Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 259: Rhett's Revelatory Solo Trip | Ear Biscuits Ep.259
Episode Date: October 12, 2020From hot springs to attempting to contact aliens to unexpected fossil hunts, Rhett is back from his journey with new perspectives gained along the way. Listen to Rhett recount his revelatory solo tri...p experience in this episode of Ear Biscuits! To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This, this, this, this is Mythical.
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Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the lifelong podcast.
Are you joking?
No, I was fixated on the word lifelong.
You want this to be a lifelong podcast?
Yeah, man.
Hey, we're gonna do it forever.
Yeah, we're gonna do this forever.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the podcast
where two lifelong best friends
talk about life for a long time.
I'm Link.
I'm Rhett.
You added best again, which I don't have any problem.
Anytime you add best, because we are best friends.
It makes, yeah, it feels good.
I just, the reason I don't add it
is because it feels like it messes up
like the flow a little bit, but it is true.
So you might as well say it.
I did say it and I'm not taking it back
and I don't need your approval.
I'm Rhett, I'm Link's best friend.
And this week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're gonna be talking about my camping trip.
Your solo excursion into,
I mean, I have all these pictures in my mind
of this bearded tall man in loincloth
out in the deserts of Nevada.
Pretty much got it right.
Except no loincloth.
And we had this whole buildup about how this was for you
and it's not necessarily for me or for anyone listening.
So we need to get into all that.
But I hope you can tell us enough because-
I'll tell you enough.
I've been picturing a lot and I need it to, I need-
You might be a building things up too much,
but I've got a lot to say.
Before we get into saying a lot, we do wanna-
Say, we wanna say something else.
We wanna let you know if you're listening to this,
if you're watching it, sorry, it's too late
because this only runs for a few days.
I'm just gonna start reading it.
Five days.
Because we're bringing back the golden tea. You remember that? The golden tea of mythicality? too late because this only runs for a few days. I'm just gonna start reading it. Five days.
Because we're bringing back the golden tea,
remember that, the golden tea of mythicality?
First time we did it, you would buy a tea
and it was a silver logo and if it was golden,
there was only one of those and if you got that,
were there two?
There was one.
Then-
You got an all expense paid trip out here.
Yeah, we flew you out here with a friend to meet us
and have a barbecue and hang out all day.
Well now we're updating it.
Am I mixing up the barbecue?
It doesn't matter.
It's all in the past.
The barbecue is Bleak Creek.
Yeah, man.
We had a lot of good times.
It was spend the day with us.
And anyway, it's gotten even better now
because there are three,
three different T-shirts that are winning T-shirts.
Yes, yes.
So we got this new T of mythicality with a new logo.
It looks good.
It's a silver design, but then-
If you just wanted to buy the shirt
just because it's a cool shirt,
you're probably gonna wanna do that.
But then there's a gold one, like a bronze one and a-
Let's say silver.
Well, no, silver is the design of the all over.
I don't remember the color.
It doesn't actually say, there's three winning tees.
It'll be clear when we talk about this elsewhere.
Just buy a shirt. Here are the different prizes.
One is one year's worth of new Mythical merch for free.
So basically everything that we release,
you get it for free.
And we release a bunch of crap.
Oh yeah, that's a good prize.
Good crap, get everything.
Another prize is a virtual taste test with us.
Again, we can't fly you out here
and we're not flying to you because, you know,
the state of the world at this point,
but one of the prizes is a virtual taste test with us.
And then the third prize, which I'm calling the grand prize,
because this is the one that I would want the most,
is a signed check for $18,000
in honor of season 18 of Good Mythical Morning.
We're gonna sign the check.
That's why we said it was signed.
We also say it was signed because you can actually cash it.
It's real money. Yeah, it's real money.
You win $18,000.
Now, giveaway kicks off today
and it runs through October 16th.
So there's only a few days to order your shirt.
And just like last time, only US and Canadian
Mythical Beasts are eligible to win.
And that's not something that we decide,
that's something that your international governments decide
because every single-
We try really hard to make it where
International Mythical Beasts could participate
this time around, but regulations are such
that we cannot do it.
It's illegal. We just can cannot do it. It's illegal.
We just can't do it.
But to make it up to you, international Mythical Beast,
we're gonna give you $5 off of the silver tee
if you're outside of the US and Canada.
So at least you get $5 off of a really cool looking tee.
For all the details, go to mythical.com,
no purchase necessary, void where prohibited.
Yeah, win some money, man.
Okay, how do you wanna do this?
Slowly, methodically.
No, I have a lot to say about my experience.
I do wanna say upfront, and we talked about,
the buildup to this was like,
this is about me kind of going out
and having this time with myself.
It's about self-discovery.
And I was very,
especially because my mission
was to not have a mission.
My agenda was to have no agenda, right?
And my sort of approach was to separate the trip
from it needing to be translated
into an entertaining story, right?
Because again, that just kind of brings the focus back
onto me in a negative way, not in like an enriching way,
but in a selfish, hey, here's what I got to say,
here's what I'm gonna bring back
from the mountaintop kind of way.
And I didn't want that.
I tried really hard the entire time I was out there
to make sure that I'm not making decisions
or writing things down with an audience in mind,
because I live my life in a lot of ways
with an audience in mind, it live my life in a lot of ways with an audience in mind.
It's part of the job, right?
And this whole trip was not about the audience,
it was about me.
So I am going to, I'm gonna talk more about,
I'm gonna talk about some of the fun
and practical things that happen.
Some of the, you know, I am gonna talk about one update that I have
based on the conversation that we had,
the argument podcast we had a couple episodes ago.
The sports, sportsmanship.
The sportsmanship.
I thought you were such a good sportsman.
I insisted that you were a great sportsman.
And I didn't believe I was a good sportsman.
When I, when I,
Am I competitive or not?
When I tried to prove to you over the course of an hour
that you were competitive,
we're gonna talk about an updated perspective
that I have on that.
But I will say up top that what I would say
are some very significant emotional
and dare I say spiritual things occurred
that I will not be talking about.
Okay, yeah, I respect that.
Because if you went into those things,
then I would be like, well, that really hits it on the head
of what you said you didn't wanna do.
So you're gonna talk around
the thing that was most meaningful to you.
And the only reason I'm saying that is because, again,
that was, I went into the desert for,
I would say for spiritual reasons.
Yeah, I mean, for emotional slash spiritual reasons.
And it was an incredibly enriching,
incredibly fruitful time.
From the very beginning,
I thought that I was gonna have to wait
until day three or something,
but even the first morning of camping,
it was just a very enriching time.
But again, I almost feel like it sells it short
to talk about it.
It also makes it about me trying to,
it's not about me having anything to share
and any wisdom or anything like that.
It was just something that happened with me
that I might talk about at some point in my life
or on this podcast, I don't know,
but that's not what this is gonna be about.
I get it, I get it.
I think that's a good choice.
I don't wanna cheapen anything that happened
by making it into a podcast.
Can I cheapen it?
Yeah, you can cheapen it all you want.
No, but seriously, there are some things on my mind.
I'll just throw out some questions now
that you can answer it in any point you want.
Okay.
I think because I did find myself thinking,
especially in the first two nights of me camping,
I found myself thinking about,
I wonder what Rhett's situation is because like I said,
I was out, Christian and I out there were camping
in the most isolated situations I've ever been in.
Right.
I mean, cause even when I did my solo trip to Slab City,
there was like someone renting out this abandoned RV to me
and I had contact with people and I was on the edge
of a city, I was never this alone.
And I was assuming you were that alone.
And I knew that last time, and again,
you wrote about it in the book of mythicality,
you got really scared that one night.
That's one thing that I found myself like,
just being swallowed by the darkness,
because it was, you know, and the stars and-
Did your wife being there making you less scared?
Oh, of course.
And then I'm like,
because what I would tell Chrissy, I was like,
I wonder what Rhett's doing.
She was like, why do you keep talking about Rhett?
It's like, because he doesn't have you or Jessie there.
Like I have you, I'm like, you know, it's,
I think that's my main question is like,
how scared did you get? Did I get scared?
But you don't have to start there.
And then I'm curious about the hot springs and like,
Gonna talk about all that. I was concerned
that like you didn't, I knew you were gonna,
you wanted to be at a hot spring alone.
Yeah. And I,
I don't know how easy that is, so I was, but I was hopeful for you.
So that was the, so again, the idea of the trip,
just from a practical standpoint was,
I've got my old FJ Cruiser, 2007 FJ Cruiser,
it's only got 100,000 miles on it,
but I recently just got some work on it,
took it in to get the-
That's an understatement based on the price tag you told me.
I basically bought a new car by restoring this car.
Did I technically own half of that car at one point?
Yeah, but I bought it from you.
Okay.
And you bought the Scion from me.
I got the FJ Cruiser, you got the Scion.
But it wasn't the same amount of money.
Was it?
Don't worry about it, go ahead.
No, actually we paid more for the Scion
than I paid for the FJ Cruiser.
But I'm kind of glad I got the FJ Cruiser.
Yeah.
Anyway, so I just put this new rooftop tent
on the FJ Cruiser and again, like I said,
I got a bunch of work done because when I took it
and I was like, I'm taking this thing across the country,
they were like, well, you need new blank, blank, blank,
blank, blank, blank, blank, blank, blank,
lots of money went into this thing.
You don't wanna get stranded.
But it's basically like, do I wanna continue
to use this vehicle as my off-roading vehicle indefinitely
or do I wanna get like the new Bronco
or something like that when it comes out?
And so I decided to throw the money at the old car,
which is less than a new car.
Anyway, I mean, I spent weeks getting ready for this trip
and like I've got these like drawers,
not like the cool, nicely installed, you know,
you can get like-
It's not a Sprinter van, I mean.
But you can get custom made pull out, roll out drawers
that go in the back of SUVs.
They're made specifically for the different SUVs.
Cause I had all this, you know,
all these tools and all this stuff
to be able to survive on my own indefinitely
or for six days.
