Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - How To Start Defining Your Own Success With Mark Manson NYT Best Selling Author Episode 307
Episode Date: March 28, 2023Have you been wanting to work with Heather? Her annual elite mastermind is open NOW!  She is only accepting 20 participants this year! Click the link below to learn more and apply now if you are ...ready to go to the next level! https://heathermonahan.com/the-elite-mastermind/ In This Episode You Will Learn About: Manson’s law of avoidance  The key to dealing with scary and uncomfortable situations What it takes to make a major change in your life Coping with the tough feelings that come with growth or a breakthrough Understanding our relationship with ourselves and the world around us Resources: Website: markmanson.net Read The Subtle Art Of Not Giving A F*ck Watch The Subtle Art Of Not Giving A F*ck Instagram & LinkedIn & Facebook: @Mark Manson TikTok & Youtube & Twitter: @iammarkmanson Overcome Your Villains is Available NOW! Order here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com If you haven't yet, get my first book Confidence Creator Get your Free Month of Thinkific Plus at thinkific.com/confidence Show Notes: You have the power to choose which thoughts you listen to, and which ones you simply don’t give a f*ck about! It is extremely LIBERATING when you let go of other people’s expectations and prioritize your own needs. To help us feel comfort with our everyday thoughts, both positive and negative, I’m joined by Mark Manson, the Best Selling Author of The Subtle Art Of Not Giving A F*ck. He’ll share the tools and tricks we can use to reset our minds when we get caught up with self doubt, how to self motivate, and why we deal with the toughest emotions right before we level up! About The Guest: I’m thrilled to welcome Mark Manson back to the show! We’re revisiting Mark’s concepts based on his best selling, self help phenomenon, The Subtle Art Of Not Giving A F*ck which Mark has designed to help us become less awful people! He’ll share how he’s managed to sell millions of books and help people around the globe improve the way they live. If You Liked This Episode You Might Also Like These Episodes: How To Leverage Scarcity Marketing & FOMO To Drive Sales For YOUR Business! With Dr. Mindy Weinstein The Most Important Question You Need To Ask Yourself To Level Up! With Ryan Leak, Executive Coach, Best-Selling Author & Motivational Speaker The Secret To Setting Goals You Will Achieve, With Heather! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I actually find it a lot more liberating to remind myself of all the ways that I'm not
special.
Even if I accomplished something success, however I choose to define it, 99% of my time
each day is spent doing very, very average things, worrying about very,
very average problems and messing up in very, very average ways.
But I think when you focus on that 99% of the stuff that is like everybody else, it liberates
you because you realize like, oh, my problems are actually not that unique.
I'm on this journey with me.
Each week when you join me, we are going to chase down our goals.
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I'm ready for my close time.
Hi, and welcome back.
I'm so excited to reintroduce you.
We've had them on the show once before, but today we are revisiting Mark's based on his
global best selling self-help phenomenon.
The subtle art of not giving an f-bomb is a cinematic documentary design to help us become less awful people.
Literally, Mark Manson has a movie and we're sitting down here today with him talking about it.
Mark, thanks for making time to be with us today.
It's good to be back. OK, so let's get into it.
First of all, it's kind of funny thinking
about all of the success, massive success as an author.
I bow down to the millions and millions of books
that you've sold, so impressive, so incredible.
However, in your teaching is when you talk about,
quote unquote, success, I'd love it if kind of share with everybody what that, you know,
achieving millions of books being sold if that related to happiness for you.
That's a great question.
I mean, it's funny because in the short run, yeah, for sure,
it's exciting to see the sales numbers come in.
It's exciting to see the money come in.
But and the long run, it's amazing the mind adjusts
to the new normal so quickly. And the same anxieties and preoccupations and doubts and stuff still
exist. It's just they change, they take a new form. So it's like before the book, I used to be
anxious and insecure of like, well, nobody's going like my book, nobody's gonna buy it. And then
when everybody bought the book, now my anxieties and insecurities is like, well, nobody's gonna like
the next book, nobody's, I'm a one hit wonder. This is never gonna happen again. How do I top this,
you know? And so the, the anxiety is the same. It's just the surface of your life shifts
and changes underneath it.
