anything goes with emma chamberlain - temptation
Episode Date: September 15, 2022today we're going to be talking about temptation. which, in my opinion, is one of the most challenging things we deal with as human beings. it's something we deal with whether we're 2 years old or 102... years old. the temptations can change as we get older, but some form of it is always there. the reason i think it's so hard to deal with, is because in the short term, it's often easier and more fun- there's instant gratification. the problem is, usually things that are tempting, that you know are wrong, will end up leaving you miserable down the line. no one gets away with it - the universe doesn't work like that. i feel like it's the fighting of a temptation that helps you grow into a more morally solid person. it's so important for your self-development, self-esteem and more...recently i had my own sort of awakening with resisting temptation that really clicked for me and that's what i want to talk about today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello. Today we're going to be talking about temptation, which in my opinion is one of the
most challenging things that we deal with as human beings. It's very constant and it
never goes away for your whole life. It doesn't matter if you're two years old or you're 102 years old.
Temptation follows us throughout our lives.
When you're two years old, you fight the temptation to steal a candy bar from your friend
at preschool.
And when you're 102 years old, maybe you're fighting the temptation to steal a magazine
from the library. Like, temptation is always there.
The temptation to do things that don't align with you morally.
The reason why I think temptation is so difficult to deal with
is that there are a lot of scenarios in life
when not sticking to your moral code, not doing
the right thing is so much easier and is so much more fun and is so much more exciting
in the moment.
That's why things are tempting because in the moment, they'll give you instant gratification. You'll instantly win.
You know what I mean?
You'll have an instant hit of excitement.
The problem is usually things that are tempting that you know are wrong will end up leaving
you miserable down the line. Nobody gets away with succumbing to
Attemptation to do the wrong thing. Like nobody ever gets away with it.
I think people sometimes feel like they're gonna get away with it. Like I've felt like before. Oh
Maybe I could get away with doing the wrong thing. Just this once. But no life doesn't work like that. The universe
The way that the cookie crumbles,
it never works like that.
You never get to just cheat life and get away with it.
It just doesn't work like that.
So coming to a temptation is the easy choice.
Fighting it is what's difficult.
And I feel like it's the fighting of a temptation
that helps you grow into a more morally solid person.
Now, I actually feel like I sound like a cult leader
right now because I did briefly go to Catholic school
and not that Catholicism is a cult, that's not what I'm saying.
Okay, so don't fucking twist my,
don't you dare twist my words.
But I feel like I sound like a religious leader right now
because I just remember in Catholic school
like talking about resisting temptation in life.
But for some reason when I was in Catholic school
it didn't click for me at all.
Because the temptations that were being discussed
were things that I wasn't necessarily morally against,
like for example, having sex before marriage.
Morally, I wasn't opposed to that.
I was like, I'm gonna have sex before marriage,
so that doesn't really click with my brain.
But recently, I kind of came to my own conclusion
about resisting temptation,
and I had my own sort of awakening
that did click with my brain.
And that's what I wanted to talk about today
because what I've realized is resisting temptation,
even when doing the wrong thing is so easy
and seems like it's gonna be so rewarding
and that it'll be fine and that you'll get away with it.
Resisting that and doing the right thing,
even if it's behind closed doors and no one ever knows
that you did the right thing when you didn't have to. That is such a powerful thing.
For your own self-development, for your own self-esteem, for your own well-being,
it's so important.
So I just wanted to talk about it today.
So coming to temptation, when the temptation forces you
to go against your own moral compass always has a consequence,
no matter what, and we need to talk about it.
Okay.
Now, I want to clear up a few things
before we get into it fully.
Number one, I'm not talking about, like, mundane temptations, you know, like, ooh, I don't
know, like, it's a one-off occasion and I'm tempted to spend a little extra money on
this purse, you know, and it's like, it's like,
I don't know, I had a hard week, like whatever,
I'm just gonna get this purse.
That's not morally, that's not going against your moral compass.
Okay, that's just treating yourself a little bit.
I'm not talking about that.
I'm talking about things that go against your moral code.
It's more serious, okay?
