsession isn't a personality trait. It's a state,
00:04:06which means that it can't be summoned on command. You can't decide to be obsessed. It appears when
00:04:14curiosity, identity, reward, and meaning sort of all accidentally align some weird celestial bodies. And
00:04:23when it appears, it doesn't last forever, which is a tragedy. Obsession is a non-renewable fuel source.
00:04:30When it leaves, you don't get it back on demand. In future, it will take you so much more effort to get
00:04:38even partially close to this obsessive level of output. So use your free fuel while it's available.
00:04:46Which is why the correct response to a positive obsession isn't to suppress it or balance it or
00:04:52apologize for it. It's to surrender to it. So if you're currently obsessed with something positive,
00:04:59my advice is to kind of let it crawl inside of you and wear your skin and stare out through your eyes.
00:05:06Like, if you can't stop watching lifting videos and spend all of your time thinking about diet and
00:05:12training, now isn't the time to be balanced in the gym. Or if your sleep is wrecked because you're
00:05:18ruminating about a business idea that you can't wait to launch, this isn't the time for you to seek calm.
00:05:24You're allowed to go full on demon founder mode with it. Serial obsessives, as far as I can see, move
00:05:32from intense project to intense project, making huge progress while the tide is with them so that when the
00:05:40obsession inevitably fades, something important has happened already. The rails for their future behavior
00:05:47get laid down. So by the time that your obsession wanes, you have built the patterns and routines and
00:05:53skills and habits that allow you to keep going when the fuel is no longer free. So I started going to
00:06:00the gym when I was 18 because I was obsessed with gaining muscle and I researched protein shake
00:06:06formulations and dreamt of going to gold's gym in LA and skipped nights out partying to stay in my bedroom
00:06:11and read the misc forums on bodybuilding.com. Like the most autistic excuse for not going on a night
00:06:17out ever. Nearly 20 years later, I'm still training and not really even because I'm that disciplined
00:06:26or motivated now, but just because an old obsession of mine fossilized into my identity. And being honest,
00:06:33this is true for my meditation habit and my research for podcast guests and the productivity systems that
00:06:39I've got and my desire to build businesses. What once obsessed me has now just simply become me.
00:06:47What often looks like discipline today is just the echo of someone's past obsessions. This is a quiet
00:06:56reframe that people basically never say out loud. Discipline sometimes isn't the starting point.
00:07:04It's just the residue. So it's what remains when obsession cools down and settles into routine.
00:07:12So if you're lucky enough to be obsessed right now, I think you can stop trying to moderate it into
00:07:18something respectable. You can stop worrying about whether it looks excessive and you can stop
00:07:23pretending whether you're supposed to feel balanced. Balance is what you can enjoy later and obsession is
00:07:32what you get to embrace now. Basically, as far as I can see it, most people never get an obsession worth
00:07:39anything. So if you have one, don't waste it. And the more that I think about this and I look at a lot of the
00:07:47guys that I've met who appear to be super disciplined and they're absolutely crushing it in life and
00:07:52they've got the systems are so dialed and you look from the outside and think, holy shit, this person is
00:07:59just a machine. What you don't realize is that in the past, they had no choice other than to do that
00:08:05thing. They were completely obsessed with it, consumed their life. And now the like the cooled heart of the
00:08:12dying star that's leftover, the brown dwarf of their previous huge furnace is the life that they still have.
00:08:21The thing that obsessed them became their identity. And yeah, sure. I said you can't engineer obsession.
00:08:28I do think that's true. You can certainly lay the ground, the foundations for it. But the other thing is
00:08:35some people are more obsessive than others. I, that's something that I've been blessed or cursed
00:08:41with. I have a slightly obsessive personality, not wash my hands all the time, obsessive,
00:08:45but struggle to switch off obsessive. And I'm going to guess if you're watching the show that you do too.
00:08:50What that means is you are going to probably like a serial monogamist, you're going to bounce from
00:08:57obsession relationship to obsession relationship. And if you dampen it down too much, if you don't fully
00:09:03allow it to kind of take over your life, at least to whatever level is healthy, or even maybe a little
00:09:09bit beyond the level that's healthy, you're going to miss out on free motivation and free discipline.
00:09:14And then at the end of it, because this isn't going to last forever, right? Obsession isn't going to,
00:09:19it's a non-renewable fuel source. You can't bring it back when you want to. Once that's cooled off,
00:09:24if you haven't allowed it to kind of take over your life fully, what you end up with is a world where
00:09:30you fought against the thing you wanted to do to stop it from being so all encompassing
00:09:38or like unrespectable. And then once it's finished and you don't have it anymore, you didn't gain
00:09:43the momentum and the identity that allowed you to kind of flow through it afterward so that it then
00:09:47became the way that you show up. I'm just a guy that goes to the gym. I'm just a guy that builds
00:09:51businesses. I'm just a guy that meditates or whatever. So yeah, I think that's a, I just,
00:09:58I love this. I love this idea. I love the fact that obsession gets a really bad rap. And in many ways,
00:10:04it can be horrible, especially when it's pointed toward politics or porn or your ex. But if it's
00:10:09pointed towards something that's actually good, you should allow it to kind of take over your life.
00:10:14And then once it's finished, everyone will look from the outside. Oh my God, dude, how do you,
00:10:19how do you train so much? You know, you like really consistent with your training must be really
00:10:23disciplined. You must be so motivated. And you're like, not really, man. Like I just used to be
00:10:27obsessed with this. And now it's kind of who I am. All right. Next one, the paradox of self-awareness.
00:10:33So everyone understands that actions are more important than words, right? You are what you do,
00:10:39not what you say you'll do. And there's this line from Hamlet, "Thus conscience does make cowards
00:10:44of us all." And I never read any Shakespeare. I can barely remember even going through it in school,
00:10:50but I came across this line again and did a deep dive on what it means. "Thus conscience does make
00:10:57cowards of us all." This line comes from Hamlet and it's usually misheard as an insult. It's as if
00:11:04Shakespeare is sort of sneering at morality, saying that ethics soften us or thought drains courage
00:11:13from the body. I don't think that's what's happening. Shakespeare isn't attacking goodness.
00:11:19He's pointing at self-awareness and naming its cost. It's in the to be or not to be soliloquy,
00:11:26and Hamlet isn't really weighing life versus death. He's circling a more practical question.
00:11:35Why do humans hesitate to act even when action would clearly relieve their suffering? Like,
00:11:40why do we endure situations we don't want and why do we tolerate lives that we could in theory change?
00:11:47Well, pain isn't the only obstacle. Imagination is. And by conscience, Shakespeare means something
00:11:56more closer to consciousness. It's the ability to think ahead, to judge ourselves, to simulate futures before
00:12:02they arrive. It's to see the consequences coming and experience them emotionally in advance. And
00:12:11unfortunately, that ability cuts both ways because the very capacity that makes you reflective and ethical
00:12:18and intelligent also makes you hesitant. We imagine worst-case scenarios so vividly that we treat them
00:12:26as if they're already real. So courage isn't defeated by fear. It's defeated by simulation. We rehearse
00:12:35embarrassment, loss, rejection, and moral failure in advance. And then our bodies respond as if those things have
00:12:44already happened. Your heart rate rises, your muscles tighten. Avoidance feels sensible, and inaction feels
00:12:51like safety. Hamlet describes what follows. Thought, he says, puzzles the will. Thought puzzles the will.
00:13:00Reflection drains us. Not because thinking is bad, but because it multiplies potential outcomes faster than
00:13:08Our actions can deal with them. I think that's so cool. Thinking isn't bad itself, but it's able to
00:13:14generate more realities than our actions can solve. Animals don't suffer this, right? They just act when a
00:13:22threshold is crossed. Humans linger. And by the time that the moment to move arrives,
00:13:28we feel as if we've already lived through its inevitable failure. So we wait. This is the
00:13:35deeper psychological point that I think Shakespeare is making. And I'm aware that a guy that basically
00:13:41didn't read Shakespeare is just reverse engineering what I think he said. But I do think that this is a
00:13:45cool interpretation, right? Our intelligence doesn't just protect us. It also inhibits us. We learn quickly
00:13:54from mistakes that we make. But we almost never feel the cost of mistakes that we avoid.
00:14:00The humiliation of speaking and failing leaves a scar. But the decades-long erosion of never speaking
00:14:07leaves nothing that you can point to. Which explains why people stay in the wrong job,
00:14:13the wrong relationship, the wrong version of themselves for years. Not because they don't know better,
00:14:20but because action demands stepping into an unrehearsed future. Hamlet names the real enemy,
00:14:26which is uncertainty. Not pain or effort, but just the unknown. Our minds would rather endure a familiar
00:14:36misery than gamble on an unfamiliar freedom. Even suffering becomes tolerable once it's predictable.
00:14:44But people would rather spend years in misery than risk a few days of pain. And this is why modern life,
00:14:51despite being safer than any previous era, often feels more paralyzing, right? Because our nervous
00:14:57systems evolved to avoid death and lions, and now we use it to avoid embarrassment and misjudgment and
00:15:05reputational damage and identity fracture. And here's the final uncomfortable implication Shakespeare leaves hanging.
00:15:14Self-awareness is not a pure good, right? Beyond a certain point, self-awareness actually inhibits agency.