Number one, thank you for being honest and sharing that
because it makes me feel better about having those same fears
and concerns and not having had that incredible success.
So thank you for that.
But what's interesting is in hearing that you're projecting,
oh, what if this isn't successful?
So many of us have heard or have been taught,
you've got to put out there what you're going to expect.
You've got to feel that that success has already happened.
How do you think that you have been able to achieve
not only one success, but multiple successes
in your career without having or leveraging that methodology?
I just think in terms of actions, like worthwhile actions, I try not to label things
too much of like, okay, well, this makes me a successful person and this makes me a successful author.
I feel like the labels will just trip you up as much as they help you. Like maybe they help you
early on to get motivated, but as you're going, they can become traps. And so I try not to think so much about like what makes this movie
successful, what makes this next project a success. And I just try to focus on, okay, let's make
the best movie possible. Let's make the best book possible. What's the message that people need to
hear that nobody's saying right now? Okay, let me go write that book. And then, you know, let other
people talk about success, you know, it's if I, if I just leave that discussion out of my own brain as long as possible,
it things tend to go better, I find. All right, well, you're talking about not labeling things,
and while you might not like to label things, you do like to have your own law, Manson's law
of avoidance. So can you break that one down for us? Because I find that to be pretty entertaining. Yeah, my ego just was insatiable. So I had to start naming laws after myself.
No, the Manson's law of avoidance says that that people will avoid experiences in proportion to
how much it threatens their worldview and identity. And I think that's really important because I
think most people have had the experience before of, yeah, obviously you get anxious and avoid negative experiences,
but a lot of us, we also get anxious and avoid positive experiences as well. You know, like that
huge opportunity comes around and you kind of freak out and you blow it or, you know, a person you
really like, you finally meet somebody you really,, really like, and you think there's a lot
of potential with and you find a way to screw it up
or make up and excuse to not see them again.
And I think most people have had this experience
at some point in our lives and it doesn't make sense.
We often like get upset and beat ourselves up.
Like, why, I'm such an idiot, why would I do that?
But if you look at it from an identity perspective,
it actually makes a lot of sense. Like your ego's job is to keep things the same at all times.
Like, it doesn't matter if things could be better, it doesn't matter if they could be worse.
If they're different, that is scary and uncomfortable. And so your mind is always trying to kind of trick
you into staying in the same spot and doing the same thing
and believing the same things and feeling the same things. And so anytime you try to break out
of that default state and change something in your life, it's going to be accompanied with
certain amounts of anxiety, anger, sadness, insecurity. It's just part of the process.
And I think this is really important to understand because it's a credit to self-help marketing
over many decades that I think a lot of people have developed this assumption that growth
is this, it's like a weekend retreat.
It's euphoric.
You're going to be singing and screaming and like hugging strangers when,
oh my God, my breakthrough finally happened.
I'm a new person.
Like, let's throw a party.
Like it doesn't work that way.
It's usually any sort of like real growth or breakthrough.
It is accompanied with a lot of insecurity and self doubt.
And even when you're on the other side of that,
there's, there's anxiety of like, well, what
if I fall back? What if I screw up again? What if I relapse? You know, it's not an easy
process. And it doesn't always, there are, like, it does feel great sometimes, but it also
feels not great sometimes. And I think it's just useful to be realistic about that.
Well, I mean, it's interesting that we're talking about this
at the same time we're talking about you entering
into this new era in your career.
You creating and you know, narrating this movie,
you opening up your life to a whole new level,
how were you able to let go during this process?
So the book came out in 2016,
we shot the film in 2021.
So I had already had about five years of doing
interviews about the book. And so I had talked about all the stories and concepts a million times.
In a way, it almost like, it was almost like practice for the film. So when it got time to sit down
and actually narrate and talk through the film, that wasn't such a hard part. The hardest part for me was,
I don't know, can I curse on this podcast?
Sure. Awesome. All right. I don't know a damn thing about filmmaking, and that was apparent very
quickly. Like my first meeting with the director, he started asking me all these questions and I was like, whoa, I have no fucking clue what you're talking about, dude. Like, you're the director. You figured out.