Little temptations that we deal with on a daily basis
to do something that's a little bit more indulgent. It's like crucial as a human being to indulge
every once in a while in more inconsequential temptations. Like that is not what I'm talking
about. What I'm talking about is stuff that goes against your belief system.
But that's tempting regardless. Okay, that's what I'm talking about. That's the first thing we need to just get out of the way. The second thing is that temptation is different than a life
or death situation. Going against your moral code because it is a life or death situation is different than
succumbing to a temptation
for no other reason other than the fact that you just kind of want to do it. You know what I'm saying?
But that's like that's beyond this conversation a situation that's dire and serious like that is beyond this conversation and
that's a and serious like that is beyond this conversation. And that's a whole other, just thing.
That's a completely different thing.
Okay, so that's another thing I'm getting out of the way.
If you need to defend yourself, if you need to eat, if you need to drink water, if you
need a place to sleep, like whatever it may be, sometimes you have to do what you have
to do to make things work, you know, and that's
different than what I'm talking about today.
Today it's like a little less serious.
Now we can get into it.
To start out, I want to talk about some moments in my life where I have succumbed a temptation and paid the price.
To start, I used to have a serious shopping addiction
when it came to clothes.
I would buy clothes just in ridiculous amounts.
Okay, and I think the reason for that was
that growing up, I always wanted to buy clothes,
but growing up, I didn't have a lot of money.
So I couldn't go and buy clothes as much as I wanted to.
And buying clothes was more of a rare occasion.
And I never felt like I could fully express myself because I never felt like I had the resources
and the proper clothes to do so.
And that was frustrating for me as a young person.
And then I made my own money and I was like,
okay, I'm gonna buy extreme amounts of clothes.
And so for a few years of my life, I did that.
And in the moment, I was like, well, I know that this is
potentially wasteful and not a good use of my money.
And it's not a thoughtful use of my money.
And I deep down knew this is not a responsible way
to be living my life.
But at the same time, I was like,
but it feels really good right now
and I'm not really thinking about future me, you know,
whatever.
Fast forward a few years now I'm an adult
and it's taken me almost a year
to cleanse my space of all of the things that I impulsively
bought over the few years that I was like seriously shopping in a way that was not good.
And luckily all of those things went to good places and they went to people that are going to use them and love them and you
know, it didn't go to waste, which is great.
But regardless, you know, trying to get rid of all of that stuff and feeling claustrophobic
in a way, in my closet and in my home, for years because I couldn't stop buying shit. Like that was not worth it. I paid a price.
I couldn't, like, I barely even wore the shit that I bought because I could never find it
because my closet was so claustrophobic. And I mean, I'm kind of inflating this whole
situation. It wasn't that big of a deal, but I think it's a good lighthearted example
of succumbing to my temptations. And then later I ended up paying the price, you know?
Literally, like money wise, I wasted a lot of my money. Could have been worse because
a lot of the stuff that I got was thrifted, whatever. but still, it was like too much. Not only did I waste my money, but also I clogged up my space
and I ended up feeling claustrophobic and unhappy
because I had too much stuff.
And I couldn't even find the things that were in my closet.
I couldn't efficiently find things.
And like that was a bummer.
You know, so I ended up paying the price.
Another way in my life that I've succumbed to temptations is with boys. I had one period of my life where
I was talking to guys and having physical relations with guys that I knew deep down didn't respect me
that I knew deep down didn't respect me and I didn't really respect them.
And the interaction was like very transactional.
And I felt really bad about it deep down,
but I was also like, I'm just gonna do it anyway
because I really need validation right now
because I feel like people aren't attracted to me.
And so I'm just doing this to validate
that I'm attractive hopefully to someone
rather than like literally waiting to share
an intimate moment with somebody
who actually respects me and my koochi.
You know what I mean?
Like I just, it happens.
Like as humans, all of these temptations are normal.
We're all gonna experience them in one way or another,
whether like it's so normal to succumb to these temptations.
But what cannot be forgotten is the fact
that you will pay a price later.
