Friday, December 29, 2017

Ep. 297 – Rich Roll: Surrendering Does Not Mean Failure

“If you were on the outside looking in you’d probably think, ‘This guy’s got a really good life.’ And on paper I did, but on the inside I felt like I was dying. I was depressed. I was unenthusiastic about my life because I knew I was in a career that was ill suited to me. But I just couldn’t see my way out of it,” Rich Roll said.

He told be about the time he felt a tightness in his chest. He couldn’t walk up the stairs. He had to take a break halfway up the flight.

Rich was 39 and dying.

Rich and I talked about his story before… how he transformed himself from a depressed and overweight alcoholic to a plant based, vegan eating, mega athlete / bestselling author / podcaster / writer and total peak performer.

But THIS time we dove even deeper.

“I was trying to force this round peg into a square hole for most of my life,” he said.

I wanted to understand the switch that led him to himself… He told me his secret. And I believe him.

“Surrender.”

He went to rehab. And got help for a problem he couldn’t handle on his own.

That’s Rich’s meaning of “surrender.” Getting help when you need.

But it’s hard to know when it’s the right time to get help. I probably need help right now. It’s the first time I’ve felt physically sick in five years. My body is tired. And I’m trying to rest. But sometimes, I can’t pull myself away from what I love.

So I talked to Rich and then my friend Ryan Holiday. And then prepped for two more interviews.

I like this interview with Rich for a lot of reasons. I’ll tell you one though… It’s because when he says something, it feels just confessing. He’s sharing what’s true for him. And helping you heal in the process. (You’ll know what I mean if you start listening)

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Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Things I Refuse To Worry About In 2018

“You sound like a moron,” one of my closest friends recently told me. It was because I was feeling sick but I haven’t been to a doctor since I was 18.

In one month I turn 50.

The last doctor i went to was my pediatrictian before I went to college. I don’t even know what doctors do now.

“You could be a hypochondriac,” another friend of mine told me. “Maybe you’re so afraid you might be sick that you refuse to get a check-up.”

So I don’t know if I should go to a doctor or get even more scared. Sometimes I’m always scared.


“You have to move into your own apartment,” my friend above told me. “Moving around from Airbnb to Airbnb is creepy,” she said.

A few months ago I finally did it. I was scared to do it. I don’t know why. I don’t like buying things for myself.

I don’t like roots. I don’t like to lock myself into a place. Bad things happened to me when I do that.

But I did it. I didn’t want to be “creepy”.

It was really hard. I have never had a credit card. So I have no credit score. So nobody wanted to rent to me.

And then I had no furniture. I only had one bag with two outfits and a toothbrush and a computer.

I’m 49. I’ve never moved into my own apartment by myself.

“You will feel stable,” my friend told me. “You don’t even realize how good you will feel.”

She’s right. It’s amazing.


I’m still a 14 year old with acne and braces and afraid to talk to people and begging for people to like me.

I beg my children to like me. Sometimes I try to show off just for them.

I want to please people all the time. And I don’t want to disappoint people so I make promises and say “Yes” to things I can’t live up to. And then I disappoint people.

Aren’t you the guy who wrote “The Power of No”.

Yes.


I can’t predict next year. Last year came out 100% different than I thought it would.

But I feel like (I hope) I’m moving in the right direction.

And here are the things I hope I don’t worry about in 2018.

Please, Force, let me surrender these worries to you:

MONEY

We need money to pay the bills. I get it. We need money to support our families. We need stability.

I get it. I get it. All my life. All my fucking life. I’ve been worried about money. I’m so sick and tired of it.

My parents went broke. I paid for every dime of my college and graduate school.

I moved to NYC with a single garbage bag with an outfit or two in it and lived in a one room apartment with a roommate.

But worrying about money never made me money.

The ONLY times I’ve ever made any money was when I solved someone else’s problem, communicated my ability to solve it for them, and got paid for it.

Look around you. Your friends, your colleagues, your bosses, other companies. Everyone needs help.

And if you are at the right place and the right time, then some of those people will pay you to help them solve a problem. Not always (so you can’t be. disappointed) but sometimes.

Right place, right time, right solution, right communication, right execution, right pay. Then repeat.

That’s a business. That’s an income stream. Then make more.

It’s so hard. And it’s EVERY. DAY. the stress of making money. But I won’t worry about it. When I worry, I’m going to look around, solve a problem, communicate, execute, get paid.


POLITICS

I’m completely ignoring politics. Trump was elected over a year ago. An entire total of ONE bill that he has proposed has passed Congress and ZERO vetos. He does nothing. His one bill (tax bill) does nothing as far as I can tell.

The ONLY thing he has been good at is making one side of the country hate the other side. Good JOB!

I won’t fall for it.

Change happens when YOU and I DO things. Not when we argue.

Everyone has critical issues. No one set of issues you care about will ever align with a perfect candidate who agrees with you on anything.

I’m the father of an 18 year old and a 15 year old. The only purpose of war, as far as I can naively tell, is to send teenagers to other countries to kill other teenagers.

I’ve never seen a Senator go off to war. Or a “supreme leader”. Or a king.

This is my main issue.

Kids killing kids. People killing people over hate.

If it all blows up, I don’t really care. I just don’t want my kids to be sent to any war. I wish we had never gotten into the wars we were in, and I don’t know why we are still in them (and why 1/3 of my taxes goes towards paying for them).

Earlier this year, someone wrote a blog post suggesting I run for governor of NY on the Libertarian Party. For the fun of it, I even met with the actual guy who is running for governor on that party (a party I am not a member of).

I would be the worst governor or congressman or whatever of anything because I have so little cares about what is happening in the world.

Naive or not, that is the way I feel.

OTHER PEOPLE’S OPINIONS

Please God, please please please let me not pander to other people’s opinions.

It’s ok to listen. It’s ok to entertain and make people happy. It’s ok to judge your progress with the applause (or lack of) of others.

But never get stuck in the hole of where everyone else wants you to be.

Everyone wants to have status over you. I need to remember this. To remember that only I have the power to give myself status.

To never out-source my self-esteem to others. Oh god, please please please.

Anybody who is creative, will start off striving and yearning to be better at what they do.

They see the nuances and the beauty in the art created by masters before them.

I want to have those nuances in the things I do: in writing, in podcasting, in comedy, in career, in whatever I attempt to be creative at.

But people will always hate. And it’s the ones closest to you to be the most careful around. They will hate. Or disappoint. Or accidentally crush you. Or mistakenly make you feel so sad you don’t know how to ever create again.

It’s never the neighbor down the street. It’s the friend you let into your house.

Pandering to what they like, or what the crowd likes, is the one creative sin.

They dig the hole, they put you in a casket, they bury the casket.

But only if you pander to them. Breaking free from the grave might make them angry or disappointed or scared. They don’t want you to escape the nice grave they buried you in.

But it’s the only way to live.

THE FUTURE

It’s so easy to mortgage the present in exchange for a better future.

To think: if only she/he were like THIS, then I would be HAPPY.

To think: if only I had this amount, then I will be a SUCCESS

If only, this effort works, then I will be WHERE I WANT.