But I ended up just getting like $25 plastic
Sterilite drawers that faced each other in the back.
But I- This is where we're starting.
Yeah. You're talking about
plastic drawers.
I put everything in there to be ready
and I was super excited about this rooftop tent.
And the idea being that you literally can drive anywhere.
Yeah. That's public land
or national forest land.
And as long as you find a spot off of the road,
you can just camp, right?
And most of, and we call it dispersed camping
and there's, you know, oh, there's a fire ring.
Somebody's been here and I use the same app
that you did the I Overlander app,
early recommendation, I guess,
because that you can find some places
that people have been, whatever.
So the idea was to loosely follow this route
that would take me to some hot springs
that had been recommended to me,
but also some that I kind of just found on another app.
There's a hot springs app that shows you every thermal
springs in the entire United States.
Okay. And the temperature
and a little bit of information,
but basically it shows you the coordinates
and then you can kind of just navigate to it
and check it out.
And there's a lot of them in California and Nevada,
turns out.
But in the day before my, two days before the trip,
all the national forests in California closed.
Closed down, yeah, because of so many fires.
And they're like, you can't- Smoke.
The forests are closed, no camping, no hiking,
you can't go in there.
And I'm like, well, damn it,
my route is taking me up through all these national forests.
And what am I gonna do?
Am I gonna just go somewhere else?
And I was like, screw it, I'll just go that way.
And first of all, there's the BLM land,
the Bureau of Land Management we talked about
in your episode, which surrounds,
mostly it's like corridors of interstates
and stuff like that, that is kind of before you get
further off the highway into National Forest,
and that wasn't closed.
It had all the fire restrictions in place.
You could have a campfire, but you could have a stove.
So I head up north and I just had this loose idea
that I wasn't gonna make it,
I wasn't gonna make myself have to make it
to a hot spring on the first day
because I felt like making it to a hot spring
on the first day was too accomplishment oriented.
You know what I'm saying?
Like having to get to a place and do the thing
that is a thing, just go.
And then if you don't, then you've failed.
Take it a little bit slow. Yeah. And so I that is a thing, just go. And then if you don't, then you've failed. Take it a little bit slow.
Yeah. And so,
I stopped at a place,
you may have seen this sign before
going up to Mammoth, Alabama Hills.
First of all, when I sent the text
from my satellite device to my wife,
I said, I'm camping in the Alabama Hills.
And she was like, how the hell did you get to Alabama
in five hours?
But that's just the name of them, they're in California.
And it's like, you know, Joshua Tree has
these crazy rock formations and they're just giant boulders
stacked on top of each other that have, you know,
kind of everything's eroded away.
Yeah.
And there are these crazy, like almost car
to small house size rocks
that are stacked on top of each other
that are super easy to climb.
Same exact material,
same exact process that happened in Joshua Tree
has happened in this little place
right outside of Lone Pine.
Lone Pine, California is like,
if you believe there's the film museum there
because they've shot so many things in Lone Pine
because the mountains can look like the Himalayas.
So they've shot the mountains in California,
right there next to Lone Pine as the Himalayas
and all kinds of movies.
Oh, like Mount Whitney and all that.
Yeah, and if you go by,
cause we go to Mammoth to ski
and as you take that trip, a lot of times you're like, man,
that looks like the Himalayas.
A lot of pinnacles.
To somebody who doesn't know what the Himalayas look like.
Right.
But there's just so many movies that have been shot there.
And this Alabama Hills,
a bunch of movies have been shot there
cause it has like a Martian kind of, you know,
just sort of this different sort of landscape
sort of feel to it.
Anyway, so I get there and it was one of those remote,
but not completely remote.
Like the park is, you know,
it's a few square miles or whatever,
but you just as bunch of dirt roads that go up
to these big boulders and there'll be a fire ring there.
And I'm like driving around like, ah, somebody's there.
I'm gonna keep going.
Oh, somebody's at this one.
And eventually I found one that somebody wasn't at
and it was like a giant sort of cul-de-sac
with this big rock and then this rock wall,
kind of U-shaped rock wall that had like a name on the map.
It was like for like rock climbers.
I think it was called like the loaf or something like that.
It's like seven, eight stories tall of these giant rocks.
And so I was like, okay, I'm here.
Like I can, like if the person at the campsite next to me
turns their car on, I can hear that.
And if they yell, I can hear that,
but I can't see them because they're over this
like rock sort of facade.
That's good, no line of sight, that's what you want.
And I can play music at my campsite
and they can't really hear it.
I'd have to be pretty loud.
Yeah.
So I was like, it turns out that that is the sweet spot,
as I will get to when you are too close to somebody
or when you're too far away from somebody,
you get a whole different problem,
which I did for two nights, so I'll talk about that.
But that first day, I parked the car,
get the rooftop tent opened up, get everything set up,
put my little table out.
Feeling good.
And then I just, I'm like, I'm gonna climb these rocks.
Why not, right?
And I just start, I go up to the rocks and I just,
first of all, I'm thinking about snakes constantly.
It's amazing how the older you get,
the more you think about all the things that could go wrong.
And when I was a child-
You're halfway up a rock and you're getting
an animal from a snake.
Well, that's not how it works.
As a child, as a kid growing up,
we're just like swimming in the Cape River,
stepping on water moccasins,
not thinking about anything.
And I'm like walking along and like clapping.
I'm like, they can hear clapping, right?
Stamping really hard.
If somebody was to see me like, what is he trying to do?
I think they hear heat.
No, they hear vibrations.
So I'm trying to make vibrations
because I know it's gonna be a rattlesnake probably
if I see one.
Yeah.
And I'm like, are they still out this time of year?
I think so, it's still pretty hot.
But eventually I climb up.
I get to the almost freaking top of this thing.
And there's a little place to pass through.
And I pass through and come into this other valley
of there was nothing but these giant rocks.
And I was like, this is wonderful.
What? This is like a cathedral.
And I just sat down on a rock.
You pass through to the other side.
And I just sat there and I was like,
this is going to be a good trip.
But it doesn't have to be,
because I don't want an agenda.
Did you have water?
I'd have been thinking, I need water.
I was, I mean, I was still,
I was 200 yards from my car at that point.
Like it was, I'd just gone up the rocks.
So I didn't have anything, I had my camera.
Were you talking to yourself yet?
A little bit, whispering maybe.
Oh.
Because I thought people might be able to hear me.
Okay.
But I go back down, I cook myself some dinner.
My food situation was a lot of those pre-packaged,
I just add water.
Okay.
Because I was like, the cleanup is minimal
and you're really hungry and everything tastes good
when you're camping, so maybe I'll be able
to get away with this.
And survival packs.
And what I did is, before the trip, I was like,
I'm gonna try a bunch of different brands.
So I got, you know, Mountain House,
that's the one everybody knows about, right?
That's the super popular one.
Yeah. And then there's another one that ended up liking the most,
just if you're interested,
I think it's called Packet Gourmet or something.
It's like, it's got the story of like the couple
that started it in the 70s and now they've got kids
and they all work there.
They make some really good grits.
Grits?
You know, when you put water in something
that's got meat in it, sometimes it's like, man,
this is like meat that could have been around until 2050.
Yeah.
That can't be great for you
and it definitely isn't great tasting,
but the grits, man, they got a grit,
they got multiple grits.
Packet people, packet hats?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, packet gourmet,
I don't know what that's. Oh, packet gourmet.
Anyway, I had one of those, I was like,
hmm, it's pretty good, yeah.
And then the sun's about to set at this point.
Sun's going down, I take out my journal
and I decided I'm gonna do the handwritten thing,
even though I'm probably gonna get hand cramps
because that happens to me.
I was like, I don't wanna be used.
Rattlesnakes and hand cramps.
I don't wanna be used to-
How's he gonna survive?
The iPad or the computer
because it doesn't feel natural enough, right?
So I got my journal and I'm starting to write
and just kind of making some observations.
Dear journal.
Go to sleep.
Day one.
Quick review, I'll give a quick review of the rooftop tent
and then we'll take a little break and we'll come back
and I'll tell you about the first morning
and how that kind of set the stage.
But rooftop tent, definitely an improvement
over a regular tent. Rooftop tent, definitely an improvement
over a regular tent in terms of like sleep quality.
And also just like feeling of safety, like you're on top of this car and there's a ladder.
I mean, I guess like a bear could climb a ladder,
but you just feel like,
you feel a little bit safer and you're literally elevated.
Circus, they do a lot of things.
They gotta be trained to do a ladder.
I think they do a tree naturally,
but you gotta train them for a ladder.
It's quick, you open that thing up.
It's not as quick as I wanted it to be.
So it's actually pretty quick to set up.
Cause you got this big leather cover basically,
rubber slash leather, whatever it is.
And it's completely zipped around three edges
and you have to unzip it, fold it down.
Then you gotta open it up, stick the ladder in there.
And then you gotta, if you want like airflow,
which the first night was kind of hot,
you gotta like put these supports,
like these metal supports,
like they go into the side of the thing
and then they kind of like make the awnings taut.
And I was like, I think this took as long as a regular tent.
Like I think that the way they make tents now,
which are like, and they're basically up,
I think this didn't take any less time.
But there's a mattress on the whole bottom of it.
There's a mattress on the bottom of it.
Plus I added an air mattress on top of that mattress.
That's stored in there or you added it?
Yeah, I mean, you leave it in there
and it's a self-inflating mattress.
And then I just kind of deflate it every morning
and then just fold it back up in the tent, no problem.
But definitely, I mean, I definitely recommend that.
And, but you gotta get it level.
And like I was saying, I took those RV blocks
and made sure it got level every single night.
Did you have a level?
Like a- I thought about it.
Bubble level? I just used my intuition.
Yeah. Does this feel level? Does this look level? Is this used my intuition. Yeah. Does this feel level?
Does this look level?
Is this level?
Right.
And it ended up being level by that.
Am I self inflating?
I will, I over inflated the first night.
I wanted it.
You don't wanna over inflate.