Like with me getting with these guys that didn't respect me
and I didn't respect them, I, to this day, have struggled
with myself as steam because of those handful of experiences I had with those boys, where I went
against my moral code, and I did that, and I still feel icky about it, to this day. And that's, listen, that's not fair to myself
because, you know, I learned a lot from it.
I learned that that is not something
that makes me feel good.
Like, I, it affects myself a steam.
It made me feel icky.
It wasn't like a safe, comfortable situation.
Like, it just wasn't good, right? I mean, it was safe, but situation. Like it just wasn't good, right?
I mean, it was safe, but not like you don't know,
like when you're having physical interactions
with somebody that is kind of a stranger
that doesn't necessarily respect you,
like there's a lack of communication
that could make things less safe.
For example, they have an STD, how am I supposed to know?
You know what I mean?
Because we don't have that open communication
and there's not the respect there to let me know,
just in case they did.
Luckily, they didn't, but I'm just saying.
You see what I mean?
So, psychologically, I'm still paying the price
for that temptation that I succumbed to.
There's something to be learned from succumbing to a temptation.
It's like a young child touching a hot stove.
A young child doesn't know how hot the stove is
until they touch it.
And then they get burned and then they're like,
I'm never touching the stove again.
It's the same thing with these temptations
that we experience in life.
You aren't a bad person, you're not evil,
you're not doomed for life if you try things out
and you maybe make the wrong decision a few times.
But also if you can avoid them, you know,
that's not a bad thing either.
It's like if you can avoid them great and if you can't, you learn not a bad thing either. It's like, if you can avoid them great,
and if you can't, you learn the lesson from it.
That's, so, you know, there's not a scenario in which you lose,
as long as you learn something, you know?
But I think that being mindful of temptations
and how they could affect us later is not a bad idea.
I wanted to go through some examples
of how we as humans can be tempted.
The first one is making money in an immoral way.
Maybe that's stealing, maybe that's lying in some way.
Maybe that's participating in illegal activities.
It's tempting to make money in dirty ways because money is one of the most tempting things
of all.
It's one of the most powerful things on the planet because it gives us freedom.
It can give us everything.
You know, it can give us a roof over our heads, food, expensive designer belongings.
Like, it can give us so many different things.
And when there's a large sum of money on the table, it can be hard to say no to it, even if you have to do something
naughty in order to get that money.
But unless it's a life or death situation, it's not worth the temptation because not only
could you get in trouble and lose all the money and your life, but also you can't be proud
of your financial success
because you didn't earn it properly.
And that sucks.
Another type of temptation is cheating on your partner.
There are many reasons why people cheat, I think.
Number one, because they feel insecure in their relationship,
they feel like their partner doesn't love them.
And they're seeking validation elsewhere.
Another situation could be they just have a crush on somebody else and they want something
exciting and spicy and fresh and new and they're kind of bored in their current relationship
because their current relationship is like comfortable and easy and they want something
spicy again.
They want to feel spice again, but yet they don't want to leave their partner because, you
know, their partner is so comfortable and safe, but yet they want something spicy at the
same time.
So instead of putting extra effort in and making their current relationship a little bit
spicier, they go and have an affair of sorts. It makes sense why it's tempting,
but resisting it is so important
for a healthy relationship.
Because number one,
how can you face your partner the same way again?
Unless you truly are,
I don't know, I don't know how you could face
your partner the same.
After that, you'll always feel guilt
knowing that you're hiding such a huge secret.
But also, how would you feel if your partner did this to you?
Terrible.
So why would you do it to them?
You know what I mean?
Like, if your partner was in the same situation
that you were in, how would you expect them
to behave?
Probably a lot better than you did.
So why are you holding your partner up to higher standards than you're holding yourself
up to?
And you have to live with that choice forever.
You have to live with that memory of what you did and that could follow you forever and create guilt and
discomfort for relationships for the rest of your life knowing that you're not
always a loyal partner unless you learn from it but still it's also tempting
sometimes to buy excess you know buy a bunch know, buy a bunch of clothes, buy a bunch of,
I don't know, gaming equipment. I don't know. Maybe you like Minecraft and you want to play
Minecraft and have 15 different monitors so that you can play Minecraft on 15 different screens.