The fiber of life is drunk by our souls only when we squeeze all of the juice out of the current moment. Ugh. That sounds like a cliche.

Also a cliche to say, “be mindful of the current moment”.

So how else can I say it?

Hmmm….

What can I be grateful for right now?

Hmmm. Cliche also.

We are insignificant on this tiny dot? Cliche.

I don’t know. I don’t know. I’m just not going to worry about it.

PLEASING OTHERS

Every day I feel like I’m disappointing someone. I don’t try to. But it happens.

I’m sorry.

I’m sorry I can’t do everything I promised. I’m sorry I let you down. But it happens. We can work it out. Or not. But I can’t worry about it anymore.

I’m doing my best. Please believe me.

I love to do what I love doing, regardless of personal benefit.

Podcasting makes me zero. Writing makes me zero. Almost everything I do makes me zero and costs me aggravation if I let it.

This past year I started doing standup comedy up to six nights a week. I’ve always loved it. And I’ve always analyzed it. But now I’m trying to get good at it. TRYING. It’s so HARD. AGGHHGHAH!!!

And it’s so “in your face”.

I go on the stage, and I say things, and they might not respond how I want. Right then, they might not like me, or they might not understand me, or they might not care. Or they might be tired or drunk.

Or I might be just bad.

I videotape each set. I watch it. I write more. I study. I talk to comedians. I try to learn. Every time I go on stage I want it to be better than the last time.

We’ll see.

But in a microcosm it represents every attempt I have at pleasing others.

My one NEW mantra for comedy, and my one mantra for going on TV, or having a meeting, or being with friends, or being with family, or being with a life partner. or being with colleagues is:

THE PARTY IS WHERE I AM AT

And everyone who wants to join in is invited.

Those are the things I will try (please please please) not to worry about in 2018.

YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED.

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Ep. 296 – Linda Papadopoulos: Validation: Why It’s Dangerous…

We all have vulnerabilities. And I exposed mine to Linda because it’s a free therapy session. She’s a well-known psychologist and bestselling author born in Canada, living in the UK.

I had to ask her about all her theories. And all her books. But mostly these 2:

1. “What Men Say, What Women Hear”
2. “Unfollow: Living Life on Your Own Terms”

Because I am still outsourcing my self-worth to new measures. First, it was money. So I gave up Wall Street (for many reasons). And then it became book sales and now podcast downloads or laughs when I’m on stage doing stand up.

And so I asked Linda “why?”

Why am I sacrificing my art for identity?

“We create because it’s in,” she said. “We’re social beings and our identity is bound up in what we create. That identity needs to be confirmed by others, right? It’s an interesting thing: identity. It’s simultaneously what makes us different but it’s also what binds us with a group”

Then she told me about the evolution of acceptance.

“Years ago you’d have a much smaller group validating that. Now, you have people out there, James, that don’t have a vested interest in you feeling good about yourself. Actually, there are people out there that would find it interesting if you didn’t. And you’ve got to ask yourself, ‘Is the source not important?’”

“What do you mean?”

“It’s like a big bathroom door,” she said. All the comments on message boards or Facebook or Twitter…

Think about this. You go to a public bathroom. And the door is covered in ink. Is any of it positive? Or even worth reading?

That’s social media. (According to Linda.)

She said, “Look at who’s giving you that validation and explore if it’s quality or quantity. And, maybe that’s that’s what we’ve sold our souls for… quantity.”

Then she gave me tips. Really useful tips that I started practicing as soon as the podcast ended (like taking note of when I’m on social media, and how my mood is, and how much power someone else has). And then I asked her about women.

She broke down all the reasons people get divorced. And the most common misunderstandings. And how to get rid of them for good.

Because fighting hurts. It comes back to what Linda said about vulnerabilities. We all have them. And they’re impossible to forget. It’s like they put a mark on you. And follow you from place to place. Never letting you forget…

(Linda gave me advice for that too.) “The vulnerabilities are there,” she said, “but the assets are the people that tell you it’s okay to have them…”

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Ep. 295 – Jon Alpert: Behind the Camera: How to Be the Catalyst for Social Change

“This guy tried to kill me. He had a gun to my head,” Jon said.  “We were leaving the country.  We got intercepted.”

Wait.

What?

I was interviewing Jon Alpert.  He was trying to smuggle controversial footage out of Iraq.

“I was basically a complete failure up until the moment that I started making films,” Jon said.

He was constantly trying to make his community a better place, but his attempts were always unsuccessful.

“I want to make this country better. And I’m not a good soldier. And I’m not a politician. So I can’t go represent in Congress, but I can be a good reporter,” he said.

He took two passions (camera and country) and combined the two to become creative in the intersection.

His documentaries show aspects of social change that I’ve never seen anywhere else. There’s this undercurrent of a larger problem… an issue or a cause that people are fighting for. I feel like, in talking to Jon, that I want to be fighting for something too. Jon had a core. A direction. And a destination. All in one.

“The camera is a license for me to go up to you and to invade every single part of your life,” he said. “The camera is a license to invade people’s personal space.”

“And I’m doing it because I love my country and that’s how I believe I can be the best patriot.”

He told me about his newest documentary, “Cuba and the Cameraman.” 45 years! It took him 45 years to make this.

It’s his life work.

He went through a thousand hours of footage. Editing took a year. And what resulted (what we finally get to see) is one of the greatest films about the Cuban Revolution. Ever.

And this podcast is the story behind those stories. We hear about the leaders. The criminals. And what was inside their refrigerator.

These are the war stories you don’t hear. This is the filmmaker’s journey.

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Thursday, December 21, 2017

Ep. 294 – Jackie Martling: The Joke Man… I Talk with Howard Stern’s Lead Writer

I started to get really itchy. Inside my head.

I didn’t know how to scratch it. So I avoided it. Until I broke out into hives and finally forced myself on stage.

I think it started when I interviewed Gary Gulman, one of the greatest comedians ever. It was over two years ago. And even though he was deeply depressed, I was jealous.

Because he was living my dreams. He was scratching my itch.

So I started to interview more comedians. And writers of comedy. I had so many questions. I interviewed Jim Norton, Nancy Cartwright (the voice of Bart Simpson!) Fred Stoller, Chris Smith (who worked with Jon Stewart), Paul Shaffer (the famous band leader on Jay Leno), Bonnie McFarlane. The list keeps growing.

And there are so many branches of comedy:

Stand up, voice overs, writers, monologue performers, sidekicks. And each branch has its own microskills.

That’s true for every skill. They all require you to learn hundreds of micro-skills.

So getting started can be scary. Very scary. Some people die with itches unscratched.

When I want to get better at something, I go underneath the skill. I imagine a small version of myself looking up at my dreams. If I can see how far away I am from greatness, I feel the desire to get there. That’s what this podcast is about. Picking apart greatness.

Jackie Martling came to the studio. He was the lead writer at “The Howard Stern Show” for 18 years and now he’s the author of “The Joke Man Bow to Stern.”

I don’t know anyone who’s looked at their crappy job and said “I’m going to do this for 18 years.”

So I wanted to hear him talk about what it’s like to love what you’re doing with your life. To feel good and dedicated.

