Kind: captions Language: en now this is an interesting you know Insight that that we we can take back to ancient times but St Thomas aquinus in 1265 writes his Suma theologica this seminal text of Western philosophy you know forget the just the theology just Western philosophy and in it he talks about this very interesting thing he says that that man mankind humankind we'd say today has four Idols you pursue everybody pursues one or more of four idols and he calls them the substitutes for God because his supposition is that that we all want God but God is extremely inconvenient a lot of one-sided conversations and a ton of rules so we look for substitutes that have kind of these Divine characteristics the problem is they're 180 degrees off God they are money power pleasure and fame fame he says honor which is has different connotations you have a son who's a marine who serves With Honor that's not what we mean we're talking about admiration EnV the uh of other people of you which is which is people want that or or just Prestige or maybe Fame you know some people actually want to be famous but let's just call it money power pleasure and fame everybody you know I play this game what's my idol and I'll ask people not what's your actual Idol but what is not your idol you know of these four money power pleasure Fame what's the one that least attracts you that you could get rid of with total impunity you don't care and then we'll we'll start eliminating and we're gonna find your idol is the whole thing now the interesting thing about that is that what he says is not that you'll go to hell if you do that he says you'll be unhappy if you don't recognize the idol if you don't recognize the idols in your life the trouble is the lyic system of your brain Mother Nature that Tyrant tells you that you'll actually be happy if you get your idol as you chase it and you chase it you can't quite figure out what you're going to do if you get it like Tom's going to get you know hundreds of millions of billions of dollars what are you going to do with that money that you would actually like and you can't quite figure out well yeah cuz if you if you articulate it you know if I say you'll buy a yacht and you're like I don't that sounds like kind of a hassle to have a yacht maybe it sounds good but not that good right the real reason you want that is because you want admiration because you want the the validation of what it represents of you to you you want to this transference of social comparison you've always done with other people you want to actually feel the thing that you felt for others about yourself that's what the idol do that's the nasty Switcheroo that's the that's the despotism of this of of of mistaking the intrinsic good for the instrumentality that's why Thomas aquinus was so astute in what he was talking about here so when we play this game and we we we see what is actually holding us back and you experience this absolutely you were chasing the thing chasing the thing and chasing the thing getting more and more and more miserable because you're actually getting closer and closer to your idol and realizing it will not realize one single thing that you needed for your own happiness it had no intrinsic worth look there's the anything thing about money by the way the research on money is very clear that it doesn't actually ever bring happiness it lowers unhappiness which are processed in different hemispheres of the of the brain happiness and unhappiness are not opposites they're not they're different experiences and what happens is at low levels money will lower unhappiness so when I could finally go to the dentist I felt better the trouble is I don't know how to do the sums inside my brain I just knew I felt better and we always mistake lower unhappiness for higher happiness and so early on you're like well I went from from you know $155,000 to $20,000 a year and I felt better I actually felt better about myself I was able to to eliminate some of these sources of of you know misery so I'm happier and so you get into the pattern early on you wire your brain when you're a young person working your way up the ladder more money feel better that means more happiness and you realize that going from $250 $300,000 is not doing it that because it's not big enough jump apparently so you go and you go and you go and you go and you go and you're basically just chasing a lure that's what you experienced and that's why you're were miserable right because you couldn't get there from here it's interesting yes I put different words to it and I'm curious to see what you think about this so I think about it from an evolutionary standpoint so we have directives in our brain that there is going to be a sense of disease if you don't do certain things I think that deep and profound unhappiness can come from pursuing the wrong thing so that you're spending your time doing things that just they rob you of energy instead of giving you energy but I also think that people end up profoundly unhappy by not doing things that nature wants them to do right and I think one of the things that nature wants us to do and so just not doing it will be a problem is work really hard to turn your potential into skill set yeah and so if things come easily to you even though you're on top of the world and everybody else admires you and wants to be you that there will be a sense of disase for you because you're not working hard it doesn't feel meritorious yeah Nature has to find a proxy right so nature wants you to have children so it makes sure that sex is intensely pleasurable but that's really just a proxy for have kids so that I find really interesting that that nature is working in these weird proxies so people end up like you think you're supposed to do one thing chase money power Fame whatever you're like why does this suck but all of those things actually do have utility and so the thing with money is people are always going to pursue it the thing with Fame is people are always going to pursue it why because it actually has utility so money for instance is more powerful than people think not less but it isn't what you've been told so it's never what myself and everyone else included is trying to do is feel better about themselves right it won't help with that it cannot touch your self-esteem and that's like the biggest like mind [ __ ] ever your wife won't love you more your children won't respect you more when you have more money exactly more troubling you won't respect you more yes which is ultimately the cuz other people will like people treat me differently because I have some micro Fame and because that's actually troubling too because when you know somebody's instrumentalizing you when you know somebody's objectifying you because of this outside characteristic it makes you profoundly uncomfortable it's interesting people hate that you know it's the one thing where we will allow people to object ify us you're welln you're successful and people will be nice to you because of that and deep down you know that they they they don't love you and it's not how it plays out in my head how does it play out in your head that I have no ability to be vulnerable around them oh I see for sure but that's the same part of self that's the same part of objectification you and and if when you're objectified you can't be a full person there's another interesting thing that might actually apply you're a creative you're fundamentally a creative when you were doing your work you were thrown off the creative process now why is creativity intensely pleasurable you get you've read the work of mikai chent Mii the great social psychologist who wrote a book a very famous book called flow f l w flow and what it talks about is how minutes how hours turn to minutes of sheer pleasure when you're in this Flow State when you're doing something that you can Master you you can it's not too easy it it requires your ability but you can Master it because of your skill skill and you can get into this groove creatives must create if creatives are not creating they will be miserable because they can't attain a flow State it's very possible Tom that when you were in this part of your career you needed to create what you wanted to quit and go to Greece to do creation you were basically craving that it's like you had no protein in your diet for a year or something it's like I don't know I just can't stop thinking about peanut butter well cuz you were create you were you were you were craving this macronutrient in your psyche and and you were never getting a Flow State and if you're denied the flow state that uniquely comes to you through creativity you're going to you're going to be practically suicidal yeah it was it was definitely a rough period that's interesting I've never thought about it as being intrinsically a reflection of the pleasurability of flow but you might be right it's just I feel I feel alive that is the right word I feel alive when I'm creating I never happier than what I'm creating it's amazing people who are fundamentally creatives look same thing you know when I retired as a CEO and I came back back to writing speaking and teaching um I'm a new man I'm a new man for the past 3 years it's extraordinary you said something a while ago I didn't want to interrupt you but I want to go back to it now you said you rediscovered yourself yeah what does that mean like you need a sense of identity is that a core part of this like is when you say you rediscovered is it a self-narrative it's you you know who you deeply are as a person you're acquainted with yourself you're acquainted with your true self and just as with people who are around you you can you can create a an identity that's actually not authentic you can create an identity to yourself that's not authentic you can be giving yourself a self-narrative that's not true to actually who you are as a person what does it mean who you are what you're good at what you love it generally speaking has to do with being in the zone of what you actually love to do and what you appreciate most in your life when you're in line with your own values when you're living Accord to your own value so Jung would have put it this way Carl Yung his definition of his understanding of Happiness was that you need to understand your own values what you value what you think is proper and correct and moral and if you know what that is and can articulate it and live according to that you will be happy if you do you agree with that I think it's actually there's a lot of Truth to that because you know you have to figure out what you think what your model of the world actually is what you think truth is and then living in accord with your own values with your own Integrity is is really critically important because when people live outside that Groove they're they're never in equilibrium they're just never the problem is that they're not comfortable they're not comfortable in their own skin and I've noticed this you know I was working you know was it was it was it was good being the president of a th tank I was lucky to be president of Think Tank I believed in the work but it wasn't who I was and so I was kind of out of my groove for 10 years 10 and a half years and when I started going when I went back to writing and speaking and teaching and doing creative work I said that always who you were or was that because you switched into Crystal it's always who I was always a creating you know as a kid I was painting and writing and composing music and I just always wanted to be I was creativity is the most important thing in my life or curiosity and creativity are the are the most important thing that I can not the most important thing in my life the most important thing that I can do and when I'm actually happiest and when I was managing a large Workforce managing a lot of creatives to their best selves I mean it was they had certainly creative moments to it to be sure but it wasn't comfortable to me and when I my second curve which was much more crystallized intelligence is a lot also a lot more creative so I was kind of out of equilibrium for a long time during that period as well which compounds the problem of my declining fluid intelligence also not being in a creative role but it's just so much better I mean I I teach you at a great University which I love I write for a magazine every week about things that I'm really interested in I get to talk to you about it this is well beats working so true for some reason I was just thinking today like I was pacing listening to you and I was like I'm technically working right now weird I was like this is cool it is super cool and you know there are people that I've met it's interesting you know I talk to lawyers who don't feel like they're working I talk to and a guy who's putting in cabinets in my house and and he's super into putting in cabinets he loves making cabinets he was talking about all the details and he's so proud of his work and I say do you do you do you like like your work and he said doesn't feel like work you know I went on a fishing Expedition deep sea fishing Expedition with my son Carlos we we he loves to fish we go fishing and uh and the guy says every morning I wake up and he says today I'm going fishing and so this is what we all need to find I mean we need to each person because we have the blessing of living in an economy where you can do a lot of different things um the problem is that people Chas these extrinsic lures the money power pleasure and fame and they get out of the groove of what they're supposed to do and then they wonder why they're unhappy I want to go back to Yung and this idea of values so as you were saying it I was like yes part of me agrees but then as I run the thought experiment sort of check it against other things um other people to see if it holds up I feel like right now we're living through maybe a weird moment or maybe a completely normal moment in time where people are using their values to cudle each other and it doesn't when I look at them it makes me deeply uncomfortable and does not resonate with how I think about values so is this just a bastardization of the word value or do the people that that on either side of the aisle that are just viciously going after each other right do they really believe what they're saying because it seems like a super dark energy yeah so so this is a variation on the theme they're the these these are our people's True Values but in a fear equilibrium where we're culturally in a polarity of fear fear and love are are cognitive and philosophical opposites so fear is the master emotion it occupies a part of the lyic system called the amydala it actually uses more brain tissue than any other basic emotion because it's what keeps you alive if it were not for fear you would have been you know your lineage would have died out hundreds of thousands of years ago by being eaten by a saber 2 tiger which weirdly you were not afraid of and so so fear is really important love is the opposite of fear love will actually neutralize inappropriate fear or excessive fear fear will I did not see those opposites coming yeah because we think of of love and hatred but hatred is Downstream from Fear hatred is always a byproduct of fear Downstream from Fear so what happens is I love the way you say that like Ultra profound [ __ ] like yeah obviously I have never thought of that before and so and so when when when people come to me and they have too much fear the prescription is surround it with more love Sur neutralize it with greater amounts of love it's pH and it's it's alkaline and a it if you on the other hand if you're looking for more love and you don't have enough love in your life I'm going to ask you questions about what you're afraid of because I'm going to try to work on your fear God damn yeah and so this is and this is how we actually deal with if you have a fear problem I'm going to work on the love Dimension if you have a love problem I'm going work on the fear Dimension okay so now when all the way this all this comes together ultimate in in our lives is we have to figure out what the problem is and what we have in our society today is a fear polarity in ourl politics and our ideology and our culture and what that the way that manifests in our values is we don't use our values which are beautiful and good as a gift we use them as a weapon now think how counter uh uh effective that is how how how destructive that actually is but when you're in a fear polarity you're actually through fear you're going to use your own values antagonistically toward other people which is incredibly uh ineffective you're using coercion instead of persuasion the point of values and sharing your values is to persuade each other that's the fruit of the Enlightenment but it's also just you know the basis of human nature if you cudgle other people with your with your with your values and use them as a weapon there's z% chance you're going to convince anybody of anything but you're trying to use force zero so the problem that we have is we could move from a fear to a love polarity then people would go back to using their values as a gift we might we will disagree we will disagree but disagreement is beautiful it's the competition of ideas which is fundamental to a free Society you and your wife there are things you'll never agree on and you will die married and in love that's a you can live in permanent harmony with somebody with whom you disagree but only if you have a love polarity in your life and you use your values which are in contrast to the other person's values as a gift and not as a weapon what we see today in politics on campuses in media is that people are trying to kill each other with their values you know you're a traitor well you're a racist I mean that the things that people are throwing at each other is basically never going to convince anybody of anything because there's too much fear damn so what are people afraid of people are afraid we we go through these these sort of s waves of these cultural polarities a lot and emotional contagion is a very profound thing facts yeah and so emotional contagion is one in which it's uh the the culture actually starts to become in so when when I was a kid for example growing up in the Pacific Northwest um in the 1970s there was deep fear of serial killers Cults remember a fear-based polarity of of cult and and what that that led to was unbelievable um bitterness in politics where left and right just as bad as today or almost as bad as it is today um between the Democrats and the Republicans between the conservatives and the Liberals and it all came from the fear that had infected you know from in the in the aftermath of Vietnam and you know the the culture wars that were going on and the and the the the Cold War these were very it was a very fear-based Society on the basis of this there was a break in that but then you know it comes back again is the whole thing the the the opportunity for us as social entrepreneurs the opportunity for us is to is to change the polarity is to encourage people to live by love to have the courage of actually living by love in a fear culture and and that's you know you can fire people up with that it's what does it mean how do you do that you basically to make people commit to only using their values as as a gift to being around people who are different than they are to listen to different points of view to go to people that with whom they would ordinarily not be in communion and say I want you to know I love you to say those incredibly transgressive words this is the most transgressive message in all of human history is love your enemies pray for those who persecute you that's the gospel of St Matthew that changed life on Earth actually is to say that led to that concept led to the Western Enlightenment which basically said we don't have to use Force we can actually live by persuasion that was a profound difference in the in the culture that led to the progress that would create an economy where Tom can become a successful entrepreneur quite frankly one thing leads to another but we're in regress right now the fear polarity in our culture is leading us we we're devolving culturally because of this so if we really want a better world I mean I know I sound like a just like an unrepentant hippie of which I've been credibly accused that we need we need love we need to stand up to the people on our own side whatever that side is and say I refuse to hate I'm just I'm just not going to do it I'm I'm done man I'm done I love you it's interesting so I can't articulate it that cogently because I probably haven't spent as much time thinking about it as you but I've come to a similar conclusion so what I've been saying so I never thought that I would ever utter a word that had anything to do with the culture war and then I started to really get freaked out by watching people run in opposite directions like just seemingly as fast as I can CU you're not super political right I'm not political in the slightest I don't find politics interesting it seems to encourage people to be divisive right and and so my thing is to your earlier point about you can be married to somebody and love them deeply and passionately and disagree about things so in business as is true in marriage if you both think alike one of you is not necessary and the I heard the same thing about so when when you really ask why are there two parties which I'd never stopped to contemplate that so Ray alio says there are only so many human personalities and that's why history repeats over and over and over I thought a that's really interesting yeah that there only so many personality types and that there are basically two big buckets that you can break people into people that are we'll call Compassion dominant and people who are conscientious dominant so not that they're exclusively either but people who are like you can't leave anybody behind and then people over here are like you have to be responsible for yourself right so it's the sort of the liberal conservative dichotomy that we often think about popularly exactly and so that cool all make sense and then in business I watched this play out so I had two partners previously and there were times where they didn't see eye to eye and I remember the contribution I felt most strongly that I had brought to the dynamic was I'm on the outside going you're both extraordinary so value each other for being different like value that friction right and that in the friction lies the magic and that either one of you would be a problem on your own but when you have that counterveiling force it actually creates something really incredible but only if you respect the other person's View and so then I started going okay politically it's the same thing whether you're conservative or liberal it's like you have to respect the friction you have to understand that either one if we only had one spirals into madness and it is only in the friction I won't even say the balance it's in the friction between the two that you sharpen your ideas like a great entrepreneur look the the prb Proverbs say that iron sharpens iron I was giving a talk to the assembled members of the Republican party on the house and the Senate side the members of the House the members of the Senate all Republicans in a retreat some years ago and I said I asked how many of you wish we lived in a one party State no hands and no Hearts let's be honest I said how many of you are grateful that we live in a democracy that has multiple parties or at least two every hand goes up I said you just told me you're grateful for the Democratic party axiomatically I wasn't trying to be tricky but it's actually true if you're grateful that you can that there that we live in a country where we can actually have disagreement without a knock in the night and the Jack booted Thug You Are by a by construction grateful for the people who disagree with you look the the Yankees are grateful for the Red Sox they don't want to blow up the Red Sox bus on the way to the game that's not how competition Works competition requires collaboration it requires rules it requires respect you know I like the Red Sox more than the Yankees but I want the Yankees to show up with their best pitching and beat them fair and square I don't want them to Forfeit that's actually there's no good in that there's no good in that whatsoever and remembering this is really really critical you know the whole idea that we're in right now and this is how the fear-based polarity breaks down the iron sharpens iron how it breaks down the whole idea of competition it basically says that do whatever you have to because you know War I mean you scratch of the eyes you know a knee to the groin I don't actually care what happens in politics because the biggest threat to this country is my neighbor who votes for the other party that is simple Insanity that not to mention the fact that that is factually incorrect you know it's actually possible that Vladimir Putin is going to bring this country back together again it's actually possible that somebody who's you're people are you know looking at like oh that's non-democratic that's what that thing means it's actually not the Democrats right it's something else and that's one of the reasons by the way that that threat brings people together that common enemy actually brings people together the great the the the greatest pity that I can imagine is that the coronavirus epidemic didn't make us love each other more for a minute