Friday, April 28, 2017

Here’s what I thought the most important thing in life was…

Here’s what I thought the most important thing in life was: sex. Every day please. Twice a day.

I would look for it everywhere. And because I was ugly and arrogant I felt nobody would let me touch them unless I had a lot of money.

So then money was the most important thing for me. Because I wanted a lot of it. More than what I needed. Enough to buy myself a lifetime or more.

Enough to buy a bookstore but pretend I just worked there and then fall in love with one of my co-workers but she wouldn’t know I owned the bookstore and she would fall in love with me on the force of my charm.

Then I thought I wanted people to not just like me but love me. Hit up vote on this post please. Hit “like” on my Facebook posts. Hit “follow” on my Instagram. Hit RT on my tweets.

Hit me.

Then I thought I wanted nothing. “Nothing” would be the most important thing for me.

So I threw everything out. Now I miss a photo of my daughters. And I miss my 2012 tax returns. I loved those tax returns.

Now I’m not so sure about any of the above but when I woke up this morning I made a list of the things I think are most important to me:

CERTAINTY

I want some stability in my life. I live from Airbnb to Airbnb so I have no steady home. And I have no stable paycheck. I haven’t for 20 years.

But I like knowing I can provide for my children. And that I’m healthy. And that I know from day to day who I can trust and love. So I need some certainty in my life.

MYSTERY

I like to take chances. I like to experiment. A few weeks ago I tried standup-comedy. I do a podcast where every interview scares me because I am always interviewing my heroes.

I write posts that I am never sure people will like. I try to figure out what chance I can take that I never took before.

I like making new friends and seeing what I can learn from them. I like to experiment on myself.

I feel the universe has given me five senses to go out and collect data and then when I die I send all the data up to the mothership.

To do that I need as much mystery as possible to get as much new data as possible.

LOVE

Not the superficial love of our “social” media although I have to admit I crave that more than I should. (Why not admit weaknesses? I will always have them.)

But I love having a bond with my children. With my friends. With a significant other.

The love doesn’t have to always be the same and always with the same people. But emotional connection is important.

CONTRIBUTION

I’m in this vast human species tribe like the rest of us. I like to know that I am helping out a little bit.

I didn’t always feel this way. Particularly when all I wanted was sex or money.

It’s nice when I write a post and a single person is helped. Or at least entertained. Or perhaps laughs.

It’s great when my daughter calls and asks for advice.

Sometimes I feel sad when a day goes by and I feel I haven’t contributed.

GROWTH

If I do something, I want to get better at it.

Getting 1% better a day at something means I’m 3800% better at the end of a year.

I didn’t always understand this rule of compounding. When I sold my first company I thought I was “done” growing as a human. I did it! No more work needed.

But then I found out the hard way that no growth is the same as death.

I have to think to myself, “how can I get better at X today” and X might be different every day.

When I have growth, my contribution gets better, my ability to connect with more people get better, I get to explore more possibilities in life, and the side effect is that I get more certainty in what life holds for me.

Growth → Contribution → Love → Mystery → Certainty → Growth → Etc


Sex, money, fame, “likes”, and intrigue are exciting.

But they are fake replacements to fill the gaping hole that a life of failure and despair often have left me with.

Around 2010 I was so disgusted with my life I gave up. I quit every job. I moved far away. I stopped talking to most people in my life.

Then I realized what was important to me.

The five things I mentioned starting with “certainty”.

“Certainty” was the hardest thing for me to accept that I needed. Accepting that I was scared and lonely without it. That’s it’s ok to be a bit needy for stability.

And everything after that was hard to accept. Why do I need love more than sex? Why do I need mystery more than money?

But hardest was maybe accepting and believing that I deserved these five things. That the gaping hole I thought I had, was actually one I created.

Seven years ago I started working at it. And seventy years from now I hope someone will be able to say about me, “job well done”.

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Thursday, April 27, 2017

How to Believe in Your Idea Enough to Take the First Step (and Other Business Advice From Ryan Deiss)

I remember sitting at my cubicle job looking at people wondering, “Why? Why are you here? Why are you doing this?” I asked a friend once, “Don’t you think this job is meaningless?”

He said no.

And then I knew what I had to do. I had to quit. And I did (eventually). First I spent time building up my own business on the side.

I don’t know if I’ve ever really believed in myself. I just knew I didn’t want the life I had. Sometimes believing in yourself just means you don’t believe in what you’re doing right now. And you have to change.

Sara Blakey felt this way, too. She woke up one day, looked at her life and said, “I’m in the wrong movie.” Now she’s a self-made billionaire entrepreneur.

But my friend Ryan Deiss said believing in yourself is possible. And I wanted to know more.

He started his first business in college. And made $100K in revenue the first year. He sold eBooks online. “I had books on pretty much any topic,” he said. One was about baby food. Then he partnered with mommy bloggers and sold it to their readers.

(That’s the formula for a great strategic partnership. Create something useful. Find someone with an untapped audience. Someone who’s talking to the people you want to talk to but who isn’t not offering what you have to offer.)

Now, years later, he’s the founder and CEO of DigitalMarketer. He’s a transformer. He teaches people how to build profitable online businesses.

He walked me through it. He told me about digital marketing. And how people use these skills everyday to start and grow their own businesses…

Here’s what he said:

A) Tell stories

I could tell you to buy something. Or I could tell you a story. I could tell you who threw milk into my best friend’s face while he cried for help. I could tell you how we survived. And the ways we bounced back.

“What wins today are the best storytellers,” Ryan said.

“How do you do that?” I asked. “How do you tell a good story?”

He said you have to start with a good product.

“Like what?”

“Anything,” he said. “Anything that is going to meet a felt need.”

We talked about dieting. Ten years ago, when people wanted to lose weight, they bought a pill. No one trusts that anymore. Now people buy hard exercise.

“You’ve got to evaluate where the market is today,” Ryan said. “What are people disregarding? What are they believing?”

“I’m a big fan of coming up with a statement of value,” he said.

“What do you mean by statement of value?”

He said this is key to becoming a good storyteller. Look at your product. And figure out how it’s going to take someone from their life today to a better life tomorrow. Then describe the product’s value.

“I make what’s called the before-and-after grid,” Ryan said.

Before: this is your customer’s emotional state, what their average day is like, what they’re struggling with, what they want in their life, and so on.

“You’re expressing empathy,” he said.

That’s one of the qualities Ryan hires for.

“Define empathy.”

“It’s being aware of others’ emotional states, having enough understanding of how they feel right now, and caring enough to respond accordingly.”

When you evaluate the market, you’re looking to understand where people are today. You empathize. Then you move into storytelling. You tell the story of how you can make their lives better. That’s the “after” state.

“All marketing ever does is articulate that shift,” he said. “You have to have the best product, and you’ve got to be the best at explaining what you do… at articulating your value, so people say, ‘Holy crap, I get it and I want it.’”

A good product can help people. It can help you. It can help your family and total strangers halfway around the world. If you have an idea, you have to take the first step. That’s what I learned from Ryan.

There are a lot of people with ideas. But a lot of people are also afraid to start.

So I asked Ryan, “What’s the first step?”

“You’ve got to believe in it,” he said. “Sometimes you’re just delusional. On the other end of the spectrum, there are so many people sitting there right now listening to this with some amazingly great ideas, but they don’t believe in themselves.”

I interrupted. “What can they do? What’s the first step in having belief in yourself?”

He laughed. “You’re the expert when it comes to choosing yourself, right? Far be it for me to throw out too much here.”

“It’s hard for everybody,” I said.