00:15:22Less reflection can mean more peace. Less certainty can mean more movement. Less conscience can sometimes mean more life.
00:15:32Courage isn't about thinking clearly. It's about moving while things are still unclear.
00:15:38You know, there's that famous line, "The unexamined life is not worth living."
00:15:42But a life can be deeply examined and still never lived.
00:15:47This paradox of self-awareness, the fact that the deeper you think, sometimes the less you're able to act.
00:15:54If your mind is able to generate realities more quickly than you are able to come up with solutions,
00:16:01or move through them, you kind of have this weird cost-benefit imbalance.
00:16:06So maybe like a cost-profit, your balance sheet is offset where the overheads are higher than the revenue.
00:16:15And this sort of puts you in a negative equity in terms of your ability to move forward.
00:16:20And that can freeze you in place. You don't want to do something because you think,
00:16:26look at all the ways it could go wrong. And the more ways it could go wrong, the less ability I'm going to have to act.
00:16:32And what if this thing occurs and that thing occurs? And over time, conscience makes cowards of us all.
00:16:41It's weird because most people probably need to be more thoughtful. They need to spend more time, be less rash, act less impulsively.
00:16:51But there is a cohort of people that are the opposite. And the people like me and maybe you too.
00:17:00And they're the people who think more than they should, talk themselves out of more things than into them,
00:17:07and actually move more slowly. They get less done in life due to their thought than more.
00:17:11Now they'll make way fewer mistakes and that's great. But again, the mistake of omission is different to
00:17:17the mistake of commission. So people make commission errors if they don't think enough. People make
00:17:24omission errors if they think too much. Like if you overthink, decide not to go up and speak to that
00:17:29girl that's been in the cafeteria at work for six months, she gets a boyfriend, would have been the
00:17:34perfect partner for you. And you decide to not make the move because you've talked yourself into and
00:17:38out of it so many times. Your mind's ability to show you what could go wrong is greater than your action's ability to
00:17:44fix it in reality. That is an omission error, but we don't see it in the same way because it's not as obvious.
00:17:50For instance, I chose to not bring a number of guests on this podcast in 2024, and maybe that's leaked out of me in a couple of
00:18:02other vlogs or whatever, but I didn't make a big song and dance about it. I basically never spoke about it.
00:18:07I'm never going to get credit for the things that I didn't do. And in the same way, you never pay a cost
00:18:15for the things that you don't do. I mean, look, if you leave a person to bleed out on the side of
00:18:19the street without calling the ambulance, that's a kind of omission error, but it's pretty obvious.
00:18:24A much more quiet omission error is I was scared of building the business because my mind taught me all
00:18:29of the different ways that stuff could go wrong, so I didn't do it. And I'll never know the pain of not
00:18:36fulfilling my dreams, but I avoided the pain of failure. And the pains of failure are much more
00:18:43prevalent in our mind than the pain of, "Fuck, what if this doesn't go well?" So there's this great
00:18:49audio book from Tony Robbins. It's 30 years old. George Mack sent it to me. I don't even know how to
00:18:54find it. I'll try and find it and put it in the links, but it's basically an hour and a half
00:18:58worksheet, Awaken the Giant Within, but it's an audio book. And all he does, it's basically
00:19:03one long exercise to try and front load the pain as much as possible. Look at what this situation
00:19:09you're in now has cost you in the past. Look at what it's costing you right now and look at what
00:19:13it will cost you in the future. And he tries to get you to sit in the discomfort as much as possible.
00:19:18It's a horrible, awful exercise. It's like the mental equivalent of an ice bath. And then he gets
00:19:24you to try and do the opposite. Look at what would have happened in the past if you'd made the
00:19:28change that you want to, that you think is right. If you'd improved this thing, look at what would be
00:19:32happening now and look at what would happen in the future. And he tries to sort of get you to use,
00:19:36he calls it the pain pleasure principle. Motivate your behavior through pain and pleasure. And the type
00:19:42of pain that you can front load with, look at what not starting this thing has cost you in the past and
00:19:51now in the future. You have to be much more conscious. Like the commission errors come naturally to us,
00:19:56but the omission errors are much more hidden. So you need to kind of, you need to do an exercise.
00:20:00You need to consciously bring omission errors in like, fuck, like I've always wanted to be a stand
00:20:04up comedian. I've always just wanted to do, I've always, I want to do an open mic. I just really
00:20:08want to do an open mic and you've put it off for decades. You never did it. You never closed that
00:20:14loop and you might hate it. Here's the other thing. The thing that you're putting off from doing,
00:20:17you might absolutely hate, but at least once you realize whether you like it or you don't,
00:20:22you go up and speak to the girl in the cafeteria and find out she's got horrible breath and she's
00:20:26an asshole. There you go. Loop closed. You don't need to think about it, but the what if
00:20:31after the fact will kill you, but the what if before the fact is really hard to determine. So yeah,
00:20:38I think this conscience does make cowards of us all. That is my, uh, year seven, uh, fourth grade
00:20:46assessment of Shakespeare. Thank you for coming to my Ted talk. A quick aside. Most people think that
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00:21:56All right, next one. The dark night of the soul has a positive side. So there's a quote from Rogan,
00:22:02the worst thing that's ever happened to you is the worst thing that's ever happened to you.
00:22:07The saddest that you've ever been is the saddest you've ever been. The hardest you've ever worked
00:22:11is the hardest you've ever worked. Shock, horror. But tough times aren't fun in the moment for the
00:22:16same reason that no one ever believes that they're living through a golden era. Right? The golden
00:22:21years, interestingly, only ever seem to exist in the past because it's only with the benefit of
00:22:27hindsight that we know all of our worries were a waste of time. But when you're going through it,
00:22:32all of your concerns are still open loops. They're all things to fear. And in retrospect,
00:22:37you see that you had the ability to handle whatever your problems were and that there was
00:22:41nothing to be bothered about, which suggests that if you've just come out of the hardest period of
00:22:47your life, this seems like a cause for celebration, right? Because you now have a new workload level
00:22:53that's been unlocked. Every new challenge that you go through shows you a new territory that you were
00:23:00scared of, but survived. Each time that you break a new limit, you now know that you have the capacity
00:23:06to handle more than you ever did before. It's kind of like inverse PTSD or workload exposure therapy.
00:23:16And it teaches you, oh, I'd been here before and I didn't die. This is okay. Joe was making some
00:23:26pithy comment about misgendering a blue haired barista and said, if that's the worst thing that's
00:23:36ever happened to someone, the worst thing that's ever happened to you is the worst thing that's ever
00:23:38happened to you. That is a big deal. And it kind of is a big deal. You could imagine some person
00:23:44had been created in a lab and raised by robots and they'd never endured any discomfort and they go
00:23:50outside and they feel the wind on their skin. I mean, maybe it would be nice, but let's say it was a
00:23:54strong wind or maybe it was a strong wind with some leaves in it and sand or whatever.
00:23:57That to them might be absolute agony because their level of sensitivity has been tuned down an awful
00:24:03lot. And I think the same thing can happen psychologically too, to people that, wow,
00:24:10I've not really ever been through much difficulty, that all of this stuff has been snow plowed out of
00:24:14my way and then I've arrived in the world and it's harder than I thought it would be. But the opposite
00:24:20is also true, which means if you're the sort of person who regularly seeks out discomfort or discomfort
00:24:26seeks you out and you have to push back against it, each time that you do something that you couldn't
00:24:33previously believe that you had in the locker. This is a new level that you have just got to that teaches
00:24:41your body. I've been here before and I didn't die. This is okay. For instance, I just came back from
00:24:46this tour in Australia and the opening night was two and a half thousand people in Sydney, which is the
00:24:55second biggest audience I've ever been in front of. And the theater is so fucking huge. It is so scary.
00:25:01This big sprawl. It's like IMAX. Imagine looking out at an audience of people and they're wrapped
00:25:06around you. It's basically, there's no part of my vision that doesn't have people in it. And it's
00:25:11even angled like a fucking IMAX screen. And I'd run the show a bunch of times in Austin, Texas first,
00:25:18but I hadn't done it in front of a big audience. There's a difference between doing it in an
00:25:21intimate 50 person comedy club in Austin, Texas. And in front of two and a half thousand people,
00:25:26you know, maybe one third of which have been brought along as friends or partners of people
00:25:30who love the show. So it's a way colder audience with a hundred foot high ceiling. It's a totally
00:25:36different environment. And I'd never run this show apart from this small comedy club in Austin.
00:25:45James goes out before me and does an entire three minute segment, which is just calling different
00:25:50things gay. And I had to, as opposed to me going out with warm audience, he had really sort of put me
00:25:58on the back foot. All of this stuff was like, fuck, like, this is so hard. They just felt really,
00:26:03really difficult. And that is now the new, I thought this thing was going to destroy me and I got through
00:26:11it. Wow. Well, the next time that I do it, maybe the sound cuts out halfway through at that same show,
00:26:17the sound guy decided to trigger the end of show sequence halfway through. First time that's ever