I don't know, excess. Access can be tempting because you feel like it's going to fill a void. You know, you
feel like it's going to fill a void in your life and these physical belongings could fill
that void. But if you're aware of the fact that they're not going to fill that void and
you're going to be left in a cluttered mess and you're going to be down a few thousand
dollars possibly depending on how much you spend on your excess of belongings, then in a cluttered mess, and you're gonna be down a few thousand dollars, possibly, depending
on how much you spend on your excess of belongings, then you might avoid making that decision,
you know, and you might wait and save your money and spend it on one really good thing,
rather than an excess of a bunch of mediocre things that will honestly lose their value anyway to you, because the
more you have, the less each individual thing means something to you.
Or maybe you struggle with the temptation to go out and party a few too many times per
week.
It's tempting because partying is fun. It's reassuring. Well, sometimes it's fun. Depends.
It has the potential to be fun.
It's also reassuring socially.
When you go to a party and a bunch of people talk to you
and are hanging out with you, and you know,
you're exchanging numbers and all these things,
that's reassuring socially. It makes you feel good about yourself.
It boosts your confidence.
But also, it's tempting because it's a distraction
from your life.
Going out, having drinks, doing the whole thing,
socializing, whatever, is a distraction from your life.
You can forget about your homework assignment that's due.
You can forget about your shitty relationship. You can forget about your homework assignment. Let's do. You can forget about your
shitty relationship. You can forget about whatever. You can forget about shit. And every
once in a while, I think this is honestly, you got to do it. You know, you got to have those
nights where you just go out and you have fun and you let everything go. But when you do
it too much, not only is it not even fun anymore, it gets stale.
The novelty of going out and partying loses its sort of allure because it's not special
anymore.
It's not a special occasion anymore.
Not only does it get ruined for you, but also it prevents you from addressing the issues
that are present in your life.
And you can't work on yourself
if you're constantly distracting yourself.
And that will long-term make you miserable.
Speaking of that, it can also be tempting
to just slack off in life in general.
And when I say slack off,
I'm not saying to give yourself
a break because you're feeling burnt out.
Okay, that is a different situation.
But it's like when you have the energy to work, okay?
But all your friends are going to the beach.
And even though you know you need to work
and you have the energy to do it, you just, you're like, oh, but I really want to go to the beach. And even though you know you need to work and you have the energy to do it,
you just, you're like,
oh, but I really want to go to the beach
because it's way more fun.
And you know, it's like,
it's being sort of irresponsible,
not giving yourself a break
because you're literally burnt out
and you've been working yourself too hard.
And it's gotten to a point
where you literally can't work anymore
without having a breakdown. Like that's not what I'm talking about.
I'm talking about slacking off just because there are funner options.
I know funner's not a word.
Don't even, don't mention it, okay?
Because there are funner options happening around you,
you're not getting your work done,
you're not getting your shit done that you got to get done
because there are funner things around.
It's tempting because it's just so much easier and it's just so much more fun.
And sometimes in moments when you're tempted by a more fun option than work,
you're like, well nothing matters anyway. Who cares if I get a good grade on this test? Who cares if
I turn in this work assignment on time. Who cares? Nothing really matters.
The problem with that is that affects your sense of self.
When you neglect the work that you need to get done in life,
you're subconsciously losing respect for yourself
because your work ethic as a person gives you confidence,
working hard at person gives you confidence. Working hard at things gives you
confidence because it proves to yourself that you are a valuable team player in
some way and you are a valuable asset in some way and working hard at anything. Being disciplined with anything can help grow
and solidify your self-esteem.
So if you just keep throwing the things
that you need to work on on the back burner,
over time, that will impact your view of yourself.
You'll start to wonder, what do I add to anything?
Because I don't have work ethic, I don't have discipline.
It makes you feel, and I've had moments like this
in my life where I just couldn't get work done,
because I was constantly surrounded by temptation to be social and to hang out with people and to go and do fun activities
and so I didn't have any discipline and I didn't get any of my work done and it made me
depressed because then I started to feel like a loser.