We did another podcast on this. (It comes out today.) Because millions of people have ideas that never escape their imagination. They go on unborn. That’s painful. If you’ve ever hidden your dreams, you know how hard it is. It feels like you’re lying all the time.

It’s hard to believe in yourself.

But it’s harder not too…

Choose for yourself. College or not. Employee or employer.

That’s the first step.

But if you want help, I trust Ryan. He’s been building businesses for 20 years. He knows how to execute. He knows how to start and grow online business and earn multiple streams of income.

He knows how to believe…  And he can teach you, too.

“At the end of the day, put something out there,” he said. “Put a product out there. Put an idea out there. Put a book out there. Write a blog post, right? If it get traction, then it’s good… It should be seen.”

Learn more from Ryan here.

 

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10 Jobs That Pay $100k Or More (WITHOUT A College Degree)…

Remember…I told you 3 reasons why college is (still) a lie.

If you missed it, read this post.

Better yet make sure you listen to this podcast with Ryan Deiss. He’s one of the most successful names in his industry…and together we’re going to help guide you away from what’s broken to what’s working now.

One more time. Everything that used to be safe…

It doesn’t exist anymore.

 

Ugh, I sound too depressing. I’m not a pessimist.

I am an optimist. It might not seem like that because of what I’ve written above.

But these ideas I’m sharing with you today will help you survive. I have been through every failure imaginable. Loss of family. loss of health, loss of mind.

Loss of money…

 

I’ve applied these techniques for myself. You can try them too.

Over the past ten years I’ve also seen others apply these ideas.

And in the past three years I’ve interviewed hundreds of other people who are aware of what is happening.

They have reinvented themselves. They have thrived.

They have surfed the rage that is simmering underneath and ridden that rage to greater highs and greater hopes.

These people will save the world.

You and I can be like these people. They have done it and made it to the finish line and beyond.

Now is the time to do it. It’s going to be too late tomorrow. And it was too early yesterday.

Today reinvention begins. And tomorrow it continues.

 

I recommend you start with a skill set that will make you more money at your current job, help you start something on the side…or let you quit and start your own business.

Learn how to sell something. Learn how to market something.

Listen, I’ve never read a book on sales. They seemed corny.

Like many people, I always looked down on the concept of “selling.” It seemed like something lower than me.

To some extent, selling appears manipulative. You have a product where you give the perception it has more value than it has in reality. So you need to manipulate people to buy it. This seems sad.

I was a salesman snob.

I was wrong…

And for the past 25 years all I have been doing is selling. Selling products, selling services, selling businesses, selling myself.

But don’t listen to me.

Listen to Ryan Deiss. He’s a world class marketer and he’s sold way more than I have. Ryan can land in a desert with no computer and no Internet and still somehow build a hundred million dollar online business.

Today, he’ll show you the easiest way for you to learn these same skills…for just $1.

 

Oh and here is a list of 10 jobs that pay $100k or more and don’t require a college degree.

But honestly I don’t know anything about these jobs. I can’t help you get them.

I can only tell you what I know works…what I’ve seen work for others. So try any of the jobs below if you want.

Or let someone I know…someone I trust and respect teach you a skill set with huge earning potential. How can Ryan Deiss help you?

He’ll start by showing you the fast, fun, & convenient way to learn how to effectively grow a business online…for just $1.

Here are the other jobs…

  1. Executive Chef
  2. Real Estate Broker
  3. Small Business Owner
  4. Construction Manager
  5. Plumber
  6. Fire Chief
  7. Court Reporter
  8. Pilot
  9. Air Traffic Controller
  10. Network IT Manager

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Wednesday, April 26, 2017

How To Start Over At 40

At 40 I lost my wife, my home, and my job. And many of my friends.

And I was ashamed. I didn’t want to tell people my wife had left. I didn’t want to tell people my home was for sale. And the website I had been writing for for seven years, had bought a company I had started, had won over my loyalty for what I thought was forever, was now blocking me from their system.

And I was going broke. Again.

I feel like when I write this it’s like I’m writing the same newspaper twice. In one form or other I’ve written this many times. I’m almost embarrassed to write it yet again.

A QUICK GUIDE TO A ‘JAMES ALTUCHER’ POST:

People tell me, “This is a typical James blog post: I lost everything, i thought about killing myself, and then I did A, B, and C to make it back….and then I lost everything again.” And then I conclude with, “I am still alive”.

(Life is never too busy to “play”). Every day.


When I turned 40, a friend of mine threw me a party. My wife wasn’t there. My daughters weren’t there. My friends weren’t there.

Just the one friend who “threw” the party. He invited all his friends and his girlfriend. They all celebrated the BIG 40 for me.

I didn’t know any of them at all. I barely spoke all night. I paid the bill.

A year later I had nothing left. And even that friend who threw the party conveniently forgot I had lent him money when he was broke and he disappeared.

Like people do.

I was so sad all the time. I thought to myself, “How could this be happening at 40?”

When I was 30 I had a great company, great family, great wife, tons of friends, and I was creative all the time.

My company was soaring and when I was 30 we sold it for a lot. I thought I had it all figured out.

I thought my “job” of growing as a human was all over. That now I can just stop improving my life and just enjoy it.

I had no clue. The second I began to think that way began the long, horrible decade of realizing that improvement never stops.

STOPPING IMPROVEMENT is death. There is no goal. There is no final destination. There is only direction.

Live life by themes and a set of values. A code.

19 years after I turned 30, this is my code:

  • Honesty
  • Creativity
  • Responsibility (Certainty), mixed with
  • Mystery (exploration)
  • Emotional connection. Be good to people and love the people close to me.
  • Significance. Always try to do things that can help people.
  • Energy. Whether it’s health, or integrity, or spirituality, do the things that will give me energy to do all of the above.

Money is not on this list. Career is not on this list. Fame is not on this list.


When I was 41 there was a moment when I was day trading and I lost a ton of money.

I called my new wife into the room. “I can’t take it,” I said. I don’t like my life.

We took a walk. I lived right on the banks of the Hudson River. We found a path and a trail and walked along it. Eventually we came to this beach through the woods.

I emptied my pockets. Keys, phones, money, debit cards.

I went into the water. I went underwater and just stayed there. Floating with all my clothes on. I didn’t want to go. The sun was setting. I felt the water become colder.

Eventually, she called me to come back on shore.

I did.

The next day I started blogging about my personal issues. About everything I had done wrong in the prior twenty years. Particularly what I did wrong in my 30s.

Did I write about everything? No. Not yet. But I wrote about many things.

Losing money. Losing friends. Losing my feeling that I wanted to live. Being depressed for years.

Even at age 40, having no sense of where my life was. Not even realizing that I needed to find out.

I felt I needed money first. I was so scared about money and what people thought about me that I didn’t even want to consider what my “real” code was. The values that I wanted to live by.

I’ve been writing every day about my stories since then. And those stories have given me so many opportunities that it changed my life into what it is today and I am so grateful.

It turns out that having that code comes first. And then all life is a side effect of that.

A code to live by, values to stand by, creativity to fuel my heart’s desires…this is what goes into a good life.

And then the output is stronger relationships, stronger possibilities, more certainty, more creativity, and eventually success.

Every year is hard. Life is hard. No year is easy. No business is easy. No relationship is easy.

This past year is one of my hardest ever in relationships and in business.

But I’m more creative than ever. And I live by my code described above. So now things get solved faster than when I was 40. Faster than when I was 30. Faster than when I was 20.

A child laughs on average…300 times a day.

An adult on average…5 times a day.

I’m up to about 50 times a day. Maybe more.

Every day we have about 10,000 choices to make. Small and big. My goal each day is that more and more of my choices are made because I WANT them. Not because someone else wants me to make those choices.