I wanted it to be hard
because when you get an air mattress that's soft
and you wake up in the middle of the night and like.
It's down.
Your booty or your hip bone is like touching the bottom.
Yeah.
What an, you know.
You went too hard.
Yeah, I went too hard.
I was like, man, I didn't think I could go this hard.
Yeah. But I went way too hard
and overinflated.
But I pretty much got it right the second day.
Okay, I'll get into talking about-
You didn't get scared that night?
Didn't get scared that first night,
again, because I kind of knew
that there was somebody close by.
There was a person close by,
and I want to talk about that in a little bit
about why is it that that brings so much comfort.
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First morning, again, I wake up and I'm like,
I don't know exactly where I'm gonna go tonight
because the spring that I had designated
as my potential first stop for a hot spring
is in the National Forest,
is deep in the Inyo National Forest, which is closed.
So like, I mean, are they really enforcing this?
Like, what, am I gonna get fined?
Am I gonna get arrested?
What is at stake here?
But I was like, you know what?
Just set that aside.
It's not the right thing to do.
Let's set that aside right now.
And I'm just gonna sit here and I'll tell you,
the most wonderful moments for me on this trip
was waking up and first of all, waking up pretty early
because I went to bed early.
Like you get out there, especially when you're by yourself,
I mean, it gets dark and you're kind of like,
well, I guess I'll go to sleep.
You know, it's like a farmer in the old days.
It's like every human before electricity.
You get dark and you're like, well, what do you do now?
George, you go to sleep.
Did you have the stars like I was talking about?
Oh yeah.
And you had the, you told me you got
a special stargazing tent, I mean seat.
I did, I got-
That was the main thing that I said,
I told Christy, I was like,
we've gotta invest in some camp chairs
that are actually good.
Because those like, those cheap ones that you get
from Dick's Sporting Goods that they just wrap up,
they're the worst for your posture.
Well, let me tell you-
And you definitely can't see the stars.
Let me tell you about these anti-gravity chairs
as they call it.
It's freaking huge.
And I was like, I could take this by myself,
but I couldn't take another person.
I couldn't take two of these.
You couldn't take, oh gosh.
It was by far,
it was the biggest thing in my truck was that damn chair.
I had convinced myself it was worth it.
I think it might be, and I'll talk about that
because I think night four is when I really used it
to full effect and tried to connect with aliens.
Go ahead.
But that first morning, had my breakfast, got my coffee.
That Starbucks instant coffee.
The Via.
I mean, I tell you, it's good, man.
We got some of that.
You don't, I mean, you don't even really know
that you're drinking instant coffee.
Yeah, it's good.
So I'm having a little coffee and then I'm full,
you know, I'm full in my belly.
And again, I go back to the journal and I just start,
again, I'm not gonna talk about what I was thinking about,
but again, my theme, my goal on the trip
was to be like water, right?
To go with the flow, to let go,
to not be this guy that has to like analyze
and differentiate and categorize
and analyze every single thing that I'm encountering
and know exactly where I'm gonna go.
It was be like, be like water.
You know, you face an obstacle and you,
you just go around it.
That's the sound of water.
Yeah.
And so-
I feel that.
I had this really intense
sort of sense that that was happening
even that first morning, Like it was pretty powerful.
And-
Because you gave yourself permission
to not just get on with anything.
It wasn't about getting back to the next thing.
Yeah, you sat there and like,
I have space right here right now.
But the whole time,
this was a challenge throughout the whole trip.
When you're somebody who's not like water,
but you're trying to be like water,
the consistent challenge when every single,
every single aspect of your trip is TBD every single day.
Yeah.
Am I gonna run out of gas?
Right.
Am I gonna get a flat tire?
Am I gonna really be able to change the tire?
You know, like, am I gonna be out of service?
Am I gonna- Right.
When I get to this hot spring,
are there gonna be people there?
Are they gonna have COVID?
You know, this is how my brain works.
I'm actually considerably more anxious
than I ever realize or even sort of put off the people.
You know what I mean?
I'm constantly thinking, in the future,
I'm constantly thinking about all possible options, decisions that can be made
and the whole point of the trip was to just be present.
The first thing that I wrote in my journal,
which I just did digitally.
You know, some people, whatever it takes.
On the first night.
You probably didn't get hand cramps.
First night, the thing that I wrote down,
it might've been the only thing I wrote down was,
it is hard not to think about the future
because even five minutes from now is the future.
So including that, I just,
that was the first thing I was overwhelmed with,
the first thought was,
it's really hard to not think about the future.
I was, and exactly for that reason,
because we were in control of our trips
and there's always a decision to be made
and you can make a better decision if you anticipate,
or if you have a plan, or even if you're letting go
of checking certain boxes or achieving something
or realizing the perfect trip
that you've visualized in your mind.
You know, even if you let go of all that,
your mind still goes to something else.
And it's, for me too, it was in the future.
Maybe for some people it's in the past.
Oh yeah. Dealing with something, but for, we're very was in the future. Maybe for some people it's in the past
for dealing with something,
but we're very alike in that way.
Yeah, so that, I mean, that was a constant challenge,
but it also was very evident to me
because I started thinking things like,
maybe next time I'll just go to a cabin.
I'll just drive to a cabin
and I'll be in the same place the whole time.
But then it was like, no, no, no, no, no, no,
don't lose the opportunity here.
Right, it's just starting. Is no, no, no, don't lose the opportunity here. Right.
The opportunity is to embrace the fact
that you don't know where you're gonna sleep.
Like that's part of why you're here, man.
Yeah.
That's how you get out of the future
and get into the present is by actually being faced with.
The feeling of not knowing.
Right. And not going to know.
So first, one of the first unknowns was,
okay, if I can't go to this hot spring
that I wanted to go to, where can I go?
Because there's another one that I could go to,
but I've already been told basically by the internet
that it's gonna be busy, there's gonna be people there,
but I was like, screw it, I mean, it's a hot spring,
let's just go check it out.
So I went to this hot spring,
I'm not gonna name the names
because I can't remember all the names.
And also the whole problem is that too many people
know about them.
So I'm not gonna talk about where I was.
Fine, tell me later.
But so I go to this hot spring that is,
north of the Alabama Hills in California.
I know it's confusing, but you can hang on.
And it's in the middle of a giant,
like there's just so many just open valleys
that are just filled with grazing cattle.
Like it's just throughout all of California
and all of Nevada, it's just a bunch of cattle grazing
in the middle of nowhere is what it seems like.
Way more cattle than people as far as I can tell.
And there's a hot spring out in the middle of this cow field.
There's a walkway that they've built over the cow pasture
to kind of keep you from walking through cow crap and mud.
And then it just comes to this spring
in the middle of the field.
And there's literally cow shit around the spring.
And also cows looking at you as you're bathing.
But-
Well, did they get in it?
No, cows don't, it's too hot for the cows.
So there's two springs.
One is the one that obviously is preferred
because there's like nine people in it.
And there's no room for another person.
I mean, maybe I could get awkward and get in there.
But again, I'm thinking about COVID
and nobody's got a mask on.
It's dirt.
This is a natural spring.
This is natural.
Because most of the ones that we've both experienced
before now have been-
Like a tub.
Like cement lined, like, well,
they'll redirect the water into a tub or a pool.
Yeah, but this was natural.
But I see that there's like another thing down there
that's even more,
I think actually the one that everybody was in,
they may have reinforced it with rocks.
But the other one is just like the cow pasture
just kind of opens up and it's like a foot and a half
of water, but it's like 20 feet across.
And there was just one woman laying in there
and it was so shallow that like,
she's kind of laying against the side.
And like most of her body is out of the water,
but she's still in the water.
I'm like, well, I'm gonna do what she does.
And I was like, hey, and I was, you know,
Was she naked?
No, nobody's naked.
She was fully bathing suited.
Okay.
And I sit down and I'm like, this is pretty nice.
Like I'm sitting in this 18 inches of water,
my legs are under the water and maybe up to my belly button
and then the rest of me is out.
And then I'm kind of like laying up against the side
of the thing on the grass and it's pretty hot.
And it's also pretty hot inside the spring,
it's hot outside and inside.
But I'm like, this is cool.
This is not me connecting with anything.
This is me thinking about this woman that's a cross. You know what I'm like, this is cool. This is not me connecting with anything. This is me thinking about this woman that's a cross.
You know what I'm saying?
Like not being able to disconnect from the reality
that there's another person here.
And like, am I sitting in a weird way?
You know, like just being self-conscious in general, right?
Yeah.
But also thinking about how these people over
in this other hot tub are really loud and like laughing and it's kind of boisterous. And then all of a sudden I'm like, oh crap, right? Yeah. But also thinking about how these people over in this other hot tub are really loud and laughing
and it's kind of boisterous.
And then all of a sudden I'm like, oh crap, here they come.
Three or four families come over the horizon
and they descend on this spring that I'm in.
And there's kids saying like, mom, it stinks.
One kid's going like gagging.
Because of the sulfur, yeah.
And then everybody's like, it's pretty hot.
Is it hot?
How hot is it?
Is it clean?
It's pretty clean.
I'm like, this is not enjoyable.
And they all kinda just sort of descend on this area
and then I just kinda get up.
I'm like, I don't want this.
I get up and I begin to walk over to-
Funny thing is, they didn't want it either.
Yeah, but just like water,
you present me with an obstacle and instead of trying to go through it i just go around it what was the last
thing that filled you with wonder that took you away from your desk or your car in traffic well
for us i'm gonna guess for some of you that thing is anime hi i'm nick friedman i'm lee alec murray
and i'm leah president and welcome to Crunchyroll Presents The Anime Effect.
It's a weekly news show.
With the best celebrity guests.
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I go over to the other, I start walking towards the hot spring and all those other people are, turns out, leaving.
And there's just one dude in there.
And I just go and get into the spring.
First of all, it's like three feet deep.
It's deep enough to sit down.
But he's, the guy says, what's up, duder?
What's up, duder?
Yeah, you add the R on the end of dude
and you're not conversation material.