And so there was a lot of trust and letting go that I had to go through of like, this is my baby.
It's, you know, my name's going to be on it.. My face is gonna be on it. But these other people, the director, the producer,
the editor, they're actually making it.
And that was very scary at first.
And it took a lot of like, okay, just trust them,
go with it, you know, assume it's gonna be great.
And then, you know, as we started going through production
and things started shaping up, I was like,
okay, could they know what they're doing?
But, you know, early on, it was a little bit terrifying.
But this wasn't the first time you had been pitched on the concept of turning your book into a movie,
right? No, I was pitched multiple times and all sorts of stuff. I mean, my agent, we had meetings about sitcoms and reality shows and
even a drama made out of like a teenage version of Mark, like just tons of tons of stuff,
which, you know, when you take those meetings, it's very sexy and exciting. You're like, oh my god,
this person in Hollywood wants to talk to me about like my idea, like that's a very seductive thing.
But what I realized, once I actually
got into these meetings, what I realized, I'm like, this makes no sense. I'm like a nerdy
author who like sits in Jim Short's most days each year alone in an office typing words onto
a word document. I'm not going gonna be on a reality TV show.
Like this is crazy.
We did it the younger you,
the player could have been on the reality TV show.
For sure.
Maybe, maybe, but that's not like,
that's not what I want for myself, I guess, is what I'm saying.
And I also felt like that's not the most,
it doesn't honor the material the best.
I really do believe in the ideas and concepts of the book.
And so I told my agent, I said, you know, whatever we do with it, whatever we give the right
to or whatever, you know, to me, what's most important is that the ideas are transmitted
in a good way, in a way that's like going to
land with people. And so when GFC approached us, they've done dozens of documentaries, they've
done multiple documentaries based on books. You know, when they approached us and they said,
look, we just want, we just want to take the book and turn it into a visual medium and
stay very, very loyal to the ideas and concepts
within the book because we think they're powerful. That just made sense to me.
So it was more around your visions aligned and trusting them.
Yeah, I think it was, you know, we wanted the same thing out of it, I think, with some of the other
pitches that we heard a lot of it revolve. I think a lot of people were just realized it's a great title and it's a great brand
and so you can just kind of milk a lot of attention straight off of that.
I think a lot of people kind of took maybe the wrong lessons from the book.
Like, I think they saw the humor and the irreverence and kind of the crazy stories
and they're like, oh, we need to we need to make a show out of that.
Whereas with the documentary Matthew,
the producer, he came to me and he said,
I love these ideas.
We need, we need to get these ideas in front of more people.
And that is what resonated with me.
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Well I'll tell you as a reader and as someone who saw the movie, I agree.
If anything, we get to see a whole other side of you now
in the movie, which, to me, it made you much more relatable
as a person.
I'll tell you the beginning of the movie,
opening essentially around the story of when you're 13 years old.
And watching a young 13-year-old you,
I mean, what you went through getting arrested at school,
I mean, the drugs, I'm a mother of a 15-year-old
immediately. I mean, I was part broken watching that and then hearing it right after that your
parents divorced. I mean, I did not get that from the book. So it was immediately as a viewer
pulled me right into that story and it was so powerful. And I think that's got to be so relatable
for everybody watching this. Yeah, and that was very much part of our early discussions. So I mean, the book is about 220 pages,
and the first, you know, if you're going to turn a book into a movie, the first question is,
okay, just to read this book out loud, it's probably about six hours to get through the whole thing.
And we got to get that down to like 90 minutes,
maybe 100 minutes at most.
So we've immediately have to cut out like 70 to 80% of this
and figure out what are we gonna keep.
And one of the first things that Matthew said is he said,
look, like, on a book, like people sit with you,
a book is a very different experience.
Like when you're sitting and reading
over a long period of time, the author is able to kind of take you down these side trails
and explain concepts and say like, researchers discovered this
in these experiments in the 1950s,
and this is how this relates to this concept
that we talked about earlier.
He said in a movie, it's, that doesn't really work.
In a movie, people need a person to sympathize with and to relate to.
So, he was the one who was like, we need to put you front and center and make your story
kind of the central focus of the film.