That is how I laugh more. That’s how I enjoy more. That’s how 40 was just a starting point for me. That’s why even today is a starting point for me. I am so looking forward to the rest of my day.

I’m going to do a podcast with one of my heroes and I’m scared to death of it.

Then I’m going to read to prepare for more podcasts. Then tonight I’m going to try standup comedy and I am terrified. I’ve been going over my jokes all morning.

The other day a friend of mine, a great artist and photographer, passed away in his sleep. I’ve known him for 22 years and we worked together for three of those in some of the most creative years of my life.

He was younger than me, but had AIDS and maybe his death was related to that.

I remember when we worked together on a project. He took a beautiful photo of a transvestite prostitute working in the meat packing district.

He captured her sadness, her despair at her life situation, the lights barely highlighting her surgical beauty, her shadow looming large behind her.

He is dead. I am still alive.

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Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Ep. 225: Ryan Deiss – 3 Reasons Why College is (still) a Lie

When I first wrote this in a column in the Financial Times in 2005 I got a lot of hate mail. People thought I was trying to ruin the younger generation.

Zero people agreed with me.

There was no discussion. People simply thought I was stupid (maybe I am).

Now I think it’s time for a “discussion”. Student loan debt is higher than $1.5 trillion. That means the head start that college was supposed to give is now a detriment.

But what if it’s free or cheap, many people ask me.

Doesn’t matter. Spend the four years really learning skills that are useful. If you want to learn the great liberal arts alongside those skills there are MANY online courses you can take for cheap or free.

The landscape has changed since a generation ago. The landscape has changed even since  five years ago.  

But still… most parents want to send their kids to college. Have them waste the four years, and even the money. Get into debt. “It will pay off,” they think, even though the data is that incomes for people ages 18-35 have been going straight down for 25 years.

And kids want to go. Their friends are going. So they will go. It’s hard to get in the middle between an 18 year old and their 50 best friends (believe me, I’m trying).

But…ten years from now it won’t be just a discussion, it will finally be a valid choice. I am sure of this. The direction of everything points to this. Higher debt, declining salaries, the decreasing importance of certification, the increased importance of skills, the alternatives in online education, and finally, less corporations requiring the degree.

They all point to one direction: less college, more skills, more real learning.

Today I talk about this with my close friend and one of the best internet marketers on the planet. Ryan Deiss can land in a desert with no computer and no Internet and still somehow build a hundred million dollar online business. By the way, Ryan can teach you how to make money the same way he does…and right now he’s sharing his best training for just $1.

He’s one of the smartest and nicest guys I know. We both have kids. We’re both worried about education and we’ve done our “homework”.

The old promise is no longer true. But there’s a new promise…I’ll tell you what it is at the end of this email.

 

1. MYTH: You’ll figure out what to do with your life

Do you know what you want to do with the rest of your life? Could you?

I don’t. Not at 49. Not at 19.

The subject follows me. I think of it everyday. I feel like there’s some sort of force inside me that’s always telling me I can do more. It believes in me. And has zero confidence in me… all at the same time.

There’s only one way to figure out what to do with your life.

It’s simple.

Just look at today. Or do less than that. Just look at this moment.

What sets your heart on fire. What section of the bookstore would you be willing to read every book. What did you LOVE at age 14 and how has that love aged? College won’t teach you what you love. Only experience and trying will teach you.

“If you can afford to send your kids to college, and they want to go so they don’t have to be encumbered by all this debt, and they want to be a doctor, a lawyer, an engineer, an astronaut, one of these things where you do need a degree, then great,” Ryan said. “But to go to college because you’re still trying to figure out who you want to be…  that’s a terrible place to figure that out and insanely expensive.”

I offered my daughter “The Altucher Fellowship:” There are just two rules. 1. skip college (or a do a gap year). I’ll pay her to do whatever she wants for just a year. 2. She has to publish a book of essays (because I think she’s a good writer with potential).

She said “no.”

I told Ryan. He said I’m screwed.

“The reality is you were screwed from the beginning because it’s your daughter, so she’s going to be smart. All kids are going to rebel at 18. They can’t help but take the opposing position to their parents…  Just accept the fact that you’re screwed.”

 

2. MYTH: It’s an investment in your future

Ryan said, “I think, as a parent, you’ve got to help your children not just make good education decisions…  but also help them make good financial decisions.”

“It’s not a great financial decision for an 18-year-old, who really doesn’t know what they want to do when they grow up, to enter into six-figures worth of debt on something that may or may not ROI.”

There are other options… Every job requires skills training. Even if you have a college degree, you still need training.

I went to college for computer science. Then my masters. And when I got a job, they didn’t know what to do with me. I wasn’t up to date. I had to go to remedial school.

And it’s the same for today.

Look at Facebook. If you take social media marketing 101 today, by the time you graduate, everything you learned is outdated. They just changed the algorithm a few weeks ago. And they’ll probably change it again. Which means a lot of businesses are already behind.

So if you invest the time to always know what these changes are you’ll be able to pivot. And you’ll collect a paycheck.

That’s a viable investment.

 

3. MYTH: College Degree = Success

“A college degree is not a prerequisite to success or happiness in life,” Ryan said.

And he’s right. Many of the most successful people I know didn’t go to college.

It’s hard to stop believing something that was told you to all your life. That’s why people got upset when pluto wasn’t a planet anymore.

Beliefs are ideas. And ideas are the currency of the future. So if you’re ideas are based around an old way of thinking, your ideas will be that too… old.

“The promise that was made to millennialsthe same one that was made to me, and probably the same one that was made to you“Go to college. You’ll get a good job,” simply isn’t true anymore.”

If you want to be successful you need to spend at least 1% of your day doing what you love. And then combine that with something else you love. And soon you’ll be the best and most successful person at that intersection.

 

P.S. – This is the new promise…

You can’t rely on any government, bank, or educational institution. Any institution that makes money when you borrow money.

They will advertise, “improve yourself” and try to lend you money.

They are primarily designed to make the rich richer and the poor poorer.

Do this instead…reinvent yourself

The world is changing quickly. A few years ago we didn’t have tablets or smartphones. Now a billion+ people have it.

A few years ago we didn’t have search engines. Now everyone has all the knowledge in the world at their fingertips.

A lot of people are making money from this…reinvent yourself and you will too.

 

Today: you need to start learning new skills, practicing new efforts, trying on new careers for size.

Everyone I’ve ever had on my podcast, 200 successful artists, billionaires, astronauts, athletes, writers, entrepreneurs, inventors, have reinvented themselves over and over.

There is NOT A SINGLE EXCEPTION of the 200 I have interviewed.

That’s the new promise.

And if you want to learn new skills from someone I trust…take Ryan up on this offer to train you. These are skills you can use to make money on the side (or start a new business and quit your job).

And right now you can try it for just $1.


Links and Resources:

 

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Friday, April 21, 2017

The Ultimate Guide To Being An Introvert

John Waters, the movie director, told me the other day where I could go if I wanted to kill myself.

I suspect he was even more of an introvert than me. I’ll tell you where he suggested in a second.

A few months ago I was at a dinner where everyone was “networking”.

I was totally frozen. I was speaking inside my head but I couldn’t open my mouth.

People were talking and laughing and getting to know each other.

Inside of me, I wanted desperately to talk, to think of things to say, to bond with the people. But suddenly I felt tired and dumb and like I had nothing to say.

And then I was afraid everyone thought I was stupid and boring . Then I thought they didn’t like me. So that made me want to talk even less.

I didn’t speak for the rest of the dinner. I went home but I couldn’t sleep. I kept whispering “sh*t” out loud even though I was trying not to. I just wanted to go to sleep and disappear.