I just felt like a fucking loser and when I started being a more disciplined with myself
and I started creating a better balance
where I was able to be social
and I was able to get work done,
I was so much happier and so much more confident.
And I felt so much more valuable in the sense
of what I can offer to the world.
It's interesting how that is. It's interesting, how that is.
It's also tempting in life to be nosy.
Maybe you wanna look at your partner's phone
or you want to sneak into your mom's closet
and see what she got you for Christmas.
Being nosy is very tempting.
You wanna know what secrets people are hiding,
but you have to resist that
clawing need to be nosy because you have to think about how you would feel if
somebody did it to you. How would you feel if somebody was going through your
phone? How would you feel if somebody was going through your closet and seeing
what you got them as a gift? How would you feel if somebody was impeding on your
privacy like that? One of the most
valuable things that we have as humans is our privacy because privacy is so important for
us to work through issues and to be truly ourselves. For example, let's say you wanna look through your partner's phone,
and you're looking through,
and you see a text between your significant other
and their friend.
And in their text chain, you see that your significant other
was venting to their friend about you.
And saying like, oh, it annoys me when they do this,
and it annoys me when they do that.
And you see that and now you're angry at your partner.
Your partner deserves the freedom
to be able to vent to their close friends
and family about your relationship
because sometimes you need a sounding board.
Sometimes it's not a good idea
to immediately bring an issue
straight to the relationship,
and you want to discuss it with somebody else first.
That is like a right that every human should have to go and be able to just vent every once
in a while and work things out with somebody else and not have to directly go to the source
of the problem to solve it immediately.
Sometimes you need a holding period where you go and you talk about it with your friends
and family and you try to work it out and sort out your thoughts before you go and you
confront the situation head on.
That's important.
And so snooping through your partner's phone eliminates their ability to do that in safety and in privacy.
Or let's say, you know, you want to do something a little bit more innocent and you want to go into your mom's closet and see what she got you for Christmas.
Let's say you don't see the gift that you wanted.
Now you're getting all pissed off at your mom because you're like, fuck you mom, you didn't give me what I wanted.
Then, you know, you start giving your mom the cold shoulder because you're all pissed off
because she didn't get you what you wanted for Christmas.
Then on Christmas morning, turns out she did get you what you wanted and it's right under
the tree.
It just showed up the day before Christmas and you didn't know that it was going to show
up and you snooped and now it changed the course of Christmas, okay?
And now you fucked up Christmas
because you were being nosy when you shouldn't have been.
It's just so much better to give everyone their privacy
to leave things be.
And if you feel like your partner's cheating on you
or you really wanna know what your mom got you for Christmas,
you'll find out eventually.
You'll find out if your partner's cheating on you without snooping through their phone.
Maybe it's through having a conversation.
Maybe it's through asking your partner to bring out their phone and show you with them sitting
right there.
Maybe you just need to end your relationship with that person anyway if you don't have
enough trust in them in the first place.
Or when it comes to what your mom got you for Christmas,
maybe you just need to fucking be patient
and wait and see what's under the goddamn tree
on Christmas morning.
You see what I'm saying?
You're gonna find out the truth eventually.
So there's no need to meddle with how soon you figure it out.
There's other ways to go about it
that are more morally sound.
You know, the last example of temptation that I have for us to talk about today
is the temptation to steal.
I've never been somebody that stole things.
I don't know why I just never did that.
I know a lot of people go through a phase where they steal,
like in middle school, everybody used to steal from them all.
Girls would go into Victoria's Secret,
bring a bunch of underwear into the dressing room,
put them on under their pants, and then leave the store.
You know, like we're talking about that.
Or girls would go into Nordstrom
and take a tiny little compact makeup palette
and shove it in their bag and then walk out.
You know, like all of that.
I personally could never do it.
I just couldn't.
It made me feel too guilty.
I felt weird about it.
I thought I was gonna get caught.
I just didn't wanna go there.