00:26:23happened to me in New York, the people who came to the New York show, I am the entire venue sound cut
00:26:31out apart from the onstage monitors for like three minutes. That's the first time that that's ever
00:26:38happened to me. And it doesn't matter whether you're on stage or not, but you know, the heaviest weight
00:26:41that you've ever lifted is the heaviest weight you've ever lifted. Each time that you break a new PR, each
00:26:45time that you do something that's difficult, each time that you go through a situation, which is tough.
00:26:49Yes, it sucks. And obviously you don't want to lean into accumulating more of those than is necessary.
00:26:54But especially if it's something around your chosen pursuit, if it's around work, if it's around
00:27:00difficulty, skill acquisition, stuff like that, you know that you have that in the locker, you know that
00:27:05you can survive that and it's cool. And I basically think inverse PTSD workload exposure therapy is a good
00:27:12way to alchemize something that you could see as really toxic and bad and difficult and actually
00:27:20realize, wow, this is kind of a gift to my future self. Look at how hard you can work. Look at how
00:27:25much you can endure. Look at how skillfully you were able to get through this thing. And on the other
00:27:31side of it, that's, that's your new level. You know that you can do that too. All right. Six lessons about
00:27:36choosing a life direction. First one, James Clear. It doesn't make sense to continue wanting something.
00:27:42If you're not willing to do what it takes to get it. If you don't want to live the lifestyle,
00:27:48then release yourself from the desire. To crave the result, but not the process,
00:27:53is to guarantee disappointment. I think that is so fucking good. It doesn't make sense to continue
00:27:58wanting something if you're not willing to do what it takes to get it. If you don't want to live the
00:28:04lifestyle, then release yourself from the desire. So a lot of the time people might think,
00:28:09I want to become a touring rockstar. Okay. You crave the result, touring rockstar. Do you want
00:28:16the process? Do you want the lifestyle to get there? And then the lifestyle of being there too.
00:28:21To become a touring rockstar, you're going to have to play guitar in your bedroom on your own with no
00:28:26one listening and no promise of whether or not it's going to work for like a decade, right? That you're
00:28:32going to have to learn all of the scales. You're going to have to learn to write music. You're going to have to find a
00:28:36bandmates and learn mastering and recording and bouncing tracks and all of this stuff.
00:28:42Do you want that? Do you want to have calluses on your fingers? And then the lifestyle of actually
00:28:46even being there. You're going to be on the road away from your friends and your family for six
00:28:49months of the year, every single year. You're going to be in a smelly tour bus for the first half of
00:28:53your career because you're not going to have made it unless you break through with like Gangnam
00:28:57style or some shit. And then, okay, is that what you want? Is that really what you want?
00:29:03Do you want something or, and are you willing to do what it takes to get it? Because if it's not both,
00:29:09it doesn't matter. Next one, outward complaints aren't a good gauge of internal suffering.
00:29:15Just because someone carries it well, doesn't mean it isn't heavy. Just because someone carries it
00:29:21well, doesn't mean it isn't heavy. This is an Oliver Berkman line. And I often think about this,
00:29:28the challenge of somebody that looks competent, or if you're the responsible one in your friend group,
00:29:35you're the one that is listening to Huberman podcasts and trying to optimize your sleep and
00:29:42maybe you've gone to therapy and you're doing meditation, you're trying to be balanced and
00:29:44regulated and all of these things. Typically to your friends around you, that means, well, you know,
00:29:49like Leanne, she's always got it together. Like Leanne doesn't, she doesn't need help. Like she's,
00:29:53she's always good, but you don't understand if this person is bearing even more weight
00:29:59than everybody else around them, but just carrying it well, holding onto it, not breaking down.
00:30:08And again, it goes back to the Rogan thing of the worst thing that's ever happened to you is the
00:30:12worst thing that's ever happened to you. If you are carrying a heavier weight than someone else,
00:30:16but you just know that your capacity to lift it is greater, that doesn't mean it isn't heavy.
00:30:21It just means that you're doing a really good job at keeping it quiet.
00:30:25Your life does not need to be easier. It needs to be simpler. I think this is such a true rule.
00:30:31Your system is designed to handle stress and challenge, but not complication. So think about
00:30:39it. You probably handle hard things pretty well, but you feel overwhelmed when they become messy.
00:30:47So don't attribute to difficulty something that can be explained by complexity. Your system is designed
00:30:55to handle stress and challenge, but not complication. If you think about the times when you felt very
00:31:01overwhelmed, I'm going to guess that it's rarely because of one pathway of thing being too intense.
00:31:11It's typically because you have one thing that's pretty intense and then your mom gets ill, or your
00:31:18partner has an argument with you, or there's an issue with your house, or the power goes out, or that you
00:31:23lose your job, or whatever. It's the complexity that really wrecks us. You are able to handle stress and
00:31:29challenge, but the complexity, the complication is when stuff gets really difficult. Don't attribute to
00:31:38difficulty something that can get explained by complexity. Obviously, the solution here, the implied
00:31:44solution, is if you're feeling overwhelmed, look at how you can reduce down complexity
00:31:52as opposed to intensity, or if you've got lots of things and it feels really complicated and complex,
00:31:58just attack one at a time. You're not going to be able to fix your relationship and get the power
00:32:04back on in your house and complete that presentation. It's like, okay, I just need to triage this.
00:32:09What is the number one problem? And I'm just going to go through them sequentially as opposed to in
00:32:13parallel. The more that I think about that rule, that your system's designed to handle stress but not
00:32:19complication is the more true it is. So, try and simplify stuff wherever possible.
00:32:25Another one, you need fewer inputs, not more. The answers you seek are in the silence you're avoiding.
00:32:34The answers you seek are in the silence you're avoiding. Shameless rework of the magic you're
00:32:40looking for is in the work you're avoiding. But this is a different pathway. And I don't think that
00:32:48I don't think that it's the same solution. A lot of the time you do need to work harder. And you're
00:32:54trying to dress it in whatever outfit you can so that you don't need to lean in and do the work. And that's
00:33:04great and important and maybe for most people is true. But after a while, once you've got the "I work hard"
00:33:13muscle embedded, you then realize that because you're working so hard, you're not listening to fleeting
00:33:19thoughts. You've maybe pushed your intuition to one side. You're not able to tap into your gut as well.
00:33:24You don't actually know what you like because you're in so much chaos and busyness and complication.
00:33:29It's a little bit hard for you to tap into that in a sense. And that's when you need to use a different
00:33:34fuel source. The answers you seek are in the silence you're avoiding. You'd also say the answers you
00:33:38seek are in the showers you're avoiding. I think shower thoughts underrated, toilet thoughts overrated.
00:33:45I saw a tweet the other day, some guy said that if you sit on the toilet for too long with your ass
00:33:49hanging out that you get hemorrhoids. Don't know if that's true, but no one's ever had a problem with
00:33:56too long of a shower. So longer showers, the answers you seek are in the silence you're avoiding.
00:34:00Another one, don't fall into the trap of mourning a life that you can still live.
00:34:06Don't fall into the trap of mourning a life that you can still live.
00:34:10Basically, if you are the sort of person that's regularly surprised at how well things go,
00:34:18maybe that's a good indication that you're allowed to believe in yourself more.
00:34:23So many people, as far as I can see, have this
00:34:28premeditated resentment for the life that they don't think they're going to be able to exist in.
00:34:36They don't think that they're going to be able to live this life, but they still have the opportunity
00:34:40to. And a lot of these people, the overthinkers, the ones who conscience makes a coward of,
00:34:48they have all of the skills to be able to fix this thing. They can go and get this thing done,
00:34:52but their overthinking, their fear is getting in the way of them believing it. And it's almost like
00:35:00they're trapped inside of a prison. They're the prisoner and the prison guard, and they've got the
00:35:05keys on them at the same time. Like, if things go well, you can probably believe in yourself more.
00:35:10And if you still have the opportunity to live a life, I think it's a really bad idea to get resentful
00:35:18and sad about the fact that you're not living it. Like, it's right in front of you. Just go and do it.
00:35:23And then the final one, simple steps to a better life. To improve your life, focus on what you like
00:35:30instead of what you dislike, and focus on people who focus on what they like instead of what they
00:35:35dislike. And this just becomes more and more true, especially as I get older, which might be me trying
00:35:40to offset the sort of natural entropy toward grumpiness. But I just like being around people
00:35:46that are enthusiastic about stuff. There are two categories of friends, typically,
00:35:51that you spend time with. One are people who want to talk about shit that they're fired up about,
00:35:56really excited. This is something that's so cool. I've got to show you this thing.
00:36:00And then, did you see what ... did today? Did you see that thing? I don't know, man. I just,
00:36:10I really like being around people that are positive. And again, the one tattoo that I have on my
00:36:15body is on the inside of my wrist and it says "smile" because I was trying to remind myself at 23 to
00:36:20stop being such a miserable bastard, which might just be being British. I don't know. However,