My mind wouldn’t let me. For hours: “s**t”.


Being an introvert has nothing to do with being shy. Or being outgoing or not outgoing. Or being socially awkward.

All it means is that some people recharge when they are by themselves (introverts).

Other people recharge when they are interacting with many other people (extraverts) and most people are in the middle.

Maybe introverts think they are shy because if they are around people long enough (like at a party) they need to recharge by being by themselves.

Extraverts can be shy also, but it’s easier for them to cope with it by talking to MORE people instead of less.

I lose energy very quickly when in a group of people. Getting invited to a party is horrible for me.

I say “no” to almost every social situation. Because I know they will take energy away from me doing the things I love.

If I’m giving a talk it’s no problem. Because I’m by myself on the stage. It’s one to many instead of me just one in a mess of people. I recharge on the stage.

 

How I Deal With Being an Introvert

#1 – FIRST “Quiet” by Susan Cain is a good book. She’s a successful businesswoman and author and I love her and think she does great work.

She studied the whole introvert thing. And to meet her she is a very kind and warm person and you don’t get any sense that she is shy or awkward or anything. She just recharges by herself.

 

#2 – CREATE A LIFE WHERE YOU CAN HAVE MORE TIME BY YOURSELF

I write and read every morning. And, as awkward as this sounds, when I want to meet with a friend I often say, “let’s record it” so then it becomes a podcast and it’s still part of my work.

I go to sleep early. I don’t really go out to parties because I don’t get my energy from being around lots of people.

How do you create that life?

 

#3 – ONE PERCENT RULE

You can’t do it overnight.

Just make small incremental moves towards the life you want to live.

Every day we make about 10,000 choices, small and big.

You either make a choice or someone makes it for you. I decide to write…or a boss tells me what to write.

Every day I want to make more choices for myself, instead of letting other people make choices for me.

I’m not a minimalist, I’m a CHOICE-IST. Every day I try to make more choices for myself than I did the day before.

How long does it take?

 

#4 – 15 YEARS, GIVE OR TAKE TEN

It took me a long time to realize I wasn’t shy. I thought the reason I had trouble talking to people in groups was because I was shy or insecure.

That’s the ten years part. I was so deluded about my strengths that it took me ten years. Maybe it will take you fewer.

Then it takes about five years to bit by bit transform your life into one where you are getting as much energy as possible BECAUSE of your introversion.

Once you know how to recharge, you can be enormously creative and successful.

Just don’t fall into the path walked by everyone else. You have to find your own path to maximize your energy.

If I were an extravert I’d be dying by now because of lack of energy.

But because I’m an introvert and I am alone a good chunk of the day, I have MAXIMUM energy when I deal with people, or give a talk, or make a video, or do a podcast, or spend a short amount of time with friends.

Does it require money?

 

#5 – NO MONEY REQUIRED

It requires asking yourself throughout the day: is this activity giving me energy or draining me?

And then over time you realize when your energy peaks.

Energy is everything in life. At night we have little of it, so we need to sleep.

When an introvert is around a lot of people, it drains quickly.

When you are around people who put you down, it drains instantly.

When you aren’t creative, it drains.

When you aren’t happy with your current moment, it drains because anxiety and regret are leeches on our energy.

When you are with someone you don’t love, it drains.

When you are at a job you don’t like, it disappears.

Note that none of the above has anything to do with money.

Energy is more important than money. Energy is what makes you live a long and productive and happy life.

If I wanted a billion dollars I wouldn’t sit around writing and reading and podcasting a good chunk of the day.

I wouldn’t hire people to help me run the various businesses I’m involved in because it’s hard for me to meet with employees and do “business things”.

I’d run a hedge fund, or directly run my businesses, or buy a company and become a CEO. I’ve done these things before and failed miserably.

Not because I don’t have the knowledge. But because it doesn’t make me happy. And those activities drain me.

 

#6: HUMILITY IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN SELF-ESTEEM

Be humble enough to realize what you are not good at.

Sometimes I’ve had too much self-esteem. I’d think, “I’m a genius!”

And I’d proceed to lose a marriage or money or a relationship or totally screw up an opportunity.

Self-esteem is great if you earn it. But if you have no gas in the car, faking your gas gauge won’t make the car run longer.

Humility is great to recognize what you are truly good at and passionate about and what you should delegate to others to conserve your energy.

So be aware of the ten or so things you need to put in place to maximize your energy. Not 100 things. Ten things.

I’m not good at managing employees. I’m not good at having a boss. I’m not good at going to networking conferences. I’m not good with groups.

A GOOD BUSINESS MEETING TIP:

But I am good at communicating. I am good at being creative. I am good at meeting people over a game like ping pong or chess.

These are my best business meetings. I’m good at figuring out how to help people without expecting anything in return.

In little steps I build my network.

A GOOD NETWORKING TIP:

One thing about introversion that works well for me is that I don’t need to be in the middle.

If I know A, and I know B, and I think A can help B and vice-versa, I’ll introduce them and say, “no need to keep me in the loop”.

Surprisingly to me, this turned out to be a powerful networking technique. A and B NEVER FORGET who introduced them.

The next thing I know, I’m considered “the source” for many successful combinations so I am always sought out for advice, which feeds my various business interests.

Can an introvert date an extravert?

[ REALTED: Here’s How I Win The Day… ]

#7 – I hate to say it, but INTROVERTS SHOULD MOSTLY DATE INTROVERTS

This doesn’t mean outgoing people should date outgoing people and shy people should date shy people.

I’m outgoing. And I’m not very shy. I can go up to anyone and talk to them. Even if I’m afraid, I’ll still do it.

The other day I was on a train.

When I was getting off the train, the only other person getting off was the famous director John Waters.

I said, “John Waters! I loved your last book, ‘Make Trouble‘.”

I had no problem talking to him. He told me something about the train route.

He said, “The ‘suicide community’ knows about this train route because there’s one point where the train is not allowed to stop. They all know where that point is. So they jump in front of the train there.”

I thought that was a strange phrase, “suicide community”. I didn’t know there was such a community.

On second thought, maybe he was bothered that I spoke to him and he was giving me a tip of what I should do.

I asked him if he could go on my podcast. I’d promote his new book. He said, “No” and walked away. No problem. I get rejected a lot.

I dated a girl who liked to go out at night. She is an extreme extravert. It was the worst experience ever even though we both liked each other.

She simply liked to go out EVERY night and talk to EVERY person at the party.

And I always wanted to go home and recharge. I hated going out.

Our different styles would/could/ and maybe even should, lead to arguments.

Much better to meet a person who recharges when you do.

This is just my opinion. Not everyone agrees. This is what works for me. The opposite might work for others.

 

#8 – HOW DOES AN INTROVERT GET THINGS DONE?

Here’s how I do it.

  • I write down ten ideas a day to keep being creative.
  • I read a lot so I keep learning.
  • “Execution ideas” are a subset of ideas. So when I have an idea I want to test I think of the next execution ideas to get the idea done.
  • I talk with friends who can help me if I think the idea is starting to gain traction.
  • I focus my execution efforts on the things I’m skilled at and hire or outsource the other things.
  • I work with people who are good at what they do, so I can be good at what I do.
  • I have no problem reaching out to people who can help BUT FIRST I research thoroughly about WHY they can benefit from listening to me.
  • I meet people one on one in a game-playing situation, or at a bookstore. NEVER in their offices.
  • I introduce A and B and say, “leave me out of the middle”.

Repeat. Every day. All day.

 

#9 – CAN INTROVERTS AND EXTROVERTS WORK TOGETHER?