And then the woman who was on the other side walks over
and he's like, hey babe.
And then I'm like, oh, they're a couple.
They're a couple.
They're a married couple.
And boy, let me tell you,
I know everything there is to know about them
because he would not stop talking.
He was one of those guys who is just constantly
saying things, but not necessarily-
At anybody?
Anything that you need to hear.
Oh no.
Talking a lot and saying nothing, you know what I'm saying?
Which is why she was all alone over there
in two inches of water.
Nice guy making conversation,
but not the vibe that I'm after, you know?
And I'm not talkative in those situations.
I'm more like, right, yeah, uh-huh.
Yeah, you were giving all the signals to shut up.
But I knew it was pointless.
So I was like, oh, and then eventually,
they were like, Duder, we gotta leave.
They had to go on and I did get some time to myself in this.
But again, you know, it was like a family over there.
And I was just like, this isn't what I wanted it to be,
but I need to just embrace what,
I need to embrace what it is.
But then I was like, okay, all right, let's leave.
Let's go to the next place.
And I was like, I'm just gonna kinda just go
and just see where I feel led to stop and camp.
Because with this rig, I can basically just go off and go.
There's all these dirt roads off the side of the road
the whole way.
Yeah. And it's all public land.
You can just go find a spot.
So I drive off, I drive up into,
I get to a place I'm like, this is a cool like forest.
This isn't a desert.
This is more like forest. I like like, this is a cool forest. This isn't a desert, this is more like forest.
I like forest, I'll drive into forest.
Would you?
So I drove into the forest
and started seeing campsites.
The road started getting rougher and I was like,
I would not be able to do this
without a four-wheel drive vehicle.
Drove around, found a couple of spots.
And then eventually kind of settle in a place.
And then first of all, I was like,
I haven't really seen any fires yet.
Like I'm not really close to the fires,
but haven't really experienced a lot of smoke.
But at that moment, a wall of smoke began to like roll
through the forest.
Really?
And I was like, oh, I'm at the perimeter
of the smoke cloud.
Either that or you're at a fire.
No, but I was looking on the map
and I knew that I wasn't near an actual fire.
Okay.
This was smoke coming from the fire
that's in the Inyo National Forest, but not where I was.
Okay.
And it wasn't one of these situations where like,
it smells like a campfire.
It was like, no, I am in a campfire.
Like I cannot breathe normally.
Everything began to smell like smoke.
I'm breathing in smoke and I know that's not healthy.
So I'm like, okay, the universe is telling me to move on.
Flo Rite did the next place.
You're doing it different than me.
I'm gonna start doing it here.
It's not in the lips, it's in the mouth.
Yeah, and so I go to the next thing
and I actually ended up crossing over into Nevada.
Not like you thought I was gonna cross over
into the supernatural realm, but no, just into Nevada.
To the smoke monster.
And started working my way towards another hot spring.
And this is, again,
this is one that relatively popular on the internet.
So I was like, well, we'll see.
But it was starting to get dark, so I had to find a spot.
And I get to this spring
and you can't camp next to the spring,
but there's a, I mean, this is one that has a parking lot.
It's popular.
And then outside of the parking lot,
like half a mile from the entrance,
there's a bunch of places to camp.
And I kind of drove over a hill and found a place
that I couldn't see anybody else.
And I was like, all right, I'm gonna set up shop here.
But I'm like a mile walk at this point from the spring.
But I'm like, you know what?
I'm gonna wait till it gets dark.
Oh, and you're gonna walk.
And I'm gonna walk to the spring and enjoy it.
Of course, this is not an original idea.
Everyone's thinking the same thing, apparently.
So I walk to the spring and yes,
it is filled with people.
Jumping.
But this spring, most of the springs have like
the hot water source coming into them
and then there's a pool and then like an overflow
to a second pool and overflow to a third pool,
each pool getting-
Cooler. Cooler.
The first pool, which is the one you want to be in,
is clean and it's not runoff and it's hot.
Everyone's in that.
I didn't want to get right next to everybody,
but also there was no room.
So I go to the second pool.
So the first pool has like five dudes, middle-aged dudes,
no women.
And then the second pool has an old man in it.
I was like, is this old man with the dudes?
I don't think so,
because he seems, his energy is very different.
Was nakedness happening at this point?
No nakedness.
It was also very dark,
but everybody had on trunks as far as I could tell.
So I'm like, I'm gonna get into this hot tub
with this old man.
And I walk up to, first of all, they're like,
how you doing?
Come on in, the water's fine.
Like no duder this time?
No duder, but very much like a lot of dad joke energy.
Okay.
And this is coming from a dad who makes jokes.
Okay.
But not like this guy that I'll talk about in a second.
But the second hot tub with the old man in it,
the old man says, this one's taken.
What?
And he's like, just kidding.
He got you.
Because you're susceptible.
Right. Anyone says this one's taken Because you're susceptible. Right.
Anyone says this one's taken, you're like,
oh sorry, I'll go to the third one.
Oh yeah, I'll talk about that in a second.
Whole hot spring etiquette.
Well, I get in with the old man.
Now, it's not a big hot tub.
I mean, there's enough room for me and this old man.
And the old man is on his all fours
and like putting one leg up in the air really high
and then bring it down and then putting the other leg.
He's doing, what do you call it?
Calisthenics. Calisthenics.
And then he gets on his back
and he's doing all this other stuff.
And I'm like, this guy is alone.
He's not with the other guys, clearly.
This dude was a character he started talking about.
He like traveled around with that rainbow society thing.
You know what I'm talking about?
Like there's a group called, I don't-
The vacuum cleaner?
It's like, I think it's some kind of cult.
They like travel around in buses,
like a rainbow society or something.
I don't know what it is, but I mean,
it's like a bunch of hippies.
Yeah.
And he had spent some time with them.
He matches the profile.
And, but then dad number one, I'll call him,
this is what he would be in the script,
is sitting and he's the guy who's very loud,
they're drinking Coors Light, they're very drunk.
Oh gosh.
And the guy says,
"'You guys know anybody who's got COVID?'
What?
"'You guys know, like anybody in your inner circle got COVID. What? You guys know, like anybody in your inner circle got COVID?
And of course I'm not gonna engage with this guy.
So I don't say anything and nobody else says anything.
He's like, yeah, that's what I thought.
I mean, I think it's a conspiracy.
It's better than him saying, well, I do.
You're looking at one, I'm in your circle.
And so I'm like, is this what hot tubs are?
Like hot tubs are coming down and sharing your space
with a very flexible old man, by the way.
Very flexible. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Very flexible hippie.
He just really makes your ligaments just ply.
And then a COVID denier.
He's like, yeah, you know,
hospitals get $37,000 for every COVID patient.
I mean, they're just doing it for the money.
They're doing it for the money.
And I'm just like, do I have to listen to this bullshit?
Do I have to listen to it?
I guess I do.
I guess I do because the water feels good.
It did feel good, didn't it?
And I was not in a-
How hot was it?
I could tell that the main,
based on the temperature of the second tub,
the main tub would have been hotter than a hot tub.
Like 110.
No, probably 120.
Oh.
Like could scald yourself if you're not careful.
Like you can't go in up to your neck
and like just stay there unless you just really are
going for it. Oh wow.
Cause it's like, but they could take it
and they can reroute it so it cools down a little bit.
Anyway, I was like, I'm not in a,
cause you know me, I've got the tendency to be like,
well, let me tell you why it's not a conspiracy
and you're full of crap.
Let's, you know, but I don't typically do that with-
Strangers. Strangers.
So, but I was like,
I'm definitely not gonna say anything to this guy.
He's not interested in the truth anyway.
But so I kind of stick around for a little bit
and then I kind of walked the mile back to my campsite.
And as I was walking back, I was just like,
I don't know, I don't know about hot springs.
It's like, am I gonna find one that I can have to myself?
Now, bear in mind that the next morning,
I had my time, my coffee,
I'm listening to multiple books as I travel these distances
and some of those books are really,
I'll talk about one of them,
one of the ones that was more of the fun listens,
I listened to like three books throughout the trip,
but I'm listening to ones that are a little bit more serious,
a little bit more about spiritual things,
contemplative things and again, I'm still having a really good time in my soul,
but the expectation of what hot springs,
I'm beginning to think that this is a lesson,
that I'm being taught a lesson that like,
you're going around looking for these hot springs,
that ain't where it's at.
You're not gonna find what you want.
You cannot place this expectation on these hot springs
because it's gonna be old flexible old men
and COVID deniers and et cetera, you know?
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
But I head on to the next one.
Again, my destination is determined
by where the next hot spring is.
So I get to one that is supposed to be one of the best ones
and I get to it and I'm like, is that it?
It's a cow tub.
It's like something you would like put feed or water in
for cows, like a circle, metal tub.
Something we would get to like bathe in on the show,
but much bigger and dirty.
And of course the water kind of stinks
because it's like sulfur.
And I kind of parked next to it
and I realized there's all these people
at all these campsites that all have a line of sight
to the spring. I'm like, maybe it's just bad etiquette to like park right next to it and I realized there's all these people at all these campsites that all have a line of sight to the spring.
I'm like, maybe it's just bad etiquette
to like park right next to the spring
because they're all saying, we all use the spring.
You can't just like set your campsite up
right next to the spring, even though there's a fire ring.
I didn't really know the etiquette,
but I did as I looked around,
saw my first, had my first encounter with full nakedness.
There we go.
But I'm also thinking like,
they're gonna come to this cow tub.
I'm gonna be here?
Question mark.
And then I'm like, listen, not to...
I have a hot tub at home, okay?
Can I just say that?
It took you three days to come to that realization.
You went all the way across the country
looking for something that you had at home.
Oh, that's-
Well, that's an analogy that I'll talk about
in a little bit, but I have a hot tub at home
that is A, clean.
B, I can dial in the temperature on my phone.
Yeah.
C, I determine who goes in it.
Right, and how much clothes they have on.
Right, these people that I choose, it's my property.