00:36:27I like offsetting that. I like being around people that make me more fired up. Maybe there is someone
00:36:31out there who is too enthusiastic and needs to be around a bunch of British people to, you know,
00:36:36bring that down. Come and be my friend. I'll fucking bring you back down to earth. But yeah,
00:36:40I think be around people who talk about what they like, not what they dislike.
00:36:46to make your life better. Also focus on what you like instead of what you dislike.
00:36:49So yeah, there's some lessons about choosing your life direction.
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00:37:50all lowercase. That's shopify.com/modernwisdom. All right, next one. The fuck you family. So
00:37:56I started thinking a lot about why the fathers that I know seem to have a different kind of confidence
00:38:03about themselves. And I think it's because of this concept that I can't unsee anymore. So "fuck you
00:38:11money" is a meme, but it's also a truth, right? "Fuck you money." There's an amount of wealth that
00:38:17you can achieve when the typical restrictions and conventions no longer apply to you. You don't have
00:38:21to suck up to gatekeepers. You don't need to do things that you don't want to do. And in extreme
00:38:27situations, you basically don't even need to follow the law because you can just pay people off.
00:38:30Similarly, "fuck you freedom" is kind of downstream from "fuck you money," but can also be achieved
00:38:37through cultivating a lack of resilience and reliance on other groups. There's no restrictions on where you
00:38:43can travel to and when and for how long. You don't need to show up to work on time or work at all. And if
00:38:50you're sufficiently well-structured, you don't even need to care about the state of the economy or the
00:38:54power grid or the wider world. This is the "I live in dripping springs on a ranch that's got completely
00:38:59independent power with solar panels and a ton of guns." It's Tucker-Max. This is Tucker-Max. I'm talking
00:39:06about Tucker-Max there. But I then started thinking about a different type of "fuck you" liberation,
00:39:13which is significantly cheaper and more accessible and more common and maybe even more powerful.
00:39:19And this is the "fuck you" family. So a lot of the fathers that I've spoken to have told me about how
00:39:26their priorities were completely changed when they started a family. All of the previous status games
00:39:33that they played seem petty. The games that they used to go through in an attempt to impress people in
00:39:39power or those with status seemed juvenile and shallow. Much of their anxiety around whether
00:39:47different people and groups liked them or thought that they were cool just sort of
00:39:52evaporated because the only people they needed to care about impressing were asleep under their roof or
00:40:01in the bed next to them. Because to their kids, these dads were the coolest, richest, strongest,
00:40:09most heroic person on the planet. And that gave them a very powerful type of liberation.
00:40:16It seems to me that much of what young men get up to are surrogate activities until they finally get a
00:40:23family. And this isn't to say that all fathers become placid soy boy hippies or that having kids neuters your
00:40:30ambition. But it definitely seems to open up a new level where they care far less about the opinions of others.
00:40:37And ultimately, what's the point in having "fuck you" freedom if you never say "fuck you"?
00:40:46I really think that the aggressive, business-chasing, capitalist, meritocratic society thing, which I'm
00:40:53all in favor of and have benefited from, obviously, and love, is playing off the fact that the longer
00:41:01people put off having a family, the more they find activities that replace that same dynamic inside of them.
00:41:09It's the obsession with body or aesthetics or sport or business or wealth creation or status or travel or whatever.
00:41:18That's not to say that any of these things can't be good, obviously. But if you were to have the family,
00:41:25I think that you would find a lot of those. It would be like going around trying to eat a shit ton of different foods
00:41:31that were all nutrient sparse when there was a nutrient dense food that you could go to
00:41:38that would satisfy a lot of those ambitions more quickly. Does that make sense? It's basically
00:41:44the source that you could go to, the most pure version of this, the condensed, concentrated,
00:41:52weapons-grade version of a lot of what you're looking for, to me seems to be on the other side of a family.
00:41:57I mean, look, is this hypocrisy? I don't think it's hypocrisy. It's closer to dreaming, right?
00:42:05I am totally open to the fact that I might be completely wrong and I'm going to have a family and
00:42:10my drive is going to go up through the roof and maybe I'm going to be more miserable and maybe I'm
00:42:16going to care more about the opinions of others and what a fucking amount of humble pie I'm going
00:42:21to have to eat if that's the case. I'm just going off what I've seen with other people. I'm going off
00:42:26what I've seen with the fathers around me and stuff. Maybe I've done a post-mortem incorrectly. Maybe I will
00:42:32live to eat my words, but I don't know. Maybe this is just a fucking pipe dream. Maybe it's
00:42:37a pipe dream for me that there's some level of personal development available on the other side
00:42:41of kids. Also not saying that you should only have kids as a selfish way to bypass the work that you
00:42:50need to do to care about the opinions of others. Just intriguing thoughts. I'm like a sommelier.
00:42:58I'm just offering you some, just some intriguing thoughts for you there. Or maybe just totally
00:43:04wrong ones. I don't know. All right. Next one. I fucking love this idea. I absolutely love this idea.
00:43:14The curse of psychological strength. Everyone has a limit, right? An end to the amount of discomfort
00:43:22that they can cope with. And this is obvious physically. Some people can lift more and run
00:43:27further than others. But how much emotional pain or upset or disappointment that a person can endure
00:43:35is subtler, harder to detect. It's not apparent in the size of someone's arms, but in the capacity of
00:43:42their nervous system. It's not a weight that you can see on a squat rack. It's their ability to carry
00:43:48a heavy emotional load. And this psychological strength can be a good thing because you're able
00:43:54to handle more than most. You don't bulk at pain. You keep pushing through regardless of how you feel.
00:44:01But too much strength can be a weakness. And high performers are particularly vulnerable to this trap.
00:44:09Psychological strength is rewarded almost everywhere. In the gym, it's discipline. In business, it's grit.
00:44:16In public, it's composure. You become the person who can handle it. Who doesn't complain. Who pushes
00:44:22through when others would quit. Basically, your ability to ignore how you feel and keep moving
00:44:28forward earns admiration, builds your career, and creates momentum. But what you are praised for in
00:44:34public, you often pay for in private. Relationships don't reward endurance. They require attunement.
00:44:43And if your default strategy in life is to absorb discomfort and override warning signs, you will do
00:44:50exactly that when someone repeatedly hurts you. You'll rationalize it, reframe it, decide that it's your job
00:44:58to make it work. And the stronger you are, the longer you can stay. What looks like strength from
00:45:07the outside becomes self-abandonment on the inside. You've trained yourself to believe that struggle is
00:45:15noble and difficulty is meaningful. So when love feels destabilizing, it doesn't register as a warning.
00:45:23It feels like a challenge. And challenges are your thing. But a relationship isn't a marathon to be
00:45:32endured. It's a place to feel safe. And the qualities that make you formidable in the arena
00:45:40can quietly make you miserable in your own living room. Let's say that you're dating and you feel
00:45:46like a side character in your own relationship. You put them first. They put you sixth. The rupture is
00:45:54regular. The repair is absent. Lower resilience, less stubborn people would have broken long ago and said,
00:46:01I'm out. But not you. You're the David Goggins of psychological suffering. Forget carrying the boats.
00:46:08You'll carry the whole fleet forever. In these situations, you're faced with a much tougher problem.
00:46:15Not how much can you tolerate. But how much do you want to tolerate? Perhaps this is what you had to do
00:46:24as a child. If your needs weren't noticed, your sadness gets ignored, or your feelings didn't matter,
00:46:32then you became accustomed to pushing through disconnection in order to make those relationships
00:46:38function. If child you learns, I need to work hard to be loved, then adult you believes,
00:46:47if I'm not loved, I just need to work harder. You achieve 10,000 hours of ignoring your own needs.
00:46:56You can't tell people how you feel without first worrying about how it will make them feel. You
00:47:02unconsciously believe that suffering is the price of connection and that silent subjugation is noble.
00:47:09You basically think, I should be able to tolerate the intolerable in order to make this work.
00:47:16And when you try to connect with someone who doesn't see your needs, you don't notice this person isn't
00:47:23attuned to me. Instead, you sense, hmm, this relationship pattern feels familiar.
00:47:32This must be what love is. You have been trained at your core that your needs don't matter.
00:47:39So you always must work to prove your worth. And importantly, if you don't have to work for it,
00:47:48you think that you can't trust it. So you push away people who are easy, ready, and open,
00:47:55and instead you pursue those who are distant, difficult, and disconnected.
00:48:02I have to prove that I'm worthy of loving is a theory that becomes addictive and completely disorienting.
00:48:11The psychological strength that once enabled you has now entrapped you. The capacity to endure emotional
00:48:19pain without protest is what happens when your nervous system learns that discomfort
00:48:26is safer than confrontation. And in totality, this obscures your ability to understand what you do
00:48:33and don't want to tolerate. Perhaps your ego doesn't want to admit defeat. And shame spirals in this way.
00:48:41If you believe you are the problem, you also have to be the solution. So you stay, you tolerate,
00:48:50you try harder. But just because you're suffering doesn't mean that you're noble.
00:48:58It just means that you're suffering. No one is going to congratulate you on your deathbed with a