though didn't it feel like it was going to it sure did it sure did except that we politicized that because of the deep fear in our country and the fact that we have leaders that are encouraging us to kill each other rhetorically that are encouraging us for their own the outrage industrial complex in media and politics is trying to drive us apart the outrage industrial complex I like that it's it's an old play Eisenhower's military industrial complex but the outrage industrial complex remember you know everybody's watching us now when you hate somebody's profiting and not you bottom line well said yeah no man that's exactly how it feels yeah and it's crazy and it's interesting so I'm definitely not an unrepentant hippie or credibly accused uh of being hippie I'm super weirded out by that stuff but the only thing I can think is that we have to race to the middle and love each other like that's it and love has been or even not in the middle even just like stay in the stay in the SS and still love each other it's like keep your opinions absolutely you know I I'm not saying get rid of your opinions yeah yeah but I mean the party that's closest to the middle always gets elected n it's not necessarily the case I mean we've been kind of oscillating back and forth between between political positions that are actually not representative of the middle and this is a different kind of sort of a a it's a different political Dynamic which you're kind of going rail to rail and you're going rail to rail because you know you basically cuz you can have bashing for example you can say that you know given the fact that we we go between parties might mean because people are so close to the center or it might be because you have two blocks that are incredibly strong that are relatively equal in power but very very different than one another so this is the key the key is basically either one can be fine you can have very I mean I was had dinner with a couple an older couple a couple of weeks ago and the the the wife is super liberal like pro-choice and the Democrats all the way and the husband is just he's just as rightwing as they get I mean just very pro-life on abortion I mean all these issues that down the line what you'd expect from conservatives and liberals and they're they've been they've been married for 50 years and they and it's like and and privately it says gosh I admire her so much she's just so wonderful in the whole thing and and it reminded me that this is the key thing that you can be in permanent disagreement but in love equilibrium we just have to be people that can do that you know we've been convinced somehow by people who are making money and getting power and followers and their jollies from our fighting that we have to that we that we can't be around people disagree with us yeah that's Insanity that's a that's a that's quite frankly a mistake and you know and you would not be a successful entrepreneur if that had been the case where everybody has to agree because as you quite astutely point out um you know if you surround yourself with people just like you you're not going to succeed I love the idea of Lincoln's A Team of Rivals exactly right getting people that think differently getting people that push you like in in business I will just tell you right now if you don't have people that are willing to tell you when you're wrong you are [ __ ] at least so I going back to my own insecurities I don't see myself as smart enough to just run the company by decree so I've had to create a structure where people are not afraid to speak to powert and because I have not invested anything in my self-esteem around being right I don't mind like hey just tell me where I'm wrong I'm so like obsessed with getting the result I don't care if it's my idea I just need it to be the right idea but man it's really hard to get people in in a company Dynamic where ultimately there's an imbalance of power and of course I could fire them at any second but they could leave at any second which is equally distressing for me except multiplied they only have you know two people my wife and I who co-founded the company to worry about we have all 50 of them uh you know to worry about so and if you're a tyrant and they leave you're cooked yeah no doubt yeah because it's hard to find good people and the SEC to success actually is a good team it actually is good people it's interesting I do this test for my students I teach this class called leadership and happiness at the Harvard Business School and I I take them through a battery of personality and happiness tests over the course of the semester and the one they like best is the positive affect negative aect battery and what that is is is your positive and negative affect emotion levels and what they learn is that you can be both very positive and negative you can be a high happiness and a high unhappiness person because you're a high affect person and you can also be a low unhappiness person but a low expression of Happiness person you're a low affect person you can be high positive low negative that's the cheerleader you can be low positive and high negative that's the poet low low is the judge and high high is you he's the mad scientist right and what you need and what I show is actually you know use using the you know the research on this that you got to figure out which one you are and you must surround yourself with what you're not the biggest predictor of success on teams and entrepreneurial startups or even established companies is making sure that the CEO is not surrounding herself or himself with people who have the same affect profile and there's a role for everybody there's a role for The Poets there's a role for the judges it interesting it's a guy who I it was actually a woman in my class this year and she's like I don't know if I can be a successful business leader she's a doctor um and she's getting her MBA super high super striver super striver she says I don't know you know if I I've got this judge profile you know this low low aect profile I don't I don't know I said what' you do for a living before this she say I was a surgeon I said that's perfect I do not want a high AFF effect surgeon you know somebody who opens me up and says oh my God and so there's a role for everybody and we actually need that iron sharpening iron on our teams and we need to Value it we need to love it we need to actually resist the tendency to want to surround ourselves with people like us and this is exactly what we're not doing in our politics and our country is in Decline as a result just today literally I was asked by an online coach if they needed to build their own app in order to launch their business and I told them do not build something if it already exists kajabi has all the tools you need to reach all of your Revenue goals with their allinone platform it's easy to turn your skills passions and experiences into online courses membership sites podcasts communities coaching and more and you get to keep 100% of your Revenue because everything is owned and controlled by you kajabi also has robust analytics easy payment options email marketing tools and customizable website templates all built in and right now kajabi is offering a free 30-day trial to start your business if you go to kajabi.com impact Theory just go to kajabi.com impact Theory and join the creators and entrepreneurs who have made over $6 billion I also think we need to have a distrust of ourselves that you're not going to like those words but I am skeptical enough of myself meaning that I know I'm high high that I can get very excited about something I know that emotions make dots feel like they connect that don't actually connect and so it's like I have to make sure that I seek that disconfirming evidence that I don't think well I feel it and therefore we all need to get behind this idea I'm like no no no I tell people put on your iCal hat like tell me where's the problem yeah I completely agree with that and you know you had Adam Grant on the show no Adam Grant teaches it at Wharton at you know at Penn as social psychologist fantastic his newest book is called think again which is exactly the case that you're making he makes the case that if you really want to be successful don't trust you and it doesn't mean that you can never trust you but you know look for the the evidence to the contrary look for ways that where your confirmation bias is probably leading you astray don't look to feel good about yourself cuz you're right on everything look you're wrong on lots of stuff you just don't know on what stuff yeah so help have people around you who can and it's probably not that fun to have somebody around you who every single day says you're wrong in every single thing you got to find some sort of balance for Pete's sake and if you're the boss you're probably right on most things but do if you're if you're wrong you should want to know first not last if you want to be successful yeah it's crazy to me how and I won't say it's crazy I understand it when you are right it feels good even now when I know better it still feels good when I was right yeah I just don't invest in that I don't encourage that in myself I'm like yo You' got to be careful with that yeah but when people would actually rather like they get angry when people point out a flaw in the idea I'm like what are you doing like that you are headed towards an iceberg and you're actively discouraging people from letting you know yeah it's ego threat ego threat is really deep for people who are living their heads because they don't want people to think they're incompetent the failure's real totally the failure's coming no no but they will they'll they'll resist tooth and nail it's just it's like you're trying to cut off my finger by telling me my opinion was wrong it's unbelievable how the evolution has led us to this place you want to be right you want to be right because you feel like an almost physical need to be right being contradicted um is is socially painful and there's a um the same part of the brain the anterior singul of the brain processes both physical and social pain that's crazy we have a very practical brain a very parsimonious brain and you know stimulating the same part of the brain so it's like you know being being told you're wrong and being embarrassed for something that you were wrong feels like somebody punching you in the face to your brain at least and so you'll resist that because you're trying to protect yourself it's deeply suboptimal and dangerous you're right yeah if I could just in fact my success is because I'm not afraid to be embarrassed I never like it it sucks every time but a willingness to be embarrassed is how I have learned yeah know and humility of course is a great is one of the great secrets of Happiness too that's interesting why yeah humility is in is because it gives you peace humility allows you to relax because you're not trying to protect something yeah you're not actually trying to protect your fortune you're not standing in front of your stash of gold all the time you know walking back and forth with a shotgun you know you you could basically just walk away and take it you know you can you can relax into the reality of your fallibility for for one and a lot of people never quite and I'm sure that people are listening to our words right now and some people are going like actually I think that might be true you know I've never actually let down my guard you know and once you actually get into it's it's actually it's a very interesting rhetorical habit when you're having a conversation with your spouse or your friend or your anyl interlocutor of any kind and they make a good point say huh that's a really good point I think I might be wrong I think I'm I think I might be wrong now that's really hard secret to marriage though it is oh man God if you can do that it's amazing it is amazing now part of the problem is that you often don't think you're wrong that is part of the problem yeah and so you know being consiliary in a way that that you know saying I think I'm wrong when you actually aren't or or or where truth is you just don't know you just don't know I mean a lot of marital Discord comes because you know somebody's saying you got to do something differently and you literally don't know what to do you don't know what to do I mean there were probably times when you're miserable I'm just going to guess in your work and you were going a you were working 80 100 hours a week and you're going in a million different directions and your wife's say you need to be happy you need to let this go you need to do less and you're like I don't know what to do less I I don't know how to do less and that's really tough because that's giving you directions that you can't quite take and a lot of marital Discord actually comes down to that is directions you don't know how to follow I'm really obsessed with this idea that running in the back of your mind are evolutionary algorithms and there's no escaping them and so there just certain things you are going to have to do if you want to I don't know if you're going to agree with this framing but if you if you're going to feel the way you want to feel you must be aware of these algorithms you must acknowledge them right so I've always tried to migrate people away from happiness not as you define it as the smell of the turkey stop worrying about the right exactly because they're so transient corre and get to fulfillment correct and fulfillment for me has a formula be interested to see if you agree with this um these are based on what I consider the evolutionary algorithms running in your mind that there is no escape from so you are going to have to work hard anything that comes easily will just not it won't resonate that's a satisfaction issue by the way satisfaction is the joy that comes after struggle that's what satisfaction is so you get satisfaction always have to come from struggle you have to do something and it's the sense of earning something so for example if if you you cheat on the exam and you get an A there's no satisfaction true but I feel deeply satisfied after good sex do I feel like I earned it I don't know I have not investigated this feeling yeah but that's that's actually that's that's not satisfaction that's enjoyment is it that's what you and satisfaction you feel sexually satisfied well that's a word that we use but it's different than what we're talking about here so it's again we're defining the terms of the problem super important because you may be about to have me separate two ideas that because I don't have words for I people talk about sexual satisfaction where they're talking about sexual enjoyment so enjoyment is a better word you're done so when I am overcome with desire the right way to think of it for me is hunger it feels the same I've got to have this thing I really want it anticipatory chemicals oh my God and then I get it and so like I'll differentiate between masturbation and sex when I masturbate necessarily feel satisfied that's one of the things that makes that such a whatever Pursuit whereas when I have sex I feel satisfied like there's some deeper thing in me and and it it it is an extinguishing of The Hunger but because I have oxytocin and vasopressin it's like oh man I feel so good so it's this combination of the calming of that like seeking Behavior with like and I feel so bonded and connected to this person yeah this is just terms so the way to think about it in in this particular framework is pleasure versus enjoyment got it okay so pleasure is you know something that pornography is associated with pleasure um sexual activity in a in a in a parab bonded relationship is is is is associated with enjoyment because it has people and memory and so one of the things to keep in mind a strategy especially for a lot of young people a lot of young men is to is to do is if you like something it's best if you're not doing it alone because then you're probably in stop it not necessarily this is just kind of a rule of thumb this is not this is not an iron law but it's a rule of thumb doing it alone is associated with pleasure so you know um anheiser Bush doesn't do ads about beer where they show a dude pounding a 12-pack alone in his apartment right why not because that would be that would be yeah because a lot of people use alcohol for pleasure right which leads to addiction and misery they talk they see you know you me cracking open a Bud Light and clink and talking about how great it is and because we're friends and we're making a memory and that's enjoyment which is associated with happiness so we have a we have a basic idea of that the same thing is true with the the example of sex that you talked about a minute ago you can it can be pleasure or it can be enjoyment and everybody knows the difference between sexual experiences that are pleasurable or enjoyable enjoy enjoyment is the goal because that's one of the macronutrients of Happiness we talk about in term in the terms that you define a satisfaction but it's really a in in this terminology and again you know you have to just defining terms these are just words but the concepts underlying them are are are critical in the book you give a really good example of pleasure without enjoyment yeah uh which you mentioned obliquely a minute ago but when you think of a drug addict yeah they're doing the drug right they're theoretically getting the pleasure but they're not getting any of the enjoyment right they're getting tons of pleasure it's because they're loading only on pleasure but no enjoyment because it's not social and it actually is not engaging the prefrontal cortex and the hippocampus to create memory and so you you you will you simply will have a transient experience and the transient experience will be unsatisfying until you'll hit the lever again and again and again and again and it will lower your quality of life so that's the key thing if there's something you really really love so for example I'll ask people will talk about because I I've done a lot of work on the on the the science of addiction and it's a very interesting subject people say how do you know if you're addicted because these are behavioral constructs you know you can't take a blood test to know if you're if you're an alcoholic if you're you know so it's these are behavioral and the big behavioral thing is do you prefer to drink alone do you prefer to actually become inebriated alone that means you're looking for pleasure versus enjoyment and that is a that that is has a lot that will lead you more to addiction more toward addiction and away from happiness is the way that that works that's the reason that people say never drink alone they don't know what they're saying is they're saying enjoy it don't have it be a source of pleasure because that's dangerous so that gives you an idea so we've talked a little bit about satisfaction talked a little bit about enjoyment these are heavy heavy topics in terms of the social science and Neuroscience for sure and we haven't even touched on meaning which is the heaviest of them all which is the hardest of them all so you can become an a what I really want is I want people to be to be obsessed with to have their hobby be the science of happiness and how they can get it and spread it CU that would be a really meritorious movement if people were like like yeah more of the science more understanding it I want to be excellent at this I want to be most excellent my hobby is getting better at happiness and it's changed my life it's a good hobby it's really been a good hobby for me I made it into a career that you most certainly did um so I want to close the loop on the Fulfillment recipe and get your take on that so uh you have to work really hard because that's just nature ensures that you're going to do that so that you're out the hard things like getting a meal protecting your family Etc uh to acquire a set of skills right that's a big lean on progress because I agree progress I think is a foundational pillar of human happiness right uh so you're going to work really hard to gain a set of skills that allow you to serve yourself and others right and it needs to be in a way that you find exciting so that to me is those are the things that nature is going to ensure that you do and if you're the doing it for not only yourself but others is the meaning portion of this right um why do is it that people never stop to identify what gives them meaning is it that they confuse meaning is that they're stuck in the Mis sself why do so few people so few people end up cracking that code part of the reason is because they're not specifically trying to find meaning they don't make it a goal they just they they a lot of people believe that if I do what I'm really really good at and I can be successful at that it's going to give me a ton of meaning automatically and that's not right like anything else you have to do things on purpose did you get meaning when you were a classical musician no that was the reason that's the reason I'm not a classical could you have gotten meaning out of it many people do but here's the thing I I my my favorite composer is Johan Sebastian Bach maybe the greatest composer who ever lived it's great story yeah I mean 1685 to 1750 20 kids he had 20 kids yeah he was a he was productive as a composer and father was Catholic he wasn't he was Lutheran but um but he was I say that because I know you're Catholic those listening you wonder why I made a joke he was just a sexy Lutheran but and and and Bach was asked near the end of his life why he wrote music at the why question you know our our friend Simon cic was talks about start with why and it's fantastic I mean it's been because it really is you people are going around asking what and hoping to get the why for free and Simon's entrepreneurial twist is start with why and then the what will come automatic and you'll be a lot more satisfied because you'll find the source of meaning so box why when he was asked why do you write music was the aim and Final End of all music is the refreshment of the soul and the glorification of God okay not bad not bad at all but I read that in my late 20s when I was still I was in the Barcelona Symphony in those days and it a good job and it was you know I love the music it's really into it it's kind of a high Prestige job you know playing the greatest it still sounds cool it sounds cool sounds cool yeah but I couldn't I couldn't answer like that I couldn't answer like that I didn't feel like I was refreshing Souls particularly I certainly didn't feel like I was glorifying God I was you built that in though cuz this is one thing I always think people think they're going to find meaning it just wasn't my thing and so I went in search of something where I could answer my why question like Bach I I became a social scientist that was the thing that was it because you know when I I because after that you also you you go on to run the thing tank after that right right yeah I got my PhD I actually finished College a month before my 30th birthday by correspondence so this is not a typical path to you know a professor ship at Harvard obviously this is not typically the way it gets done this a great country isn't it yeah um a kid from peup can do this it's fantastic crazy I love that so um and then I went and I I got so interested when I was doing my my bachelor's degree in the in human behavior and the fact that you can model it and you can study it that I I went back and got my masters in PhD as a social scientist as a quantitative social scientist I was doing for a living I was doing military operations research at the Rand Corporation for you know like secret stuff for the Air Force and all that but you know using and you felt the sense of meaning and all that I was what I felt the sense of minan was I was learning so much that was so critically interesting and I had a strong sense that I was going I was learning how to a ask and answer original questions about human behavior they were going to push the boundary of what we knew so that people's lives could get better I had a very strong sense that it was going to it was in the offing it was going to take decades was the part about so people's lives could be better was that a critical part of that it was a critical thing to earn my success I needed to do something where my work created value in my life and the life of other people that's I think that is so big and look you covered this in the book so I know this isn't mysterious to you but uh focusing outward like if you want to be happy we don't need this is me paraphrasing you again we don't need self-care we need other care right and I just have learned uh through unfortunate trial and error that if I'm doing something only for me it I'll run ashore on the M me me problem totally totally you get into the me self world it's all me you know other care is i s it's I'm going to look outward at what other people need I'm going to be thinking more about them which gets me away from the the boring repetitive tedium of the M me Me soundtrack to begin with I mean it has I mean it's just simple you're you're distracted from the stuff that's so boring and yet so um you look at so obsessively over the course of your life so that's critically important and you find I mean again there's tons and tons of studies that actually show that the more you give the happier you get the more you give the Richer you get the more you give the better looking you are is it it's a wonderful study it's all