But I know that a lot of people struggle with the temptation to steal, especially when they're younger. But even in older ages,
like, you know, sometimes you just, you're at the airport and you're like, I don't want to wait
in line to pay for this bottle of water. I'm just gonna steal it. Again, like if you don't need to steal, there's no excuse to steal.
It's just not the right thing to do.
Leave it for someone.
See the way, okay, here's the way I look at it when it comes to stealing.
If you don't need to steal because you can put food on the table, you can put water in
your glass, you have a roof over your head.
You just have no excuse. It's just not the right thing to do.
And I always think of it like,
let's leave the stealing to people who need to steal,
people who don't have enough money
to put food on the table,
people who don't have access to water.
You know, people who don't have access to water,
people who don't have access to a roof over their head,
and they're doing the best that they can,
but they're just not in a good spot right now,
and they need to steal to make ends meet and to survive.
Leave stealing to those people, let them do it.
That's the way I've always looked at it.
I'm like, I don't need this for free.
It's just not the right thing to do.
And I think over time, the more things that you do
that are just morally wrong in life, stealing,
spying on people, buying and excessive things,
the more things that you do in life
that go against your moral compass,
but that have instant gratification.
The more of those things that you do, the less confidence you'll have in yourself as
a person.
Think of it like this.
If you were to look at somebody else, and they're a hard worker, they are a loyal friend,
a loyal, significant other, they don't steal because they don't have to.
They are just a morally sound person overall.
You look at that person.
What do you think of them?
Do you put them in a respectable place in your mind or do you put them in a less respectable
place in your mind?
Obviously, you're going to put them on a pedestal almost.
You know, you're gonna, you respect them.
Versus somebody who doesn't have that kind of discipline,
you're not gonna respect that person as much, right?
The same thing applies for yourself
in your own view of yourself.
If you know deep down that you do your best every day
If you know deep down that you do your best every day to be the best person that you can be and make the best choices that you possibly can, your view of yourself is going to be much
higher and much more positive.
Now this is not to say that you need to be perfect to have a good self-esteem and to view
yourself as a good person.
There are going to be moments when you look at your partner's phone.
There are going to be moments when you're partying too much.
There are going to be moments when you buy too many things.
There are going to be moments when you get tempted to cheat on your partner.
Maybe you do cheat on your partner. Maybe you do cheat on your partner. But whether or
not it impacts your self-esteem and your well-being long term is based on how you
learn from it. If you succumb to that temptation and it makes you feel like shit
and you say, I'm never doing that again.
Then that is a positive thing because you learn something.
But if you succumb to a temptation and then the next day
you're like, I feel like shit about it.
So I'm just gonna go and I'm gonna do it again.
Then that's when you start to get yourself
and do a bad cycle.
But it's never too late to turn it around.
It's never too late to decide,
hey, you know what, I'm done.
I'm going to be more disciplined with myself.
I'm going to hold myself accountable
to doing the right thing
and being the best person I can be.
It's never too late to mend your relationship
to yourself in that way.
And I think a lot of people can get discouraged to mend your relationship to yourself in that way.
And I think a lot of people can get discouraged when they're in a moment where they are having a hard time
sticking to their morals,
sometimes making the difficult choice
to stick to their morals,
because it's honestly more difficult most of the time
to stick to your morals than it is to do the right thing.
A lot of times doing the right thing
has delayed gratification,
doing the wrong thing has instant gratification
and long-term suffering.
I said that earlier,
but I'm saying it again
because it's so important to remember.
When you're in a moment in life
when your temptation is stronger than your discipline,
you can find yourself in a low point.
And because of your decisions, those might impact your self-esteem and your belief in yourself.
And then you might feel like, well, I can't pull myself out of this and start making better choices
because I'm a loser and you can start to feel like a fucking loser. I've been there. I've been
there so many times throughout my life. And it's a vicious cycle because it's like succumbing to
your temptations makes you not believe in yourself. And what you need to pull yourself out of it
is to believe in yourself.
So you almost need to form a false sense of belief in yourself
for a little bit of time until you can pull yourself out of it
and say, you know what? I can turn this around.
It doesn't feel like it right now. I don't believe in myself.