00:49:04medal for never making a fuss. No one is going to thank you for quietly lifting weights that should
00:49:13have never been yours to carry. And the answer isn't less resilience, but less denial. Because
00:49:23a boundary isn't an intellectual decision. It's an emotional limit. And if you can't feel it,
00:49:31you can't enforce it. Psychological strength doesn't always make you strong.
00:49:39Often it just makes you stay too long. And you risk one day waking up in a life that you built
00:49:46entirely around what you were willing to tolerate. And then you finally break.
00:49:53I think this is so important, especially for hard-charging, type-A, insecure, overachiever,
00:50:01thoughtful, reflective, empathetic-y people. The assumption that if this isn't working,
00:50:07it's my job to fix it is noble. It's a good thing. You should take responsibility. You should try to
00:50:12help other people. You should try to work through things as opposed to just quitting. But there is
00:50:16a limit. And what you're praised for in public, you pay for in private. This kind of psychological
00:50:24strength. I had Andy Stumpf on the show and he told me this story about how, as a Navy SEAL,
00:50:30he had basically built his entire identity around being someone who never quits.
00:50:36And that caused him to stay in a marriage that sounded really destructive for a decade longer
00:50:43than he should have done.
00:50:46At the same time, that r/relationshipadvice subreddit just leave them went from, I think,
00:50:5510% or 15% to 50%. It doubled or tripled in the space of a decade and a half. Go to therapy,
00:51:02we ticked up a little bit, but try to work through it, explain your emotions,
00:51:05all of these things trended down. So two things are true at once. That some people are pulling the
00:51:11ripcord and unable to go through discomfort. I just don't think that that's you. If you're
00:51:17listening to this show, if you're into the wisdom verse, modern wisdom-y stuff,
00:51:21I don't think that's you. I get the sense that you're the sort of person who
00:51:28holds themselves in emotional situations far longer than they should do, that always has this sense that
00:51:33someone's mad at them, that they could be doing more, they should be doing more. They take responsibility
00:51:38and carry weights that aren't theirs to bear. Walking around with everybody else's luggage
00:51:48and then wondering why your shoulders hurt all the time. I just love this idea. It's one of the best
00:51:56things that I've seen. I'm particularly interested in things that are advantages that we pay a price for.
00:52:05Psychological strength is something almost everybody wants more of, but look at how it can be damaging
00:52:12and destabilizing because you can't turn it off. Fuck your feelings, just work harder is a great
00:52:19philosophy if you want to do it in the office or in the gym. It doesn't matter if I'm tired. It doesn't
00:52:25matter if I'm sick. It doesn't matter if I don't feel up to it. I'm just going to get through it,
00:52:29right? Unless you're obsessed, obviously. The same thing isn't true around your kitchen table.
00:52:38Like your capacity to withstand emotional discomfort and just keep moving
00:52:46should be domain specific at different levels. In the gym should be very, very high.
00:52:53In the office should be very, very high. In your relationships and your friendships should be lower.
00:53:01Maybe with your family should be a little high, you know. I think it's a consideration that a lot of
00:53:06people need to need to think about because we praise this as such a universal good, which it almost
00:53:12certainly is. I'm trying to find the situations where it shouldn't be used or it gets used too much.
00:53:20So I think that's one of them. Before we continue, I wish someone had told me five years ago to stop
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00:54:41All right, next one. I've been thinking about the dark side of monk mode. So monk mode has grown to
00:54:47huge popularity over the last few years as a self-improvement strategy, especially for men.
00:54:52Maybe on the internet, you have seen these videos about monk mode retreating from the world to focus
00:54:58on the three I's of introspection and isolation and improvement. And it's been talked about since 2014,
00:55:06was the first time I read of it, on the Illimitable Man blog. He says, "Monk mode is a temporary form of
00:55:13men going their own way by cutting yourself off from the rest of the world for a while so that you can
00:55:17fine-tune your focus and calibrate your direction and confront yourself. You acknowledge your weaknesses,
00:55:23and then you formulate a plan of action to deal with them." So the focus is on minimizing your time
00:55:28contribution to social obligations and junk activities, because these consume so much of
00:55:34your time while yielding little to negligible increases toward your social market value, right?
00:55:40Monk mode is a serious commitment that shouldn't be half-assed. You're either doing it or not.
00:55:44And it'll be a struggle in the beginning, but once you've fully engaged it, it becomes a beneficial,
00:55:50productive, and dare I say, even addictive lifestyle. So that's from the original blog post in 2014.
00:55:56And look, for all that I can criticize it, I've gone full monk mode tons of times throughout my life
00:56:03with really great success. All of 2017, all of 2018, mid-2019, basically straight through COVID until
00:56:132021 when I moved out to America. I've cut out alcohol for 2,000 days in the last eight years.
00:56:19I've done 500 days without caffeine, over 2,000 sessions of meditation, five years of daily gratitude
00:56:25journals, over 300 sessions of yin yoga, 500 hours of Stu McGill's big three to try and rehab my back.
00:56:32This just sounds like the recipe for a very autistic breakfast, I'm aware. But this is all done as well
00:56:37in a bedroom in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in the UK, sat on my own, usually first thing in the morning, okay?
00:56:46I've done the monk mode thing, right? Those are my credentials. And almost all of the most important
00:56:54progress that I ever made was facilitated by a concentrated period like this.
00:57:01However, monk mode's reliable effectiveness, especially for men, especially for men that are
00:57:07prone to a bit of introspection and isolation creates a huge problem. And the dark side is the
00:57:13final two words from that blog post that I read, addictive lifestyle. The problem is monk mode justifies
00:57:23a retreat from your life, a retreat from risk-taking and adventure and repackages it as self-development.
00:57:30It makes you feel noble in isolation, but it does that so effectively that it can become
00:57:38hard to bring yourself back out. And that means if you already have a tendency to live a sheltered,
00:57:44routinized, unsocial life, you are encouraging yourself to sort of abscond further away from
00:57:53ever building a real-life support network, which is actually the thing that you need most in the long
00:57:59run. The reason that you're doing all of this work, the isolation, the introspection, the improvement,
00:58:04is to reintegrate to society and be effective. But it's so addicting that a lot of the time,
00:58:09people who do monk mode just never reintegrate. And I saw this with a friend like 15 years ago,
00:58:16who was competing to go into a bodybuilding competition, and he already was introverted
00:58:20and socially shy. And then his upcoming fitness competition justified 8pm bedtimes and militant
00:58:26routines and rejecting all social invites. And the competition came and went, but the routine didn't
00:58:33change. And it took years for him to re-venture out into some sense of normality. This is largely a
00:58:42personal reflection too, right? The allure of perpetually working on yourself is very high.
00:58:50And improvement is rewarding. But if you're not careful, you can spend the rest of your life focused on
00:58:57isolation, introspection and improvement at the expense of the actual reason that you did monk mode
00:59:03in the first place, which is to be able to show up in the world in a better way. Bill Perkins says,
00:59:11delayed gratification in the extreme results in no gratification. With monk mode, you practice in private
00:59:20so that you can perform in public. But private practice in the extreme results in no public
00:59:27performance. So basically, don't obsess for too long in solitude for personal growth, or you'll
00:59:33struggle to reintegrate. And the solution is, I think, periodize. Set a deadline for your monk mode
00:59:40to end. Three to six months is a really good sweet spot in my experience. You can do longer if you've
00:59:44never done it before. You can do shorter if you're sort of more developed on your journey. But yeah,
00:59:49man, I really fucking earned my stripes, right? Doing the isolation, the introspection and the
00:59:54improvement. The more that I did it, the harder it was to integrate, which I guess is the fourth
01:00:05eye. Isolation, improvement, introspection. But then the fourth one, which is the one that you're
01:00:10actually here, is integration. Like, how do I bring what I've learned in private back across into the
01:00:15public? I am trying to make myself a better person so that I can function more effectively in the world,
01:00:21be more successful in my business, move along in my career, make better friends, find a partner that
01:00:27I love, you know, just function in the world in a better way. But it does repackage isolation as
01:00:36nobility. And again, if you've got that predisposition, if you're the sort of person who tends to spend time on their own
01:00:42already, this is going to push you in a direction that you're already moving in. It's going to
01:00:48exaggerate your predispositions as opposed to correcting the imbalances. And yeah, look, I love
01:00:54monk mode. I think it's great. Just no one that's either done a video on it or tried to create a
01:00:59fucking course on it has talked about the challenge of reintegration publicly because it's way less sexy.
01:01:05And this is the fucking problem with almost everything. All of the different things that
01:01:08I've talked about today, psychological strength, self-awareness, everybody will want to extol the
01:01:16virtues of why it's great. And it is given that I'm basically trying to dispel comforting myths
01:01:25about commonly held personal development strategies. That's basically what this,
01:01:29this like lessons episode is. I'm sorry if I've fucking ripped the rug out from underneath you.
01:01:35This is also why when I talk about this stuff, especially on the internet, it doesn't ever