Yeah, you're the king of the castle.
No cows, no algae, it doesn't smell like sulfur,
it's filtered, it's right out my backyard.
Now I know that's a privileged thing to have,
to be able to have a hot tub at your house.
I'm blessed, I'm privileged.
But I also am looking for hot tubs throughout the nation.
Yeah. Hot springs.
Yeah. And I got a hot tub at home.
This is interesting, yes.
That's better.
And it hit me at that point.
So I was like, I'm not, I was like,
you know what I'm gonna do?
Sounds like an opportunity to journal.
You know what I'm gonna do?
I'm gonna bypass this.
I'm gonna get back in my truck
and I'm just gonna go up into the woods
and find a parking space, a camping space.
Because the thing that I'm after is solitude and reflection.
Yes. Contemplation.
There you go.
I go up the way into the woods to the point where I'm like, there's only one way out of here. And there you go. I go up the way into the woods
to the point where I'm like,
there's only one way out of here.
And now I'm, what if there's a forest fire here, right?
But I'm like, screw it.
Or a dude with photos.
I don't know.
Yeah, right.
I'm setting up here.
Who knew what you had to fear?
And this was the first night that I set up in a place
where I had my map
and I had no service, but I've got my satellite phone deal.
So I'm still safe and connected in some way.
And I know where I'm at, I can get out of here.
But this is when, as it's starting to get dark,
I start to think about bears, mountain lions, killers.
You know?
Yeah.
Funny thing is I didn't think about any of that
until I met one.
Yeah.
Well, okay, so.
But I wasn't alone, you know?
I think that makes a big difference.
And it gets to the point where it gets dark
and your eyes adjust to the light
in your immediate vicinity.
And it was a new moon.
So the moonlight on our trip,
and you probably noticed this,
the starlight was incredible.
There was no moon.
No moon. There was very little moon.
I think the beginning of the trip was the new moon.
It was up during the day,
but then it set before night or something.
But so no moonlight.
So when it gets dark,
you've got your little lantern there
and that's in your headlamp.
You can't see anything.
And it's just, every direction is just pitch black.
What could be in that dark
really started to kind of freak me out.
And I told the story a long time ago
about the time I went down to like burn some stuff
when I was working for my father-in-law.
And- In the woods, yeah.
Yeah, and we're like burning, it was back when they had to keep my father-in-law. And- In the woods, yeah. Yeah, and we were like burning,
it was back when they had to keep everybody's, you know-
Medical records.
You had to keep everybody's records as a,
as- Paper.
Paper, and then I think it was just like old patients
who had left or had died or whatever,
and so you could shred them or you could just burn them,
whatever, I don't know exactly how it works, 20 years ago.
But I would be out there burning.
And then,
and I had recently watched the ring.
And so I think that the little girl from the ring
is gonna like come up out of nowhere.
And I started getting this image in my mind.
Well, one of the reasons that in the Lost Causes
of Bleak Creek that the,
not villain, if you will, but like one of the scary things in there is,
spoiler alert, the little girl, Ruby.
Yeah.
Because the idea of a little girl
that sort of got something demonic inside her
is the thing that is one of the most scary thing for me.
And when I get out there alone, I begin-
You think about her?
I know, I begin to think that I'm gonna turn around
and there's gonna be a little possessed girl
on all fours turned over backwards, crab crawling at me.
And then the moment I think about it, I'm like,
you're an idiot.
You're a 42-year-old man out here scared of the dark.
And you're thinking about things
you've seen in horror movies.
Yeah, yeah.
And then I like laugh it off.
And then I like, you know, start like making my dinner.
And then I'm like.
Looking over your shoulder.
I'm like, turn around.
Yeah, here's something.
I'm like, what, is she here now?
Wow.
And then I'm like, man, this is,
if I knew that there was somebody a hundred yards away,
I wouldn't be thinking about this.
Like just the proximity to another person.
And I was like, isn't that, I was like,
what does that say about me that I wanna be isolated,
but I wanna know where other people are.
And when I don't know how far I am from other people,
I begin to imagine that there's possessed people
who are close.
It's like, what's going on with me?
So eventually after it gets too dark,
I get up in my tent and I go to sleep.
But then that morning I woke up and again, same thing.
Once the morning comes, the little girl can't come.
Yeah, it's how physics works.
She hates it.
She's down in the well.
I cannot come out into the light.
So I drove, so I had a nice morning.
I drove to a cave that had pictographs
from thousands of years ago.
Wow.
And it also had metal bars
that they had put on the full face of the cave
so you can't get in there and screw them up.
Because people are like,
why people gotta be like that?
Why can't you just not screw with the pictographs?
Why you gotta put metal gates on the front of it?
Because even the most well-meaning people-
Are gonna touch it.
Are gonna touch it.
They're gonna do stupid stuff to it.
They're gonna just reach out and touch it and rub it
before they've thought about if they should do that or not.
You rub a pictograph for thousands of years,
it's just a rock.
Yeah, but it was pretty cool.
Took some pictures of that.
That was the-
Write that in your journal.
Toquima Cave, I think it's called.
And- Sounds right.
I mean, I took pictures and I was like,
man, what were they trying to say?
It looks like just circles and lines.
Maybe they were just like,
let's draw circles and lines.
Yeah. Probably.
Or maybe this is like representative
of some sort of contact they made with aliens,
which I'm gonna try to do tonight.
I mean, it could have been a football coach
like doing the offensive play.
Yeah, ancient football.
So then again, I've got,
the cool thing is I've got this,
I've got my app, the Gaia app,
and I've pre-downloaded all the maps for this area
for all the places I'm gonna go.
And it's got layers that you could turn on.
Like this is the US Forest Service.
This is the topography, whatever.
This is girl layer. This is the topography, whatever. This girl there.
This is your cell phone service coverage.
Like you can see where you're gonna get
into cell phone service by carrier.
I needed that.
So super easy to turn
and then you can download all the maps at a time.
Anyway, so I saw that there was a ghost town
down like an hour down.
I mean, it's only like 15 miles away,
but because of the crazy roads and stuff,
it just took me an hour to get there.
But a ghost town that had a hot spring.
Oh.
And I'm like, okay, all right, this sounds fine.
Double.
So there's this part of Nevada near that Toquima Caves.
I know where Duder's going now.
There's these sort of the hills
that have all the trees on them
that are like conifer trees of some kind,
like some kind of pine tree.
And it's really awesome because they're not super thick
and they just have this sort of like
fairytale quality to them.
But then when you get to the base of them,
it just turns into just field.
And there's usually cattle,
the people have made ranches out of all this stuff.
But dirt roads just go forever.
Yeah. And so,
I go down this dirt road and I get to a place called
Potts Ranch, I think it was.
And it's just an old house, an old farmhouse,
and like a barn that looked like they'd been abandoned
for many, many generations.
That's cool. Or many, many decades,
but probably been around since like 1800s or whatever.
Did you walk through it?
Yeah, I took some pictures and walked in a little bit,
but it was like the floor was falling apart.
I'll share some of those pictures.
I bet you weren't thinking,
I'm gonna camp here tonight.
No, cause I wasn't far enough.
I hadn't moved far enough.
I needed to keep moving in order to kind of get back
to a place where I could be close to home
by the end of the trip.
And this is, I'm almost at my furthest point away from home.
I'm kind of in the middle of Nevada at this point.
But I'm like, okay, but there's a hot spring here.
Here's where it's at on the map.
And I kind of went past the house
and went down this dirt road and I get down.
I'm like, oh yes, this is gonna be awesome.
There's nobody around for miles.
And I get down there and I'd seen a picture
of the hot spring on the internet
because I had service for a second.
And it was the same deal.
It was like, there's a creek
and they've run the creek through a pipe into a tub.
I get down there, the tub's gone.
The pipe literally just is there
and just goes onto the ground.
Huh.
They've removed-
The tub.
The tub. The ghost.
There's just a little pool there
that they've kind of dammed up.
That's about six inches deep.
So I just like sat there and stuck my feet in there.
Like a poor little boy.
It felt great, but I was like,
how awesome would this be if the tub was here?
Why you gotta take the tub?
Why you take the tub away?
You should have brought your own tub.
Next time, man.
I thought about it. I was like, could you gotta take the tub? Why you take the tub away? You should have brought your own tub. Next time, man. I thought about it.
I was like, could you have a baby pool
that you inflate and then like mobile hot tub?
It's gotta be like made of Kevlar.
Yeah.
But-
They make those for like really rambunctious children.
I did have my first shower there.
I know I had been in a couple of hot tubs,
but I had my solar shower,
like heated the water up with the sun.
You talking about a sack?
It's a sack that has-
With a tube going out of it?
Yeah, basically, a solar shower sounds more sophisticated.
I showered myself, I used soap, I washed my parts.
Feels good, doesn't it?
It feels great.
You haven't washed your parts in a few days.
You gotta wash your parts.
And I had, it was naked in the middle of a field.
Yeah, that's nice.
Where mountains on both sides
and just valley as far as I could see both ways.
And I was like, this is pretty awesome.
I mean, I wish that the tub was here,
but this is pretty awesome.
And I began, it's funny,
the moment that my whole perspective began to shift
from like, are you learning your lesson yet?
You come with these expectations,
drop your expectations, man.
That's the whole point of this.
You gotta drop the expectations.
The tub may not be there.
It doesn't matter.
Take a shower, wash your parts.
It's not something you can just reflect on it.
I think it's, the way you say it,
it does seem like it's like, I should have known this.
I should have just realized this.
You have to experience it.
But I actually, I think that that's the thing
that I'm learning and what I was saying in the last one too
was like, it made sense when people talked about
connecting with nature or connecting with themselves
in nature, connecting with God in nature,
you know, whatever your intention is,
it makes sense, but it's different
to actually experience it.
And I guess that's true for just lessons in life
is that the strongest lessons you learn
are the ones that you experience.
And which is comforting as a parent,
think about that in terms of your kids too,
that you can't protect them from everything.