Because in the book, it's like I use my own stories as a way to, as examples for the
concepts I'm talking about.
Whereas in the movie, it's kind of the other way around.
We start with my story.
We get the concepts and lessons and pull them out of that story.
So it's kind of inverted in a way if that makes sense.
Yeah, and for everyone listening, the best analogy I can give is I'm not someone who sits
around and necessarily reads the Bible every night.
However, there is a show out right now called The Chosen,
which is incredible and has just reactivated me
and captured me in a way that simply reading
wasn't able to do.
So for anyone who's already read the book,
you're gonna love the movie.
But if you haven't read the book,
this is such a different way to access the content
and get, you're gonna get the same messaging
but in such a different way that if you are a visual learner,
I really think it's gonna pull people in.
They did an incredible job with how differently
this movie is cut up.
Yeah, it's visually, it's a very eclectic,
kind of wild ride.
And that was mostly Nathan, the director.
He and I had a lot of good conversations
about like why the book worked.
And I think one of the reasons why people liked the book
so much is that it broke convention a lot.
Like for decades, people, if you bought a self-help book,
you kind of knew exactly what you were gonna get.
Like it was gonna be a lot of feel-good, fluffy,
nice stories about success and happiness.
And you know, here are the three
steps to achieve this and that. And the book kind of just spitting the face of all that. Like it,
it very intentionally messed with people's expectations. Was very irreverent. Was very funny.
Had some very difficult stories like challenging stories, but also some very like light and funny stories mixed in.
It's like fast paced and it's always kind of changing up
what the reader is expecting.
And so Nathan and I had conversations
about doing that with the film
because there's a lot of documentaries,
especially documentaries based on books.
It's almost like a dry kind of academic interpretation
of, you know, well'll hear this is what chapter three
said and now we're going to show it.
And this is what chapter four said.
And now we're going to show it.
And so he and I had, we very consciously were like, we want it to be a little bit crazy,
a little bit weird, definitely funny.
And we want to mix formats.
We want to have like animations and B roll and hire some actors to do some crazy stuff
and then have me talking for a while and just kind of always keep the audience on their toes of like not knowing what's going to happen next.
Yeah, and incorporating the bombing in Japan. I mean, there's so many things going,
you're getting pulled in so many different directions that it really, it keeps you so focused on the
film. And again, like I said, I'm someone who's read the books. So you think, is this going to be,
it's very different. However, again, to the messaging, it'm someone who's read the books. So you think, is this gonna be, it's very different, however, again,
to the messaging, it definitely hits home.
All right, so some of the key points for people
who haven't read the book yet and are thinking,
why would I wanna watch this film?
I want to get into this whole idea
that is, you know, not the popular belief out there
that not everybody's special.
In fact, are really any of us special
and you diving into that?
This is when I'm kinda like the turd and the punch bowl. I very much bang on the drum
of this idea that we're not special. I understand why we tell ourselves and tell each other
that we're special and look like if you're a mom or a dad obviously your kids are the most
special thing in the world to you
and to you, they're like these perfectly unique, amazing human beings. But I think in terms of
understanding our relationship with ourselves and our relationship with the world, I actually find
it a lot more liberating and helpful to remind myself of all the ways that I'm not special,
that even if I accomplish something great,
the accomplished quote unquote success,
however I choose to define it,
99% of my time each day is spent doing very, very average things,
worrying about very, very average problems,
and messing up in very, very average ways.
And I think so much of our culture,
and I don't know if this is, you know,
I don't think it's driven by social media
or television or whatever,
but like so much of our culture revolves around the extremes,
it revolves around the finding the thing,
like the outlier, the thing that you are either incredibly good
at or incredibly bad at and
focusing on that and ignoring the 99% of the stuff that you are pretty much like everybody else.
But I think when you focus on that 99% of the stuff that is like everybody else,
it liberates you because you realize like, oh, my problems are actually not that unique. Like
everybody struggles with insecurities like this.
Every family has problems.
Every job has frustrations in parts and periods that you don't like and you don't know if
you're going to get through.
Everybody deals with loss at some point.
So it's, to me, that's a very powerful concept.