I feel like a weak human being. But maybe I can turn this around. It doesn't feel like it right now. I don't believe in myself. I feel like a weak human being. But maybe I can turn this around. And it's taking it one step at a time.
And it's considering every moment of discipline as a success, studying for an hour instead
of going out to a party with your friends for one evening, that is something to celebrate.
Not buying 50 things online because you're bored and instead just saying, you know what?
I'm going to close out of this tab. I had fun filling my cart online, but I don't need to press
check out. I don't need to pay for it. I don't need to pay for, I don't need to do that.
I'm just gonna wait and save this money
and be more thoughtful and save up for something
that will mean more to me
and that will be a more valuable use
of my precious space at home.
That is a success.
It's like, and then you start building that up,
getting the temptation to look at your partner's phone,
thinking, ooh, I feel like I really want to look.
What are they saying about me?
And then not doing it.
That builds your confidence a little bit.
And then next thing you know, you feel better about yourself.
Your confidence in yourself has grown exponentially.
And not to get too spiritual,
because I know I literally said in the beginning
of this episode that I feel like a fucking cold leader
because I'm talking about,
like this feels borderline religious.
I promise you this is not that.
I'm not gonna start a cult tomorrow.
I'm not interested in that.
This is not religious.
But what I am about to say does sound kind of,
it is a little spiritual.
And you can take it with a grain of salt.
I don't even know why I feel this way, but I do.
I feel like the universe lets you get away with nothing, whether it's God, the universe,
karma, whatever is the power, the higher power of sorts.
If there is any, whatever it is, whatever you believe in, that thing does not let you
get away with anything.
I always feel like it's just the universe, the way the universe just exists and like is.
I feel like you always end up paying for bad decisions
eventually. Whereas I feel like you also get rewarded for good choices. And it
might not be something as deep as like the universe or God or whatever. It
might not be that. It might just literally be that when you make good choices in
your life, good things just come to you because
I don't know. I don't know. It just is that way. You know, when you are sticking to your guns and you are
doing the right thing, things just end up coming to you in your life that are positive.
I'm done. I'm done talking.
That's it.
That's all we're talking about today.
Okay.
I find myself fighting off my desires all the time, you know,
in so many different ways.
But every time I fight it successfully
and I do the right thing, I feel so much better.
And I feel like recently
my self esteem has been so much better because I've been really doing my best to be disciplined
with myself. And it really, really pays off. And I know it can be difficult at times because discipline and overworking yourself, there's a fine line.
And you have to figure out that line for yourself.
But once you do, it's so powerful.
And it's life changing.
And it makes the amazing moment so much more amazing when they're balanced out with a disciplined life.
You know, I honestly wonder if you can have
happiness and bliss and fun without discipline.
I'm not sure that you can,
because I love and appreciate and enjoy going to a party
I love and appreciate and enjoy going to a party so much more after spending the whole week working as hard as I could.
I appreciate my relationships in life so much more because I give my Loved ones privacy in space and I don't impede on their
lives and I
Am not nosy about their lives and I just give them space and
I'm loyal to them. I appreciate those relationships so much more because
They're rooted in honesty. I don't know. I don't know you guys, I'm done, I'm literally done.
What did I just talk about for an hour?
I don't know, like I just don't know.
But I hope that you enjoyed, maybe, you know,
maybe something in this was valuable, I really hope it was.
Regardless, I just appreciate you listening.
And I hope you enjoyed hanging out
and it's always a pleasure.
If you wanna subscribe to anything goes,
you can do so on any platform use stream podcasts.
I'll talk to you next week.
Per usual, every Thursday you know the drill.
If you wanna check out my coffee company,
I have a special code for you, the listener,
AG15, check out my coffee company, ChamberlainCoffee.com, and use that code if you want to pick
anything up.
And that's all I got.
Thank you guys so much for hanging out.
Let me know what you think.
You can check out anything goes on Twitter, at AG podcast or Instagram,
at anything goes and let me know what you thought of this episode and keep up with the episodes
on those social medias. I don't know whatever. I'm out of here.
Okay, talk to you guys next week. I love you all. I love you all. Bye.
you all. Bye.