And it's like, that's the most powerful way
to change who you are as a person is to go through things.
And so, but maybe I'm hearing too much
in what you're saying that it almost feels like
I had to go through this in order to learn it.
But it's like, I went through this
and I was able to learn it.
That's very much what's happened.
Listen, I had my therapy appointment last night
to kind of follow up for my trip.
And of course I ended up sharing everything
that happened to me internally,
which even that morning when I'm taking my shower
and sitting next to this hot Creek and stuff,
there was a lot of things that I was just sort of realizing
and more than just the surface level of,
this trip represents my life in a lot of ways
and the way that I live and the things that I seek.
It's not just something you can write down.
It's not something that just happens in your brain
is what I think we're saying.
Yeah, and that was a big,
I'll share a little bit of that
because I think that was one of the biggest realizations
on the trip is that,
I've talked about how I live in my mind
and I'm a victim of my thoughts,
which is a very normal thing,
but that heart knowledge, experiencing things,
something just being true because it is,
not because you can rationalize it, explain it, analyze it,
break it down and present it to someone else,
but something that you can just experience
and sort of know intrinsically,
like access inside yourself
was something that was just very visceral and very powerful
that was continuing to happen throughout the trip.
Yeah. But that day,
now, you know, I brought the special chair.
I had intentions to try to connect with aliens.
Now, the thing I didn't talk about
is I had listened to the 30 minute guided meditation
from Dr. Steven Greer in the CE5, I think is what app.
Yeah. Again, this is from
that Netflix documentary, which I was fascinated by.
Again, I don't believe it.
Close Encounters of the Fifth Kind.
Of the Fifth Kind is what it's called.
And basically the fifth kind representing essentially
a cosmic connection to aliens,
not like just seeing them physically,
but it was interesting.
Receiving a signal from them.
It's based on the fact that if there is something
to the idea of a collective consciousness of the universe,
then other intelligent life out there is a part of that.
And we can, if we get into that sort of,
what do you want to call it, metaphysical, spiritual plane,
there is some way to have a connection.
Now, again, the rational part of my brain,
which is very dominant in my mind, in my personality,
is like, this is almost assuredly bullshit, right?
Like I would be flummoxed if this were to be true, right?
If you really could connect with aliens in this way.
But also, why the hell not try?
Who am I going to hurt if I try?
And wouldn't it be cool if it could happen?
So tonight I'm gonna try.
Because I finally listened to like the way he kind of talks
about the meditation process and how you're supposed
to like basically broadcast where you're at
so they'll find you.
Uh-huh, right.
So, but I see this hot spring on the map
that I'm not too far from and I'm like,
well, let's go there, maybe there'll be a tub.
And it was funny, the moment that my expectations
completely evaporated is the moment that I found
the best hot spring experience.
This is the next to last night.
I stop at a place that I'm not going to tell you
where it's at because I hope to return to it.
But I go there and there is two large families
with two large trailers who are camped
right next to the spring.
I'm like, ah, crap.
And they're getting out of the spring
like they've been bathing,
like they've taken a little break or whatever.
And I kind of just drive up to the spring
cause I'm like, I'll just, you know,
I wasn't planning on camping there.
I was like, I'm just gonna take a dip, take a soak.
And I'm like, oh, you guys got a good spot.
And he's like, well, we're leaving.
I'm like, oh, and he's like, and I-
You do that.
And he was like, and I just cleaned the hot tub.
So basically it was a heart shaped stone tub.
That the way it works is again, they all work the same way. You've got the hot tub. So basically it was a heart-shaped stone tub. That the way it works is again,
they all work the same way.
You've got the hot water source from the spring
that somebody has piped into this thing.
It fills up and then it kind of goes out over a spillway,
but there's a plug in the bottom of a lot of these
that you can pull so it'll drain
and then you can scrub it.
And the dude, because they had been there for a few days,
antelope hunting, didn't know that was something
that happened, they had two antelopes already.
Like draped over their trailer or something?
Butchered or something?
I didn't see him, he just said, we've killed two.
Huh, he drained and scrubbed the thing.
He had drained and scrubbed it and he had just filled it up
and he like showed me how it worked.
That's cool.
And then they left and I was like.
Oh yes.
Am I about to have a heart-shaped tub all to myself? No And I was like. Oh yes. Am I about to have a heart shaped tub all to myself?
No, I'm not.
Oh.
Because, and I was, this is like two o'clock.
I was like, there's no way no one's gonna show up.
But I was like, you know what?
I'm gonna stay here.
I'm gonna camp here.
So I go ahead and I take my rooftop tent out, set it up.
I'm probably, I don't know what the etiquette is,
but I'm probably closer to the hot spring than I should be.
But I was like, I want to get in it.
Not that nobody else is going to get in it,
but I'm probably a hundred feet from it.
So it's pretty close.
Okay.
And then up rolls two cars,
two older couples get out and they walk up to me
and they're like,
"'So, is that the spring?'
And then it hits me, I'm like,
"'They think I'm an authority.'
Yes.
"'Because I'm here and because I'm close to the spring,
"'they assume that I have some
"'sort of intrinsic authority here.
Yeah.
This is how people's brains work.
You can use it against them.
And I was like.
You could say no.
Yeah, it's just been cleaned.
Oh no.
I was, no, I was.
It's dirty.
No, no, no, no.
I played it like this.
I'm gonna be generous with the spring.
Okay.
I'm the keeper of the spring.
That's what these people believe.
I'm gonna be generous.
And I said, it's just been cleaned.
It should be warmed up for you.
And they're like, well, we're just gonna stay
for a little bit.
I mean, don't wanna, if you don't mind.
I was like, this is working.
And I'm like, take all the time you want.
As if I have any authority at all.
But I'm just going with it
because they seem to be going with it.
Okay.
But you could also told them take 10 minutes.
No, no, no.
Cause if you give somebody a limit,
they naturally want to exceed it.
Oh.
Don't give them a limit, just be generous.
Be nice and then they're like,
I'm gonna give him his space.
Then they said- He lives here.
They were from- Look at his beard.
They were from Ojai.
Ah.
I said, you know Chuck Testa?
And they were like, oh yeah, the commercial.
I was like, I made that commercial. Oh. I said, you know Chuck Testa? And they were like, oh yeah, the commercial. I was like, I made that commercial.
I made that commercial.
Oh, really?
And boy, that got me some brownie points.
Seriously?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They're like, he keeps the spring and he makes commercials.
How does he do it all?
Cause that is all.
And so I talked to them for a while and-
You were in the spring.
No, no, no, I was-
You were standing over it, keeping it.
I was sitting in my alien chair.
Oh yeah.
Next to my truck on this side
where you had to walk past me to get to the spring.
That couple ended up leaving,
another couple showed up, a younger couple.
That was the hashtag van life couple
when I was taking the pictures that I told you about
during your story.
Yeah, priorities out of whack.
They ended up being really cool.
They stayed the night and an older man stayed the night.
Now, not really close to me.
And the way it ends up working is you end up spending,
you can spend about 10 or 15 minutes in a really hot hot tub.
This one was the temperature of the water was 130 degrees
coming out of the pipe.
So you'd have to like fill it up and then divert it
or put a restrictor in the pipe.
The engineering behind these things is pretty cool.
Put a restrictor in it
so it's not quite filling up fast enough
and it's slowly losing temperature.
So it probably gets down to like 110.
And so that night I just got into the hot tub by myself
for 20, 30 minutes, looked at the stars.
Everyone was completely quiet.
They were both gone.
They were in their fan and in their camper asleep,
not talking, and I'm just out there and I'm like,
man, this is awesome, I get it.
Like I'm in this heart-shaped hot tub.
And then it hit me like,
oh, I need to reach out to the aliens.
So I began the meditative process.
I went through the steps, which ended with me.
I'm in the heart-shaped hot tub.
You know the one.
Oh yeah, cause you start.
You start with the galaxy.
With the galaxy. You move to the you start. You start with the galaxy. With the galaxy.
You move to the solar system.
You funnel your signal down.
You move to the North America,
you move to America, you move to Nevada.
Bamba, bamba, bamba down to there.
Yeah. And let me tell you.
That was the moment, right?
You're like, I'm right here.
I'm here, I'm like, you can't miss me.
Heart-shaped hot tub.
And the thing I can most closely relate it to
is the time I tried to speak in tongues in New York
when I was trying to share the gospel
with the man on the bench who couldn't speak English.
And I was like, Lord, this is when I speak in tongues.
This is it.
And I was like, almost,
we're gonna open my mouth and to see what happens, you know?
Because I was under the understanding
that speaking in tongues was for evangelistic purposes,
not for the edification of the body.
It's the theological stuff that no one cares about,
unless you're one of those people who cares about it.
Anyway,
they didn't come, they didn't show up.
I did it twice.
And I was so, I was so committed.
I was like, I am willing to believe this.
Like if you just show up, I am here, I'm ready.
There's also other people here.
It didn't happen. But they're sleeping.
It didn't happen. Be quiet in here.
Now I'm not saying I'll never try again,
but I tried so hard that night.
I can't imagine trying harder,
but Dr. Steven Greer suggests doing it in a group.
They were there.
You were in the leadership position.
You have to have commitment from everybody.
I think you gotta have buy-in.
That would have been a lot to ask.
Well.
But it was an incredible.
I was gonna say sorry, but you know what?
Water.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was fine.
I wasn't supposed to meet the aliens on this trip.
Now I know I'm getting a little bit long.
There's something significant I gotta talk about.
Sure.
Next to, before the last night,
I'm like, okay, I gotta find a place to stop here.
I was kind of doing the game that you were doing,
which is I wanna get kind of close to Vegas
because that's gonna be close to home.
It's like four hours from home, but it's hot down there.
So where am I gonna go?
So I stopped about an hour outside of Vegas,
north of Vegas in some sort of higher mountainy areas.
It's still kind of deserty,
but about 10 degrees cooler because of the elevation.
And as I was looking for my campsite,
I passed by this sign, it said trilobite fossil area.