perception so there's this one study where These Guys these social psychologists they they bring men it's a men into the lab who are partnered it's all heterosexual couples and they bring them in some have been dating for 6 months and some have been married for 50 years and the the guys in white lab codes and they say okay it's a simple experiment I'm going to sir I'm going to give you these coins put them in your pocket you and your wife or girlfriend you're going to walk down this little path to that other building down there and my colleague is going to interview you and then you get to keep the money that's it like okay so I walk down this little path outside and there's an Alleyway between the buildings and this homeless guy comes ambling out of the alley and panhandles the husband or boyfriend he's a Confederate to the experiment obviously he says hey you got some change he does they know he does cuz they put the money in his pocket and he has to make a decision in front of his wife on whether he's going to help the homeless guy they get to the other building and the first question in the interview is did you help the homeless guy how much did you give him and then the second question is to the wife how attractive do you find him right now the more you support the homeless guy the hotter she finds you that's so interesting that's the reason on a first date you're like I love Humanity I support you know I build houses for the poor I love dogs I love babies you're trying to look like you know Albert schwitzer on a first date that's hilarious because you're more handsome that is very interesting okay so um we know that being outward focused is going to be beneficial but you were talking about um you needed to find the answer to your why what is going to be that thing that I could answer in the way that Bach does I find in life basic basically nobody finds that like that that is so rare uh and when they do find it it ends up being very transient so how did you navigate because your for people that don't know we we did another interview which I highly encourage them to go watch and so we covered this I don't want to tread uh a ton of the same ground but I think it's worth telling people you've would you say that your career has been spiral yeah for sure okay you gave me the language mine has for sure um I I it's interesting you make me question whether that's just my personality and was going to end up there no matter what or if it really was what I the story I've told myself my entire life which is I did all of this just to get into storytelling and I needed to control the assets maybe maybe we'll get into that those are that's those are endogenous to each other yeah maybe yeah but I what I want to know now is did your why run out and that's why you reinvented yourself did it just migrate like how have you kept that alive in your life I I took opportunities that were put in my my path that I thought were in line with this vision of how I was trying to grow so I had a intention but I didn't have attachment so when I was a French horn player leaving that becoming a social scientist I I had an intention to do this work on human behavior to as to help myself and others to make life better to increase love and happiness in other people's lives but I was not attached to what manifestation that was going to take and that's what I urge all young people to do to have a virtuous beautiful intention with that attachment with respect to the the expression that it's going to take at any particular time I taught for a number of years I loved it super great then I thought I should run something that I think is going to be good for Humanity and for society you know until I ran this think tank this big think tank in Washington DC had 300 employees mostly just raised money I had to raise $50 million a year to keep the doors open and it was a thrilling experience it was exhausting to be sure but what I was trying to do was to use my background as a social scientist to create better public policy to hire really good people that was going to to make the country and the world Freer and better with an emphasis on opportunity for people at the margins of society which is what my Think Tank was engaged in after about 10 years I knew I was getting stale man I was getting stale so I had the same intention but I had no attachment to Arthur Brooks president of the American Enterprise Institute that was a that would be a disordered attachment because that's not who I am I'm Arthur Brooks I'm a husband I'm a father I'm a child of God and I am put on Earth to lift people up in bonds of love and happiness using science and ideas what's the next assignment what's the next assignment and the next assignment was to do what I do now which is I have a company that teach writ speaks and teaches widely and does media on the science of Happiness to popularize to see the world as a classroom and an enormous course of study of the science of Happiness to lift people up and that you know so I can write have I have column in the Atlantic and I write books and I get to talk to you and I get to travel and speak I teach at Harvard and it's phenomenal but that's no I'm not attached because I know this is not the last assignment I have intention but the attachment no no no no no the attachment is the killer of all these things and and you too it's like next assignment please but here's the direction we're going in I need to do this thing this thing is going to serve and when you're really in the zone it's it's a thrill it's a thrill you just can't get enough of it when you're really in the zone too but it's not because you're going for the thrill it's because you're going for the value you want the you want to hit that vein of value right and when you run that vein out then you go look for you dig a new mind what does it mean to run the vein out though so um okay how pure was your move into the the think tank because you talk about idols I've listened to enough of your content I know what your idol is uh I think we share an idol um so I I nothing is either good or bad but thinking makes it so yeah so I don't know that having an idol is bad I have a feeling that it's Nature's way of getting us moving and making us an active species and it is how use it for great good right exactly but if it's the end goal if an idol of money or power or pleasure or fame is the end goal will be unto you and we be under the world but if it's an intermediate goal to lifting people up and bringing them together if you can use the prestige that you have in your job and the admiration of other people to get them interested in something that's truly generative and good and improve their lives which by the way you're doing with a show right I mean you got lots of prestige you're famous guy but you're using it so that people will watch it and change their lives so if this is the end goal it's a problem if it's an intermediate goal then it's good I want to uh restate this in my language to see if I really understand this okay okay so the Mis self is getting caught up in my emotions I'm confusing the emotion for the perception of the emotion so knowing that in the brain pain and suffering are two separate spaces knowing literally two different regions of the brain not making that up for people listening uh and then uh in meditation I am to your point earlier about uh the bitter coffee there's a difference between um my knee hurts and witnessing that I'm having a sensation in my knee that one might AR my KNE hurts versus I don't like how my knee feels that's really the big difference because you know it's my knee hurts it's that's a statement of fact right right it's a signal and the one last thing I'll wrap on that to see if I really get this so uh Victor Frankle talked about the gap between stimulus and response now for people that haven't heard that name he was in a concentration camp lost his wife mom dad I mean just unimaginable and came out of it psychiatrist came out or actually I think aist and he was a psychiatrist and and a psychoanalyst okay which is an interesting combination very interesting writes a book about that time basically saying if you could find meaning in your suffering that you could make it but if you lost that sense he was like you could literally predict when somebody would die because once they gave up and they could no longer associate meaning with why they were going through the suffering that was it right and so that idea of there's this gap between stimulus and response and you get to decide how you interpret that thing is everything right is that what you're talking about when that Gap goes away You're now in me territory yeah so so there's there's so much in this and and you know we've referred to the you know the new book and there's the whole front part of this new book is emotional self-management based on the science of how your brain gives you signals that are called emotions getting away from the idea that bad emotions are unfortunate we should get rid of them and or that unhappiness for the is bad and we should get rid of it so understanding the science of how this works and what these things are for and then being able to learn grow and manage the feelings that we want such that we can adapt best to the current world and we can make growth toward happier that's that's the whole front part of this book the back half is okay now that you've done that build the life you want build the life you want co-authored with Oprah Winfrey exactly right exactly right book by the way I'm glad you like it thank you it's um it was a joy to write it it's a joy writing a book with Ora Winfrey too what an experience it was really an interesting experience to and and recording the book the audio book too because you keep thinking oh I know that voice not mine so um so emotional self-management comes down to number one understanding that emotions that you have are not just nice to have and bad to have all they are are signals they're like a machine the machine of your brain perceives outside stimuli and turns it into a universal Lang anguage that can that can send signals to the neocortex of your brain the out outside wrinkly area of your brain especially the prefrontal cortex which is the most modern part of the human brain to send it signals so that you can decide how to react according to them and it doesn't matter what language you speak or where you grow up you everybody gets the same signals they get the basic emotions of Joy Of Interest which are the two positive basic emotions the negative emotions which doesn't mean that they're bad just means that they're negative anger disgust sadness fear and all those things are then Blended together into these complex emotions so anger and disgust you blend them together you get contempt which is the conviction of the worthlessness of something so it's this multiplicity of emotions that we get they exist to send signals Universal signals and then we get to decide how to react here's the problem most people don't take that opportunity most people take their emotions as given regret them like them and act according to them without doing that last trick that last entrepreneurial trick which is deciding how to react you get to decide this is Victor frankl's point the book is man search for meaning and what he learned in the concentration camp was that all these bad things are happening and good things happen in life you decide how you're going to react to these things that's the ultimate entrepreneurial task of human life is deciding how you're going to use the resources under your control and the first set of resources you get are your emotions okay so the time between the stimulus and response the time between the the emotions and the reactions that you decide that's the Gap that Victor Frankle is talking about you want that to be as wide as possible that's why every time you have an emotion the most important thing to do is to not react is to get is to practice not reacting when you feel something good or bad wait tell tell me why because this is where I see people get lost all the time they trust their emotions they think their emotions are right they are a map of reality and that if you feel angry you should act angry yeah and that's that's that's that's a great way to live an unhappy life and make other people unhappy around you I agree so violently I can't even tell you yeah yeah and think about all the times when you're building your companies that that you you felt something negative and if you just yelled at you snapped at somebody or said that was on your mind you would have done catastrophic brain damage to your company it would have been terrible and instead or you get that email you know you get an email and it's like I want I want to I want to answer right now don't never answer a bad email on the day you get it never just have it automat as a matter of fact have somebody who's managing your email for you so you don't see them how often are you checking your credit score afraid of identity theft or account breaches we all use the internet every single day for important things like Personal Banking and remote work so why not protect yourself with our sponsor Aura Aura is an allin1 cyber security service that keeps you safe online Aura identifies data Brokers exposing your info and submits opt out requests on your behalf Ora also monitors your credit tracks your passwords for data breaches and secures your online activity with VPN and anti malware protection you can try Aura for free for 2 weeks by clicking the link in the description or scanning the QR code you you see them and you think about it but you can't answer it because it disappears from your inbox for 24 hours make a deal with somebody why because you want to you want to your your your prefrontal cortex to be in charge you don't want your lyic system to be in charge it's a 2-year-old you know when kids when you have little kids and you know I have I have grown kids but now I have grandchildren and and they they yell and and what you tell little kids always is use your words what you're telling them is put more time between stimulus and response and choose the response that you want you're not going to say that to a little kid you're going to say something that's truncated like use your words and and people who are reactive what we say as social scientists we call them limic people because they're they're acting according to their limic system this is the most unrepresented should you buy something with it what should you do that that's what good entrepreneurs do with their lives but that's how we need to see our emotion so that's the most important point now what you do in that Gap is called metacognition and this is word gets really really interesting in that Gap the best thing that you can possibly do is to think about the emotions that you're feeling what they mean and how best to use them so that and and this is this is really the engagement of prefrontal Cortex that's what meditation practices tell you to do this is what prayer helps you to do this is what walking in nature helps you to do so all these metacognitive practices this is what therapy is supposed to do too by the way it's supposed to give you expertise in expanding that Gap then on top of that there's all of these ideas that you can use once you you've got this time you can make these decisions you can you can substitute emotions you can say that's not the right emotion here's a better emotion you can literally do that how's that not just faking it it's not it's what is so so for example um I work um I've talked a lot and and I've been ping around lately with you know rain Wilson who's the you know actor from The Office on the show he's terrific and and we grew up he grew up in Ballard yeah yeah and so five miles away from me is the just same ages me he was a classical musician just like I was I didn't know him but we have parall he play like bassoon or something he played the bassoon I play the French horn we probably over laugh an all state band or something as we were kids but we have the same childhood basically and so it's interesting and so we really connect on this but for example he talks about the fact that most uh he believes that most comedians suffer from depression and one of the reasons they're such good comedians is because they choose the substitute emotion when they're feeling sadness of humor which is also an appropriate response to things that are making you sad you make them into a joke and people think of it as a defense mechanism no it's an emotional substitution you it's the when you drink coffee the the the caffeine molecule it looks just like the adenosine molecule which is a neurom modulator that that is inhibitory it makes you feel tired it goes into the slot into the neuro the receptor for the adenosine and so you don't get adenosine that's what makes you feel peppy it blocks the thing that makes you feel tired that's how caffeine Works emotional substitution works in the same way the humor molecule goes into the sadness receptor but you can't do that unless you're taking time you cannot do that unless you actually expand the time between stimulus and response until you understand exactly how the science works and and getting as much time as you possibly can was that the angle that you took to understand the science or did you come at it from a God says that this is the way to go about life I'm a scientist you know and one of the reasons that I am religious is because of my because what I've learned intellectually so for me that was the the thing that freed me as well was so I'm call it 22 I am very unhappy like really scary sliding towards depression unhappy and I started reading about the brain now I don't remember what gave me that impulse it was probably something I learned in college plus dosm whatever but it like really made me think about the way the brain worked and I reading about how brain plasticity was this hotly debated thing and maybe you really could teach an old dog new tricks and one day I just decided I'm going to act as if brain plasticity is real right and then the more studies came out that showed that it really was real like the more I felt like I could grab a hold of that but it was it was a science based Insight that allowed me to really change the tenor of my entire life for sure for sure I mean it's interesting because people back when when I was a kid I'm you know 10 years old little 10 years older than you and when I was a kid or even when people were older who than me were coming through that the whole idea was that biology is just psychology you know that you can you can think bad things away and that was supposed to be really incredibly empowering now really what we believe with the Advent of you know the advances Neuroscience you know as a social scientist I have to know tons of Neuroscience teaching happiness is 30% Neuroscience what I teach I'm talking about the brain constantly it's much much more the case we believe that psychology is actually biology and and that sounds like it's not empowering like this is all determined emping it's super empowering because once you actually understand the process you can intervene in the process I talked to Young Executives for example I say one of the biggest threats to your career is an inappropriate sexual relationship in the workplace that's so hilarious to me it's and and and so he say so let's understand how this is going to work and you can psychologize it and say you know you need to and get get therapy no no no no no what happens is the first thing when you have a when you have attraction towards somebody who's a potential romantic partner there's the first thing that happens is sex hormones with testosterone and estrogen and in in combination in both males and females this is happening the second thing that happens in the neurochemical Cascade of falling in love is there's an up um and there's a an increase in neopine phrine and dopamine so that you get the sense of euphoria and anticipation the third thing that happens is a drop in serotonin now what happens when serotonin drop in serotonin when serotonin drops it makes you ruminate that's the reason it's associated with clinical depression because of the rumination procedure it's it's a there's a part of the brain called the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex which is incredibly active when you're ruminating it it's one of the things when you're ruminating on a business plan on an opera on a poem on somebody who's rejected you on you know so it's it's it's you see it incredibly active in depression and creativity and falling in love all of these things that all have rumination you know iterative rumination involved in it so it all is involved with a drop in serotonin which is why you don't want to have that early stages of falling in love for the rest of your life because you'll want to die oh and then and then the last you'll want to die the early stages of Love made me feel like I'd never get anything done again yeah yeah it makes you feel out of control your brain looks suspiciously like an MRI in the brain of a a methamphetamine addict you know that's how it felt I legitimately felt like I was on drugs and then the tide the warm tide that comes in of the increases in oxytocin which is a bonding neuropeptide that functions it's reciprocated you you well I mean what it happens when you have eye contact with somebody in a love connection and eye contact so you're both getting it the the biggest bolus that you get of that is when you first lay eyes on on eye contact with your newborn baby really yeah it's just like Fourth of July in your head but anyway so it's 1 2 3 4 that's the neurochemical Cascade and the reason I bring this up is when I'm talking to young people in business I say if you do not intervene early enough in this neurochemical Cascade you're going to be in trouble because it'll be out of control it'll be like you know no breaks on the roller coaster and then he was like I have this incredible career and this incredible job I don't know what happened we slept together and now I'm fired and you see it all the time like Harvard Business School case study uh what happened well they let the neurochemical Cascade go too long and you have to intervene number one don't put yourself in a position where you go to step two don't put yourself in a position where you go to step three what are you doing you're managing your brain and if you don't know the brain science you can't do that that's why this stuff is so incredibly empowering and when you read that stuff for the first time you're like oh I something I can do here now there's something I can use this it's not just psychology now it's something that's more tangible than that because the the Grandeur of this entire experience has a biological basis and one that I can understand and one I can I can actually manage yeah for me being able to picture the thing that helps a lot yeah once I could understand um the myelination process I was like okay now I get why this is something I need to repeat once I understood that the the brain is a caloric hog and from an evolutionary standpoint that means anything that you do repeatedly it's going to hardwire just to make it more efficient and so all of that coming together really allowed me to begin to improve your habits because your habits what they were doing was improving the management of the organ and and that was affecting your psychology and your Effectiveness and your happiness and and the whole you know the progress that you're making in your life that's why in the information is so critically important that's why it can be so lifechanging to learn science actually for sure so what are then the habits of happiness or maybe a better way this is a language you use in the book the macronutrients of Happiness like what are those things that we want to begin building our lives around if we really want to thrive so people define happiness in a lot of different ways but the biggest mistake that people make make is thinking that it's a feeling that happiness is a feeling oo it's not a feeling happiness has no happiness has feelings associated with it okay but to say that my Thanksgiving turkey has a smell is different than saying that the smell of the turkey is the Thanksgiving dinner right so that's a really big distinction that it's important to make so your Thanksgiving dinner is protein carbohydrates and fat that's literally what your Thanksgiving dinner is it also has a delicious smell that attracts you to it and that you want and if it didn't have that or had the wrong smell it smelled like you were you know microwaving trash when you walked into Mom's house for Thanksgiving you'd be like something's wrong here so but getting past the feelings on happiness is what will set you free to be able to manage it appropriately why do so many people feel lost and unhappy and what can they do about it people feel lost and unhappy is basically part of what it means to be human and there's a there's an irony in the having the big brains that we do we developed the a very large human brain over the past 40 million years for all kinds of reasons I mean it's the it's it gives us a it's our genetic advantage that we could say it gives us help it's our survival we're not fast you know we're not very good climbers you know we don't have a lot of hair on our bodies but we got big these got these big prefrontal cortex of the brain the problem with that is that we can understand