That’s where I hope to find us help. (I say “us” because I’m still itchy). I still want to be a standup comedian. Not just “do” standup. Doing and loving leads to being.

I’m still at “doing.” Because love comes from having a deep relationship with the skill.

Jackie loves what he does.

So I’ll keep scratching.

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Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Ep. 293 – AJ Jacobs: Why We Experiment (And Why You Should Also)

I like the idea of experimenting for two reasons. A) widen comfort zone B) become a better person.

I’ll tell you about A first then B.

But first, let me reintroduce my good friend AJ. If you listen to this podcast then you already know who AJ is. But just in case, AJ Jacob’s is a professional at experimenting. All his books are experiments. Four are bestsellers.

He told me about one he did with the comedian Jim Gaffigan. They looked up the oldest jokes in the world. From hundreds of years ago. And told them to live audiences today. Sometimes Jim bombed, some jokes he skipped (because a lot of jokes were about lettuce… lettuce used to be thought as an aphrodisiac), but others worked.

And he didn’t know what to expect.

That’s A) widening your comfort zone.

So for this podcast, AJ and I came up with ideas to experiment with. And we want you to join us. You’ll hear what we’re testing right now. And what’s next.

I found that if I do a new experiment a day or week, it becomes a micro step to creating a healthy life. For example, I told AJ that I try very heard not to say anything bad about anybody. And it’s hard because things come up throughout the day. But ultimately it makes me feel happier to not gossip. And I’ve been doing this now for about seven years. AJ tried it too. “It was fascinating,” he said, “because I realized 70% of my speech was trash talking and it made such a difference in my life when I cut that out because it made me more positive and happier.”

And it’s true. Because we all know that eating trash makes you feel like trash. And it’s true for your brain too.

These are the nuances hidden in experimenting. You have a secret with yourself. A promise to uphold. And you live up to some unknown potential sometimes.

That’s B.

 

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Tuesday, December 19, 2017

How To Win a Trip to New York City (And Sit In On a Podcast Taping)

I didn’t even want to do a podcast. Too much work!

I’m too shy to ask people to come on.

And I get so nervous I hope each podcast will get cancelled. Or a natural disaster will happen.

But I wanted an excuse to ask people how they made their lives better. Maybe I could do it also.

I’ve gone from successful to broke more than once. I’ve gone all the way down, then come back up. I’ve gained then lost multiple times, so I needed to talk to my super heroes…

I would read a book and think to myself: I wish I could ask Judy Blume, Peter Thiel, Coolio, Tim Ferriss, Jewel, Mark Cuban, etc. MORE about what they just said.

But if I just called them, would they return the call?

Definitely not. I needed a front. A lame excuse. I’d pick up the phone… “I have a podcast.”

People ask me “what’s this podcast about?”

To me it’s about interviewing people who are peak performers. Maybe even the best in the world at what they do.

It’s not about business or entrepreneurship. But about going deeper and exploring what it means to be human and achieve well-being in a world that is increasingly complicated.

This is what people struggle with in their lives, it’s the layer underneath the bills, the relationships, the sicknesses. All of that are just byproducts of finding well-being in life.

It’s been four years and now 300 interviews later. I’ve had close to 50 million downloads overall. More when I include other podcasts I’ve been involved in.

The podcast has saved my life. I’ve spoken to so many of my heroes. (People who I would never have expected to have a conversation with.)

Having Judy Blume, my favorite author as a child, give me relationship advice – might be the highlight of my life.

Or Brian Grazer, producer of many of my favorite movies and TV shows, give me advice about creativity.

Talking to Wayne Dyer, Coolio, Steven Pressfield, Seth Godin, Tim Ferriss, Judy Blume, Cheryl Strayed, Amanda Palmer, and on and on, has taught me so much about the world.

I hope I remember them. I hope I live what I learned. I try to.

Often people ask me what my favorite episode is… I can’t possibly tell you.

I’ve learned so much. Every one of the 300 people have changed my life in some way.

I could sit here and write 300 things… one from each podcast. But I wanted to try something different.

Now I want to hear what you’ve learned. Or how this podcast has helped you.So I’m doing  a contest…

Here’s how you can enter. (And if you win, I’ll fly you out to New York City for a live podcast taping with me and one of my guests)

It’s simple. (And takes less than a minute.) Tell me your favorite podcast and how it’s changed your life.

I’ll go through each video and pick out the best one, fly you to new york for a live podcast episode (or two).

We’ll hang out…

You can ask me about the time I blew off Trump’s inauguration to interview Sara Blakely. Or how I was able to get Mark Cuban, Arianna Huffington, and Gary Vaynerchuck on the phone for an interview.

You can’t change 300 things in your life. But you can file a few things away and pull them out as necessary.

I learned about creativity, nutrition, persistence, peak performance, happiness.

Every day I think, “I’m going to quit this podcast. It’s too much work.”

But then I read a book. Or I see a person I’m curious about. And I think, “I need to know more about this.”

So I call them. I arrange to meet them. I pull out a recorder.

I start asking questions.

I also learned they’ll pick up. They’ll share their stories. I said I wanted to be like my heroes… Enter the contest. I’ll pick up.

 

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Monday, December 18, 2017

Ep. 292 – Tiffany Haddish: Stop Telling Yourself You’re Not Good Enough

Got to interview one of my favorite comedians for the podcast, Tiffany Haddish, star of “Girls Trip,” her recent comedy special. “She Ready”, and 20 years a stand up.

I asked her what was the biggest change in her first few years of doing standup. (She’s been doing it over 20 years).

She said, “I learned to change the fear into fun”.

I think all of the above is great advice to achieve success in everything worth doing.

I had a gift for Tiffany.

It was a suitcase. I gave her a suitcase for the kids.

Let me explain. Because a suitcase is an odd kind of gift.

Tiffany was placed in foster care when she was 12 years old and stayed in the system until she was a legal adult. When she moved from home to home she didn’t have a suitcase or any kind of bag to put her clothes. They make the kids put all their belongings in trash bags. And it made her feel like garbage.

“You’re garbage,” she said. “Garbage moved around from house to house.”

“When I was 13, I said to myself if I ever get any sort of power, any sort of influence at all, I’m gonna figure out a way to make sure no kid feels like a piece of trash.”

And she’s succeeding (and you can help).

So she’s been collecting suitcases for kids through the Felix Organization. If you’re reading this and want to donate a suitcase, look up the Felix Organization.

I wanted to know how she rose up from foster kid to superstar comedian. And the first black female to host Saturday Night Live.

“I try to manifest what it is I want to be,” she said. And she told me her self talk…

“You got divine order all over you,” she said. “Everything is happening in the order and the way it’s supposed to happen.You got this girl. Pull that energy from your uterus. You got it that’s where your soul at. Pull it up from your soul. You got this girl.”

I couldn’t stop laughing.

She said she tried to find the joy and the fun in everything she’s ever gone through.