I am not good at conferences. But I work well with people who can go to conferences, make connections, and can teach me later what they learned.

I work well with extroverts if we meet one on one and brainstorm together.

I have one daughter who is probably an extravert and one who is probably an introvert.

I love them both equally. They are both equally kind.

Introverts or extroverts can’t help who they are. But you CAN regulate your humility so you can figure out what you are.

The daughter who is an extravert often wants to go out more with her friends. I have to be ok with this and then enjoy the time with her.

The daughter who is an introvert spends more time with me. But then she goes to her room and reads more. I have to be ok with this also.

I think you can work just about any relationship situation except romance between introverts and extraverts.

But, again, this is just me because I believe I’m extreme on the spectrum but most people are somewhere in the middle.

 

#10 – WHAT ABOUT ‘GETTING OUT OF YOUR COMFORT ZONE’?

I don’t need to get out of my comfort zone and go to lots of parties and talk to a lot of people. I tried it.

It never worked. 30 years of trying and I failed.

Again, 90% of the game is being aware of what you are good at and what you are not so good at. Usually I’m hopelessly unaware. Finally, I got more aware in this one area.

I’m not 6′7″ so I probably won’t be a professional basketball player at this point.

Trying to be a professional basketball player for a 5′9″ 49 year old is not called “getting out your comfort zone”. It’s called “stupid”.

It’s not “you can do anything you want to!” It’s self-delusion instead of self-esteem.

But most other things I can do if I put in the time and I have the desire.

I simply don’t have the desire to learn how to recharge by being in a party or very social situation that I don’t enjoy.

I say, “No” now instead of saying, “Ok, I’ll say ‘yes’ because this will be practice for being around people”.

I used to say “yes”. Because I wanted to be an extravert. So many hours wasted. I only have one life. And I only have about 15,000 days left, tops. I don’t want to waste them in parties.

 

#11 – BIBLIOGRAPHY

Quiet” by Susan Cain
Choose Yourself” by me
Tiny Beautiful Things” by Chery Strayed
Tools of the Titans” by Tim Ferriss
Graceful” by Seth Godin

There’s probably a lot of other good books out there but these are the first few I think of.


I was in a camp as a kid. I couldn’t speak at all.

Some kids would pick on me. Other kids thought I was mentally ill so they would defend me.

Eventually the counselors had to ask my parents if I was dysfunctional in some way.

My parents pulled me out of the camp but they didn’t know what to do with me. So I just stayed at home and read all day. It was the best summer of my life.

I was alone but not lonely.

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Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Ep. 224: Dave Asprey –

Dave Asprey wants to live to be 180 years old and I don’t really believe it’s possible. But I admire him for trying.

I’m fine if I die tomorrow. I feel I created good kids. Mission accomplished.

BUT, if I have to live longer, I want to have high quality of life. When I read Dave’s book, “Head Strong” I called him up, “come on my podcast.”

I want to be smarter so I can win more chess games and stop forgetting people’s names. And I don’t want to get sick as I get older.

Here’s what Dave does: he hacks himself. He is his own laboratory. So I asked him what he does to make himself smarter.

I told him: make it easy for me to understand. So I can remember.

Here is some of what he told me:

 

1) Don’t Eat Damaged Fats

“Between a plate of french fries or a cigarette… the cigarette is actually a better choice. Don’t do either one,” he said. “They’re not good for you, but fried food is really bad for energy production, especially in the brain. And I know that’s bad news. But that’s just science.”

 

2) Take a Cold Shower

Dave does this everyday. He takes a shower. And then the last 30 seconds are optimal cold water. “As cold as you can get it,” he said.

“I’ve tried it. It’s really hard to do.”

“How many days did you try it?”

“One”

“It takes four days. You are only going to get 10 seconds the first day. And you’ll actually get a headache. Here’s what’s going on: these temperature sensing mitochondria are worried about the Petri dish, (you) dying.”

It’s hard because your body is resisting. The mitochondria send you this panic signal. “Your job is to stand there a little bit longer each day and at the end of the fourth day it feels good.”

“Our bodies will rapidly adjust to cold,” he said. “It sounds weird, but Russians have been doing this and the Swedes…  when you get a little bit of cold, it really helps your mitochondria be resilient. We’re building a resilient battery system. It makes the weak mitochondria die, so they could be replaced with strong ones.”

This is how you evolve better. Teach your body that what you thought is a threat… actually isn’t a threat at all.

“Now your resilience to the environment around you goes up and you burn more calories all day long. We’re talking four days of discomfort. After that it actually feels good to turn the shower on cold.”

 

3) Sun + Plants

“Remember the ‘Swamp Thing’ comic book? Well… it’s real,” Dave said. “If you eat enough leafy green vegetables and get sunshine, you can actually make extra energy from the chlorophyll the way plants do.”

“It can add a small amount of energy to your system, “he said. “We will get energy from anywhere we can. We’re incredibly well-adapted for an environment of scarcity.”

Why? Because the body lives to reproduce. Not to thrive. But we’ve already mastered reproduction. And as humans, we want to thrive. We want to live beyond the difficult layers of our lives. Beyond the stress.

That’s why Dave biohacks. He used to weigh 300 lbs. He had toxic mold poisoning, which cause “mitochondrial dysfunction.” He was tired all the time. He had no energy.

I fundamentally believe our core drive is to be nice. If you are well-fed and you have enough energy, your ability to be nice goes up.”

You can start small. You can start with sun and plants.

 

4) Get Fresh Air

This is critical if you fly in airplanes.

Dave always sits at the front of the plane. He says you should too.  “It’s kind of disgusting, but the good air comes in for the pilots. They actually have their own little air supply. They’re compressing air from outside the plane. And the guys at the back of the plane get the least oxygen… the most used air.”

He gave me a lot of advice. More than I can handle probably. He told me to wear sunglasses on the plane and beware of WIFI dense areas because it affects aging. I’m going to make a list. 10 reasons why my health matters. Then I’m going to reread Dave’s book.

I’ll start small. And I’ll follow the one piece of advice that seemed to matter most in my heart…

5) “Don’t worry about perfection.”


Links and Resources:

Also mentioned:

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Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Incomes Are Going Down, Jobs Are Disappearing…Here’s Your Survival Guide.

 

I got fired…

Security escorted me out. They would send me my box later.

All self-help is bullshit. It’s hard to choose yourself when an iceberg hits the Titanic.

People write books: “How To Not Give A Shit” and it’s supposed to be helpful – to toughen you up, make you stronger.

“The 5 Minute Effective Leader”.

Doesn’t work.

 

Or then there’s the books not in the psychology section but across the aisle in the self-help section: meditate, think positive, picture positive visualizations.

When the boss asks you to leave and security escorts you out and there’s no severance, there’s also no meditation in the world.

Meditation won’t pay the rent. Thinking of nothing won’t put food on the table.

Visualization is a dream. And the universe owes you nothing.

Sure, if you do it, it might help. But who is doing that?

I’m not doing it.

I can’t. I’m stuck.

When you’re depressed you can’t sleep at night and then you can’t wake up in the morning.

I can’t handle thinking of a future where I might be broke. Or lonely. A shaved head, living in a gutter, abandoned.

I’ve seen it happen.

I’ve been broke…worse than broke, more than once. But I keep coming back.

 

The truth is that I always go broke when I stop reading.

Before I started my first business I was obsessed with reading everything I could. Fiction (because I wanted to write novels) and non-fiction (because I loved technology and something called “The Internet” was just starting).

And then I started reading books about business because the Internet and entertainment and my life all seemed to be merging with business.