Because I think one of the things, one of the problems that we all have is that when
we have a, when we're very hurt or upset about something, we kind of trick ourselves in
the thinking that nobody else can understand that like we're the only ones that feel that way.
And therefore we're weird. And so you don't say anything because then other people will know
you're weird. But when you realize like, no, no, actually everybody has that problem and
everybody also has the problem of not saying anything about it because they
think that they're going to be weird if they say something. It just liberates
everybody to start talking about it.
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All right, so I want to get into this.
I don't know if this guy is a caricature,
or if this really was your friend.
I mean, you're claiming he was your friend,
but this guy, Jimmy, is, wow, I mean,
this guy is incredible.
But you set it up.
So basically, seeing, listen, there was this error of,
you know, we were telling everyone they were so special
and they're so amazing and you're going to get an award
for doing nothing.
And then suddenly we have an entire generation
of your friend Jimmy.
And Jimmy was a party friend, which is very different
than a friend friend.
Thank goodness.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, I think, you know, there's just a general sense these days that people feel entitled
to not only things, but entitled to feel good all the time.
And I think those two things are actually very connected because if you look at so to catch
everybody up, you know, my friend Jimmy that I talk about in the book is a little bit of
a con man, like a low level con man, like a cheesy guy at the nightclub con man.
He was taking shares, I'm stocks from companies and advising them when he had never advised
any companies, he's a total con man.
Yeah, you okay, yeah He's a total con man. Yeah, you're okay. Yeah, he was a comment. But funny story about Jimmy. So the director of the movie,
he was like, Hey, can you, can you look like, are you still in touch with this guy? I was like
absolutely not. And he was like, can you like show me a picture? I'm like, I just want to get a
sense of, you know, who is this guy? What does he look like? I went sort of digging around Facebook to find this guy.
I hadn't talked to him in 10 years.
And sure enough, I find him, I find his Facebook profile
and I click on it.
And the top thing on his Facebook profile is a video
of him standing on a runway in front of a private jet,
telling everybody that like if they sign up now,
they'll be able to join his exclusive platinum club
and join him on his jet. And I'm like, watching it, I'm like, okay, I know him well enough to know
that that's not his jet. He just, he just drove to a runway somewhere and is standing in front of,
that convinced somebody to let him stand in front of it. And I was like, wow, dude,
dude has not changed a bit. So anyway, back to entitlement.
So I think people who do stuff like Jimmy,
like Jimmy doesn't think he's a bad guy.
He thinks he's a good guy.
Like it's, there's a great quote from that I love
from David Foster Wallace.
He says, evil people don't think they're evil.
They think everyone else is evil.
And so Jimmy, he doesn't think he's a bad guy.
He thinks, he thinks everything he does,
all the shady, you know, creepy stuff, he does is worth it.
It's like a means to an end.
But the thing that causes him to feel that way
is this, this sense of entitlement of like,
well, of course I should be able to stand in front
of a private jet.
That's who I am.
I'm gonna be a private jet guy.
Like that's what I believe.
I'm gonna be, I'm gonna be a super rich private jet guy.
And so I'm just going to like sneak onto a runway
and film a video and tell everybody that's my jet,
even when it's not.
Like, they start convincing themselves
that they deserve these things
without actually going through the sacrifice
and the struggle to get there.
And so I think, you know,
that's kind of an extreme example of just this unwillingness
to face pain in one's life, this unwillingness to sit with a struggle and actually work through it rather than finding a way to to avoid it and run from it. him because I think it's interesting in that you are not right. So what that says to me is
people have the ability to change if they become self-aware or you know not to to stay on that same
path. And again, no judgment. People need to do what works for them. I'm on the wanting to
change journey. But one of the things that you highlight in the movie that I really connected with
was that story of you know you dating women and at first
you're thinking, you know, what's wrong with them. And then when you get cheated on, then suddenly
your heart broken and you start this journey of looking within and noticing these patterns. Can you
share a little bit about what you teach that? Yeah, it's, this is a good example of, I had my heart broken by my first girlfriend
in a pretty extravagant way.
And I think like a lot of young immature people,
rather than looking at myself and asking the difficult questions
of, well, why was I so attracted to this person?
Why did I ignore so many red flags?