Oh. And I was like, oh, well, I've always this sign. It said, Trilobite Fossil Area. Oh. And I was like,
oh wow, I've always wanted to find a fossil.
It's one of my dreams.
I've never found one.
I've searched the world over.
Well, I've looked on the side of the road a few times.
So I'm like, well, let me find my campsite first,
then I'll come back to this area.
Cause I wanna kind of know where I'm gonna sleep.
10 minutes down the road,
I find a spot way down in this dirt road
next to this pile of rocks where I did end up camping.
But I go back to the trilobite fossil area.
You park your car and you walk up this path
and I hear a kid's voice and I hadn't seen another car
and it felt like I was in the middle of nowhere.
So I was like, oh, is that the aliens here
in the form of a child?
No. I have kids too.
It was just a family, a human family.
Oh.
And they were getting the fossils.
There's the shale deposit out there
where there's this millions of trilobites,
mostly just heads and some full bodies, but-
Really?
Now I didn't see any of them yet,
but like it's this shale,
it's these very flat rocks that you pick up and I was like, what do you do? Just, I start talking to the family, you just turn rocks over and they're like, it's this shale, it's these very flat rocks that you pick up.
And I was like, what do you do?
Just, I start talking to the family.
You just turn rocks over there like,
well, actually we have a hammer
and you have to hit the rocks and they'll split.
And then you see if there's fossils in there.
I'm like, ah, I've got an ax in my truck.
I'll go get it.
It's like, as I said it, I was like,
I'm going to kill you is what they heard.
Yes, that way you don't run when I come at you with an ax.
I'm going to get my ax, family.
So I turn around, I go to get my little ax
and I'm coming back down the path.
And they're running.
And no, I get back and a little boy is crying.
I'm like, I'm just gonna use it for the fossils.
I'm not gonna kill you with it.
The little boy is crying because he's locked his keys,
his parents' keys in their car.
Oh no.
And they're like, can you help us?
And I'm like, oh, I don't know,
I don't really wanna help anyone right now.
I'm about to get a fossil.
I mean, I can bust your window.
It's getting dark, you know, I'm here for my fossil.
Oh gosh.
But I'm like, sure, what happened?
They're like, he locked the keys in the car.
Our campsite where our camper's at
is just a couple of miles down the road.
Could you take us?
I was like, well, I got room for one,
which sounds like something a serial killer would say.
I realize that now, but I only had room for one.
Did you have pictures that you wanted them to vote on?
Because you are becoming that guy.
I showed them all my pictures.
You don't wanna sell them.
So I took the dad and he got the key and came back
and they were like super appreciative, whatever.
That was my biggest fear, by the way.
I only had one key to the Sprinter van
and I think it's smart enough not let you lock it
when the keys are in it, but I was very anxious about that.
I had an extra for that reason.
Now, you rescued them. It was a give and take. I saved an extra for that reason. Now, you were, but here's the thing.
You rescued them.
It was a give and take.
I saved the day for them.
They would probably be dead without me.
Sure.
But the thing that they provided is-
Or they would have killed the kid out of anger.
Yeah, the thing that they provided
is the method how to get fossils.
Yes.
I would have been out there turning rocks over
and let me tell you, I would have never found anything
because you have to split the rocks
because everyone's turned the rocks over.
They had found three of these things.
So I was confident that I was gonna find one.
And I was like, it's getting dark,
but I'm gonna find my first ever fossil.
And then I began to attach a lot of expectation
to finding the fossil and the sun was going down
and I'm frantically running around hitting these rocks
and I'm like, I'm never gonna find a fossil.
I'm not a guy that finds fossils.
You're moving fast.
I'm having a little bit of a pity party.
Okay.
And then I'm trying other things like,
maybe if I close my eyes and walk
and just set my hands down,
I will be directed to where the fossils are.
Yeah, I'm trying everything.
You were sincerely thinking that.
Oh, I did that.
If you had to watch me, it would have been like,
I just leaned back and then I was like,
I sensed a fossil and I would go down and touch it
and try nothing.
That's like, I mean, that's like praying
to win your recreation soccer game.
Yeah, which I also used to do.
Yeah, right.
So the other thing that I, so then I was like,
okay, well, it's getting dark.
I, you know what, three more rocks.
And then I'd do three and not find them.
Okay, two more rocks.
I kept doing that strategy until I finally found one.
Now I don't have it with me because,
the reason I didn't bring it is because
I'm afraid that if I showed it to you,
you'd be like, that's a fossil.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like, it's not impressive.
It's the head of a trilobite.
It's really small.
It's very clearly a fossil if you really look at it,
but it's not like, this thing ain't going in the Smithsonian.
You know what I'm saying?
And all the ones out there are like,
oh, I can see the outline of where this thing died,
but it's not this, even a discoloration
as much as it's an imprint of this ancient crustacean
or whatever they are.
But it's special to you.
It's special to me and it's sort of my,
is it, what is the word, talisman?
Talisman?
Amulet?
For my trip, you know?
Oh, okay.
It's sort of the- Souvenir.
Souvenir that I kind of hold on to
the significant life things that happened
because I've got this thing that kind of hold on to,
whatever.
Keep it in your pocket at all times.
So I found that, then the last night of camping,
camping next to a rock pile, a big rock pile.
And in the middle of this giant valley,
there's this giant rock pile,
kind of like the Joshua Tree type rocks,
but a little bit different.
And I get there as it's getting dark,
the sun has already gone down,
but I'm like, I gotta really set up really quickly.
And I like get out of the car and I'm like,
whoa, what was that?
A bat.
You're afraid of bats.
I hate bats.
And I've set up next to a bat cave.
Oh.
Because there's multiple bats coming out
of the giant rock pile.
I'm like, I sat up next to a bat cave and I'm not Batman.
You know how they see, they see by yelling at you.
And they're attracted to bugs
and I'm the only source of light in this valley.
What do bugs like?
Lights.
So I'm like, well, I'm gonna see
if I can do everything in the dark. Seriously? I'm so afraid of bats that I'm like, well, I'm gonna see if I can do everything in the dark.
Seriously? I'm so afraid of bats
that I was like, I'm gonna cook my dinner in the dark.
I'm gonna do everything in the dark.
I kept lights off
and I was able to do almost everything in the dark.
There's a few things you had to turn the lights on for.
And at that point there were moths coming up to me
and the bats were coming to the moths.
Like it was a little freaky.
They didn't attack me.
But I got in my tent that night and this is where,
now I'm finally getting to these two realizations,
one related to our conversation
and another one sort of a larger scale thing,
but also kind of related.
So,
and sort of a larger scale thing, but also kind of related.
So,
2.30 in the morning,
I wake up and I'm like,
this doesn't happen to me. Like I wake up in the middle of the night,
but take a whiz, go back to sleep, whatever, you know?
Yeah.
But I can't sleep.
And then I could not stop thinking.
And it was very weird because it was very vivid.
I could not stop thinking about how polarized our country is.
Like it was very strange.
And I think it had something to do with the fact that,
you know, I'd been thinking about these wildfires
the whole time that I'm on this trip
and I've been trying to avoid the smoke
and I knew I was about to go back into the smoke.
And I've been on the internet a little bit.
Like if I had service, I was like checking in,
you know, there was a few things happening,
like a few emails or whatever that I like looked at.
I wasn't completely disconnected.
I tried not to like set some unrealistic standard for myself,
but I was like, I'm not gonna be on the internet very much,
but if I have service, I might check something.
Yeah.
And I made the mistake of going on Twitter
a couple of times.
And of course, when you go to Twitter,
especially Twitter, I mean, Facebook,
which I don't go to, because it's even worse,
but everyone has an opinion about these wildfires, right?
And so, and of course I had been around the COVID denier guy
and I was like, I'm just like,
I'm looking at what people are saying
about the wildfires online and it's, you know,
what our president is saying about the wildfires.
And there's this, you know, there's this narrative that,
oh, this is the problem with the West Coast
is forest mismanagement.
Right? Like that's what's causing these wildfires.
It's not climate change. Climate change is a hoax.
And I'm just like, this is so,
it's just so disheartening, right?
It's just so disheartening that
we're dealing with something so tragic
that we're just beginning to deal with it.
It's gonna be just continued further tragedy
for the coming decades.
And it is related to climate change, but you know what?
There is also an element of forest mismanagement
that contributes to it, right?
It's not one or the other.
It actually both contribute to it,
but we're so divided that you have to be
on one side or the other.
And if you believe that it's forest mismanagement,
you have to believe that climate change is a hoax,
even though I'm not gonna give all the arguments
for climate change, but it's happening
and it is almost assuredly caused by humans.
And if you're on that side of it,
then you won't listen to anybody
who's got anything to say that's other than
this is just climate change.
No, it has nothing to do with forest mismanagement.
It's not California, those are national forests.
I'm not gonna get into the details of it,
but the thing that really just kind of like,
I could not go back to sleep is I was like,
so, and it was related to some of the stuff
that I was reading about
and the way that we dig in so deeply
and identify with our position.
And we think of ourselves as Democrats and Republicans,
Christians, atheists, whatever,
and we get into our group and we just,
we put these shields around us,
and those shields cannot be penetrated
by anybody else's ideas.
Yeah.
And I mean, I really think that it's,
it will be our downfall.
The problems that we face as a species are so large
and there's so many of us that our level of division
is gonna, it will be our downfall.
That's the hopeful conclusion I was waiting for.
Yeah.
Well, no, and I was just like,
wow, I can't stop thinking about this.
But related to that, as I was driving back,
and again, this is related to a book that I was reading,
which I'm not gonna talk about what book I was reading
and that kind of made me think about these things
because maybe I'll talk about it at a different time.
But I thought about our conversation,
the conversation that we had about me believing
that you were as competitive as me.
Now I'll say, I have looked at what people have said
about the, about, you know, a few people have talked
about what they thought about the conversation
and kind of analyzed.
Thank you for those of you who have contributed
to that conversation.