01:01:40happen at the live shows. I think because people that able to see it in totality whilst they're
01:01:46focused and not at four times speed, or maybe they're just too scared to fucking criticize me. I don't
01:01:50know. On the internet, people hate having their comforting illusions pulled out from underneath
01:01:56them. So there will be a ton of criticisms about my criticisms. Easy for you to say, you've already
01:02:05I'm like, Hey dude, I'm not saying that these things, psychological strength, being self-aware,
01:02:11the opportunity to isolate yourself and work on yourself. I'm not saying that these things aren't good.
01:02:17I'm warning you of some of the side effects that come along for the ride that no one wants to talk
01:02:23about. The reason no one wants to talk about it is it's anti-memetic. It's inherently unmotivating,
01:02:28right? To talk about the fragility of obsession is an anti-memetic idea because people want to believe
01:02:36that their obsession will carry them through or that discipline and motivation will be all that they
01:02:40need because they can't engineer their obsession. I'm, I'm just here to tell you in my experience,
01:02:46that's not the way it is at all. And I'm sorry. And if I could change it, I would.
01:02:54But I think that this is a much more important conversation to talk about.
01:02:58All right. That was a bit dark. Let's do some interesting differences between the sexes. So I've
01:03:04been researching sex differences. I found some spicy ones. Your guy friend is attracted to you
01:03:12and he thinks that you're attracted to him too. So a study of Americans finds that in platonic couples,
01:03:17the men are far more likely than the women to find their friend sexy and far more likely to think that
01:03:23she finds them attractive to. Indeed, a man's assessment of how much his female friend fancies him
01:03:30matches how much he fancies her. And it is unrelated to how she really feels.
01:03:39So shock horror, men are prone to wishful thinking. Also, there is a
01:03:46well-understood failure of cross-sex mind reading, the male overestimation and female underestimation
01:03:54of attraction. But your guy friend is attracted to you ladies. And he thinks that you're attracted to him
01:04:03too. Nearly half of your guy friends are trying to sleep with you as a woman. So William Costello polled
01:04:12527 heterosexual and bisexual people and asked the question, are opposite sex friendships ever truly
01:04:19platonic? 81% of women said yes. Only 58% of men said yes. So women were three times more likely than men
01:04:31to say that their friendship was purely platonic. Half of guy friends in the platonic friendship
01:04:42are trying to sleep with you. And this is why dudes, when their girlfriend says, no, he's just nice.
01:04:52I'm sorry, ladies. We understand how that works. We understand how men's minds work. And you understand
01:04:59how women's minds work, right? But not only are guys more attracted to you than you are to them,
01:05:07they think that you are as attracted to them as they are to you. And you don't know either of these
01:05:12things. So that's an uncomfortable one. There's double standards over infidelity. So according to recent
01:05:21polling, both sexes think it's worse for a husband than a wife to have an affair, which is sort of the
01:05:27opposite of the traditional double standard. So 53% of men say it's always morally wrong for a married
01:05:34woman to have an affair. But 61% of men say it's always morally wrong for a married man to have an
01:05:41affair. So 53% of men say it's wrong for a woman. 61% of men say it's wrong for a man. 56% of women
01:05:50say it's always morally wrong for a married man to have an affair. But what's interesting here is both
01:06:02men and women judge men more harshly for infidelity. And women judge both men and women more harshly.
01:06:14Like, what's that? 9% more. So 61% of men say it's wrong for a man. 70% of women say it's wrong for a
01:06:20man. 53% of men say it's wrong for a woman. 56% of women say it's wrong for a woman. So, I mean,
01:06:26women are more sort of enforcing and judgmental on this generally. Might not be that surprising, but
01:06:35I don't know what that says. Spicy. Romantic relationships matter more to men than to women.
01:06:41So this is from Steve Stewart Williams, who's got a new book out. He's coming on the show very soon.
01:06:45Romantic relationships matter more to men than to women. Stereotypes say it's women who care more,
01:06:51but this time the stereotypes are wrong. A new paper in behavioral and brain sciences assessed that very
01:06:57question and researchers found that among other things, men strive harder to establish romantic
01:07:03relationships. They fall in love faster. They benefit more from relationships, depend more on
01:07:08their relationships for social support, are less likely to initiate breakups, suffer more in the
01:07:14wake of a breakup, and take longer to get over their exes. So, I wonder how much of this is wrapped up
01:07:22in the fact that men don't have social support structures outside of their relationship in the
01:07:28same way that women do. Typically, women have a broader and tighter support structure of friends.
01:07:34And a lot of the time when men get married, they get rid of their social support system and just sort
01:07:40of adopt the wife's support system. Her friends and the husbands of her friends become his friends.
01:07:46And then if they get divorced, those friends go with her, not with him. So not only does he lose a wife,
01:07:53he also loses his social support network because he let his atrophy, this is kind of typical,
01:07:58but they fall in love faster, strive harder to establish romantic relationships, benefit more from
01:08:03relationships. I think all of this is pretty normal. If you were to look ancestrally, why not?
01:08:09Women have got more choices, so men need to work harder to do it. Women are always going to be able to
01:08:14get a replacement and men are going to struggle more so. So they're going to take longer to get over.
01:08:18They're going to be more worried. They suffer more in the wake of breakups. They're less likely to initiate
01:08:22breakups because of the chance of them finding somebody else. They depend more on their relationship
01:08:26for social support. All of these things make complete sense, especially when you look at it ancestrally.
01:08:30But anything that denies male privilege is usually treated as kind of abhorrent or blasphemous.
01:08:39And I just think it's cool to highlight some of the ways that maybe things aren't super rosy for guys,
01:08:46or maybe some stereotypes are turned sort of back to front, not calling women bad or men weak or men
01:08:53more moral or anything like that. It's fucking interesting. All right. Married men and women
01:08:59disagree on how much sex to have. Women typically believe their marriages have about the right frequency
01:09:05of sex. Men wished for twice as much sex as they were having. This suggests many couples adjust their
01:09:12sexual frequency to the lower rate that the wife desires, right? Women typically believe their
01:09:18marriages have about the right frequency of sex. Men wished for twice as much more. That means that
01:09:25there is a disparity in what people want versus what they're getting for each partner. But look at which
01:09:32partner it defaulted to. It defaulted to the woman, not to the man. Now, that's not a bad thing, right?
01:09:37You might say it's much better to run the speed of the race at that of the slowest person, as opposed
01:09:46to dragging them along. There's definitely a difference between someone who doesn't get to have sex that
01:09:52they want and someone that has to have sex that they don't want, obviously. But it is interesting that
01:09:58there has to be a negotiation that goes on here and men are sacrificing on average 50% of the amount of
01:10:05sex that they want and it's sitting at around about the right amount that women do want. It would be
01:10:12interesting to see how many of these women would want even less sex but aren't prepared to say it
01:10:19because they know that their partner wants more. That would be really interesting to work out. Also,
01:10:24would be interesting to work out if women want more sex, but they're just scared of telling researchers what
01:10:29they truly believe. Maybe because they think that there's more judgment around women being sexually
01:10:33open or something like that. But more spice.
01:10:38Before we continue, most people in their 30s are still training hard. Their protein is dialed in.
01:10:43They sleep better than they did in their 20s. Discipline is not the issue, but recovery feels
01:10:48somewhat different. Strength gains take a little longer. The margin for error starts to shrink.
01:10:54And that is why I'm such a huge fan of Timeline. You see, mitochondria are the energy producers
01:11:00inside of your muscle cells. As they weaken with age, your ability to generate power and recover
01:11:04effectively changes, even if your habits stay strong. MitoPure from Timeline contains the only
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01:11:16natural process for clearing out damaged mitochondria and renewing healthy ones. In studies, this supported
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01:11:26actually supporting the cellular machinery underneath your training. If you care about staying strong
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01:11:55And a final one here, which is actually nothing to do with sex differences, but far fewer people are made
01:12:02for polyamory than think that they are. Polyamory is hilarious because the community is basically 5%
01:12:09genuinely ascended, emotionally hyper-intelligent communication masters who've got nervous systems
01:12:15like a fucking glass lake. And 95% insatiable hungry ghosts who have convinced themselves
01:12:23that they're the former. And this is from Cook Fuchsius that me and George fucking love on Substack.
01:12:29He's so funny. Even just the name is brilliant. Polyamory, 5% like guys on the right with the
01:12:37Jedi master hood up and 95% spiritually bypassed, bead wearing, fedora hat, shawl, burning man,
01:12:49like hungry ghosts. And I think in my experience, this is really true. And the problem is that the
01:12:54people who are in the 95% who can't get it right and aren't built for it and just keep on trying more
01:13:00and more and more and more until in the hopes that that's going to fix the problem, have mistaken
01:13:06themselves for the former and use the success of the people who've got the amazing nervous systems and
01:13:11can handle it as the justification for why they keep going. But they are not the same. Shock, horror.