Why did I tolerate these sorts of behaviors?
What did I do to contribute to this relationship?
What could I have done better?
Instead of asking those difficult mature questions, I did the immature easy thing, which is I'm
like, well, clearly women are just evil, just selfish, right?
It's clearly it's the women's fault.
And yeah, and it's a perfect example of like,
evil people don't think they're evil.
Evil people think everybody else is evil.
And because I started, I protected myself
with these irrational beliefs around relationships
and women and sex.
I became an asshole.
Like I became a really bad boyfriend who cheated on people.
And it took a number of years of like patterns repeating
for it to kind of dawn on me of like,
hey, wait a second, there's only one thing
that all these relationships haven't gotten.
And that's me.
Obviously I'm contributing something to these patterns.
And it wasn't until that point
that I was able to look back
at that early relationship,
that first relationship,
and realize, wow,
I wasn't such an angel after all.
Like I was kind of a bad boyfriend,
and I was selfish in a lot of ways
that I didn't realize at the time.
And there are a lot of problems in the relationship that I was too immature, naive, to address or deal with.
And so, you know, of course she left me. Like, that's actually not surprising in hindsight that she left me.
And so it's, I think that's just, it's one example of how, again, coming back to how growth is not a weekend retreat. Growth is, it's actually, it's usually slower than we want.
And it's not as linear as we want.
You know, it comes in fits and spurts and plateaus.
And then it's also, it doesn't feel good, right?
It's like, it doesn't feel good to look back and realize, oh, that really heart
breaking thing that happened to me, you me, I was partially responsible for that.
Like, I have blamed there as well.
And that takes a lot of work to swallow that,
especially when you've been feeding yourself
these narratives for many years
that you were this perfect angel that was wronged
by this horrible, horrible woman.
Well, for everybody right now,
who's having a visceral reaction to this because you've
been cheated on and know that Mark is not like Jimmy.
He has changed.
He is married and he's actually repping for his wife right now in a Brazil sweatshirt.
So shout out there.
Okay.
There's two things I need to get to before I let you go and I know I only have nine minutes
left with you.
All right.
You were a hard metal rocker growing up and you were a big fan of Metallica and you share an amazing story and the power that pain can have to help someone and hurt someone.
I'm hoping you can share a little bit about that now.
This actually ties in really well with be careful how you define success. So a lot of people don't know, but the original league guitarist of Metallica
was a guy named Dave Mustaine. He was right before Metallica recorded their first album. He was
kicked out of the band. No reason was given. They just like handed him a bus ticket and sent him home.
And he basically fumed all the way home. He was really heartbroken, upset, you know,
similar age to how I was, similar reaction, right?
It's like, those guys are assholes.
I'm going to show them.
And he went and formed a new band called Megadeath.
And Megadeath went on to sell, God, I don't know, 100 million records, toured stadiums around
the world.
I mean, it's, they're huge.
They're arguably the second biggest heavy metal band of all time behind Metallica.
But it's fascinating because if you jump ahead 20 years,
there was an amazing documentary about Metallica
called some kind of monster.
And they actually went and interviewed Dave Mustaine
in that documentary.
And it was the first time that Dave had sat down
with the Metallica guys and talked very openly
about what had happened. And to everybody's surprise, like with the Metallica guys and talked very openly about what had happened.
And to everybody's surprise, all the Metallica guys thought, of course, he started Megadeth,
he's fine.
His life's great.
In that interview, Dave broke down in tears and he said, I've always felt like a failure
because no matter what I do, I'm always the guy who got kicked out of Metallica. And to me, it's just such a fascinating story of like you can rack up all the external
accolades in the world.
You can break all sorts of records, put up huge numbers.
But if your internal definition of success is off, you can feel like a loser the entire time.
To me, it's a cautionary tale of
beware of how you define success for yourself
because you maybe it helps early on,
and I'm sure it did help him early on.
It helped help him start Megadeff and make it a better ban.
But be careful because it can turn into a trap later. And so, you
know, hold those definitions lightly.
Reese's peanut butter cups are the greatest, but let me play devil's advocate here. Let's
see. So, no, that's a good thing. That's definitely not a problem. Reese's, you did it.