Here’s a quote from her new book, “The Last Black Unicorn”:

“In stand-up, you do need to be having fun up there like Richard Pryor said, but you have to know yourself well, too…You start learning and it’s like playing a piano. You know exactly what keys to stroke, ’cause really with comedy, you’re like fiddling with people’s souls. You resonate on the same frequency as them, trying to greet them to relate…”

“To do that, you gotta put yourself out there. And in order to put yourself out there, you’ve gotta have an idea who you are.”

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Ep. 291 – Stephen Tobolowsky: Write Your Own Story Because We’re All Living On Borrowed Time

If you’re reading this, you probably don’t know the name Stephen Tobolowsky.

But I’ll give you some hints.

Ned Ryerson. (From “Groundhog Day”)

Jack Barker. (From “Silicon Valley”)

Sound familiar? Stephen Tobolowsky is one of the main characters and actors in one of my favorite TV Shows, Silicon Valley. He also plays the MOST annoying character in Groundhog Day. He’s been in 200 movies and a thousand other things including Seinfeld, Thelma & Louise, Heroes and the list goes on.

But he did something weird.

He wrote a book.

And when I read it I thought, “who the hell is this guy?”

There are only two ways someone could write this book…” My Adventures with God”.

ONE: If they were incredibly broken as a human being somewhere in their lives and then they climbed back out of that hole by thinking all these intense and philosophical thoughts.

TWO: They were just born this way…

I still haven’t figured out which one.

I have to admit I didn’t understand parts of Stephen’s book. And not because it was bad, (I loved it), but because I had to stop and think. His thoughts are so valuable and I really wanted to know what they meant. I was pretty happy he was able to come on my podcast.

He taught me that we’re all writing and choosing our narratives to some extent…

“Well I think on a personal level, we all end up developing narratives,” Stephen said, “Either it’s instinct or sometimes it’s choice. I think we live in the dark so much of the time that we need metaphors to find our way. And I believe having a philosophy is only useful if it helps you see in the dark.”

So I asked him how do we begin to take control of our own narratives?

Because we to some extent, I can’t just surrender to the narratives that has  been  given to me.

That takes away my freedom and ability to reinvent.

Stephen told me this, “We’re all living on borrowed time.”

This podcast shows you a window into a man’s desire to connect with the deeper meaning on time and what it means to be alive.

 

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Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Ep. 289 – Amy Morin: The Easiest Side Hustle You Can Start Right Now

You may remember Amy, she came on my podcast a few weeks ago. We discussed her book, “13 Things Mentally Strong People Don’t Do.”

I asked her why is it a book about what people DON’T do instead of SHOULD do. It seemed counterintuitive to me.

But her reasoning made sense. The book wasn’t written for other people. It was actually just a letter to herself at first. And then she put it online. And it became viral… that led to a book deal.

The podcast was really popular. But I feel like you didn’t get the full story…

Amy’s not just an author, therapist, social worker/mentally strong person. She’s also an entrepreneur.

She was making money in her sleep…

“I’ve always had some sort of a side hustle usually something fun or strange,” she said.

I knew immediately I needed to have her back on the show. I wanted her to  share this with my listeners. Because these are “choose yourself” ideas. Simple, easy to execute, and anyone can do it.

“I had a friend who had a jewelry store,” Amy said, “so I knew the markup on jewelry was incredible, like 200 hundred or 300 hundred percent.”

And she knew jewelry was fairly inexpensive to ship because it didn’t weigh anything. Over the years she and her husband thought about how they could turn this into something they could monetize. And finally they did it.

I asked so many questions about how she pulled the trigger. And got the courage. I wanted to know how she made this business work. I also gave her ideas about how she could scale.

I really believe this: anyone who listens to this podcast can start doing their own side hustle right now.

“Over time it went from a few dollars to a few hundred and then before I knew it we were up to a few $1,000  dollars a month.”

You could quit your job I told her.

“That was the dream,” she said.

The post Ep. 289 – Amy Morin: The Easiest Side Hustle You Can Start Right Now appeared first on Altucher Confidential.



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Ep. 288 – Mike Van Cleave: A Conversation About Cancer & Learning How to Discard the Meaningless

I got a call from my friend Mike Van Cleave a year ago. He told me had cancer. We hadn’t spoken for years.

“It’s like mold in your refrigerator,” he said. “All of a sudden you’re like, ‘What the hell happened? It’s only been a week.”  

You never know who’s going to call you out of the blue someday with cancer. It’s scary, but luckily we don’t live with these thoughts in our minds. We only think of ourselves. “Will I get cancer?” And that’s important. These selfish thoughts keep us alive.

I’ve always admired my friend Mike. I felt honored to have him on this podcast. He told me the science of his cancer (thyroid cancer) and the ways he’s surviving every day.

I’ll take emotional pain over physical any day. So my bones can keep typing.

“Do you have pain in your bones?” I asked him.

He did. And it went away. “I have no bone pain right now. So there’s a very good chance that all the bone metastasis is working,” he said.

That takes away 80% of the “badness”. He spoke casually. And sometimes I laughed inappropriately.

I guess I was scared.

In 18 months, his medicine will stop working. The cancer will keep growing again. And he’ll be on a new drug.

He told me about the success rate of his next drug (only 50% of people are helped and it only helps for 6 months).

“What’s the best case scenario?” I asked.

I cried afterwards. Not in front on him.

Not there…

But later, when I was alone with my fear, I cried for hope. He’s down to his second to last drug. The second to last hope.

Unless they create a new medicine…

“We’re look at a maximum of three years,” I said… “What happens next?”

“Honestly, really bad things happen,” he said.

Then he told me, “All of a sudden there was meaning… The desire to connect with meaning overwhelmed the time I had for the meaningless. In some ways, you can’t understand it. And the one thing I’ve come to understand completely is there’s only one thing in your life that matters and that’s the quality of your relationships. It’s such a cliche. You can look back at thousands of quotes from people who are old and dying and they always talk about the people in their lives. Nobody cares how much money you have when you die.”

I stayed silent. I wanted to catch all his words. And learn from them.

“Most of the things we sit around worrying about, you realize, at this stage, has no meaning. Now, it’s important. Maybe. Ya know, it’s important that I have a job, but the job itself only has the importance that you place in it.”

I hope this podcast is a special moment for you like it was for me. I took it as a chance to step back from my life. And the problems I think about over and over again.

This interview allowed me to care for a friend. And I hope it lets you care for a stranger. That’s something I want to do a little bit more each day. Until the day is full with selfless thoughts between selfish thoughts.

Maybe that’s part of the medicine.

 

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Monday, December 11, 2017

The Greatest Pleasures In Life

At age six, Jaqueline Du Pre, was running, cello over her head, down the performance hall where she was one of the performers that day.

She was smiling and laughing and running.

A janitor, figuring she must have just performed and was relieved and happy at how she did said, “You must have just performed. Congratulations!”

And she said, “I didn’t perform. I’m about to!”

—-

She died at age 42 in 1986. She’s one of the greatest cellists in history.

But that day, at age six, she was so excited to perform that she was running TO something.

She was running towards an exciting and uncertain and even scary future (“I have to perform and do well!”). She wasn’t running with relief and the fading of fear. She was running towards the fear.

She grew up to be one of the greatest cellists of all time.