ourselves we're the only species as far as we know that knows that you know Tom knows he's going to die for example you can understand the nature of your own existence but you you can't actually make your own existence work in a fundamentally different way and so knowing yourself that the essence of Consciousness is one that that gives you incredible transcendental information but at the same time it programs in a whole lot of misery so for for example you know we have a tendency to to our our genetic proclivities Force us to chase money and power and admiration and pleasure because those are the things that help you pass on your genes you get more animal skins and and flints and buffalo jerky in your cave and you're going to have more mates basically and so mother nature wants you to do that but it's not going to make you happy and you think that you want to be happy the big prefrontal cortex says I want to be happy because you're so conscious but the things that will help you pass on your jeans are not the things that are going to make you happy Mother Nature doesn't care if you're happy and that's why it's so much more work if it if you live by if it feels good do it you're going to be a you're going to be a mess weird but so true so I had a realization a long time ago I'm very grateful that this happened early it was of course born of misery but I became so profoundly unhappy chasing money I used to show up every day saying I am here to get rich and that provided me a lot of energy so as a child of the'80s growing up in Tacoma so and I really grew up on the edge of Tacoma it's probably more accurate even though my address really was Tacoma it's more accurate to say I grew up in pup yeah P the fair was oh yes the Western Washington State Fair now the Washington State Fair that is all accurate and I it felt almost Rural and so I felt like I was living in the middle of nowhere and John Hughes films showed me sort of this upper middle class Chicago suburb and I was obsessed with getting a big house and so I used to tell everybody I'm going to get rich I'm going to get rich and my family was like and I had friends that like and I could literally walk to a trailer park it was like that kind of part of Tacoma and so my family who were all sort of blue collar just thought that was hilarious and they're like yeah right and but that I was really obsessed and so I um were you good student were you I was but I was cheating so I was really I did very well in high school from cheating and then in college Lally from cheating yeah yeah like I was Charming yeah so I could get away with murder whether incredibly clever oh that's interesting my identity is not that of someone who was clever so it was was very much somebody who was Charming so I could make people laugh yeah and so I could get away with things whether that was asking my friends to let me literally take the test off of their desk and put it on mine so I could show my work right but of course I was showing their work uh but when I got to college and I'm not even sure what gave me this ins it but I was like I'm going to be spending a lot of money taking on a lot of debt I should actually learn what I'm here to learn so I set a mantra to myself sink or swim a or F I won't cheat not even once and so and I ended up doing very well in fact I did better in college than I did in high school were you happy in college I was I was it when I graduated though I was like I'll never go back I'm not one of those people was like oh I'm gonna get a master's and then a PhD I was like get me the [ __ ] out of here but it was was filmed so it was amazing yeah and you were living by the dictates of your own Integrity you were a man fully alive yes you were not shading the truth very true he's very important and this is what's you know this is there there's a famous speech by you know an and and I can't remember who it was the guy who went on to become the president of the University of Texas who gave became famous because he gave a an a a a a commencement speech that was about make your bed if you want to actually get your life on track start by making your bed what that was was uh to ask people to become men and women of integrity and that means even when nobody's looking at your bed make your bed because you're a person of Integrity you went to college and you said to yourself I'm going to be a person of Integrity I am not going to do that thing because that thing is not the right thing and so doing you ordered your mind in a different way it's really interesting so I wish that my life was like a straight trajectory after that but it becomes the darkest period of my life becomes right after college when I feel lost I feel feel hopeless I have no sense of how I'm going to put things together that was a really scary time because when you don't feel that you can affect the change that you want it really for me any well let's go back to what you said at the beginning so I call that the directives of evolution so if you think of ai ai has to be given instructions you have to want a high score or you have to want to stay within the lanes of your car whatever and humans as nature AI need directives and so like you said get a mate that's definitely one of them and man I really hope at some point later in the conversation after we've really g into your book we get to the fact that people are 30% less likely to get laid now which is absolutely [ __ ] terrifying to me um I have the solution for greater happiness on college campuses really it's more love yeah now what do you mean by that though I mean actually more relationships more romantic relationships this would actually solve a lot of the misery college campuses today actually is I mean what were you trying to do in college you probably wanted to fall in love right oh no so I I didn't so I had a girlfriend at the very beginning of college like the first few weeks who ID met in high school right and I broke up with her and re decided that to get into film school I had to really buckle down and I wasn't going to date I wasn't going to party I wasn't going to drink I wasn't going to do drugs and so I effectively locked myself in a room for four years to get good at film making so it was a very a different of experience to a lot of people but now I want to I want to get people back to your book because it is absolutely life-changing so I would show up every day trying to get rich that was my whole shtick as an entrepreneur yep and then because I wanted to build a studio right became profoundly unhappy pursuing that and the lesson that I ultimately ended up learning was that all that matters in life is how you feel about yourself when you're by yourself and so meaning and purpose matter and so I had better figure out that money wasn't going to bring me happiness I was living the cliche and so I needed to attach meaning and purpose to what I was how did you figure that out that money was not going to bring you happy so so on paper I was worth more money than I'd ever been worth so I was making more than I'd ever made I was making like maybe 80 85,000 something like that which for me that was at the time that was a lot of money and on paper I was worth about million dollar so I was like okay theoretically and paper money is very different than real money but on paper I was worth millions of dollars and I was still profoundly unhappy so I like and did you think what did you think if I'm get like see your your lyic system of your brain is saying Tom go for the money then you'll be happy so what did you imagine was going to happen to you if you had a bunch of money that would actually make you happy or did you actually form an image at all you just thought that if I had more money I'm going to mysteriously be happy yes then once I wasn't I asked myself maybe the right question which is what did yeah what did I think was going to happen and I realized that I thought I would feel about myself the way that I felt about other people when that had money when I looked at them yes and I admired them so social comp got it and you would actually so social comparison LED you to the admiration of other people who had been successful so therefore you would have that a sort of an admiration of yourself yes and that self admiration would have been the Genesis of your of your newfound happiness on the basis of your money and if I were as able to articulate that to myself as you were just now I could myself a lot of struggle but uh I couldn't either at 22 but yeah reading your book really began to bring home this idea that there are two different types of intelligence and so at the time I'm haunted by this idea genius is a young man's game I feel like a really late bloomer I end up spending all this time chasing money not I take this huge break from pursuing my passion and building that skill set so now I really feel like I'm behind the eightball and my whole life has felt like that and reading your book and the whole punchline of there's these two grand movements in your life and if you understand them then you really can avoid this decline in misery right you open your book with a story that I will never forget and when I put the book down I was like running around the office like telling anybody who would listen that story if you don't mind yeah walk people through the airplane 10 years ago I was the president of a think tank in Washington DC and I was having these profoundly disturbing thoughts am I on the right track where does this lead what is my goal but you're really successful at this point yeah I mean successful for you know for entrepreneurs in Southern California you know what do successful mean to be the president of a think tank in Washington DC maybe not so much but everybody's got a dream it's a great country isn't it and I was the president of a of a big prominent think tank in Washington DC and I was in my late 40s that was more or less the same age that you are right now I was looking at my life saying okay buddy what's the end game and look I had done resech I'm a social scientist I do work on human behavior and I had never really trained these tools on myself and I I was really disturbed by this because I didn't actually see what the future could actually bring that would be better or I would be happier and as I was kind of going through this I was doing what I always did which is basically fly around and ask people for money I was a nonprofit organization I had to raise $50 million a year and I was giving 175 speeches a year which is super fun I love Jes yeah yeah and so it's like running for the Senate and never getting elected basically which is you know for running for the Senate that's probably the best thing so you don't have to be a senator and as I was thinking about this kind of an existential crisis you know what am I what path am I on what I'm supposed to do I mean some of that was evident I was I have a family I'm in love with my wife I I I love my kids but I didn't have an understanding of the the course of my life I mean my religious life is figured out but I don't understand what I'm supposed to be doing what is Arthur Brook supposed to be doing such that I can be happier as a person and frankly I wasn't very happy for lots of reasons that anybody can understand I mean and and I heard a conversation behind me on a plane one night that changed my entire Direction it was a couple and I could it was night time like about 11:00 at night and I so it was dark and so people were doing what people do on airplanes at 11:00 at night you know they're drinking or they're or they're watching a movie or they're sleeping but I could hear a couple talking and I could tell it was a man and a woman I could tell by their voices that they were elderly clearly old and I suppose that they were probably married based on their conversation I couldn't quite make out the husband's words cuz he was sort of mumbling but the wife's voice was very penetrating was coming through the chairs and she's he mumbles and he she she says uh don't don't say it would be better if you were dead and then he mumbles some more and she says it's not true that nobody remembers you it's not true that nobody appreciates you anymore and I'm thinking this is a guy who holy cow he's he's not he's not a big shot he's not an entrepreneur he's not you know he's not somebody who lived up to his own expectations got the he got the experience or the education or the job that he wanted and now life is kind of over and he's disappointed and that makes sense or it made sense to me because look if you're a big shot then you're going to die happy huh and the lights go on at the end of the flight an hour later or so and I'm kind of curious It's not PRI intin but look you know this is my laboratory as a social scientist it is an overheard conversation perhaps and and so I turn around and it's one of the most famous men in the world this is somebody who's going to do 10 times as much with his life as I ever am he's Rich he's famous he's universally admired he's not controversial for stuff that he did many many years ago and I thought to myself my whole model is wrong the problem that I have the direction that I'm going is incorrect because my model of of of satisfaction is wrong here's the model the world tells you here the the lyic system of your brain the ancient part of your brain that was extent a million years ago and all of marketing and entertainment which is a a a distributed digital limic system says work hard make money be successful be admired be envied Bank it die happy and it's wrong and and you know in your heart it's wrong because you're always asking yourself hey Tom what have you done for me lately that's what your mind is asking you it's not good enough that you founded a company a long time ago and it made a bunch of money it's not good enough we we need to excel we need to achieve we need to create value that's how we're created as people and this guy was blowing away the the world's Theory of Happiness of satisfaction and I said to myself I don't want to be explaining to my wife Esther on a plane 30 years from now 40 years from now I might as well be dead and so I set myself to crack the code what can I do and by the way the data are very clear that the people who have the earliest success the mindblowing success they're the most likely to be unsatisfied with their lives at the end of their lives the story that you tell about Darwin was unnerving he could have been the man on the plane Charles Darwin who is on anybody's list of the three greatest scientists of all time he was the Talk of the Town his name Rings through the anals of History man he's a hero this is I think I may have been even more struck by the Darwin confession many many people who we rever today who had early astonishing success they died unhappy but we don't record that we record their success not the unhappiness with their life later on Charles Darwin had his greatest successes starting when he was 27 years old we all know that he visited the Galapagos Islands on the on the Voyage of the begle which is a fiveyear sailing Voyage around the world to collect plants and animals send them back to England he was getting quite famous in his absence but when he got back he drops this intellectual atomic bomb which is the ideas that led to his theory of natural selection AKA Evolution and for 30 years I mean he was I mean he's Rich he was famous he was the man but then his progress stopped it stopped because he didn't have the mathematical ability to keep up with his own research his research passed him by technically and there was a there was actually an advance that he needed that today we call genetics that he couldn't understand he was written in German he didn't study German he was a bad student he didn't do his mathematics homework he never learned very much about statistics and so the result was that he was left in the dust which happens to people in their 40s and at most most their early 50s based on their early success and he spent the last 20 years of his life complaining about the disappointing I mean he wrote 11 books after that point but they all sort of derivative they're like straw and he said I don't have the energy to do any work that I really find satisfying to his friends and you know he died disappointed he died sad the great maybe the greatest naturalist of all time died sad he could have been the man on the plane and this is not what the world tells you the world says bust your pick get as as early as you can get bet 10,000 hours man kill it kill it Bank it you know and but if if if so what you know the the cinon of Happiness Excellence retire at 40 well how many people do you know who've done that who've actually gotten happier who retired at 40 I know none the point is that's not how human endeavor actually works and so we need a better model and I saw that I did the research and I said time to build a better model that actually describes the Dynamics of human experience that actually digs into what actually brings us happiness and that's what my research is about that's what I'm dedicating the rest of my life to exploring all right so to put a fine point on it the punchline ends up being there's two kinds of intelligence so type one is fluid sort of raw intelligence it's Darwin's genius was fluid intelligence it's Innovative capacity it's what made tomt which is your indefatigable energy your focus your ability to get better and better to be the ninja in your particular field which gets better and better through your 20 it sounds sexy even as you're saying it that that's what I find so horrifying that's hustle culture man hustle culture rewards that and by the way and it's been an awesome ride oh and it's super addictive it's super it actually works in the same dopamine Pathways as you know methamphetamines and alcohol yes it is my one addiction success addiction yeah it's a killer and you you I write about it in the book about the success addiction that virtually all entrepreneurs virtually all Strivers have you can be you know the ace electrician and have a success addiction because we are wired to want to be excellent and to be admired which leads you to get better and better and better at what you do using what we've identified is what psychologists have identified for a long time now as fluid intelligence your the structure of your brain lends itself to just incredible energy and focus and to get better and better and better as an individual at solving any problem faster than others the problem is this is the problem that led to Darwin's misery and so many others it peaks in your late 30s or early 40s and then it declines and then it declines faster and if you try to keep your groove you're going to ride that thing to the basement and you're going to be the man of the plane you're going to be Darwin you're going to be bitter and unhappy and most people think they get one curve that's the bad news the good news is that's not your only curve you have a second curve that comes in behind it which is not your fluid intelligence which goes up Peaks comes down it's your crystallized intelligence your wisdom which doesn't have fast working memory the Innovative capacity is not as good but it's your ability to identify patterns to use the information in your environment like having the New York Public Library at your disposal it takes a while to get the information like I can't remember that thing because it's on the fourth floor back in the stacks I got to send my guy to get it but it's in there and you can use this information to be a teacher to be a historian to have actual wisdom that's what you get better at through your 40s and 50s and you can stay high in your 60s and 70s and Beyond that's your true success curve as you get older the key is you got to walk from fluid intelligence over to crystallized intellig you got to walk from the Star litigator to the managing partner from the from the Innovative startup entrepreneur to the venture capitalist from the from the mathematical researcher to the professor those are the different curves you got to go from one to the other and if you're stuck on the first and if that's your vision of your own greatness and you can't be thrown off that you'll be chasing that for the rest of your life even though it's just it's in it's in the basement and you can't get it back so there are some people that can wake themselves up out of the Matrix other people that must be awoken I do fear sometimes that I need to be awoken uh but you woke yourself up I'm so curious so you're doing your thing you're very successful and I don't know maybe and I guess we should tell people that you started out as a musician yeah a French horn player nonetheless very specific yes and very esoteric and made a living as a professional French horn player if I'm not mistaken exactly right all right so you're killing that game but you realize that you're declining do you think that going on that is what allowed you to then consciously step away while it seems like you were still in your Prime as the leader the president of this Think Tank I got very lucky I got very lucky that I failed my first career and after having a lot of success I went into early Decline and out of desperation to support my family and to have a future out of my 20s I had to change gears I didn't have a college education I dropped out of college you know dropped out kicked out splitting hairs when I was 19 um I and I went on the road as a as a musician what that's my parents call it the Gap my Gap decade right which you can imagine how fun that was for them and you know kind of made a living kind of made my rent you know but I was I was living my best life because I was a young guy I didn't have health insurance I didn't go to the dentist for six years at one point which I'm still paying for and but like I've told friends I um I never missed a day without cigarettes so you know you you've figure out what my priorities were at that particular point in my life and fortunately I gave that up a long time ago but I was going into decline as a French horn player and things that used to be easy became hard and things that were hard became impossible and I saw the writing on the wall I saw a lot of older classical musicians who were deeply alcoholic and unhappy and had been good and now weren't and didn't have the respect of the younger people that were having a harder time making a living and I thought look I'm barely making a living now I'm ambitious and it's going well I mean look I was in the Barcelona Symphony so I was making a middle class living and that's a good Orchestra but I knew that I couldn't keep it up and so I I had to change just by necessity I had to change and I went back to college got my college degree by correspondence um and at 31 left to start my PhD that by the way that's not just an arbitrary thing that's the family business my father was a college professor my grandfather was a college professor so I knew that business more better than any other I know how to do a PhD my father was working on his PhD even when I was a kid so I saw that whole process that wasn't foreign or exotic to me at all and I knew what professors do for a living and I said okay I can do that because I know that I was VE I was very ashamed I was just I felt horrible about myself that I had that I I had failed at this thing that was everything to me I mean I there were I would have just as soon died than to not be a French horn player because there was nothing else but I didn't die and I couldn't die because I was a married man I was in love with my wife and and you know we were going to have kids kids and what what was I going to do I mean you were you honest with her about what you're going through at that point yeah yeah she knew well she knew full well I mean she knows me I'm an open world I'm an open book with her and U I mean she's also smart and you know we she she knows me super well in no small part because when we were dating um we didn't speak the same language and we spoke rudimentary amounts of the same language for the entire first year of our marriage oh you got to know each other you get to know each other in a in a deep human way when you actually can't talk cuz you can't lie I recommend this to everybody that's really unexpected yeah yeah how did you fall in love if you guys weren't speaking the same you saw her I was 24 she's a rock and roll singer from Barcelona she's beautiful and she's lovely and she's kind and she's smart and weirdly she liked me and so um and I threw in big time I moved to Barcelona to try to convince her to marry me without speaking a word of the same language this is what entrepreneurs do right this is the ultimate entrepreneurial experience is to give away your heart and and to take a chance that's what young people today they're so non-entrepreneurial if they're unwilling to fall in love because that I mean forget the companies forget the money forget all the cool stuff that you and I been able to do professionally fall in love that's entrepreneurship right that's the big bad I've never heard anybody describe it like that entreprene risk-taking like why do you entrepreneurship is taking a big risk in in in looking for major rewards for explosive returns I'm not going to tell you how to denominate those returns it's faith in resources that you don't already have in hand these are the characteristics of the entrepreneur when I was writing a textbook on entrepreneurship I was looking at that I'm saying it's a it's a big mistake to talk about