My first business was creating websites for people. My second business was creating “mobile websites” for people, which really didn’t exist then.

In between the first and second business I played poker for 365 days. Even the day my daughter was born. I couldn’t help myself.

My accountant finally said the worst thing he can ever say to me. He said, “you should be starting another business”. I wish I had just kept playing poker.

I lost everything in that second business. Here’s what happened.


I stopped reading.

I separated from my wife. I had no clue what my business did. I fell in love. I started drinking a lot. I went broke. Lost my house. Lost my family. Blah blah.

I’m sick of “failure porn”. Ok, we get it.

People fail. Then they come back from it and somehow they turn into Steve Jobs. Steve Jobs is this generation’s mythical “phoenix”.

So now I get to listen to music on my phone and my teenage daughter probably sends nude pictures to boys on her iphone.

When I was playing poker I read every book ever written about poker. I watched every video. I was still reading a lot.

But something got into my head. Something bad when I started my second business.

I was really unhappy in a lot of ways. I can’t even tell you why I was so unhappy. My dad was always going broke so I thought I was finally going beyond where he went. I thought I was superior to him.

I thought I didn’t need to do what he did.

And since he was a big reader, I no longer needed to read. And since he stayed with his wife, I no longer needed to.


I know now: investing in yourself is the best investment you can make.

Incomes are going down for young people for the first time in forever…

Jobs (a TON of jobs) are being lost to robots, to artificial intelligence

Student loan debt is out of control, nearly impossible to pay back…

And housing keeps getting more expensive…

But forget about failure porn. You don’t have to lose.

Do what I did. Read.

 

I picked out 20 books to help you. 20 books that will make you smarter (and maybe richer).

Remember I always go broke when I stop reading. So I choose these books as the cure for fear about money.

And I want you to have them.

All 20. I will pay for them and ship them to you.

Some books in this giveaway are the sort of books I call “IQ books”. I read them and I feel like my IQ is going up. “Sapiens”, “Bold”, “Wonderland” are like that and several others.

Other books are about amazingly intelligent people who are sharing their lives and I am just blown away by not only their experiences and their intelligence but also how their playfulness often inspired them to greatness. “A Man for All Markets” and “Moneyball” fall into those categories.

And there’s a third category on this list which includes books I personally used to get myself to be a better investor.

The investing world is constantly changing. But to get good you have to know the foundation and many of these books are foundational, even the one fiction book (a financial thriller from  the 1970s) that snuck it’s way onto this list.

I can’t give all 20 books to all the people who read this, but I can give them to some people. See the bottom of this post.

Here are the books I’m giving away:

  1. Tools of Titans” by Tim Ferris’s
  2. Bold” by Peter H. Diamandis and Steven Kotler
  3. Abundance” by Peter H. Diamandis and Steven Kotler
  4. Unshakeable” by Tony Robbins
  5. Damn Right!” (biography of Charlie Munger) by Janet Lowe
  6. Wonderland” by Steven Johnson
  7. Payoff” by Dan Ariely
  8. The Billion Dollar Sure Thing” by Paul Erdman
  9. Sapiens” by Yuval Noah Harari
  10. Moneyball” by Michael Lewis
  11. The Undoing Project” by Michael Lewis
  12. Stealing Fire” by Steven Kotler and Jamie Wheal
  13. Essays of Warren Buffett” by Warren Buffett and Lawrence  Cunningham
  14. The Black Swan” by Nassim Taleb
  15. Fooled By Randomness” by Nassim Taleb
  16. A Man For All Markets” by Edward O. Thorp and Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  17. Too Big To Fail” by Andrew Ross Sorkin
  18. Elon Musk” by Ashlee Vance
  19. Hedge Fund Market Wizards” by Jack D. Schwager and Ed Seykota
  20. Reinvent Yourself” by James Altucher

 

Here’s the link if you want to sign up for my giveaway. I think it’s about $400-500 in value, but I haven’t added it up. Maybe it’s more.

There are also ways to increase the chances of getting all of the books. I describe them in this link: http://ift.tt/2paJrqi

I charge nothing. I want nothing.

I just want to run into you and we can say, “We both loved these books…and here’s how they changed our lives”

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Monday, April 17, 2017

“Why are you even doing this podcast?” Dave asked me.

“Because I love my guests. I get to pick up the phone and call them and ask them anything I want.”

From Peter Thiel to Tony Robbins to Coolio to Sara Blakely, I simply love them. And maybe Coolio would never talk to me unless I had something called a “podcast.”

I don’t even know what that stupid word means. Am I sitting in some sort of “pod” like Major Tom. Is ground control listening to me talk to Daymond John?

One person said to me: “But there’s no theme. You talk to entrepreneurs, rappers, random writers… JUST WHAT IS YOUR THEME?” He really wanted to know.

Humans are NOT themes. Coolio was talking to me about the value of the U.S. dollar. Mark Cuban was telling me what he was doing the second he became a billionaire. Yuval Noah Harari was telling me about the next step in our evolution. Humans want to reach out and touch each other. They want to connect. They want to have something they leave behind.

I open the door and say, you can come over here and leave something behind that hopefully people will listen to and enjoy for years.

Yesterday, I read a book that was a page-turner. It was a book about nothing to do with anything I’ve ever read before.

I noticed the author has another book coming out soon…

As soon as I was done with the book, I wrote to him and said, “Can I talk to you?” And he wrote write back and said, “Yes!” And I said to myself “Yay!”

I know the more times a day I say “YAY!” the longer I will live. Please, please, please promise me you will say “Yay!” a lot today.

It might not work for you. But you can tell me later. We can play chess in the park when we are 100 years old and our backs hurt and we hold each other up when the day ends and the pieces are scattered by the wind, the game unfinished.

By the time this post ends, I am going make you say “Yay!”

Because I love my guests so much, and I love them because I mostly love their books, I want you to love them as much as I do and I want you have their books.

I’ve picked out 20 of the books of my guests or some of their book recommendations. Some of them haven’t even appeared on the show yet.

And I want you to have them. All 20. I will pay for them and ship them to you.

Some books in this giveaway are the sort of books I call “IQ books”. I read them and I feel like my IQ is going up. “Sapiens”, “Bold”, “Wonderland” are like that and several others.

Other books are about amazingly intelligent people who are sharing their lives and I am just blown away by not only their experiences and their intelligence but also how their playfulness often inspired them to greatness. “A Man for All Markets” and “Moneyball” fall into those categories.

I’m trying to get those two, in particular, on my podcast, but I think they know my game and they aren’t playing it.

And there’s a third category on this list which includes books I personally used to get myself to be a better investor.

The investing world is constantly changing. But to get good you have to know the foundation and many of these books are foundational, even the one  fiction book  (a financial thriller from  the 1970s) that snuck it’s way onto this list.

I can’t give all 20 books to all the people who read this, but I can give them to some people. See the bottom of this post (and then you can say “Yay!”)

Here are the books I’m giving out:

(By the way, for those who wonder why I would do this, I have no clue. Maybe you can give me an answer why I would do this. I just want to run into you in the street and then we can all talk about the books we love. Yay!)