I have to give a talk later today and tomorrow. I’m always nervous as hell. And then standup on Saturday.

I have to teach myself to run TOWARDS something, with cello overhead.

I want to do this every day.

Laughing, happy, excited. I am about to perform!


Happiness is a scam.

I wrote the above post about DuPre a year ago today.

I am always trying to make my articles “evergreen”. And here it is: I can post the exact same article today.

It’s to remind me how important it is to run TOWARDS something.

To DO rather than plan and think and analyze and hope.

To ask a question and leave it in the air, unanswered, floating, but simply asking it. Even that is “DOING”.

To “choose myself” rather than waiting for others to choose me. Ultimately, if I choose myself it means I am choosing freedom.

How can I take a little more control today, that I didn’t do yesterday, over the things I value most? How? HOW?

—-

A good friend of mine has a family member in the hospital right now. He is depressed and having problems.

Too often, we chase happiness: the next party, the latest drug, the next “love”, the clapping of others, the salary increase, the promotion, and all the other metrics society has approved as “worthy” for us.

But I told my friend what I always remind myself.

Happiness is useless.

What is useful:

COMMUNITY:

Good friends and relationships. 100% of the people in my life need to add to my life, just as I hope and strive to add to theirs.

IMPROVEMENT:

The goal is the direction. I want to be better at the things I love to do: a kinder person (father, friend, relationship, etc), a better writer, a better performer (podcast, speaking, standup, etc etc), healthier.

FREEDOM:

What is freedom? It’s not money. I’ve had it all and it didn’t give me freedom.

Money is good to pay for experiences and conveniences and pay for the bills. It’s certainly important.

Money is often the prison door. But it’s not locked.

Money will solve our money problems. But it is not the key to freedom.

Freedom is that feeling: to run TO something.

We know when we are free when it’s in our heart. In our bodies.

It’s that feeling of curiosity about the world around us. And permission to ask the questions.

It’s that feeling of “I learned today. Even if it was painful and horrifying”. Because almost every moment of new freedom, involves figuring out what prison is enslaving us.

The prison might be a job, a relationship, the incorrect goal, the wrong direction, or just a feeling that something is amiss.

“I chose myself” is that feeling of, “I can be myself. Even if I don’t really know who that is and I never will. Even if I feel like such a failure most of the time.”

“I choose myself” is that feeling of, “I can run towards something, not FROM something”.

My idea list for today: what are the ten things I am excited to be running TOWARDS.

Hopefully one of those is you.

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Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Ep. 287 – Scott Galloway: How the Four Most Influential Companies on the Planet Took Over the Market and Changed Humankind

I don’t know where to begin. I’m a fan of Scott. I think he reminds me of someone I went to highschool with. He was bright and always cursing at the right time. I remember laughing. Because I felt close to being free. But he was the one with the ability to put himself in the middle of controversy.

That’s something I (still) can’t do.

He’d say eff this or eff that. Part of me felt compelled to egg him on. But he didn’t need it. He was comfortable being cynical and right.

Scott Galloway does this with business. I watch his weekly  “Winners & Losers” videos where he tells you things like “Brands are dying” and “Amazon will be broken up” Then he’ll dress up like Spock and I’ll lose my mind.

I get these videos emailed to my phone. And I’m also subscribed to his YouTube channel.

He came on my podcast to talk about his new book, “The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google.”

But we also talked about his past: creating and selling companies. Being on the board of The New York Times, wanting to salvage the newspaper industry (his idea back then was brilliant).

“I got laughed out of the room,” he said.

“What was your idea?”

“That the stupidest thing we did is buy into this bullshit lie that ‘information wants to be free.’”
He’s right. I remember the beginning on the internet. We gave information  away… And now they’re profiting off us. Scott called it “the hot girl effect”

“Everybody wants to hang out with the hot girl,” he said. “So, to say you’re doing a deal with Google made you feel younger and more interesting.”

They said “information wants to free.” So deals were made.

He told me exactly how he would’ve turned it around. And I felt like I was listening to the possibility of new reality.

That’s what Scott Galloway brings to the table. Beyond strategy or analysis. Beyond brilliance, he brings possibility. And teaches you that it’s not over.

“The Four” are winning.

But I told Scott nobody really cares. Nobody cares which one of these companies “wins.”

I’m interested in is learning how to win too. I want to know HOW Amazon, Apple, Facebook & Google became influential. And disruptive. So I can be influential and disruptive, too.

Scott said all Fortune 500 CEO’s have one thing in common… or at least “450 of them have one thing in common.”

They’re likable.

“Even the ones that are psychopaths?” I said.

“Yeah…”

He explained: ”During the day these people are Darwin and Darth Vader, make no mistake about it. They play full body contact business and they make very brutal decisions. They dominate markets. They put companies out of business. And they don’t put warning labels on your iPad even though your kid has a crack-like addiction to the thing.”

He called them “wolves in sheeps clothing.”

Zuckerberg, Jobs, Bezos, Page, Brin.

But then he told me the principles they standby…

There’s five in total.

And we go through them all on this podcast. Listen learn HOW you can copy the 4 most on influentialal companies

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Ep. 286 – Dennis Woodside: How Do You Know When Something is The Next Big Thing (Advice from Dropbox’s COO)

Dennis Woodside left Google, for DropBox. Everyone thought he was crazy.

DropBox was this little tiny company.

What was he thinking?

“So you ask why I would go from Google to Dropbox. Just play the movie forward. Where’s it going to be in ten years? It’s logical to me that the company that pioneered this notion of putting your files in the cloud is going to have all kind of opportunities and going to solve problems for everybody in the world. A lot of people don’t think that way. They think very linearly. That’s how we’re taught as kids. That’s how you’re taught in college.

(And that’s how Dennis was taught to think in law school. But he got out of that rut. More on that later…)

“You have to rewire your brain a bit,” he said.

You have to ask yourself, “What trends do I understand to be true?”

And “If I extrapolate that trend to its logical conclusion, what does the world look like?”

That’s what Dennis did. And that’s how he found Google. And later, Dropbox.

He said Google was tiny when he first joined.

“What year?”

“2003”

There were only a thousand employees.

“When I joined Google everybody thought I was crazy because it was a little tiny company,” he said, “but I felt one of the most exciting things you can do with a career in Silicon Valley is to help grow a company. And be there early… There’s a lot of uncertainty. And competition is really hard. You have to figure everything out. That’s the hardest part, but the most rewarding.”

Dennis is now the COO of DropBox. How did he go from lost lawyer to a leader in Silicon Valley?

I wanted to know.

“Ultimately, I realized I wasn’t going to be a great lawyer,” Dennis said.

This is where his career path changed from one end of the spectrum to the other. He reinvented. He learned a whole new set of skills. And he adapted to an ever changing digital world.

Most people are thinking about the next ten days, Dennis is thinking about the next ten years.

He saw DropBox as a pioneer. And is vision paid off. DropBox is one of the fastest growing companies maybe ever. And there are billions of people who are signing up every month.

I wanted to learn how to cultivate that same skill. The one that lets you have a vision. And believe in it.