this in terms of money we should be talking about this in terms of love because that's the currency of life and when a whole generation of young people are miserable because they're comfortable putting millions of people people's dollars at risk to start a company but they're unwilling to go bankrupt in their relationships they're unwilling to have somebody crush them by breaking up with them they're just not very entrepreneurial that's the problem we have people who are too non-entrepreneurial which is one of the reasons that we have too few people who are in love today as far as I'm concerned so that was the thing man I took that I jumped I did that I did that and that that was actually very good because that gave me a lot of confidence that I could conquer my fear I could take a risk I mean look it was it was a very low chance that this was going to work out and we're going to learn each other's language and she's going to realize I'm a hopeless stooge or something or we're not going to love each other or something and we just celebrated our 30th wedding anniversary congratulations we have three adult children incredible it's amazing so so that was we know each other deeply deeply deeply she knows all of my nonsense because she knows it without the words you can shade all kinds of Truth with with words you can't when it's just your heart you're just a heart tohe heart and that's really unexpected that's very intriguing to me I would because I have leaned on language so heavily in my life in fact if there's anything so I once went live for for 24 hours as a thing like to celebrate hitting a certain number on Facebook I don't even remember now what number but went live for 24 hours and then literally I that morning or the next afternoon whatever I flew to London and then uh I did an event with no microphone and I spoke for nine hours so at the end of that something happened to my my vocal cords and I was having a hard time talking and I could feel like my throat would click it was so distressing go to a therapist they stick a camera down my throat the whole nine like trying to figure out what did I do and I start really worrying what does my life look like if I can't speak yeah and that was the first time where I was like whoa like imagine losing that thing that made you you and I've always been highly verbal that was always the thing that I could terrible at math got horrendous SAT scores but I'm highly verbal you're extremely expressive you're extremely expressive I will give you that I'll take that it's absolutely true so and I thought o God what happens if I lose my voice so I can't imagine trying to court the woman who is now my wife almost 20 years uh without my voice that's interesting that and and me too look I mean I talk for a living I literally I mean blah blah blah that's what I do for a living did it not hit you then that like oh God I'm taking away my superpower well super I was I was a French horn player okay so you guys connect over music yeah well we were at a music festival in France in dong in France that's how you met yeah and I was on tour and she was studying and she was studying with a teacher an American teacher there and we met at this music festival and and and we were playing music and that's what you did and so that that made it a little bit easier I mean we were less reliant on on talking yeah than than than I am today yeah that's awesome yeah yeah for sure and so that was you know when I went into the client as a musician she was right there to be helpful and she gave me she gave me the courage yeah was she warm about it or was she super warm she said I was deeply unhappy because I was in Decline look humans are not intended to decline decline is hugely painful because happiness comes from progress unhappiness comes from regress and when you feel that something is harder than it used to be so it's interesting you know you see this the decline of the fluid intelligence care we just talked about if you're really a striver um and that's who I'm working with I'm working with people want to make the most with their lives you if you look if you never do anything with your life you're not going to know it's over you're not going to have this big crisis at the end of your life it's because you never did anything and I was like I watched a lot of TV awesome it's like and I can still do that don't you think their whole life is a crisis not really no actually no no not really yeah know for sure I mean well here's the thing it depends on what you mean by happiness and what a good life is you know I want my life as a striver but I also recognize that it's not normal in many ways to strive not to strive to the extent that you have but is that what you mean by it's not normal yeah and it it creates problems I mean you you you re hell on yourself y when you're actually doing the stuff that you've done and there's a lot of ways you could have had a much easier life a much more relaxing life a life with greater peace yeah for sure so that's all I mean it's it's not a very profound point in that way but when I you know when I was when things were going poorly and I was deeply unhappy cuz I was in a state of regress my wife said you're unhappy you just need to quit and I said that's insane I mean like one can't just walk away but of course and she said yes you can absolutely you can do anything you want I said we'll be poor she said we're already poor you know how do you know you it's it's you know multiplying by zero is still zero and uh and so we did we just we we bailed you know we went to we left Barcelona we moved to boka Ron Florida where nobody knew us I took a pretty easy teaching job and I started studying by correspondence at night nobody knew I was doing it she had a minimum wage job she spoke very poor English had not graduated from high school um and so was learning English and making you know six bucks an hour or whatever it was and I was getting paid to teach the French horn while secretly working on my bachelor's degree at night to build my to to rebuild the person that I was and then finished that went on to and started my PhD which is what I really thought I needed to do and that took me a little I came here to Los Angeles as a matter of fact in studyed the Rand graduate school in Santa Monica and then I learned a new trade I learned I actually learned who I was as a person again for the first time but it was like four years of you know it was weird I couldn't I remember trying to sign a check during that time and I couldn't replicate my own signature and it turns out that that's actually quite frequent when people in this period of liminality between faces of their life that their handwriting will change what yeah yeah it's actually a common occurrence I didn't gnomes like I'm trying to send a check for the bank sorry Mr Brooks this is not the right signature is it is it because there's a subconscious part of you that's like I'm not that person anymore it's I don't it's it's not well understood but there's a the the neurophysiology of a lot of this stuff is we're just starting to understand there's no doubt something that where these things are connected where your sense of yourself is somehow connected to to you know these motor skills in a particular way I couldn't replicate my own signature sufficiently I got like rejected Ed by the bank for cashing a check into my own account at one point I'm like my my my early dementia I mean what early stage something what's going on here and what it was was I was in this profound state of liminality which in retrospect was this just fertile period you know I tell the story in the book is a place that you and I both know as Pacific Northwest guys there's a place called Lincoln city in Oregon that's you're near just north of Newport and I used to go there because my aunt was the receptionist aot tell and she had she lived in a trailer near the beach and it was like this Bliss I used to go there and I remember the first time I was trying to fish off the rocks in in Lincoln City Oregon I was catching nothing this old guy lives in a shack is watching me and he comes up he says kid I've been I've been watching you you know today he'd be arrested but and and I said he said you're not catching anything right I said no he says cuz you're doing it wrong you can't catch any fish unless it's a falling tide that's when the tide is going out very quickly rushing out between the rocks and I'm like well all the fish are gone right he says no no no you'll see it's stirring up the Plankton the fish go crazy it's happening in 45 minutes he has his fishing pole we throw our we throw our lines in and we're pulling them out by you know by the tens it's unbelievable and and afterward he's feeling sort of philosophical he lights up a cigarette on the Rocks I'm 11 or something and he says Hey kid you know during a falling tide you can only make one mistake I said what's that he said not having your line in the water and I have learned this that the time between the tides of your life the falling TI of your life looks like you're losing everything get your line in the water because that's the most fertile period of your life so what does it mean to have your line in the water you must try new things you must be fully Alive you must try everything you possibly can you must need you to Define Fully Alive to be to to wake up each day and to live that day full of possibility not to nurse your wounds not to waste your time not to try to do things that you used to do to be fully Alive is to be live to the new set of experiences that's that's coming across the transom that's super important because during this time of luminal there by the way there's a lot of research on this this is not just an anecdote about you know this kid fishing in Oregon this is there's a lot of research that shows that this time between periods in your life which there's a guy named Bruce filer who's who writes a book about Transitions and he said during these life Quakes you know if your if your spouse just left you that's a fertile period for you to learn new things if you you know you've lost somebody to death if you've if you're if you're going through chemotherapy for example this is and you and you're very afraid through a pandemic for example for example if you during the pandemic many people find that despite the fact that they hated and were insecure and it was horrible that their lives transformed for the good that in terms of what we're talking about here the two curves fluid and crystallized intelligence that period between the two where you're you're inclining in one and the other's increasing but you don't know how to get on it or even what it means that's your most fertile period That's when things are can be absolutely magic they're not going to be fun you might not be happy but that's when magic can happen and the thing I try to convince everybody is look somebody that's had the kind of success that most people only dream of nothing has come close to giving me as much joy fulfillment anything protection from the downside all of it other than my marriage my marriage is the thing that I protect most fiercely I am not worried about losing my money I'm not worried about losing uh accolades I am terrified of losing my wife yeah yeah and and and mark can have a horrible day and you don't like it but your wife is really mad at you and you're bummed yeah yeah even even if you know she's not going to divorce you you're bummed because you don't want the person you love the most to be upset with you you want her to be happy with you cuz what's happened it's basically like your stock market radically tank the stock market of what really matters in your life is the way that that works out it's actually a really interesting way to think about it okay so if that is the thing if that's the thing that's going to really the thing that we're pursuing is love and a bunch of different guyses but the relationship that's going to be most important to us is the relationship with our spouse how do we do that well and let's start at the beginning so one thing you've said is delete your dating apps yeah yeah or there there are some people who you know wind up meeting their partner and getting married based on dating apps but dating apps the evidence suggests that it's making dating harder actually why would be true because it's making it harder to find somebody with you with whom you can have the complex connection that's appropriate for a couple different reasons number one is the Paradox of choice so dating apps give you too much choice and so what that means is that there's always something better so are you saying subtle yeah yeah well part of the reason is because you're not going to find the perfect person you're going to make the perfect relationship o That's Rel work you know people think I'm going to find I mean magical thinking is a huge problem love at first sight doesn't exist and soulmates don't exist right I mean I I believe that God wants me to be with my wife but that's an entirely different thing than saying that there was this there was one woman in the world and she lived in Barcelona and she was a little girl and I was growing up in Seattle and the No No No circumstances were such that I met the person that was going one of the people that could have been perfect for me if I worked to make it perfect and your wife is cool with that framing yeah because she knows that that's what God wants us to she you know we believe that this is what God wants us to do God puts people together and then puts a lot in our hands we have free will and we have to you know part of making Cosmic love-based progress is the things that we do in our relationship this is the way that we work out the stuff of love in life is is not it's all perfect then you're in heaven automatically well boring that's boring no no no progress man and you got to make prog one of the ways you make progress is the imperfect that you make as perfect as you can using your imperfect tools and that's the that's the exciting Adventure that is a a romantic relationship and if and if you start off with the idea there's always something better because of magical thinking and I'm going to find the perfect one if I keep swiping right or left or whatever it is what is it left or right I don't know I've never used them that's right CU we you and I have been married men for a long time but that I'm 21 you're how many years 32 man it's impressive 32 yeah congratulations I am in awe of that my wife's like it's like 10 minutes underwater that's good I know I like it's like being married to an oldtime comedian from the cat skills it's nice except she's Spanish yeah Spanish Jackie Mason anyway it's a good reference that no one in the audience got but that's okay Google him anyway so he's probably on YouTube yeah uh black and white maybe yeah yes Jesus so that's number one the second reason however is that that it and again I'm not down on dating apps I'm just not I'm not down I'm not down with how people use them typically use them feels like you're caveat I am caveat for sure because there's nothing that's good or bad but that thinking makes it so exactly right and so the big thinking error in apps is finding somebody who's who's completely compatible with us the technology enables compatibility the the technology is enables you to find comp to find people who are more and more and more compatible that you couldn't on the on the human Market and so that matchmakers your parents wouldn't find for you or certainly blind dates or somebody you meet in a bar you just you know it's a crap shoot for compatibility which is actually what you need we're too compatible this is something that most people don't understand that sounds crazy yeah I know and so it but but people will sort on their political views and their likes and their dislikes and you know physical characteristics what you find is that people that match up on compatibility ex you know um ex Ane a priori in the dating Market they even look alike right and and and that's a problem you know it's basically you wind up looking for somebody who's effectively your sibling which as my adult kids say is not hot that's not hot not hot not hot and so when people are looking for excess compatibility they like the person less they find them less attractive what you need is a base of compatibility which is lower than you think and then tons of complimentarity which is interesting and sexy okay you want difference yes aged not opposit opposites don't attract where do you want want you're now confusing me where do you want things to be where do you want to be compatible you need Basics on non-negotiable values preach right no non-negotiable values negotiable values doesn't matter people think that too many values are non-negotiable that are actually negotiable politics shouldn't be in there you should not sort on politics now 71% of political liberals say they won't date a conservative 41% of conservatives say they won't date a liberal which just shows that conservatives have lower standards politically than liberals and or maybe it's men versus women or something like that I know I got to look into the data more but the whole point is that that that's a that's that's a ridiculous barrier that's a ridiculous barrier that's just that's basically like classifying being a Democrat or Republican like being Jewish or Catholic or atheist it's interesting man like this is one area where I'm with you in the abstract but political stuff's gotten so weird people are so devout about it that that isn't interesting I don't want to be like even even I try not to be dogmatic but even if I were I'm not being dogmatic if they're dogmatic like that's not interesting to me yeah I get it and one of the best ways actually is what what I recommend to my students for example is that they don't talk at all about politics for four dayses to see if yeah yeah to have until we get into that exactly right so you don't actually so the Dogma or something and if you can start to fall in love suddenly less dogmatic yeah you're less dogmatic about politics and the person you're falling in love with when they say something that you would have previously thought was a non-starter was a deal breaker it no longer is are you and your wife politically aligned kind of now just because we've been together for so long but you weren't in the beginning no she was Spanish I mean she was brought up you know a hard red atheist family you know really really you know it's like complete socialists you know they were on the losing side of the Spanish Civil War and they were all atheist she hadn't been to church since her first communion and interesting I quietly assumed that was the first thing you guys bonded over oh no way that was just like that was a 10-year project for me wow totally 10year project for me was just but you know she when I met her she's like no I don't believe in marriage that's an Antiquated institution doesn't make sense we'll see we'll see I mean and I moved to Barcelona to try to convince her to marry me how long were you guys together before you got married uh it well I hoped that it would be very short but it took me two years to close the deal okay from Meet to married no from from moving to marriage okay how long from Meet to mared three so we were apart for a year and I was you know right and she didn't speak any English I didn't speak any Spanish or Calon and and so I thought I'm GNA the only I had a premonition I mean I I met her for a week and I told my dad I think I think I'm going to marry this girl whoa he's like can't wait to meet her I got some problems and she doesn't uh speak English shees live in the United States and she doesn't believe in marriage but I think I think it's surmountable other than that yeah and uh and so you know we kind of stayed in touch for a year and then I'm I quit my job and I moved to Barcelona took a job in the Barcelona Symphony because I had this I had this very strong sense and by the way maybe it didn't work out it was an entrepreneurial thing to do and I was 24 and it was okay and I worked on it and worked on it learned the language um and we were in love and when I was 26 and I said we have to get married you have to marry me she said yes and you know and then little by little by and you come together see the couples change people change over the course of their lives and couples change together and the couples that don't do well change apart because the don't change together there's too much pride is what comes from it so what'll happen is tons of difference at the very beginning lots of love glue glues you together and then you start to change together the ultimate goal by the way for a marriage relationship that lasts tons of passion we talked about the neurochemical Cascade of falling at love of you know love addiction but within five years what you need to be left with is what we call companionate love your goal within five years to be is to be best friends with a person that's your goal there's lots of passion and companion at love that also sounds not hot you know here's my companion Mrs Brooks you know no companion love is this is the person that you'll be looking into her eyes on your dying day and that who knows all your secrets with whom you can be truly yourself who really has your best interests at heart that's what companion at love is and not every relationship can get to that but that's the go what do you think that what's the importance of keeping sex alive because that's the that's the a a physical bond that is the most intimate understanding of the of your relationships it's an expression of your great greatest intimacy it's also it's also super fun yeah A and B yeah so I make but you can have sex with people you're not in love with you know people do that all the time too Carfax it's way way way more satisfying when it's in the expression of your greatest intimacy that's why the happiest people have one sexual partner in a in a given year it doesn't mean one in your whole life interesting it means one there's actually been a study on that a study on that using the General Social Survey of the University of Chicago yep is that to me that just sounds like a proxy for committed relationship yeah it it is and and the greatest expression of the deep deep deep intimacy and commitment is is usually sex because when people ask Lisa and I like what's the secret to a long marriage we always say like one of our top things obviously communicate but have a lot of sex like you don't want to become roommates right and there is something also and I don't know what you think about this but there's something about there's a an electricity to Crossing that line and there's one person that you cross that line with and not having that like one for that just entire part of your life to die and for you to never have that thing H there's tons of oxytocin that happens during sexual activity that you don't get otherwise as well and that bonds you together again and again look there are other ways to get it too by the way so sex is not the only way people often ask is it bad that couples fight and the answer is it's bad when they don't and I mean some people fight a lot some people fight a little my wife wife and I fight a lot we fight a lot we have a lot of arguments a lot Spanish because yeah I mean for them it's just a form of communication you know and there's nothing that's not on the surface and and so that was hard the first five to 10 years I was very agre you're not built like that I'm American you know we didn't do that growing up in the Pacific Northwest did we I mean it was like I yeah that was not learning to fight well was a big thing I had to learn but the key is about about that couples that never never never fight they're missing out on some of the greatest sorts of of intimacy because the friction is there and saying things you that you think that you weren't saying before I heard you say this before will you take a second to say that very clearly the the idea of of intimacy through fighting yeah people often say it's so weird you know after we have a big fight then we then we make love as if it were make done that I never do that are are you in the mood for sex after you've been in a fight well it depends on how the fight resolves but the whole point is that a lot of people do that and the reason is because they're raw and intimate in their communication sometimes for the first time in a long time okay for the first time in a long time so if you're the kind of couple that has a you're not seeing each other very much because you're working really hard and you're on the road and and you're not talking about things and a lot of tension is building up and and then finally you have a knockdown drag out fight and you're saying things that you think that that that are deeply intimate that are your deepest feelings that you would never say at work because you don't have the kind of relationship with other people you don't want to demoralize them you don't have trust you have enough trust and you say things that might be they might be cutting they might be wounding but they're deeply intimate you have a an intimate Bond you have a a a spiritual bond with that other person because of the intimacy of the communication even though it was wounding that's really interesting so I will say this I have had moments where I was completely uninterested in sex until we had I would even necessarily say fight because fight implies that it's like really fiery