  1. Tools of Titans” by Tim Ferris’s
  2. Bold” by Peter H. Diamandis and Steven Kotler
  3. Abundance” by Peter H. Diamandis and Steven Kotler
  4. Unshakeable” by Tony Robbins
  5. Damn Right!” (biography of Charlie Munger) by Janet Lowe
  6. Wonderland” by Steven Johnson
  7. Payoff” by Dan Ariely
  8. The Billion Dollar Sure Thing” by Paul Erdman
  9. Sapiens” by Yuval Noah Harari
  10. Moneyball” by Michael Lewis
  11. The Undoing Project” by Michael Lewis
  12. Stealing Fire” by Steven Kotler and Jamie Wheal
  13. Essays of Warren Buffett” by Warren Buffett and Lawrence  Cunningham
  14. The Black Swan” by Nassim Taleb
  15. Fooled By Randomness” by Nassim Taleb
  16. A Man For All Markets” by Edward O. Thorp and Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  17. Too Big To Fail” by Andrew Ross Sorkin
  18. Elon Musk” by Ashlee Vance
  19. Hedge Fund Market Wizards” by Jack D. Schwager and Ed Seykota
  20. Reinvent Yourself” by James Altucher

Here’s the link if you want to sign up for my giveaway. I think it’s about $400-500 in value, but I haven’t added it up. Maybe it’s more.

There are also ways to increase the chances of getting all of the books. I describe them in this link: http://ift.tt/2paJrqi

I charge nothing. I want nothing. I just want to run into you and we can say, “We both loved these books.”

YAY!

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I Bombed And Then This Is What Blah Blah

There was total silence. I’m not sure if anyone laughed at a single joke.

First, I prepared to be bombed. I spoke with the comedian Jim Norton. I said, “I’m afraid it will be a disaster.”

He said, “The fear goes away when you realize that bombing is survivable.”

I spoke to the MC of the show. She said, “It’s not IF you will bomb, it’s WHEN you will bomb, because you WILL bomb.”

And then ten minutes later I bombed. I said jokes. Dead silence.

Were the jokes bad? I don’t know.

I used them just a week earlier. Everyone laughed then!

But this night, my third time, nothing. Silence. Embarrassment.

I’m not quite sure what i did wrong.

The comedian Judah Friedlander was up right before me. I heard him muttering as he walked out, “Shitty audience.” Or at least I think I heard him muttering that.

But maybe I’m just trying to make myself feel good. I need to feel good one way or the other.

If Plan “A” didn’t work (making people laugh), then maybe Plan B will work (“the audience is bad”) or Plan C – not sure what Plan C is yet. Working on it.

Here is what I learned: 

A) SOMETIMES THERE ARE NO ANSWERS

I did jokes that had worked the week before. Now they didn’t. I don’t know why. I videotaped it. I watched it. I’m still not sure why.

B) I DID IT! 

I’ve been afraid of doing standup. I’m even afraid to do public speaking. I’m afraid to interview people on my podcast.

But I’ve given talks hundreds of times. I’ve done hundreds of interviews. I always get people to laugh.

People keep telling me, “you WILL bomb” at some point in standup.

I didn’t believe them. The other two times I had done it went great.

And BAM! Death.

C) I DIDN’T DIE

Jim Norton was right. I survived. I know the important thing for me to do now is to do it again. To not quit.

My instinct is always to quit when things don’t work out. I feel like I want to be the smartest and best RIGHT AWAY.

Or else!

But the only way to get better in something you love is to get through the worst moments which are inevitable.

D) DIVERSIFY

The jokes I did were very crude.

I was watching Louis CK a few weeks ago and it seemed to me he would think of the WORST topics he could joke about and then he would specifically go over the line. Slavery, Racism, Abortions, etc.

So I asked a friend of mine, “what’s the one thing you really don’t want to hear about:” and she said, “Child abuse”.

So at least half the jokes I did were about child abuse.

Again, the first time I did them, people were laughing. The second time, nothing. People even groaning.

People didn’t like me. I felt like a 14 year old at the dance again.

The next day I watched about a dozen videos of people who had “clean” acts.

I watched Todd Barry, Dan Soder, Jim Gaffigan, Gary Gulman, Judd Apatow.

Then I decided to practice. I wrote down about 20 “clean” jokes.

I sent them to a friend of mine who has been writing jokes for a living for 25 years. He sent me back notes on each one. The notes were brilliant. I practiced again the next day and the next.

We’ll see.

When I give a talk it’s easier to tell a story that leads up to something funny.

When you are standing on a stage for five minutes to do comedy you kind of need a punchline every ten seconds (time Louis CK between laughs).

So it’s basically setup / punchline / follow through and then new setup.

It’s hard. I want to get better. And have a wider range.

E) WATCH THE VIDEO

It’s important to watch yourself. When I got nervous, I started talking faster. I need to slow down. I need to pause between laughs. I need to not pander to the audience.

The only way to get better at something is to study what you’ve done.

I was watching a video of Greg Shahade playing chess. He analyzed the game afterwards.

He described a move he made in the middle and said, “I lost a game FIVE YEARS AGO to Nakamura and afterwards we were looking at it and determined the this move would have been good. Now, five years later in a position that looked similar, I made the move and it worked.”

You have to study your losses, really analyze them, and determine what you could have done better.

Every single time.

F) RESPECT THE GAP

When I watch a video on YouTube of someone doing standup, chances are they have been honing their craft for 20-30 years.

20 to 30 YEARS!

I will never do that.

And it’s not similar to giving a talk and making people laugh. When I give a talk, the audience usually knows who I am. There is more time. It’s a friendly audience. They are already to go.

Standup is different. It’s not the story or the observation. It’s really just about making people laugh.

But I love watching standup. And I want to get better at it .The raw skill of it. It’s not just making people laugh. It’s moving in a certain way. It’s having a certain kind of courage to say something outlandish and commit to it.

It’s about dealing with a variety of nuances and unexpected things (different audiences) in real time and responding appropriately.

Whenever you love something but you are just trying it, you have the sense to realize the best are the best for a reason. I can’t fool myself.

But still…I love trying and experimenting and taking risks.

G) tl;dr

– Everyone bombs and lives
– You have to get up again afterwards
– Study the video. Learn from mistakes
– Diversify the way you do things.
– Practice and repeat
– Respect the gap. Learn from watching others

I’m not trying to switch careers or anything. This is the benefit I have. But I want to get good at a new skill.

Part of happiness is these two things:

– possibility
– growth

“Possibility” is doing things you never did before but you feel are “possible.”

The mystery. It’s why humans, above all other species can adapt to and seek out new environments. It makes us happy.

“Growth” is a sense that you are improving in things. You don’t have to improve in ONE thing only. I used to think I’d go to college, find my ONE thing and then keep improving in it.

Instead, I had to find many things. And I still do. Combining the possible with growth is part of what makes me happy each day.

Standing up there. The groans. Nobody laughing. I died on the stage.

But I did it. And I’m alive writing about it. And I’m going to do it again.

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Friday, April 14, 2017

Good Friday And The Powerful Magic Of Idea Babies

Is Da Vinci a plagiarist? Is Andy Warhol? Is Steve Jobs?

How do you take “the greatest story ever told” – a story around thousands of years and has been painted 100s of times, and make it your own?

Answer: Idea sex!

The most famous rendition is Da Vinci’s “The Last Supper. ”

Da Vinci was an amateur forensic doctor. He would cut up dead bodies to study, in great detail, all of the musculature, the bone structure, etc.

A “Last Supper” painting from the 13th century (see one of the attached images, “supper1”) was mostly two dimensional.

With no talking and no emotions on the faces despite the intensity of the dinner.

An intensity that has made it “the greatest story ever told” for 2000 years.

Da Vinci’s studies of human biology + his constant sketches of people talking in the street + “the greatest story ever told” = one of the most famous paintings in history.

And was Da Vinci’s concept original? Of course not! The story was already 1400 years old and had been painted hundreds of times.

Da Vinci made it his own. It became 100% original with his mastery of idea sex.

Steve Jobs didn’t invent the phone. The “genre” of the phone had existed for a century. The iPhone is a “phone” in every way.