Also Mentioned:

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Thursday, November 30, 2017

Ep. 285 – Ellen Fein & Sherrie Schneider: How to Get the Relationship You Deserve… Advice from “The Rules” Authors

I sat down with two women the other day. And I can’t decide whether they’ve completely ruined my life or helped me. I decided they were going to help me decide before this podcast was over. Ellen Fein and Sherrie Schneider are the authors of the classic book, “The Rules”.

I know this book inside and out. Every woman I ever dated back in the 90’s and early 00’s read “The Rules” AND were following them. I felt like I was talking to them on behalf of every single person I’ve ever dated. (And every man who’s ever been frustrated by a woman they’ve dated.)

“The Rules” tell women how to date and WHO to date. But more than that, it teaches you to have self respect. How to bring the center of gravity back to yourself. And stop outsourcing your self-esteem to some other human or some idea of being with that human.

I’ve been married twice. I told Ellen and Sherrie about both of my marriages, but I kept something things private, too. I told them I’m going to give their books to my daughters. I want them to read it.

“But I don’t know if I want my future girlfriend to read it,” I said.

Maybe that’s because I’m a little lost. And I want her (whoever she is) to be a little lost with me.

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Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Ep. 284 – Frank Shamrock: The Making of a Legend: How a Criminal Became a Champion

I asked Frank Shamrock, a living legend MMA fighter, “How many titles have you won?”

“I think I won them all.”

He calls himself a “super athlete.” So I told him he lacks humility… And we laughed.

But he’s right. He IS a super athlete. He evolved the art form. And went one level deeper than any opponent. He didn’t just say “how do I crush this person?” He said “How is the body working? What is this machine? How can I use it optimize my performance?”

“I was studying the biomechanics,” Frank said. “And how to maximize it… everyone else studied technical fighting.”

But he wasn’t always a fighter. He found the sport in jail.

He was 11. He left home and learned “crime was a tool to change your situation and protect you,” Frank said.

His parents were abusing him. “I was an emotional basket case,” he said. “I couldn’t hold anything together for more than a few days, no sport, no activities I would just fall apart.”

He escaped through crime. “ I actually threw rocks at a train and in California, that’s a felony. I went and did ten days in juvenile hall.”

It was his first time away from his “family.” His abusers…

He was hanging out with all the other kids in juvie. So he started to ask questions. “How do you deal with x, y and z.” He listed out all the abuse. They looked at him shocked and confused. And asked him repeatedly, “What are you talking about?”

“You don’t get locked in the closet till they get home?”  he asked. They couldn’t believe what they were hearing.  

That’s when this small 11-year-old realized he had to get out.

“When things didn’t work out, I knew what to do: commit a crime, go back to juvenile hall, see my friends…”

The cycle didn’t stop.

He turned 17. Committed another crime and went to prison for 3 and a half years. “Because I was married and an emancipated minor, anything that I did illegally was charged as an adult.”

THIS was Frank’s wake up call. It all fell on him. He had ruined his life. He had 20 felonies, no education, and a baby to support.

“I know what the bottom is like,” he said. “I know what it’s like to have zero. You can always build up. But it starts by changing your mind and taking action.”  

This is a story about the making of a legend.

It’s the story of a criminal turned champion. I want to take these lessons and apply them to my own life.

I realized I don’t have to fight, but I can at least live with the mindset of a fighter.

Links and Resources:

Also Mentioned:

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Ep. 283 – Anthony Ervin: Overcoming Your Battles: How an Olympic Swimmer Transformed Tourette’s Syndrome into Winning Gold

Anthony holds a lot of weird records. But the most interesting to me is the record for the biggest span between winning golds. SIXTEEN YEARS.   

But first, let’s start from the beginning.

Anthony Ervin always had a gift for swimming. He had the talent. He had the coaching. And he had the success from an early age. But there was something else looming. Tourette’s.

I asked him how it happened. “What was the first things you noticed about yourself when you developed Tourette’s?”

“It was debilitating,” he said. “I felt a lot of nervous energy running through the body and that energy needs to find an exit.”

It escaped through his eyes, his jaw, his neck.

“It took a long time cause originally you want to fight this. You want to imprison this energy just to make it stop. But my eventual tactic for it was to take that energy and move it through my entire body. Specifically to move it into my swimming,” Anthony said.  

He used it as a weapon.

He turned a negative into a positive. And it ultimately led to success in swimming.

He first went to the Olympics when he was only nineteen. He won gold. But he wasn’t ready for the mantel of responsibility that came with winning.  

“I quickly fell off the mountain,” Anthony said.   

He battled with depression and addiction. He dropped out of college. He stopped competing. He self-medicated. And he kept this secret inside. He forgot all about his athletic success.  

I really wanted to understand why.

What is the catalyst for a comeback?

In this podcast, Anthony Ervin, 3 time Olympic gold medalist reveals how he did it…  

Links and Resources: 

 

Listen to our full conversation here:

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Monday, November 27, 2017

How You Do Anything Is How You Do Everything

I’m thankful for dead people.

Nothing felt more low than when my father died. I can’t even imagine feeling that feeling again. He died over ten years ago now.

I guess I’m over it. I guess people who are old and tired and stressed and afraid, eventually die.

But I was really sad then. And there was no recovery from it.

He was going to die and I knew it.

Statistically, I’m immortal. I’ve lived for about 18,000 days. What are the odds that my death is tomorrow or the next?

Maybe 18,000 to one. Plus, I happen to be very lucky. I’m so lucky I can’t jinx it by saying I’m lucky. So maybe the odds that I die tomorrow are 50,000 to one.

With those kind of odds, I think I’m going to live forever.

But my dad didn’t have such good odds. He was stressed. He was overweight. He was a bit of a drinker. And he was in the middle of an argument about money.

In the middle of that argument, he had a stroke.

And for the next two years afterwards he stared at the ceiling with his open eyes. He got bed sores. He got pneumonia. He got heart attacks. Then he died.

So, fair to say, the odds were very much against him. I swore to myself: don’t argue about money. The stress and death are not worth it.

But what I learned from him, and what I learned from his death, is what I am thankful for today. I owe any success I’ve ever had to him, because of these things I’ve learned.

1) HONESTY

One time I asked out a girl on my paper route. Beth Mosesman. I don’t mind saying her real name. It was easy for me to fall in love when I was 16 and I loved her.

She said “No”, and shut the door.

On Saturdays I collected the money. One guy gave me a $20 bill instead of a $5 bill, which was his usual tip.

I bicycled home and told my dad, “I got an extra $15! This guy gave me too much money!”

“Get in the car,” he said. And I was devastated because I knew the deal that was about to go down.

I wanted the money. But even more than that, I wanted to not be humiliated.

We drove to the house of the over-tipper. My dad waited in the car. He told me what to do.

I walked up to the door, knocked on it. The son came to the door. I knew him from school. “Can I see your dad?” The son looked confused, got his dad.

“Yes?”

“I’m sorry,” I said, “But you gave me too much money. Here’s your $20 bill back.”

He looked confused also. He took the $20 bill but he didn’t have any clue why I would bring it back.

“Ok,” he said. “Thanks.” And shut the door. I was so embarrassed. I felt like I had robbed him, he knew, and now every silence in the air was punishing me for it.