um there was one big disagreement that my wife and I got into and it was really interesting the when we when I brought up the thing we happened to be in a swimming pool and so my wife likes me to hold her and walk her around the pool and it ended up being this amazing way to have this argument because it was really like hey I've been meaning to say this thing for a few days now here's how this thing made me feel like let's really get into it and we couldn't see each other's eyes and it made it way easier to have the conversation so we were like cheek to cheek but we couldn't see each other's eyes so there it just became easier to like get those things off of our chest it was really wonderful but I and so I didn't want to have sex until we had that conversation but it wasn't like I'm going to run you upstairs and like I've never had that response like I don't people are different for sure but it's important that you have those relationship moments and those might be as bonding your fights might be as bonding for you when done well are you yeah for sure and there's technique Techni talk to me about so so my guess is that you're in a 21-year marriage and you're going to be married till you die yes you're going to die yes I mean until death to you part for sure MH and um so my guess is I could probably write a script for your fights based on that and when when something's not right the the accusation is that we are having a problem mhm now when you look at a couple that's tenuous and have really having trouble and really in danger it's like you're doing something and it makes me feel a particular way so important super important and just changing the language because language change has very strong cognitive impact so if you you want your fights to be you're going to fight and it's important that you relate to each other and you're honest with each other but you want it to stop actually creating so much brain damage just change the just change the the pronouns that's the first thing to do is to change the pronouns in the fights don't say I and you start saying we and us we and us we have we have to do this thing I mean when whenever we do this thing we have a problem and and you'll find your stumbling across it at the very beginning you'll find because it's because and you did this we had this problem we had this breakdown communication because then you're trying to solve a problem together and it's a joint problem you're trying to solve and when you solve it you've made progress together as opposed to I won and you lost that's really super important and just using different pronouns starts it can actually repair a multitude of problems my wife and I do and this has been really powerful for us is we talk in insecurities when we get into an argument yeah so if one of us is getting angry it's like we have a shared understanding if you're angry it's because you're insecurity has been tripped so confess like what's the insecurity what's the thing that's bothering you so that you can get off of the surface level argument which is usually very fruitless and you can get down into you fin the milk without talking to me and it makes me feel unseen whatever and once you get down there like ooh whoa why is that making you feel unseen and also that the person isn't just I have an insecurity you triggered it shame on you it's like okay I have an obligation to work on my insecurities you have an obligation to care enough about me that you want to know but I can't just be like you have to deal with it I have an insecurity and you better tread around forever you're doing a lot right I can tell you that and this is one of the reasons that you you you state so openly that your marriage is the most important thing in your life it's it's the central institution of your life I mean like this goes all bust and and by the way this is going to go bust it's all going to go bust yeah right but the one thing on your deathbed is Lisa I mean here's the problem one of you is going to die first yes although if you ask my wife she really wants us to die simultaneously yes that would be like she's like I don't care if I die in a PL class as long as you're next to me and I'm like what what you talking about why are we both going down like if I have to die in a plane crash I want you to be safe on the ground she's like no way I'd want to be with you so yeah that she says it out of love though so it's you actually laugh about it totally get not like I sure hope you die in a plane crash with me yeah no I get it it's a it's but but that's a you know this is is an issue right because that you will be separated yeah the data say that except under the oddest of circumstances you'll be separated y but what typically happens is really really happy couples except under conditions of bad luck they tend to live long time have a long marriage and one of them dies and then the other dies it's crazy man uhhuh uhhuh because you have a joint life you have a joint life together the Enterprise it's the the startup it's a you're co-founders the other thing that's really interesting too is that the a lot of the relationships that do best are startups not mergers that's interesting tell me more meaning second marriage no well I mean second marriages are sometimes they're really great but the the marriages that that have the greatest likelihood of success they're entered into earlier when you're both in life startup mode as opposed to I got my law degree and you got your PhD and you got your startup and I got my startup and I think we're and we have separate bank accounts and now now let's have a merger startups are more successful than mergers there's dat and oh yeah and the worst of course are hostile takeovers or Acquisitions but you know wow okay so no you can have a merger that works but you got to go into it with your eyes open and make it as as much of a startup as you can make and that was I don't recommend subra bank accounts I don't recommend it really yeah there's huge data showing that couples are more successful when they have joint bank accounts interesting let me run something by you so when Lisa and I first got together um we had enough difference in values that it was I looked at the things that she spent money on and I thought they were dumb she looked at the things I spent money on she thought they were dumb so what we did was we said bills are joint but spending is separate and so we put our money together and then we each had the exact same amount to spend yeah and at the time so when we got married she certainly had more money than me because I was just absolutely broken in debt uh but then when we got married I was the only one with a job and the one insight and I wish I could track back to where I got this but I was like this because this is all prefunctional internet the internet existed but nobody was really using it for much um and I said okay look we're going to come together but the we are in this together so whatever money I earn it really is half yours right and so we're going to take care of all the bills together we'll have the separate spending accounts um and really have looked at everything in that way like when we started impact Theory um the lawyers were like who's going to own 51% and I was like what are you talking about and they said you can't be 50/50 that's the ultimate divorce Nightmare and so my wife was like you're obviously going to work more than me like you take the 51% she's like I don't have any problem with that whatsoever and I was like Over My Dead Body I was like I need you to know to the core of your existence this company whatever if something goes wrong with us I have a problem if we're in a position where I'm like thank God I have 51% I've already lost everything so right 50/50 you're saying is impact theory is an extension of Tom and so therefore my life is 50/50 with you so axiomatically impact theory is 50/50 nice and really what I wanted to say was impact theory is an extension of Tom and Lisa right this is a thing we are doing together and even if we weren't I mean I suppose at that point I wouldn't have thought about it but like if my wife betrayed me I'd still give her half my [ __ ] M just be like you love her yeah yeah not only that I don't know who I would have become had I not in a startup with her you're not prey at all and all you were doing is avoiding fights by you know having separate allowances yes it's not the same thing I mean it's just that's just that's just prudent is the way that it works out it's like yeah we we're going to tend to fight over this and and you know we don't want me to accidentally take all the spending on you know giant chest pieces or you know or you know Batman statues or something video games that was video games whatever the thing happens to be and so let's let's you know make it so this we just avoid a fight let's just simply avoid a fight and that way you can I can laugh at the way you spend your money you can laugh at the way I spend my money instead of feeling a source of resentment but basically saying my money your money my account your account my property your property that's problematic from the very beginning because what you're basically is you're planning for is the disillusion you're planning for the I mean it's a union and you know the union of this is to say that we're I mean it's biblically it's a a man shall leave his parents and and cleave to his wife it's one flesh I mean the whole in in religious Traditions divorce is supposed to be like cutting off your arm it's supposed to be that kind of a I mean I get I get it it happens sometimes I get it I you know I live in the real world it happens sometimes but for when you're doing it from a startup you can't you don't really understand yourself without Lisa like who's Tom I don't know alone literally yeah that's the thing now not everybody can have that you know and I'm not saying people shouldn't not everybody can can be held to these standards because of the the the reality of things that have happened in their lives and you know I talked to people who have been the victims of abuse and and addiction and criminal behavior and all of this and and they have a need for love in their life and they get married again and they have an established life and it doesn't have these per per perfect standards social science gives you the the ideal circumstances but not the only circumstances and so here's the key when the circumstances are not ideal you have to work consciously with your eyes open to make them as ideal as you can so if you've got a merger on your hands got a merger on your hands good you can make that work too but make it as as start upy as you can yeah the thing I would encourage people is to understand that their the reason a startup works is for a set of principles if you understand the principles and can apply them later in life so be it one of them is going to be being open to being Changed by the relationship going into it and knowing we are creating a union and in doing that like what are the ways that we have to move and to dance in this thing in order to make it work and then a big part of it especially if you're older is understanding that selection is 80% of the battle like if you select poorly you're going to be in dire circumstances they they are I mean again without magical thinking without thinking there is one soul M so Choose Wisely I believe in soulmates I don't believe in love First Sight I'm just saying that if for instance you said earlier you have to grow together as a couple now the amount of all the things that we talked about here emotional stability getting that right knowing how to fight well like I mean there's just a laundry list of Happiness things right that if you get right you will be way primed way marri knowledge is power in your relationships and your work in your spiritual life knowledge is power and and again it it all goes back to I know people who you know say yeah we knew each other for a week and we got married in Vegas it's like that's Folly yeah that's just Serendipity that it that's just doesn't make sense on the other hand you know when somebody says I say how long youve been dating that girl it's like eight years like no yeah no no um and and you know what's the right amount of time this is what this is a question of credential judgment too you know my oldest son met his wife now wife when he was 24 early 24 they dated for six months they were engaged for six months they got married a year after they started dating their first child was born N9 months later I mean that's called the 669 Cadence in Catholic Life by the way six really that's a thing that's a thing six months dating 6 months engaged N9 months till the first baby I mean it's not it's not that we recommend this it's just but it worked out really really well because that was enough time but it wasn't too much right you know it wasn't the kind of thing where I don't know why don't we live together for you know 50 years before we decided whether or not to get married that's that's not the right thing either so you know credential judgment is is is and it's the same thing with a startup by the way I don't know I think I need a little bit more experience so when I was writing my dissertation I would see these guys and you know I was doing my PhD but like I got to read a couple more books like write your dissertation pop the question after a certain point but not on the first date yeah I I didn't have any trouble with that so for me when I met Lisa I did not think I was going to get married and then old were I was 24 mhm and when we started dating um probably about three months in something 3 four months in something like that I realized oh [ __ ] like I'm in love with her and then I was like okay well I'm either never getting married or I'm marrying this woman yeah and so I proposed at eight months and we had spent some of those eight months apart it wasn't even like we were living together for 8 months or anything cuz she was in England and then I was ready to get married right away I was like what's it take to get married about three months and she's like you are having a laugh she's like no way this is going to take like a year to plan this wedding so we ended up being together for about 18 months by the time we got married but uh good good by today standards that's fast and and by today's standards you were young yeah um and again Society Chang in different ways but some of these some of these principles don't change I don't know if any of the principles change that's the thing like circumstances do but principles don't yeah so how do you how do people grow together like what is the key there part of it is understanding that you have a you you you are stronger when you are together and that one of the cues for you to change is the other person changing so not PE people who struggle they think the cue for me to do something different in my life is I feel differently about something one of the accus for you to do something differently in your your life is that your spouse starts to think feel differently about that you have to take on the characteristics of the other person as if they were inside you you know so you find for example that your spouse is on a spiritual journey starts to find stirrings of spirituality that's a cue for you to do that too that's a cue for you to do that too and to do that sincerely as well and again people say well you're losing your individuality and the whole thing yep that's exactly right yep yeah you're sublimating the individuality on these things to have greater strength in the Union right so that you can have a greater multiplicity of experiences across the two of you greater adventure and excitement across the two of you is the way that that works and sometimes it's hard for people because they feel that they're the the senior partner in the relationship doesn't that's not the secret to a successful marriage now there are social scientists that have very heterodox views on this there's a guy named Eli finl at Northwestern um a psychologist who's written about marriage and he says that one of the reasons that marriage is so hard today is because we we expect too much from it he says you know we expect your best friend and your your one and only lover and your business partner and the person who helps you raise your kids and the only person to who who knows your secrets and it's like it's too much pressure for one relationship that was distributed across 10 people until about the 19th century or the 20th century and but in the time of the Romantic Era uh where in when when romance took on its modern connotations which is it's everything it's magic it's a you know it's a it simulates the relationship with God even some of the language that we've used in this conversation that then it took on too much pressure and he recommends in his book about this that and in his work and his his very interesting research that yet yet you ease off on the throttle a little bit that you don't expect your wife to be your best friend necessarily he even suggests that some couples do better when they're not the only exclusive sexual partner I disagree with that say w I disagree with that I don't think that I don't think the data support that I mean again as they say in finance your results May differ right but they certainly don't in my case are yours yeah that uh that one I can't imagine having unshared sexual experience the only thing that I can imagine is if yay if you're like sharing something by all means but when people go off I just don't see how that works and I certainly don't see how it works if you invite another person into the stable pair bond like whoa I know and there's actually you as an evolution guy you'll you really really like this literature that talks about why it screws up relationships so there's a guy at University of Texas that does work on Jealousy on The evolutionary basis of jealousy and he had this hypothesis that men are more jealous of sexual infidelity and women are more jealous of emotional infidelity Y and so what he does is he finds that that that women in relationships they will forgive their husbands for sexual Discretions but not for falling in love with another woman and a man if if if your wife says I know I mean yeah I had an affair all that but it was only because I felt like I was falling in love the sex was terrible you'll be like I I forgive you yeah yeah I forgive you it's so asymmetrically weird and the reason for this from an evolutionary basis is that males have to be really Vigilant about making sure they're not in intently raising The Offspring of another male yeah and women have to be very Vigilant to make sure that the provider and defender of the family doesn't stray and take and defend and provide for another family and another another female's Offspring and so that's why the the jealousy is going to work in that particular way but no matter what I'm telling you if you have if you have an open marriage somebody's going to fall in love you know and and there's all kinds of stuff that can that can go wrong on that so that's not I mean again it's like different social scientist disagree on that but I think my reading of the data and my Prudential judgment not just my Catholicism suggest that's not a wise course of action for most I'm a big believer I I think you're right about that I'm a big believer in what I call frame of reference so your frame of reference are your set of beliefs and your values right there's other things at the fringes but that's the core of it and it will make all the difference it's not what happens it's how you perceive what happens just going back to Victor Victor Frankle So to that point you said guys have to be really hyper prototec that they're not raising somebody else's kid but you adopted a kid right and so that to me speaks to frame of reference so and I've heard you say that you have every bit of love for your adopted daughter that you have for your biological kids which I have no reason to believe is not true so what did you do to your frame of reference in order to be able to welcome her and even though we would both agree that from an evolutionary standpoint that doesn't make sense yeah it well yeah from an evolutionary standpoint it actually might make sense from an evolutionary standpoint because if you if there's an orphan even in nature will be aded by by nonhuman mammals will adopt orphans as their own and sometimes it will be even a mistake so you see a the the cuckoo bird will actually lay its eggs in the nest of other birds and then the egg knock the eggs out of the nest of the other of the of the birds the that have the nest and then the cuckoo will hatch and be taken care of by the surrogate mother the unknowing comes from yeah exactly right and then of course the cuckoo is twice the size the regular bird so it's hilarious because you know the the the the bab bird is gig I know it's the funniest thing so so there there is some evolutionary basis for that in the case of not raising somebody else's Offspring per se but raising an orphan and bringing the child into your own family and one of the things that you find is that the my experience but also the research shows that the oxytocin release for an adopted child is just as high as it is for a biological child so you basically know that this is my child you lay eyes on that child and it's Fourth of July all over his Roman candles in your head and and it is forever and so it's funny because you don't actually know till you do it it's all a theory oh yeah no you know the bond with the adopted child will be just as much as with the biological child it's it's it's weird because intellectually it's a it's a stronger bond in some ways because it's this this election it's this human will on top of the neurophysiology of of human connection on top of it it's really something I have to say it's funny it's funny but it's just deep deep deep deep love and for both both both kinds of kids I've heard you say you were no longer making progress when you were a French horn player and that's what made you want to leave that I'm wondering if you felt like you were no longer making progress in the think tank and that's why you wanted to leave that like is that the moment where we all go oh that's my cue now to find that next assignment that's what we should use as a Quee the natural Cadence of you know the value that you're creating you don't very very few people get to create more and more and more value in one exact thing over the course of their lives and we have an economy that accommodates change so it's really incumbent upon us to have our anten eye up and pay attention to that because we want to be able to create that value and be open to the next assignment so yeah I mean my motives are never pure because you know I'm just a guy and but I do have a process of discernment every philosoph opical and religious tradition has a process of discernment discernment is when you don't know what to do how you figure it out this is hard you know the decision-making process and so I'll have students are like I don't know should I do a startup or go work in Investment Banking or should I marry this person or not or should I go to law school or stay at work or or some some things are even more personal and and and delicate and difficult but at any particular time a third of the people who are watching us are agonizing over a particular decision so the question is how do you make these difficult decisions and every philosophical tradition has a process on how to make a decision and here's the key thing that they all have in common you got to do the work and to do the work means you need to think about it it doesn't mean you need to think about a particular thing you need to think about that decision process every day what are you thinking about so when I have students said haven't even begun this process I'll say Okay 15 minutes a day I want you to start by sitting alone at your desk no music no phone is not there write lists of things you like you got to start getting in touch with the things that are attractive to you because some people are completely even divorced from that they have no they're so far away from being able to discern what they want to do that they don't even know what they like and so just starting to write places I've gone that I really enjoyed and not because you're deciding where to go next but just because you're trying to get that in order in your head what are the things that are attractive to me what are the things that I actually like um I'll tell people that they have they should to be thinking about just the process to let the discernment happen you have to be very quiet and very concerted in the effort to do so to walk for an hour before Dawn every day with no devices and to do that so people who are really religious I'll say 15 minutes a day praying about this to be given the discernment to be given proper discernment 15 minutes a day on your knees so and or meditation practice there's lots of ways to do what the difference between prayer and meditation is there one well there's lotss of forms of prayer and lots of forms of meditation so there's a lot of meditation techniques single point meditation analytical meditation um uh meditation of compassion all different sort of in the mahay tradition are you trying to make your best case to God or are you just repeating an idea in your head like please grant me the discernment to understand what I should do in this moment so there are different ways