He didn’t invent the MP3 player either. But he combined ideas, moved the genre forward and created his own micro-category which became THE category of smart phones.

And “The Last Supper” didn’t stop with Da Vinci.

Every industry and art form is the product of thousands of generations of idea sex. Every single one.

Check out the images attached to this post.

A) Dali’s surreal take.

Da Vinci tried to be as realistic as possible.

Dali combined surrealism with “The Last Supper”. The transparent, ambisexual blonde Jesus, The ghostlike body floating above. The disciples backs facing us (not done before in prior paintings).

B ) Fast forward to Andy Warhol: Da Vinci’s painting + the Warhol-style silk screening of it he made famous in his portraits of Marilyn Monroe and Elvis Presley.

Pop Art + The Last Supper = multi-million dollar painting.

Fast forward to one of my favorite TV shows, Battlestar Galactica and their marketing poster based on The Last Supper.

C) Battlestar Galactica:

A poster for Battlestar Galactica (see attached) is:

the battle between possibly semi-divine Cylons and humans (with a Judas) + Da Vinci’s exact representation = beautiful marketing poster. A work of art.

Every idea, every art, every business, is like a wedding dress. Something old, something new.

The OLD is thousands of years of story, of emotional conditioning, of wars, of sickness, of “rules” to help us conform.

The NEW, is you and the pleasure and thoughts and excitements that are uniquely you. What makes YOU happy?

It’s a party in your brain!

Do it with art. Do it with business. Do it for fun. Do it for love.

Take an idea from 100 years ago. From yesterday. From 1000 years ago. From your friend.

Tell a story around it in modern terms. Make it uniquely yours.

You can even make it a joke.

News article #1: a mother thrown out of Disney World because she was choking her child.

News article 2: United Airlines beating a passenger up.

1 + 2 = A mother was thrown out of DisneyWorld today for choking her son. Everything turned out ok, though. United hired her the next day.

Ok, not quite Louis CK but I’m practicing. Maybe one day I’ll be original.

—–

P.S. Oh! I love this one.

Another great example of “idea sex” from Battlestar Galactica:

Jimi Hendrix’s “All Along the Watchtower” (written by an obscure songwriter named Bob Dylan and then Hendrix-ized) re-written and performed (and made totally original) by Bear McCreary for the show.

So beautiful. Please google it.

Seeing only the top of the pyramid of a work of art, or a business, or an invention, or an idea, misses the beauty of the entire pyramid.

What are some other cool examples?

 

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Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Ep. 223: Scott Steindorff – Addicted to Life

The cocaine made his throat close. “I was about to die”.

He wanted to be an actor. He wanted to be creative. He had dreams. And working real-estate for his father wasn’t one of them. “I didn’t want to come down,” he said.

“Why’d you do it?”

“I really wasn’t happy with myself,” he said. “I believe it was because I wasn’t my authentic self doing what I really wanted to do in my life.”

“Nepotism got me the job.”

And it was killing him. He was suffocating.

Now Scott Steindorff is the producer of “Empire Falls,” “Chef,” (one of my all time favorite movies), “The Lincoln Lawyer,” “Love in the Time of Cholera,” and more.

He’s worked with Paul Newman, Jon Favreau, Robert Downey Jr., Matthew McConaughey, Scarlett Johansson, the list goes on.

The other day he called me, a few days after we shot the project, to tell me about brand new projects he was working on  that were different than anything he had done before. He is constantly testing the limits of his creativity.

I wanted to know how he became his “authentic self.” How did he go from being depressed and self-medicated to a successful and happy movie producer?

I wanted to know because I don’t think we ever really know. I think part of self-awareness is never quite getting there but always moving (hopefully) in the right direction. And creativity is something that needs to be  constantly reinvented.

Once creativity stays the same, it is no longer creative. Scott found a way to constantly be creativity. I want to learn how.

“It’s not easy at all,” he said. “You have to do the leg work.”

“What’s the leg work?” I asked

Here’s what he said:

 

Step 1: FIND OUT WHAT YOU’RE CRAVING

These are the two types of cravings:

a) Depletion: Your body needs something. It can be water, a vitamin or mineral or a change. That’s where reinvention comes in.

b) Addiction: I felt powerless. I was addicted to money. More was never enough. Then I left Wall Street. Because they were the supplier.

Scott wanted euphoria. He craved it.

“I grew up wanting to be a skier and an actor and here I was in an office making money,” Scott said. “I started craving that feeling of euphoria and excitement and passion for life.”

So he started doing cocaine.

“Nobody knew I had a problem,” he said. ” I would do it by myself. So when I checked into rehab, it was a shock to my family.”

The patients had to drink some type of alcohol until they threw up. “By the second day, I said to the doctor, ‘This isn’t working for me. I’m a cocaine addict not an alcoholic.”

He thought they’d try something new. He thought they’d help.

No.

“Well… leave,” the doctor said.

“There was a shift in my consciousness. I went to my room. I cried uncontrollably for 24 hours. All the stress and pressure left me and from that moment on I haven’t used for almost 33 and a half years.”

“What do you mean the stress left you?” I said. I couldn’t imagine. He told me it just left. No explanation. He just saw his own choice. And he took it.

I think most people don’t know what they really want in life.

We talked about adapting. And I said it seems like you have to surrender and be okay with the changes…  even while you’re depressed.

“Isn’t depression a lack of your expression?” he said. I never thought of it that way. Maybe I’m filling one need with sand when I really crave water.

 

Step 2: ASK QUESTIONS

I’m not in a 12-step program, but I want to understand who I am as my authentic self. So I asked what can I do right now?

“Ask yourself questions,” he said. “How Am I feeling? How do I feel about myself, do I love myself, am I feeling less than? Do I feel guilt?”

“But what if you’re lying to yourself?”

“You can’t lie to yourself,” he said. “You’re just denying the truth. If you’re listening to this, it’s coming to the surface. Don’t push it down.”

 

Step 3: ACT IT OUT

It’s easy to come up with ideas. It’s harder to act on them. I always say, actions are more important than words, which are more important than thoughts.

It’s not about one skill set. It’s about how you meld them together and act on them.

Scott laughed and said, “I have very few skills in life…”

I didn’t quite believe him. He had skills to do real estate. To make movies. To be creative. I have skills.

But we always compare ourselves to what the “next level” is. And I can’t help it. I do it also. So, again, it’s the direction that counts. And fully engaging in the process.  

Scott would surrender. If an opportunity presented itself, and it excited his need for creativity, he would say “yes”.

It never hurts to try the next steps in whatever endeavor presents itself. Try it on like you try an outfit to see if you want to wear it for the summer. See if it fits. See if you love it. And if you do, go all in.

Scott’s story is not about movies, or addiction, or creativity, it’s about knowing the right direction to take the next step.

 

Step 4: MAKE SMALL CHANGES EVERYDAY

Scott quit his dad’s real-estate firm.

“Was he supportive?” I asked.

They didn’t talk for two years…

Scott became a millionaire. He was still in real-estate, though. And unhappy. Then the market crashed.

“It crushed me,” he said.

Scott changed careers every five years or so. Now he’s 56. And he’s working on a Joan of Arc movie, a new TV series based in the Bahamas, and a script for “Station 11.”

Any time he liked a book, he’d try to buy the movie rights. Then he’d try to get the movie made. Sometimes it would work. Sometimes it would be a massive success. But always he tried, starting with the simplest step.

The story he told me was a combination of luck, learning skills, building a network, and acting on the intersection of all of the above. But more than anything, it’s being open to surrender. Surrendering to constant reinvention.

Reinvention is a habit not an event.

Links and Resources:

Also mentioned:

 

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