“Did you do it?”, when I got back into the car.

“Yeah.”

I forget what my dad said then. It wasn’t a wise quote that I can repeat here. I can’t remember at all.

But actions are more important than quotes. Doing is more important than reading. Emotions are more important than thoughts.

I felt horrible. I felt embarrassed. I don’t think I “felt” honest because I’m not sure that’s an emotion.

But I was honest that afternoon. And I hope I still am.

As my friend Jim Kwik says, “How you do anything is how you do everything.”

2) CHARITY

As far as I know, my dad never gave to any charity.

But he told me this once. “The best thing you can ever do is to give anonymously.”

I don’t know if he ever did it. Give anonymously. I don’t think he actually ever did it. Which would make for a better story.

If you want to give anonymously, here’s what I recommend.

a. Look for a “mission”. Someone to help. Maybe a friend. A colleague you overhear needing help in some way. Two people you can connect. A favor you can run. Anything.

b. Work really hard at figuring out how to do it anonymously.

I don’t know what else to tell you. It’s hard to find a MISSION and to DO IT.

DO IT.

3) OPTIMISM

My dad was so optimistic I thought he was a bit low IQ. A bit stupid. When he went broke (I inherited his stunning ability to go broke) he was still optimistic.

“I’m going to sue them and make it back,” he’d say for a whole year.

Not in an angry way. In a hopeful way. He convinced me he was going to make it back.

“I’m going to start a new company,” he’d say for another two years. And he had a vague idea he could never explain but he spoke to everyone about it.

“I’m going to be a real estate agent,” he said. And he was. But sometimes the agency wouldn’t pay him.

I had never seen him raise his voice my entire life. But apparently, he was raising his voice and yelling at his boss in the real estate agency when he had his stroke.

His last words were in the ride to the hospital with my mom. I think these were his last words. He said his head hurt “really, really bad”. And then for two years he couldn’t speak until he died.

I learned about his optimism in another way.

When I was young he would destroy me at chess. But then I got better. And I saw how he played. How truly stupid his optimism was.

He’d attack and attack and attack. He’d throw everything at me. Every game,I felt like I was walking into a dust storm and had to make it to the other side.

But as I got better I was able to defend against his attacks. And eventually, each game, I’d start winning.

He would never realize when the tide had turned. When his attacks had worn out. And so I’d creep up on him and win, knowing that he would never stop attacking.

He’d scratch his head, “How’d I lose that? I had such a strong attack.”

“You did,” I said. “I was in big trouble. I don’t know how I escaped.” And I’d set up the pieces again.

Because what better pleasure is there than defeating your stupid parent at the game they love the most.

Or the other time when I got a job at HBO as a “junior programmer analyst” and one time I had an idea that my boss, or his boss, or his boss, didn’t like.

“Just go walk into the CEO’s office,” my stupid dad said.

So I did. And it worked. The CEO said, “This is the future. Go for it.” And that one moment changed my life.

Because of his optimism I’ve never said to myself, “You CAN’T do that.” Which is the mantra for so many people.

But I can do it. I can do anything I want.

4) WRITING

One time I had to write an essay but I didn’t know where to start or what to write about. I’d stare at the paper and couldn’t even think how to start.

“Here,” he said, “Read this.” It was Thomas Mann’s “Magic Mountain”. I can’t remember a single word of that awful book.

But then I wrote the essay and got an A on it in my English class. The teacher read it out loud to the class.

Another time, when I was in college, I had to write a paper for Sociology 101. I was stuck. I had no clue.

“Here,” he said, “Read this.” And he gave me an essay he had been reading in an academic journal about sociology.

I can’t remember the essay I read. And I have no idea why he was reading an academic journal.

But I read the essay. Then it was like the floodgates opened and I wrote mine. I got an A+ on it.

Now, whenever I write, I read first. I get inspired. And then I write. I do this every single day. I’ve been doing this since 1989.

He taught me how to get inspired. How to get motivated. Getting motivated turns on the ignition and shows you the directions. Then you can drive.

5) SADNESS

When he had a stroke, it was really sad for me. For reasons I’ve probably described a billion times elsewhere, I hadn’t spoken to him in the prior six months before his stroke.

Then I got a call from my sister. “Come to the hospital.”

I went to sleep after my sister called because I knew it would be a big day the next day. Visiting him. Seeing my family sad. Trying to figure out if he would be okay. He was never ok again. He never spoke again.

When I was lying in bed I felt so sad. Like a black hole that no light could escape.

No matter who you are, or what your age, you can become an orphan. I was about to become an orphan.

Someone told me a way to cheer up. But I didn’t want to cheer up. I wasn’t depressed. I was sad.

It’s ok to be sad.

I was just talking to a friend who told me, the more pain you can feel then… the more compassion you are capable of feeling. And it goes the other way also.

I said, That’s good! I’m going to steal that. The relationship between compassion and pain.

She said, It’s yours!

There’s no need to avoid sadness. To think you should only accept happiness. This is the false promise of self-help.

Living an authentic life, I think, means honestly feeling the sadness when bad things happen as much as you honestly enjoy the happiness when good things happen.

Living one without the other is only living a half life.


One time my dad had surgery. I was eight years old. He needed to sleep and I made enough noise to wake him up.

He had me stand in the middle of the room. He told me to stand still. He told my mom to walk over and hit me in the face. She did.

Then I went to my room for the rest of the day.

I felt (and still feel) I deserved to be hit because I had made too much noise for him and hurt his recovery from surgery.

But … I don’t know, it’s hard to know what is right and what is wrong outside of your family. Your parents are so large and you’re so small when you are young.

When I went broke the first time, I called him. I was crying really hard. “I ruined everything,” I kept saying. I was so scared. And nothing was going right for me.

I felt like the worst fraud. I felt like my life was over. I felt like my kids would be better off if I were dead. I couldn’t stop crying.

“It’s ok,” he said. “Things are going to get better.”

And he was right. They did.

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Ep. 282 – Tyler Cowen: What the Future Holds: Stagnation or Innovation?

We’ve become too comfortable. We’re innovating less and watching Netflix more.

When I think of a “complacent class,” (a group of people who don’t care to move forward or move at all), I think of this: Americans soaking high wages off the backs of more aggressive global economies. I picture us eating delivered food, never moving, only using the remote. And having drones deliver everything we need.

I had to ask Tyler Cowen about this. He’s a personal computer that’s going to answer all my economic questions.

He knows all about the “complacent class.” Because he wrote the book on it.

It’s called, “The Complacent Class: The Self-Defeating Quest for the American Dream”.

“Look at it this way,” he said. “We’ve had these incredible advances in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. We take fossil fuels and powerful machines and combine them to do everything you can imagine (cars, airplanes, electricity, radios, televisions). We’ve had incredible booms spread to the middle class. Spread to the poor. We’ve done that. Now we’re waiting for the next wave of big things.”

I have an idea of what the next big wave could be… I’ve written about it before. And I’ve interviewed the experts. But I wanted to know, will we be successful?