01:13:19All right. The internet is awash with videos about how to find your true self. But what do we mean
01:13:25when we talk about our true self? I think we live with a quiet superstition that beneath the noise
01:13:31of our habits and our mistakes and contradictions lies a truer version of ourselves to self that's
01:13:37fundamentally good. An alcoholic who gets sober is becoming who he really is. But a sober man who
01:13:44starts drinking again has lost his way. In Scrooge, Dickens didn't just write about a man who swapped
01:13:51stinginess for generosity. He wrote about a man who discovered his real nature. When Richard Nixon fell
01:13:58in disgrace, people said that power had corrupted his real self. But when Nelson Mandela forgave his
01:14:03captors, the world said his true self had been revealed. Or in real life, patients that have got
01:14:10dementia or lose their memory but retain their kindness are often seen by loved ones as still the
01:14:17same person. While those same people who grow cruel are perceived as having lost their essence.
01:14:23Even when fiction tries to make villains irredeemable, audiences resist. Darth Vader is terrifying
01:14:31until he saves his son and proves that there was goodness there deep down. We are reluctant to accept
01:14:38that anyone, even fucking Satan in paradise lost, is rotten all the way through. And our language betrays
01:14:46the bias. Goodness is authenticity while badness is a mask. And psychologists have tested this belief
01:14:53and the results are so consistent. People overwhelmingly identify morally positive changes as revealing
01:15:00someone's true self but dismiss negative changes as surface corruption. I started thinking about this
01:15:07when I saw this unreal study about a man called Mark. So a study about a man called Mark. Mark's life
01:15:12was presented in two versions. In one, he was a devout Christian who believed homosexuality was wrong
01:15:19but admitted he was attracted to men. In the other, he was a liberal who believed homosexuality was
01:15:25perfectly acceptable but confessed to secretly feeling repulsed by same-sex couples. In both cases,
01:15:31Mark was split. Belief pulled him one way while a feeling pulled him the other. The question to
01:15:36participants was simple: which side represented his true self? Liberals almost always said the attraction
01:15:44to men revealed who Mark really was while his disgust at homosexuality was right-wing programming.
01:15:51Conservatives almost always said that his conviction against homosexuality revealed who he really was
01:15:58and his public support was woke peer pressure. Basically, each group looked at the same man
01:16:05and saw their own values reflected back at them. It wasn't that people consistently treated beliefs
01:16:12as more authentic or feelings as less genuine. Instead, they treated whichever side lined up with their own
01:16:19moral compass as the real side. And this has some fascinating implications because it suggests that
01:16:26authenticity isn't something we find inside others. Instead, it's something that we project onto them.
01:16:33What counted as Mark's essence wasn't hiding in him at all. It existed in the values of the people
01:16:40that were judging him. And these fights are never just about evidence. They're about who gets to define
01:16:46authenticity. Interestingly, the whole exercise only works when someone is conflicted. If Mark only had
01:16:53one belief or one feeling, no one would have hesitated to declare, "Oh, that's who he is."
01:17:00Conflict is the playground where we get to impose our judgments about which side counts as the real
01:17:08self. There are consequences to always seeing ourselves and the others that we favor as moral, too.
01:17:14It cushions us from despair because failures can be brushed aside as "not really me," which makes bouncing
01:17:22back after mistakes easier. But it also blinds us to our own cruelty because harmful actions get
01:17:29rationalized as accidents or errors or aberrations. It creates an asymmetry where we forgive ourselves
01:17:37quickly while judging others more harshly. It skews our sense of authenticity because we treat virtuous impulses
01:17:47as real and darker ones as intrusions, which can make us dangerously naive about people who are not
01:17:55conflicted at all, but those for whom malice isn't a mask but it's a pattern. And it fuels this sort of
01:18:02lifelong quest to uncover the good self as though the work of living is not making choices but
01:18:10excavating our own purity. And to add even more complexity to it, notice how unevenly this belief
01:18:17gets applied. If goodness is the truth and badness is a mask, then in theory we should treat all people's
01:18:25goodness as authentic and all people's badness as superficial. But that isn't what we do. With our
01:18:33allies, we assume their virtues show who they really are, while their failures are only slips or distortions
01:18:41or masks. But with our opponents, we reverse it. Their good deeds are dismissed as fake or manipulative,
01:18:48while their mistakes and vices are taken as proof of their true character. And this double standard
01:18:54shows that the rule isn't actually "goodness is authenticity". The rule is "the kind of goodness
01:19:01I value is authenticity". Our side's goodness is treated as essence, while the other side's goodness is
01:19:10treated as performance. And our side's failings are masks, but the other side's failings are revelations.
01:19:17Psychologically, this makes sense. In small groups, assuming hidden goodness on insiders helped to maintain
01:19:25our trust and our cohesion. And it assumed hidden badness in outsiders helped us define the boundary
01:19:32between us and them. But the cost is distortion. We give our friends a free pass while demonizing our
01:19:40rivals, blinded to their real virtues and our own side's flaws. What looks like a rule about human
01:19:48nature, goodness is truth and badness is a mask, actually turns out to be a rule about group loyalty.
01:19:56So, here's a disconcerting idea. What if our true self doesn't exist at all? What if we are nothing
01:20:06but the bundle of drives and beliefs and feelings that show up in the moment? The addict is just as
01:20:13much himself when he drinks as when he doesn't. Scrooge was authentically Scrooge as a miser and as a benefactor.
01:20:21And we only anoint the generous version as authentic because it flatters our sense of what humans ought to be.
01:20:30And in this light, the true self isn't discovered. It's basically invented. The fiction makes forgiveness
01:20:39possible, but it also blinds us to cruelty and shortcomings. It allows us to keep loving people
01:20:45even at their worst, but it also tricks us into underestimating their malice. We say every tyrant
01:20:52or abuser has a hidden spark of goodness, even when sometimes there isn't one. You can see this bias
01:21:01everywhere. Addicts in recovery routinely say "that wasn't the real me" about their lowest points,
01:21:07but no one ever says that sobriety is fake. Childhood stories teach us the frog is really a prince,
01:21:13the beast is really gentle, the happy ending is always framed as the revelation of what was hidden
01:21:19all along. Therapists describe patients getting back to themselves after depression, but it's almost
01:21:25unthinkable to frame it the other way, right? That the depressed version is the truest one. Even in daily
01:21:32life, when a friend lashes out in anger, we soothe ourselves by saying, "That's not who she is." But when
01:21:39they show generosity, we never say, "That's not them." I hope that that's not the truth, right? That there is no
01:21:46authentic real self. But my fear, my philosophical hypothesis that I want to be disproven is that there
01:21:54may be no real you at all. The true self isn't something to be discovered. Instead, it's something
01:22:02that we invent. It's a superstition that we cling onto because it makes forgiveness easier and love
01:22:09sustainable and cruelty bearable. And I started thinking about this when I went through some spicy
01:22:17stuff at the start of the year. And what I realized was, when you're getting criticism, you're being criticized
01:22:23from almost always one side for saying one thing that they don't agree with. And if they say, "Who are
01:22:30you to talk about this topic?", the exact opposite opinion would occur if you were saying something
01:22:36different. So if someone says, "Who are you to comment about the environment?", if they're an environmentalist, and you are
01:22:42saying something which seems environmentally critical. But if you were saying something that was
01:22:47environmentally supportive in their direction, they would want you to say more. So it's not really,
01:22:53"You're not allowed to speak about this." It's, "I have a problem with the direction in which you're
01:22:57speaking." And because of that, I found the next closest association. Like who are you, American person,
01:23:04to talk about the way that Britain is dealing with its immigration problem? Because you're saying
01:23:10something that disagrees with whatever that person's point of view is. But if you were saying something
01:23:15that agreed with them, they would want you to say it more. No one is saying, "Your support is too much.
01:23:20Please stop doing it because you're not supposed to be talking here." They will say, "Your criticism is
01:23:25too much. You shouldn't be talking. You're not supposed to be here." It seems like an asymmetry.
01:23:32You know, men shouldn't be talking about women's bodies. Well, if the men were in support of
01:23:37access to birth control when Roe versus Wade got repealed, I would imagine that lots of
01:23:41women who don't want men talking about women's bodies would have liked men to be talking about
01:23:45women's bodies. In fact, that's the only thing that you can get support with if you want to get
01:23:4850% of the population to get on board with this thing that you think is really important.
01:23:54But if you only want to accept voices from the other side when they're in support of you,
01:24:00you can't expect them to show up if you criticize them when they don't agree.
01:24:04All right, that's it. 1100 episodes. Holy shit. Thank you all. I love you to bits. Thank you for
01:24:10supporting me. Thank you for supporting the show. I'm here in the new studio. This place rules. I've got
01:24:14so many big episodes coming up. Like, subscribe. It really does make a difference. Still now,
01:24:194.2 million subscribers later, it does make a difference. So wherever you are listening or
01:24:23watching, I appreciate you. I hope you have a wonderful day. And I'll see you next time.