to do it there are different forms of prayer even Christian prayer even Catholic prayer which is what I engage in so every night I pray 25 minutes which called the rosary a thousand-year-old meditative prayer before I go to sleep every night and that's a repeated prayer and that it's a thing that you repeat while you're meditating on particular Mysteries that happened in biblical tradition and what are you doing you're focusing you're you're seeing your life through the lens of these great stories and what that does is helps you understand yourself better and all kinds of insight Insight comes to you over the context of do that's process that's a kind of a centering prayer there are other prayers that are called uh you know mental prayer which the Buddhists call analytical meditation the Dal Lama wakes up every morning and the first two hours are analytical meditation where he'll just think deeply about a passage in tibetan Buddhist scripture he's thinking about it he's not reading it he's written down a few lines and he's looking at it and thinking about it for two hours he gu 88 and he's doing that for the first two hours of every day that's analytical meditation that's not just like looking at a flame or doing Soul cycle or something that's not he's and that's that's also meditation incredibly important mental prayer is the same thing where you'll read a passage of scripture whether your scripture is the the sutas or the New Testament or whatever your thing is and you read it and you say and and you say what is this meaning to me where am I in this how is this impacting my life two sentences 15 minutes more it's crazy how much Insight you can actually get from that there's compassionate meditation or compassionate prayer where you you bring into your mind the people that are giving you struggle and you think about you visual ize good things happening to them and you ask God or you ask the cosmos that good things that that blessings be rained down upon them and you change the nature of your orientation toward them the biggest reason that you have enmity with other people is because of your enmity toward them not theirs toward you typically and you can literally change that and this is one of the techniques for doing so so different kinds of prayer and meditation they have different functions but we have to use them as such and not just be kind of like all right like like a little kid like God I have sure hope I get an A on that exam can you please help me get an A on that exam you have to be a grownup about this stuff and it's super exciting and it so that's the process of discernment when you're trying to figure out what to do is you have to concentrate on it the the ancient Greeks called it sunus um in the Pali Buddhist tradition in the Mahayana Buddhist tradition it's called p and in this discernment of spirits in ignatian Catholic spirituality every tradition has it where you're focused on it focused on it focused on it for a particular period of time if you do the work where you're focused on the decision looking for the insight for 15 minutes a day for two months you'll have Clarity that's the guarantee it's amazing but the reason that people can't get clarity is because they don't do the work they don't do the analysis yeah for sure um okay uh walk me through the idols what what are the idols and how do we use them well instead of being used by them so this is a tradition that comes from um neoplatonism s from Plato as best stated by his great pupil Aristotle and then translated into the Islamic Jewish and Christian traditions in the Middle Ages so avaros who is the you know the the the Muslim philosopher from from from southern Spain um uh uh mosha B Mamon mades and Thomas aquinus so these are the you know St thasus these are the great figures of this and they really they they translated AR and is saying the Aristotle was the greatest of all the social scientists I mean to to I realize I'm cheapening Aristotle in this way by saying but it's it's kind of a conceit that everybody you love is like Tom you're a great social scientist that's like the ultimate compliment from a social scientist so by the way you're very good social scientist so kind and he and so for example aquinus said that there's four substitutes for God that he he believed as did avaros and and mes and all of the monotheistic religious leaders that what we ultimately want is God now atheists watching us or agnostic disagree with that but we all want something can you define what that means then to Define to want God yeah cuz I I have a feeling even atheists want a thing to fit that god-shaped hole but I've never taken the time for myself to Define what the god-shaped hole is so I'd love to know so this is the thing for example you're looking for something that's defined by your craving you know when you're when you're really really hungry it it proves the existence of food when you're really really horny it proves the existence of sexes right and so when you really really are seeking the complex Singularity the source of all Truth The Cosmic Oneness is proof that it exists but what is it but what is it okay so that's what different Traditions have been trying to explain for the longest time this is really interesting though by the way I don't want to just let that rle pass hunger is the proof that there is food the desire for sex is the proof that there is sex the desire for evidence that there is sex it's it's not a proof in the classical sense but it's evidence that it exists evidence and so it would be really really really weird if you had a craving for something and the object of the craving didn't exist it doesn't really make sense yeah and so if you have a craving for the Oneness Arthur Brooks this is good yeah and this is by the way this is one of the reasons that when all of the conversations that we're having about AI they're misguided AI can't give us what we want it can't because all it does is gives us complicating engineering solutions for a Similac for the thing that we're for a simulation for the thing that we really really want which is a different species of problem you know what we really want is the is the object of all the complexity of the universe complexity is simple to understand and impossible to solve complication is hard to solve but possible all of the reasons that all these things that we do in Tech that are that promise everything and deliver nothing but loneliness the reason is because they're comp complicated solutions to complex needs love is complex it's very easy to understand and impossible to figure out your cat is complex very simple but impossible to know what it's going to do all the things we really want in life all of our deep desires are complex all of our Solutions are complicated and we're we're throwing complicated Solutions at complex problems and we're not getting happier and so the only way that we can do this is to take quiet time in contemplation of the complex that's the solution now are you going to find it no no but it's just like happiness you're not going to find it you're going to make progress toward it the goal the the the the the metaphysical goal the transcendental goal of a spiritual or philosophical life is the approach to the complex Oneness to the ultimate truth that We crave and you got to do the work stop distracting yourself with social media stop distracting Yourself by saying if I make the money then everything will be okay or if I have the prestige and this gets us back to the idols aquinus said that we crave God but we but God is complex and hard to understand and has all kinds of Demands and and winds us up in all sorts of one-sided conversations and and so we take a complicated solution to the complex problem and things that are kind of Godlike you know social media is kind of social life like which is why when we're lonely we'll binge it but it doesn't help and the the social media equivalent for what we want in God according to aquinus is four-fold money power pleasure and Honor by which he meant fame or admiration or Prestige that's what he said that the four things and those are the idols and everybody's got their Idol that when they're not on their game looking for the cosmic Oneness despite the fact that they'll never find it they'll say okay fine I'm tired I'm going to go do that thing that's a that's a simulation for it and it always runs you in the wrong direction it runs you in the wrong direction and only when you know what your idol is can you actually manage yourself so you say I'm doing that again I'm doing that again I'm looking for money again when what I really wanted was love I'm looking for admiration again when what I really wanted was Enlightenment because you didn't want to do the work for enlightenment so you went and did the easy thing which was getting the idol so is is Enlightenment a standin for God yeah yeah yeah I mean the whole the whole point is that these are Enlightenment is something Enlightenment would be what Christians or Muslims would call the beatific Vision which is to lay finally Lay Your Eyes on the face of God which is actual truth if you're a Buddhist it means because you finally understand you're sitting under the bod tree and you you finally this you finally get it is what it comes to you know we in the monotheistic traditions we don't believe you get it on this side of death Buddhists think that you actually can achieve it but be that as it may I mean I don't know I have my hypothesis but I am I do know that we're all move we all need to move toward it we all need to do the work toward it and getting it getting the AI is not going to do it anymore than Facebook that you're linking because I don't think of AI as God but I hear a lot of people talk about that that it will end up being Godlike so it's interesting if they really are looking for that in AI I think what I'm trying to fill the whole Godlike hole with it is all I'm saying so I I will grant you that for anybody doing that that would be a tremendous mistake and I'll give you my thesis on what I think all this is in a second but AI I think for me anyway it is it is to finally get answers to the complex which may be your entire definition of God that's an that's an exercise and futility that's interesting I don't know that I would agree with that so I feel like and look I don't have uh the data that I have to back up the following is is merely physics right as we that's not bad grow huh well we don't understand physics simple physics the the reason I bring that up is because as we strip layers off that onion it unlocks things that we couldn't do before right and all of us grown up in a world where einsteinian einsteinian whichever way you would say that physics already exist yeah and not realizing that before that it was Newtonian physics and that the shift between the two unlocked the modern world right and you know we think of him as just sort of this crazy-haired guy and we forget that so many of the things that we rely on in the modern world required us to understand that breakthrough but it isn't the universal principle yet we haven't gotten there we haven't got higs bll on which will which will show which will render Einstein and physics obsolete in all kinds of ways fingers crossed so as we begin to unlock these things and truly understand them it it really does open up Avenues of um technology now one has to be careful not to view technology as a God but if we can use AI to either augment our own intelligence or for it to itself be intelligent now I'm wildly conflicted about AI let me be abundantly clear we deploying it as fast as I can the same time I'm terrified uh but I want those answers have real world implications that's the moral of my story yeah yeah yeah for sure absolutely they do but the point is that they that Ai and all of these particular tools they solve a different species of problem yeah they are not going to answer the God they're not going to because they can't and the whole idea is that there's always this concept that we could understand everything if we had sufficient computational horsepower MH but that's not right because you can't solve comp complex problems which are mathematically different than complicated problems yes give me an example of so for people that don't know you did Applied Mathematics for a while so this is not me asking some random guy off the street give me an example of a complex and a complicated problem yes because in math the only thing I can think of because I am wildly ignorant I would like to be abundantly clear but from my just not knowing math at all perspective the only category of thing in math that I know as being complex would be something like the uh PI right so Pi is uh if yosa Bach is correct better understood as a function rather than a number because you can never know the final digit of pi it's a relationship interesting yeah it's a relationship but but so I'll give you an example of two is that complex yeah well it's a good question whether or not it's complex or I think about it in a slightly different way so I'll give you an example that might um that might make it clearer so a complicated problem is one that has you know 75 equations and 75 unknowns it's a highly dimensional mathematical problem that it would just take tons of computational horsepower to to to figure out but there is a solution designing a jet engine um is an incredibly complicated problem making a toaster is a complicated problem you know if you try to do one out in your garage with you know stuff that's sitting around your house you'll probably burn your house down if you try to make toast with it it's a very complicated thing to do but once you do it you can do it over and over and over again with all complete accuracy that's a these are comple complicated problems a complex problem is a football game a football game is a complicated problem where I don't care how good your computer is you're not going to be able to tell me the outcome because it has it's complex it's complex it's a I think I misspoke you said complicated ones and complex ones but complex it's a complex problem a complex problem is incredibly simple to understand the outcome you know the Patriots score higher than the Broncos that's uh you know the natural natural order of things that they that it's just one team has a higher score than the other and wins very simple incredibly simple um but it's unbelievably the permutations are so vast that you can't you can't simulate it you can't and you don't think that's knowable with enough computation it's not knowable with enough computation but actually and even if that one turns out to be that turns out to be not a complex problem but a complicated problem there are complex problems like the problem of love the problem of Love is very simple and yet it's not something that you can simulate in any real way and some people will say well you have your AI girlfriend that's a that's a you've you've cracked the code of love no you haven't there's no there's nobody watching us right now is like yeah AI girlfriend just is good no no AI girlfriend a substitute because I can't get the real thing is what it would come down to that's the difference between pornography and and and and sex with your wife all right when two smart people who are well-meaning think the other person is crazy you know they have different Bas assumptions so to me that sounds crazy uh and the reason is that I believe we're in a deterministic universe I'm guessing you do not I don't believe we're in a deterministic universe I believe we're in a stochastic Universe okay Define stochastic stochastic means there's Randomness in the universe my father was a biostatistician a PhD biostatistician and he was a devout Christian I said what gives dad you know I'm an adolescent what gives and he said you don't understand he said you know what Miracles are and and I said what he said events that are five standard deviations of away from the me they're way out on the tales of the of the of the curves you know the greatest gift that God ever gave the world was was a distribution a random distribution of events he believed and I think it's actually more than plausible I think it's most likely that the universe is actually has Randomness in it which means it cannot be you can't get to a single point on most of the or any of the complex problems you can't and so you can simulate a kind of a version of a curve fit but you can't actually get underneath them and simulate them properly because we have a stochastic universe and we live with deterministic brains our brains say that this happens to this and this happens to this we have a supercomputer that's good enough we can figure out all how it all hangs together and that's the the supposition behind einsteinian physics or or or Newtonian physics that these are that there's a deterministic structure underneath that we're we're simulating we're doing the best that we can to put a model on top it's a map but that's actually probably not the way that the Universe works and if that's the case and if we have a craving for the source of that then it's some thing some one some entity that can be the the the origin of that complexity per se what is it what is it you know it's like maybe my model which is yeah I got the Bible and I got God and I got that whole thing maybe that's nuts maybe it's nuts but it's it's a hypothesis and it says that we can't get it from the stuff we can't get it from the stuff you can only get it by looking for it looking for the true thing and that's the reason I think that really great intellectual life requires that we have both a an intellectual Pursuit and a spiritual Pursuit and that we need to undertake these things in parallel I think that's the only responsible course of action what's happening when you're looking for it like I can give you I I don't know that Buddhists would agree with this but I think they would uh what you're getting by looking at it in a Buddhist or looking for it in a Buddhist tradition is you're getting out from under the illusion of uh perception if that that's definitely a western look at it uh but that feels pretty accurate um that's a good way of explaining it that's a good way of explaining Buddhist thinking on it that you're no longer bound by the Illusions What What In the language that we're developing here you're no longer bound by your models you're actually able to see the road as opposed to staring at the map M all the time it's like you know when we're looking at that we got our devices we're looking at the GPS if you just stare at the GPS you're going to crash in your car you're actually driving on a road in real physical life but you're more and more and more divorced from that when you're stuck with the with the with the models and those are the illusions that they would say that you're trying to free yourself from by actually imbibing some of the the oxygen in the in real life around you okay so if that's the Buddhist take on it what is the Catholic take on it the Catholic take on it is very similar which is that there is underlying reality but that underlying reality is not always apparent and for all sorts of reasons I and that the underlying reality is um made by God and yeah it is the realm of God and that we're not we just don't have the capacity or the you know the preparation to be able to experience now Plato talked about this he was pre-christian Plato talked about this about the his analogy in of the the Shadows on the cave wall the closest that we can get to actually seeing what's going on is the shadows of what's going on behind the fire in the cave wall um the a lot of the the German philosophers from the 17th and 18th centuries and 19th centuries would talk about this too so the schopenhauer for example Arthur schopenhauer obviously one of the greatest early 19th century mid 19th century philosophers would talk about villa which was you know the sense of will that the reality exists but we can't see it because we're just not comp ENT and we're trying to put One Foot In Front Of Another and so we create an an edifice that that allows us to live but we can't actually see the reality that's the complex reality is happening behind it all the time what do you think these guys were struggling with and maybe you're from your perspective the obvious answer is just God but I don't know if it's just God that's a word for it they were struggling for something they had a craving because here here is the modern take on that uh you're in a simulation right now some people believe you're in a literal computer simulation and other people like me I don't necessarily have evidence that you're in an actual computer simulation but I do have evidence that your brain is simulating reality as a way so that you can grapple with it because instead of seeing blue if you just saw the number of photons in a given wavelength that are reflecting off that surface and into your eye it's so complicated so your brain is just taking this incredibly complex Universe which by the way for people that don't know the human uh our ability to perceive the actual electromagnetic spectrum is 0.35% yeah so you're like way way less than half a tons of dimensionality doesn't exist there's tons of things we can't see so we we've taken this gigantic we know there things we can't see yeah for sure and we boil it down into something that is just an absolute sliver of the reality so okay in a modern context I get it but like what were they coming up against in whatever 20 years ago when Plato is describing the Shadows on the cave wall what is he grappling with like it's as far as I can tell he's he's getting underneath like realizing oh my perceptions do not equate to reality and once you accept that like everything begins to unwind well it doesn't begin to unwind it begins to free you to this understanding that you're that you begin to see it's Illusions you begin to see that you are living in a world of Illusion now how was this the the we can militate against that by saying it's all of in a simulation and part of the simulation is that we're simulated the simulation creates the illusion that there is something bigger even though there isn't but that's just explaining something away so in a philosophical basis the way I talk about this with my students I say okay we got three we got three choices three doors to go through Monty this is you know for those of that's the the Monty Hall game in economics is based on let's make deal this old game show that was on when I was a kid right and you get the the the contestants would have to choose one of these three doors and then the door would open up and it would turn out you got a car or you got a living room set or you got a goat yeah or something like that so there's three there's basically three choices about about how you're going to see the the existence of of an underlying reality that you can or cannot perceive and you can or cannot get closer to and make progress toward it has to do with the two concepts of essence and existence We believe We all believe that we exist I mean you can relax that by saying it's a simulation we don't actually exist I don't know but let's leave that for a moment and let's just say that we all agree that there's existence what we don't agree on is the the nature of essence essence is meaning so I'm alive and my life has meaning okay now the the the the traditional philosophical understanding the platonic understanding of this the ancient Greek understanding of this the Christian Jewish um Hindu um Muslim for sure understanding of this is that Essence precedes existence let's think about that for a second the meaning of your life existed before you were born your job is to live up to that meaning to find that meaning and live up to that meaning it existed it's a cosmic thing that's what comes from the cosmic Oneness the modern existentialist view modern philosophy a lot of it would say that that existence precedes essence you're born without meaning you have to invent meaning the best you can good luck that's SRA like go sit in a French cafe and smoke filterless cigarettes and feel depressed as existence precedes essence now the third the middle way the most depressing way is the nian way which is the nihilistic way that says existence exists and Essence doesn't there is no meaning the only responsible course of action in a life is to give up on Essence there is no meaning stop looking for God stop looking for enlightenment stop looking for all of it that craving you couldn't apply meaning he said there is no meaning there is no meaning life has no meaning so you can't apply because the first one is there is no meaning but you can apply meaning that there no the first one is that there is meaning you need to find it and live up to it the second is that there is no meaning until you create it and the last is that there is no meaning got it and you can keep looking for it and you can keep trying to create it but that's childish Let It Go Let It Go that that's nihilism that's why we call you know somebody who's nihilistic somebody who believes that there is no meaning and nothing matters that's the reason we call it that in the popular vernacular so these are the kind of the three choices that we have to walk through most for most of all of existence of humanity it's been door number one which is that there is Essence and then we experience existence and the whole point of life is to figure out and pursue Essence and responsible and and in a way that's generative and