You stumped this charming devil.
Yeah, I think the word you used in the movie was a prison.
And I just I like that that word and that visual that it provided.
But this guy maybe he wasn't really in all that much pain.
Maybe he's just really good at guilt tripping people and he got the last laugh on them.
I don't think that you're giving him full credit.
Okay.
So I said earlier that the movie opened with you as a 13 year old boy.
And that's not actually true.
The movie opens and you're talking about death.
And I wanted to get into this story,
which was a really transformational story for you.
And I just, I love the lesson from it
about losing a good friend when you were young
and that powerful dream and how it's impacted you
if you could share that.
One of the most personal and powerful stories of the book and the film is when I was 19,
I was at a party and a friend of mine named Josh suddenly drowned right in the middle of the
party. It was very unexpected, very shocking, quite traumatic at the time. It really kind of put
me into a tailspin. But it was interesting because
you know, I went through a depression for a number of months in a grieving process.
And, but it was also a little bit of a wake-up call. It taught me a very important lesson, which was,
you know, as such a young person and with somebody so close to me who passed away, it was the first time that I really was exposed
to my own mortality and the consideration of like,
oh my god, like this could be over tomorrow.
This could be over that, that could have been me,
it could have been anybody.
And it forced me to re-evaluate a lot of the things
that I was doing with my life.
At the time, I was kind of a lazy stoner kid,
didn't put much effort in it.
School was very insecure, smoked a lot of pot,
did a bunch of drugs, and it made me really, really think
about like, dude, if you go tomorrow,
like, are you gonna be happy with this?
Like, what are you doing? Right?
Like, there's, there's a time limit here and you're not using that time well. And so it ended up being
an incredibly transformational experience for me in a lot of ways. It was kind of the first
experience I ever had in my life that like lit a fire under my ass and said like,
dude, this is, you only get one shot, like get up and take it. You know, I quit, quit doing drugs.
I started studying in school. I transferred to a better college, got my life together.
Pretty powerful. And the concept I talk about in the book is how, you know, kind of returning to
this conversation about how growth is not
always pleasant. I think thinking about your own death is actually one of the most useful
ways to kind of get a sense of what's worth pursuing and what's not worth pursuing. I
think most people have an experience at some point in their life of either they have a
scare in their own life or somebody close to them has a scare,
or somebody close to them passes away,
and it kind of forces them to think about this,
of like, oh my god, half of the stuff
that I worry about on a day-to-day basis
is completely pointless, does not matter,
will not care if I go.
So what's the 50% of things that does matter
and I do care about?
And actually, a cool story related to that is when I was originally pitching
subtle art to a bunch of different publishers back in 2015, you know,
my agent and I were driving around New York, we were taking all these meetings at
different editors and some of them went well, some of them didn't go so well.
And I went to Harper Collins and met with my editor, Luke Dempsey.
And I think he
showed up to the meeting in a couple of minutes late. But my agent and I were sitting in the
office or in the conference room. And he just walked in, he put the manuscript on the
table. And he said, I'm a cancer survivor. It's the best thing that ever happened to
me. And I'm going to publish your book. I don't care what it takes. And I was like, that's my guy.
He gets it. He totally gets it.
So true and so powerful. Mark, for everybody who's read the book, you've got to watch the movie.
And if you haven't read the book, I highly suggest watching the movie, where can people find the movie?
So the movie is available on demand on streaming platforms. So Amazon Prime, YouTube, iTunes, etc., etc.
And you can go to, I believe it's subtle art movie.com to find all that information.
Well, I watched it on Apple TV. Definitely go to your digital provider and check it out.
Mark, where can everybody find you? Markmanson.net and then obviously every all over social media. All over social media.
Bringing the heat, bringing the humor. Mark, thank you so much for all the work that you're doing.
Thanks Heather. All right guys, until getting here, start learning and growing.
And inevitably something will happen.
No one succeeds alone.
You don't stop and look around once in a while.
You can miss it.
I'm on this journey with me.
I hope you're enjoying this episode so far.
I'm Jennifer Cohen, host the top ranking business and entrepreneur podcast, Habitson
Hustle,
apart the YAP media network,
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