Key Takeaway

Mastering personal growth requires cycling through intense periods of obsession and focused 'monk mode' while remaining vigilant against the tendency to use these states as permanent retreats from uncomfortable social realities.

Highlights

  • Discipline relies on friction-filled willpower, while motivation requires external fuel, and obsession functions as permanent, friction-inverted drive that pulls the individual toward a specific task.

  • Obsession is a non-renewable state rather than a personality trait; it typically produces disproportionate results before eventually cooling into routine or identity.

  • The paradox of self-awareness suggests that excessive reflection can inhibit agency by generating potential worst-case scenarios faster than actions can resolve them.

  • Psychological strength often becomes a liability in relationships, as the ability to endure discomfort leads to staying in destructive situations far longer than necessary.

  • Approximately 81% of women believe opposite-sex friendships can be purely platonic, while only 58% of men agree, with nearly half of men attempting to initiate sexual involvement.

  • The concept of a 'true self' is largely a social invention used to justify forgiving one's own mistakes or demonizing opponents based on group loyalty.

  • Monk mode, while an effective period for intensive focus, carries the dark side of potential isolation and difficulty reintegrating into broader society.

Timeline

Differentiating Discipline, Motivation, and Obsession

  • Discipline accepts friction through willpower, motivation reduces friction through desire, and obsession inverts friction by making work feel unavoidable.
  • Obsession produces superior results because it eliminates the need for willpower-based negotiation.
  • Positive obsessions should be fully surrendered to until they fossilize into personal identity, rather than being balanced or suppressed.

These three drivers function differently regarding internal cost. Discipline is reliable but expensive as it burns energy, whereas motivation is downstream of mood and inherently unreliable. Obsession acts as a poltergeist-like force that cannot be commanded but provides free, sustained output. Once an obsession wanes, the habits established during that period serve as the residual engine that keeps the individual moving.

The Paradox of Self-Awareness and Action

  • Self-awareness generates worst-case simulations that can defeat courage and freeze the will to act.
  • High levels of reflection often lead to errors of omission, where the fear of an unrehearsed future prevents necessary movement.
  • Avoiding pain by inaction creates a 'familiar misery' that is often more destructive than the temporary pain of failure.

Shakespeare's insight that conscience makes cowards of us all highlights how human imagination allows for the simulation of failures before they occur. This causes nervous systems to treat feared outcomes as reality, leading to paralysis. Using techniques like the pain-pleasure principle helps front-load the pain of inaction, forcing a transition from reflection to decisive action.

Workload Exposure and Relationship Dynamics

  • Hardships unlock new workload thresholds, functioning as a form of inverse PTSD that builds future capacity.
  • Complexity, rather than sheer difficulty, is the primary driver of feelings of overwhelm and system failure.
  • Wanting a result without being willing to endure the associated lifestyle guarantees disappointment.

Survival through intense periods teaches the nervous system that previous limits were not fatal, expanding the individual's capacity to handle future challenges. When life becomes overwhelming, the solution is to reduce complexity by triaging problems sequentially rather than trying to manage them in parallel. Aligning desires with the actual reality of the necessary process is essential for sustained progress.

The Trap of Psychological Strength

  • Psychological strength, while rewarded in professional and fitness domains, leads to self-abandonment when applied to relationships.
  • The assumption that one must 'fix' a struggling relationship through endurance often masks a fear of confrontation.
  • The capacity to endure emotional pain without protest is a red flag indicating that discomfort has become safer than setting boundaries.

High performers often default to absorbing and overriding warning signs because they view struggle as noble. In intimate settings, this strength prevents attunement and repair. Those who learned early that their needs were secondary to others often mistakenly interpret relationship distress as a challenge to be conquered rather than a signal to leave, leading them to stay in dysfunctional dynamics for years.

Revisiting Monk Mode and Sex Differences

  • Monk mode is a powerful tool for short-term calibration, but it becomes addictive by justifying a permanent retreat from social risk.
  • Men and women show distinct asymmetries in romantic expectations, with men suffering more significantly in the wake of breakups.
  • The belief in a 'true self' is a social projection used to maintain group cohesion and justify forgiving own failings while judging rivals.

Monk mode should be periodized with a hard deadline to prevent the loss of the ability to reintegrate into society. Research indicates that opposite-sex friendships are rarely perceived the same way by both parties, and men often depend more heavily on their partners for social support. Ultimately, the 'true self' is an invented narrative that facilitates forgiveness but can blind individuals to the reality of malicious intent in others.

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