meaningful and that's what we're trying to do that's that's what I think is most compelling I think that's the most compelling view I don't I don't know the truth you know and and by the way when I've talked to Sam Harris about this he agrees with me that there's things that we don't see that there is Essence that we we can only barely perceive and and all of the things that I talk about from Catholicism to the stochastic nature of the statistical set of circumstances which we find ourselves from the science to the religion is my understanding my best understanding my fumbling around in the dark and looking at Shadows on the cave wall for what I'm trying to do to to find the essence that will give me meaning give meaning to my existence that's the point of my life it's very interesting so uh it goes back to what are we grappling with here so uh I'm going to Define my version of what I think the god-shaped hole is and I'm going to put it in the context of the language we've been using here so CU I come at everything from an evolutionary lens and I'm very much of the good lens by the way it really helps you understand a lot it has been very helpful evolutionary psychology is just the best it's bizarrely controversial which I will never understand but uh nonetheless it has been extremely useful in my life so I come at it from that so I'm like okay if we do have this hole and it is um a yearning and that yearning is evidence that there is something what what is the nature of the yearning and what is the thing that I'm yearning for right and again using the language of this conversation um I have a feeling that humans have a um a very intrinsic evolutionarily derived desire to kneel before something and now the question becomes okay if you have this push to kneel before something why what what is the evolutionary advantage to those that kneel before the thing and the best answer that I can come up with is that you need to get out of the me self and you need to get into the I self and you need to create that distance and by kneeling before something by put making something bigger than you now one you're just you are in the habit of living your life in service of something Beyond yourself right I don't think but this is definitely just ignorance you will help me here I don't think that any of the world's lasting religions would compel you to serve anything other than ah this will be interesting I actually don't know the answer to this question I will be very shocked if you tell me that any lasting religion has asked people to serve anything other than either Humanity itself or a God that loves humanity is there no doubt there are no doubt there are religions that that but there I guess but you stipulated lasting religions yeah CU I don't see how that would be beneficial cuz what ultimately what I'm saying is the proxy the god-shaped hole is actually a desire to serve your fellow man because that's going to be the thing that keeps you alive because you're way better off coming together as a group evolutionary yes is my gut and then religion like the specific whether oral or written tradition is the thing that allowed humans to come together in gigantic swaths in a way that no other species no other creature not ants nothing can come together in the flexible fashion that we can by using ideas right of religion like those just give you an instant bond and I'm willing to kill for and die for this thing that we have in common yeah yeah so it's um I also have a huge amount of time and admiration for evolutionary psychology but it's totally descriptive and it's not it's it's neither prescriptive nor deterministic so I don't believe that the evolutionary psychology of the things that actually set out our impulses and imperatives that they that they prescribe neur proscribe particular Behavior I think that we have choices way beyond our Evolution so let me give an example um we talked about Mother Nature she has really two goals for you and all of evolutionary psychology comes down to survival and and Gene Gene propagation that's what all of you know the The evolutionary psychologists and evolutionary biologists they say that all that the that that any organism exists for is to survive long enough to pass on his genes and so it all comes down to that but virtually everybody believes that we can short circuit that and make decisions that go beyond that we can do all and so people will say okay well you laid down your life for a stranger but that was because you had some evolutionary impulse to behave in an altruistic way that that dates back to a time when that would have been better for your tribe etc etc etc I think that the better explanation for that is the animal path versus the Divine path the animal path is incred powerful it's a it's a wonderful model for understanding why most things happen and why we have the impulses that we do but the most interesting questions of the Divine path where we actually make decisions that are that that go beyond the what our evolutionary Evolution would suggest is the best path for us that go beyond the things that we want to do that that that help us to understand that there could actually be something bigger and and this is the really unique thing about the human species is that we can make this election between Divine and animal Divine and animal and every day is this election between Divine and animal and in fact to look for the source of the complex Oneness in a world of complex Ingenuity a comp complicated Ingenuity that's to choose the Divine path ultimately the Divine path over the animal path in the biggest way so not everybody agrees with me a lot of really smart people disagree with me and say all the things that we actually do they still come back to evolution even if they don't look like this is an evolutionarily Adaptive thing to do it it sort of is you just need a more complicated understanding of The evolutionary impulse I just agree I think that there's man evolutionary biology it just puts us on this track and makes us act in particular ways yeah we got all these habits the things that we want to do and then we can decide not to do them because we want something higher because we're called to something higher because we have a a dim perception of something that's bigger that something that's better that we're drawn ont and that's the the the Oneness that we're distracted from when we're basically just sitting on the animal path and doing money power pleasure fame money power pleasure Fame and so instead of getting on our knees and contemplating the the nature of Enlightenment we'll you know scroll Instagram that's interesting so as somebody who believes that you can't be enlightened prior to death um what is it about the contemplation of that knowing you will never be a able to actually understand it what is it about the contemplation that makes your life better I presume progress the progress principle you're getting closer you're getting closer and why not why would God want it such that you can't attain Enlightenment because well according to Christian yeah the theology I so this becomes a theological question it's because ultimately it's the relationship the beic vision is the relationship with God him him or herself and you know that the way that the Hindus talk about this by the way is that the transmigration of the Soul occurs as people are getting closer and closer to Enlightenment at which point the soul will be reabsorbed into the godhead so the idea of the soul for Hindus is that your soul Tom's soul is a little chip of God comes down enters a human being corrupted by circumstance Etc becomes perfected over a 100 or a thousand lifetimes and is reabsorbed into the godhead and the ultimate goal of to stop samsara the endless cycle of birth and rebirth is to be reabsorbed into God is the way that so their their understanding of this is actually easier to understand weirdly than just I got to see God awesome you know I don't know it's but it's all basically saying the same thing getting closer getting closer making progress this is the goal in life this is the impulse and how do we do that all kinds of ways that our lives are generative and help us do that you know as as silly as you know doing a podcast starting a business all these things they help other people they help us understand understand ourselves they make life they they lessen the burden for our brothers and sisters in particular ways this is the reason that it's so profoundly unsatisfying for you to do something it's all me me me me me as opposed to others others others and ultimately you get the juice of of the of these generative things of these creative things that you're doing when it when it really does lighten the load and and improve the lives of other people because that's the process of getting closer the process of getting closer and the physical manifestations of the things that we do every day and it gets better and we hope and again this is one Theory my whole religion I might be completely off base I mean I can't say because I have no data I can only hypothesize at this point faith is belief without data is belief without evidence it's it's not set a set of non-testable hypothesis is what it comes down to and it's just that the progress per say is the point of what we're trying to do on Earth that's what the C certainly the doy Lama would say about the you know the from Life To Life toward Enlightenment that's what the Hindus would say about the transmigration of the soul for the reabsorption of the godhead that's what Hindus or that's what Buddhist sorry uh Muslims and Christians would say about trying to actually go to live in heaven with God but it's all saying the same thing fundamentally about the progress the the progress is the point of life I don't know why at this point in my life this has become such a fascinating question you're right on schedule by the way yeah no no seriously because what you what you you throw off Superstition and you you look for the pure oxygen of Enlightenment and what looks like you know Jesus and Santa Claus what's the difference you know when you're 20 when you're 50 you're going ah big difference yeah it's interesting there is um there's something about the way that the world is moving so my goal in life is to in a really practical way help people um live a life live a life of fulfillment and I I never quite know how to put words to it it fulfillment survives grief and so I'm trying to um I have thought a lot about in my own life and have found tremendous easing of suffering in recognizing what I call that there is an evolutionary impulse to get me to do the things that will uh align myself with having kids that survive long enough to have kids right and so while I don't have to do that literally M I have to understand what the algorithms are that are running in my mind to make that happen and um the more I explore this space of like how one clicks into fulfillment I do find myself grappling with it as you get under perception and you really start to say okay what what is the Bedrock here um it does become I'll say quasi religious because I don't find myself going oh I'm getting closer and closer to God that isn't what it feels like from my perspective from my perspective it feels like there is ground truth and you can get closer to it and the more you understand how the illusion is created the less you are trapped by it and the less you are trapped by The Matrix to use a very uh fun word evocative way of thinking about it it's one of the most profound movies for the past 30 years notwithstanding the cinematography it has to do with the it has to do with the concepts underneath it 100% it for me it is the most useful metaphor for the human existence and so once I understand how the Matrix works then I start seeing it in everything I start seeing it in um politics which is not something I thought I would ever engage with I start seeing it in the culture War another thing I never thought I would would engage with but as I I forget what this is a reference to this is a a an allusion to something as I set aside childish things I really come to realize that you just quoted St Paul is that what it is that's hilarious I can't even tell you where from but uh that you begin to realize oh this is one problem yeah and once you understand it's one problem that manifests in all these weird ways helping people get deeper on that ladder because helping people get deeper on that ladder uh becomes is is very meaningful to me it's obviously also self- serving in that the deeper on the lad I go the more grounded I feel the more more I feel resilient to the slings and arrows of Life the more I feel like facing death isn't scary um just all the things all the things but I am I don't know what to make of the fact that when I started all of this it was a lot easier to have conversations about think like this act like this uh and then finding people wouldn't do it and every time I tried to scratch as to okay where were all my own Hang-Ups that it has led to me circling around this problem of the god-shaped hole over and over and over it's uh very fascinating yeah no it is and this is me psychologists and sociologists have found that pattern that it tends to occur particularly with people who are who live in their heads people who are questioners that they start asking bigger and deeper questions and the answers that typically come to them even with a with the with the greatest horsepower that the world can provide doesn't give them the truth that they seek it just doesn't give you full flavor it doesn't give you you get lots of interesting Solutions like yeah I I got a good morning routine you know it's really good ice bath you know workout whatever happens it's just not good but it's not the thing that I'm seeking you keep finding answers to questions that you weren't asking and you're not finding the solutions to the questions that you really were asking that are in coate you know you don't even know quite how to put words to these questions because the complex is so hard to apprehend that you don't even you can't even you don't even know the questions let alone the answers but that's what you're grappling toward and that's I believe that's what humans are grappling toward that's what aquinus was saying that we all want the thing but we like all right I'll take the substitute all right I'll take the substitute and people start to freak out about dying if they've been taking the substitute the counterfeit money power pleasure Fame their whole life because they're running out of time and they haven't made any progress because they've been you know eating non-nutritious food and not getting and they're starving to death and and it's just they get people get into a panic in their life and they realize they get into this deep existential dread this onwe that comes from you know the depression of the world that comes because there aren't any answers and maybe n was right and and they were just looking in the wrong place so that's what I see and I'm I'm I'm endlessly interested in an enthusiastic about the about the promise of AI but I'm not kidding myself for a second to think that it's going to answer the real questions that I have and that real people have and the Really the real things that people want it's funny because you know the one thing that we really all want we don't have the technology for and we're not getting closer to it you know the the the happiness that everybody really wants it's not sold on the Internet it's not provided by the government you know we've got lunar Landers and Tik Tok videos and you name it we can invent any anything the Ingenuity is almost boundless but we're not getting closer to the thing that we want because the Ingenuity is being deployed toward complicated ends as opposed to the answers to complex problems we're answering the wrong set of questions is what it comes down to and that's why you can find people who have everything in the world and are still miserable they because they couldn't get it there they couldn't buy what they wanted in that store it's the way that it works interesting the dolly llama and I had a conversation about this CU he and I worked together in various projects for last 11 years wow and we had this conversation about he says you know he's musing this one point when the doll Lama Muses you listen it's like it's funny because you know that you you westerners you know you've done everything to create economic value and tremendous businesses and incredible wealth and it's so wonderful to give people all this opportunity so they don't starve to death and you know the world is richer and all that but but you spent no time actually trying to understand the nature of what really matters the most he says we're poorer yeah our societies are poorer in the East but we spent all our time and all our Ingenuity trying to get the source of pure truth did they make any more progress than we did I'm not sure but also it's interesting because a lot of Buddhists will look at Christianity and they'll be like yeah yeah we used to believe that 4,000 years ago that's a that's a a rudimentary theological technology you're on the right road but you're way way back compared to where we were yeah we used to have a guy yeah we type of guy you know and the whole thing as opposed to these are different religions trying to get the same ideas in different ways they think there's a natural progression of Enlightenment that happens to people and societies and we're thousands of years behind where they are despite the despite the fact that we're hundreds of years ahead economically or thousands of years behind in terms of spiritual enlightenment complex versus complicated same idea H I don't know if it's true that is the question uhhuh all right let's reground this for a second so this is gotten pretty heavy man i' I've never had a conversation like this before yeah this is uh in in media this is amazing oh thank you yeah um assuming that the audience is still with us let's uh let's reground this so in the book you talk about um what it is exactly that people need to um come back together so you talk about the four pillars to build the life you want right um what are those four pillars and if I can contextualize this why does modern technology seem to move us in the exact opposite direction yeah so what we want is love that's what we want um and and and once again the world gives us complicated things we want complex things love is complex how do you get love love of the Divine or love of you know truth love of your family love with friendship the the the point of intersection between family and friendship is romantic love so that crosses both those categories and love of everybody is instantiated in the way you earn your daily bread which is work so the way that we needed the portfolio the pillars or the Investment Portfolio for happiness that we all need is to spend every day thinking about the way that we're going to make progress in our faith or philosophy whether it's religious or not Family Life friendship real friends not deal friends you know in the modern world gives us lots of deal friends but not very many real friends which are you know real friends deal friends are are useful to us real friends are useless that's and that's why we don't spend a lot of time on them and then work that serves is what it comes down to so those are the silos those are the deposits those are the accounts that we need to put investment in every single day and if we don't we're going to be we're going to be missing things we're we're going to we're not going to be as happy as we could be and we're not going to be building a stable steady um happiness that will that will improve our lives and help us make progress as we go through life so those are the four things it's just a very practical matter um I set people on I can actually set up a course of action most people watching us are very good at working nobody's watching impact Theory who's a total slacker it's like yeah I don't think I'm just G to sit around all day but I'm watch impact Theory no you want to be better at what you do so everybody watching us has got his work is pretty on point and okay and it's creating value and it's cool stuff generally speaking it's going to be cool stuff you're you know you've got a cool stuff audience good but are you working on your philosophical life are you reading the stoics are you walking in nature without devices are you studying the work of yan Sabastian Bach are you engaged in meditation practice are you practicing the religion of your youth you need to do something like that every day I I recommend at least 15 minutes of wisdom reading every day stuff you don't need to read but you you're Soul needs it 15 minutes a day and I have a whole you know list of books that I recommend TOS out a couple well toss out a couple um depending on what what what tradition you want to start in you know somebody who is interested in all eastern and western and very questioning and open to all different IDE I would I would recommend the way of a pilgrim which is written by an anonymous Russian Orthodox monk in the 19th century way of a pilgrim the way of a pilgrim and what he is he's just walking around Russia having Adventures saying one prayer over and over and over again it's a meditative book you're reading it it's just like the more you read it turns into a page Turner it's the most boring book ever and turns into a page Turner Zen In The Art of archery which actually explains Zen through the activity of archery Through The Eyes of a Westerner so that's a very good way to begin to understand Zen thinking Zen is the most ey self thing ever because it's nothing more than an attitude of observation that's what Zen really is it's a stripped thing compared compared to Tibetan Buddhism all the Buddhists are going to you know put in the comment section how crazy and wrong and wrongheaded I am on that um I would recommend the miracle of mindfulness by tick notan which talks about what is mindfulness it's being alive right now and how you can actually do that and there's countless numbers of these things and there's any number that we could if you want if you want fiction that falls into this category as dov's brothers Kaz off that is the most spiritual and intellectually psychologically Rich book I've ever read hm DVI is philosophy right so it's kind of like people were reading Atlas Shrugged because they wanted they wanted objectivist philosophy in the form of a novel if you want the essence of the search for the complex Oneness in the force of in the form of a novel Brothers karamazov by by Fodor do of G great so there the reading second thing is family life again we talked about that before there's one reason to have Schism in your family that's abuse everything else requires work the big reason that people drift away from their families is because they're just just lazy they're just lazy they just like I got to call Mom I was when the last time I saw mom do the work it takes two to tango like if the person is just not investing like you're you're trying to engage with your mom and oh my God yeah I know but the the point is that generally speaking it's an iterative process where you don't and she doesn't and you don't and she doesn't and you don't and she doesn't it's got to get restarted and doing the work actually the even the one even even unilateral work even one-sided work is incredibly enriching for your happiness because the part about relationships that's best is the giving is not the getting it's better if you're giving and getting I get it I mean there's an equation it's a dynamic situation but even if you don't it's better to do it than not to do it friendship is critically important real friends not deal friends and that means the work that you have to do is not pecuniary I have people I work with who are real friends but they started as real friends and we just look for an excuse to spend more time together and that's how they became deal friends too but the whole point is you know the people that you grew up with often people went they went to college with if they went to college and you know I have a son in the military and his buddies in the military they're his real friends I mean they've literally saved his life and and he can't lose touch with those people I guess that's the ultimate deal right is saving is saving your life and then and then last but not least at least making sure that your work serves others and you earn your success and that you're working to make sure if you're an entrepreneur or a CEO like you're me that you're the people who work for you can earn their success and serve others because they deserve to earn their success and serve others and that's in the hands of the boss to a very large extent that's the that's the portfolio and are you and either you're doing those things every day or you're not either you did your reading and called Mom and your best friend or you didn't right and every day that you don't you're just you're you're you're weakening the pillars of your happiness you're you're getting you're getting less competent in the serious business of building your life check out my intense conversation with Patrick B David about masculinity to truly be free you have to be strong enough to control your own life and many men today simply do not qualify many of you have been told the pursuit of power is disgusting you shouldn't do it many of you don't even have a clear definition of what it means