“We’re kind of running a race,” Tyler said. “Will the next wave of innovations and productivity come before our debts do us in? Right now to me, it’s looking like the answers no.”

What Tyler said next scared me.

“America is losing its dynamism.”

But Tyler makes two distinctions here. The future is built on A) Innovation and B) PRODUCTIVITY. It’s the persistence to do.

I still feel we’re trying to hit the frontier. We’re exploring space. Improving biotech. Creating countless innovations.

But is this progress coming from is only the 1%? Are the rest of us just sitting around? Waiting for the benefits?

I wanted to hear the worst case scenario. I don’t know why. Maybe sometimes fear pulls me in. It’s like following a narrow path of light in a dark cave. I’m not interested in the dark. I’m following the light.

But what he said next is a scary thought to consider…

“The worst case scenario is that America’s allies realize we cannot make good on all of our commitments. So they start fighting more amongst themselves. Trusting us less. Maybe building their own nuclear weapons. The fiscal position of the United States government becomes more and more cramped. We stop being credible. The quality of our governance continues to decline. And, both internationally and at home, we have a mess with warfare and partial collapse of international order. And here we have a return of something like the 1970s with high unemployment, high inflation and stagflation,” Tyler says.

So then what is our future? What can we depend on?

In this podcast, I ask Tyler and he shows me how we can create a dynamic future… How we can keep reaching for the frontier.

Links and Resources: 

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Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Ep. 281 – Tim Ferriss: Using a New Lens To Make Life Easier

Tim’s doing a new experiment.

(I’m not surprised.)

He’s looking at people and asking himself one question…

“What happened to this person?”

He said, “Normal people are just folks you don’t know well enough yet, right? Nobody’s normal. We’re so full of stuff and trauma and nonsense and silly beliefs. Everyone’s a work in progress and since you’re a work in progress, it’s very hard to know yourself.”

He gave me an example. But didn’t name names.

“There was this woman who had some very peculiar emotions. It turned out that she had watched her father beat her mother into unconsciousness on multiple occasions… knocked out, unconscious, on the floor. And that was just the tip of the iceberg.”

She’s acting in response to her past. Not her present. I think that’s what Tim means when he said, “we’re cause and effect collection machines.”

And that’s really where advice comes from… the intersection between cause, effect, and hindsight.

I feel Tim’s really mastered this new intersection. He’s embracing being “a work in progress.”

That’s what makes his new book so relatable.

It’s called “Tribe of Mentors: Short Life Advice from the Best in the World.

He reached out to Matt Ridley, Stephen Pressfield, Dustin Moskovitz, Naval Ravikant, Patton Oswalt, Susan Cain, Ben Stiller, Annie Duke… the list goes on and on.

(But don’t worry! I’m in the next book, “Tribe of ALMOST Mentors”).

Each person in the book dissects their success. They slice it open, dig through the guts and give you the heart.

They show you HOW they became a peak performer. And the best part is it’s all through Tim’s lens.

Links and Resources:

 

Also Mentioned:

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Monday, November 20, 2017

Ep. 280 – Chuck Klosterman: From Yesterday to Today: Comparing How We Interact with Culture

I can’t just call Chuck a writer. He’s arguably one of the most successful pop culture critics.

“Oh sure,” he said. “And I have a big advantage. Most critics want to be the first to write about something, I get to be the last person. And that puts me in a very good position.”

“Why?” I asked.

“I’m not just reacting to something,” he said. “I’m looking at all the other reactions.”

He’s interpreting our interpretations. And defining the 21st century.

They say Deja Vu shows us when we’re having the right experience at the right time.

The other kind of “repeat experience” is monotony. The same “day-in and day out.” I think humans have a desire to look for newness.

If you look down at your feet but forget to look at the sky and see a new day, is it a new day?

The way to achieve newness is through interpretation.

No song sounds the same to any two people. No business opportunity or investment looks as golden to two people. We see the world through ourselves.

Chuck Klosterman analyzes Pop culture. He’s the author of “Fargo Rock City,” “Sex Drugs and Coco Puffs,” “Killing Yourself to Live (85% of a True Story).”

(I love that “85% of a True Story”.)

Last time he came on my podcast, we talked about his book “What If We’re Wrong.” And now we’re talking about his latest book is “X.

“

He told me about the age of Led Zeppelin… when artists performed for themselves. People always asked, “What’s this lyric or that lyric mean?”

And the artists would say, “You decide.

”

But now we live in a 24/7 awake world.

People don’t want other people to have control over “their” creation. “The artists now have a desire for people to understand what they did,” Chuck said.

I wanted to understand why…

And what I found out is that interpretation is a form of control. Or a form of freedom (depending on how you use it.)

In this podcast, Chuck teaches you how to become an observer from the inside… how to change your view of yourself, your life, of the world.

I think this podcast is about choosing to look each day the way you’d want yourself to… and then taking action that matches the rhythm of your heart. That’s how I make meaning out of anything and everything.

This is what Chuck did. He’s created a micro category. He dives deep into every aspect of a niche category (pop culture.) And if you study how he thinks, you’ll learn something very important.

No one else thinks like him. And no one else thinks like you.

The world changes because our thoughts change. Anytime I’ve been in the gutter, I told myself, “the world changes if my thoughts change.”

Maybe nothing happens, except for the exchange of an old mindset for a new.

Links and Resources:

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Thursday, November 16, 2017

Ep. 279 – Elizabeth Smart: How She Endured Tragedy, Survived and Created Her New Normal

I was really nervous for this podcast.

Elizabeth Smart has been through so much trauma. And I’m sure everyone says that to her. Was she sick of hearing that after all these years?

I wanted to learn how she survived. The kidnapper came through her window, held a knife to her throat and threatened to kill her. He said it was religion… God, that made him do it. But she saw through them and their evil.

Elizabeth said, “From a very early age, my parents said, ‘You’ll know a person by their actions. If they’re a good person, they’ll be doing good things. If they’re a bad person, they’ll be doing bad things.’ So despite the fact that my captors constantly said, ‘God has commanded us to do this. We don’t want to do this, but we have to,’ it was always pretty easy for me to separate what they said from actual faith because they were hurting me.” 

I asked her about escape… and how she rebuilt her life back. She was just fourteen when she was kidnapped.

Now she’s an advocate. She started by going to Washington with her dad. They spoke to congressmen about the “Amber Alert”  we all get on our phones when someone is kidnapped. Now she has a two-part movie series on A&E called “Elizabeth Smart: Autobiography” and a new movie coming out on Lifetime called “I Am Elizabeth Smart.” These movies help us discuss a terrible issue. 

1 in every 4 women are sexually abused. And one in six men are sexually abused, too. “I can talk statistics,” she said. “But for me, personally, those numbers did not sink in until I started meeting them and they started coming forward and saying, ‘Elizabeth, I’ve never told anyone this before, but when I was your age…”

I think that’s what struck me the most about Elizabeth. Everyday she focused on the tiniest things to be grateful for. Even in the worst moments she never forgot that gratitude is often the key to meaning.  

This podcast is not about the horrific details of Elizabeth Smart’s kidnapping. It’s about the endurance of a survivor.

This is her story.

Links and Resources:

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