I mean, I definitely got the impression
that a lot of people were like,
why did you guys end up talking about that for an hour?
And the reason we ended up talking about that for an hour
is because of me, because I thought that it was gonna be,
you know, I never intended for us to talk about,
I thought I was gonna say,
I think you're just as competitive as me.
And we'd have a 10 minute conversation about it
and it would be lighthearted and it would end somewhere
where you'd be like, yeah, I am.
But the moment that you were like, I don't think so.
I was like, okay, well, I do think so.
And it became this hour long conversation about it.
And basically what I realized is that,
and this is, I mean, this is my tendency.
My tendency is to have an opinion, have a perspective,
to have an opinion, have a perspective,
and then be very invested in getting whoever I'm talking to
to agree with my perspective, right?
And one of the things that kind of clicked based on some stuff that I was reading
is that all arguments, all debate,
all sort of obsession with wanting to be right
is based in an over-identification with our mental position.
In other words, I become invested
in this opinion that I have, which by the way,
is not even something that I really care about.
Whether or not you're competitive
or whether or not you see how you are as competitive
is not an important thing.
This is not something that impacts my life, your life.
This is just a conversation, almost a philosophical,
inconsequential debate of kind, right?
But I was invested in
proving to you that you actually think the same way I do.
And that's based in ego.
And it's based in me identifying myself with my position,
but also ultimately my fear of death.
And let me explain that.
And this is kind of mind blowing,
but basically, you know,
humanity's, one of the humanity's big problems
is this over-identification with something
that it's a thought that you have
in a way that you identify yourself.
Like I talked about a second ago,
like this division that it's in our country. And by having, that you identify yourself. Like I talked about a second ago, like this division that's in our country.
And by having, once you identify yourself with an opinion,
you actually translate your own existence
into that opinion being maintained and spread.
And that's where it gets into this,
like trying to protect your own existence.
So what I'm saying is, is that I identify myself
with this argument because I feel like
if I can get you to agree with me,
if I can get you to think like I do on this,
then that kind of validates me.
It validates my own existence.
And if I'm not able to do that, then, and I've identified,
I've placed some of my own personal identity
in that position.
If that position isn't true,
there's a little bit less of me around.
It's a fascinating concept.
You're saying you discovered this about yourself
more so than you're saying
I discovered how everybody operates.
I think I had this realization
that both things were happening
because the first thing that happened
is this overwhelming sense of burden
about how divided the country is.
Yeah. And being really mad
about the country being divided.
And also having a very interesting perspective
that I bring to that because I'm somebody
that's been on both sides of the political spectrum
in my adult life.
So I feel like I have an appreciation for both sides.
It's like, I know how conservatives think
and I know how liberals think
because I've had very similar thought patterns
to both of them.
But then realizing that on a small scale
and maybe an inconsequential scale,
I had demonstrated that I'm just as big a part
of the problem just in that little conversation we had.
Now, I appreciate what people had to say
when they were like,
oh, I'm so glad you guys had that conversation
and you're able to have like this conflict
without being mad at each other
and you kind of demonstrated how to have healthy conflict.
And if that's what came from it, then great,
I'm glad we had the conversation.
But I realize that not just that conversation,
but the way that I think in general,
even when I did my deconstruction story,
as much as I was trying really hard
because I know my tendency to be persuasive,
but just to be expository and just tell my story,
I know that I have a tendency, I wanna justify myself.
I want to validate my own position
because I've got a big ego
and I want to perpetuate my own ideas
because I have over-identified
with ideas as inconsequential as thinking
that you need to realize how competitive you are.
And the details of the argument are kind of,
they don't even matter.
It just becomes this,
I just kind of like, I dug in and said,
let's have this conversation
and hopefully it will end with you agreeing with me.
And I think that that is,
it's a small picture of what's happening,
not just nationwide, but worldwide.
It's just a preoccupation with being right.
You know what I'm saying?
Identifying with an idea
and then being validated in that idea
because that validates you as a person or people as people.
And the way that ideology,
identification with a particular political party,
particular worldview, particular religion, whatever,
it isn't, it comes with a whole set of things
that you have to embrace, right?
Like how did it ever get to the point where identifying
as a follower of Jesus went hand in hand
with being extremely capitalist, right?
How did we get to a place
where identifying yourself as a follower of Jesus
meant denying that humans are causing climate change, right?
Like, I think we got there because it's a package.
You take the package.
And I'm not saying, listen, I'm not judging.
What I'm saying is that I'm guilty of it as well.
I'm beginning to try to explore, okay, well,
where else has this manifested itself outside
of just a dumb argument about how competitive you are.
But ultimately what I'm saying is that we had
that conversation and it became this big thing
because not even because I thought that it was important,
but because I made the statement
and then I felt like I had to defend it.
I felt like I had to defend it
for an hour worth of conversation.
You know, I think that that's not the typical,
that's not how things typically play out
in our friendship dynamic.
I think it wasn't what you expected to happen.
Again, it was like,
you thought there would be
a little playful conversation and then an agreement.
I think with a lot of things going through life together,
there has been this dynamic of,
if we're exploring an idea or if you're more intent
on exploring an idea, then you can bounce it off me.
And most, more often than not,
I would explore it with you and validate that position.
And I think that's,
I just, I do think that's an interesting dynamic that,
you know, I didn't realize was happening.
And I, you know And it was like from, if someone was looking at my life,
they might say, well, you just glom on to whatever Rhett
believes or whatever, or you believe whatever he tells you
will be like a severe and non-charitable way to put it
because that's not actually true.
Or if they, but what I never thought of is with you,
like talking about how this,
because I didn't know how this worked in your own mind,
but if hearing that someone may say,
link fulfills a role in your life
to validate that part of yourself
that's associated with ideas.
Potentially. Potentially.
Like, again, I don't know, but it does,
I do see, I mean, there is that pattern
because I think, again, you're exploring
how you interact with ideas and identity.
And again, it's like, I don't have to say
I have that exact same experience
in order to validate your realization
or your confession even now.
And I think that- Or me to say,
I don't relate to that.
It's like, this conversation is not about me at all.
It's one thing, it's because, I mean,
it's one thing to be like, this conversation is not about me at all. It's one thing, it's because, I mean, it's one thing to be like,
so are you saying you shouldn't have opinions about things
or you shouldn't argue for things?
It's like, well, I mean, I think we're in a place
in our country where I think that there are principles
and there are people that need to be advocated for
and there are things that need to be stood for.
So I think that being a person of principle,
of character and integrity and standing for things,
I'm not saying you shouldn't have opinions and convictions.
But we've talked about how we also value,
I mean, with our deconstruction stories,
how much we value open-mindedness
and like not skipping from one entrenched thing,
belief system just to another one.
But it's less about where we're entrenched,
that's a different conversation
than just talking about our value of open-mindedness
and not ruling anything out in order to.
Well, and I think that the challenge is finding a way
to have an opinion, a belief, a conviction
to fight for something,
but not to overly identify with it
to the point that your self-worth and your self-identity
is based in some position that you have, right?
Because at that moment, you become more committed
to your position than you do to the human race,
to the greater good, right?
I think the thing that-
And it's a selfish,
it actually becomes a selfish pursuit.
And I just, in that podcast,
I demonstrated how that can happen
with something so unimportant
as me thinking that you're competitive.
Like, you know, what if it was having an argument
about abortion, you know, for God's sake, right?
Right.
But no, I wasn't even talking about something
that has any emotional weight to it.
I was just talking about whether or not you're competitive.
It came from a conversation about board games,
but yet even then I was willing to,
and I was a very willing participant
in identifying with that position.
And once I threw it out there
and it encountered some resistant energy,
I energized the side of my conversation
to try to get my energy to beat your energy
so I could be like, my energy wins and I won this argument.
And I just feel like that negative energy
that's happening on both sides,
it's happening on both sides of the spectrum at this point,
is like, there's just something that's been lost
and I'm a part of it.
I'm saying that I am a part of it,
but I'm realizing that I wanna be a part of the solution
and not just contribute to the noise.
I don't even know what that looks like.
I don't have any application.
You know, and ultimately I'm not encouraged.
So I'm not gonna end it on a happy note.
For me personally, I'm encouraged with some of the things
that have happened and that being one of the things
is like, oh man, you tend to be, you tend to be,
you know, you tend to want to debate or argue
or you want to be right.
And that's not about,
that's not about wanting people to understand the truth
as much as it's about you wanting to be right, your ego.
That's it, I'm glad that I'm beginning to realize that.
But the thing that is discouraging is
our interconnectedness that we've been able to achieve
given the proliferation of the internet has backfired.
And we're way less connected, I think, than we've ever been.
And it does not seem to be,
there doesn't seem to be any sort of resolution in sight.
And instead of commenting on that,
I'll take an aside and just say,
since this is the time where we're talking about,
if this is the follow-up to the competition,
I'll just give the concise way that I've processed it.
I think for me, I didn't read a lot of the comments.
I didn't read a lot of the comments.
I had discussions with Christy.
I might've had a therapy discussion about it. I may not have.
But one of the things that kinda,
when I look back on the conversation now
is the thing that I carry with me is,
I realized that it was, you know, it didn't,
unpacking like the competitive, your competitive nature,
you know, I very much internalized that
as kind of a, as a threat, right?
And then what I, what And then what I did, part of my process
was kind of coming through that saying, you know what?
Analyzing that, but then also realizing that
if the thing that sticks with me,
the positive thing from the conversation is that
if there's a competitive spirit between us,
and it doesn't just go one way,
and I'm not denying that,
like I'm not saying I'm not competitive at all,
but I am asserting that I am not the same,
I'm not the same as you in this way.
That I think what it kind of hurt
because I felt threatened by it,
the turn was actually being honored by it.
Like if you, you know,
you're not competitive with everybody.
If there is a competitive spirit from you towards me,
then I can take, honestly take that as a compliment, you know?
That is a level of respect
that I didn't immediately experience,
but the more I thought about it and reflected on it,
I was like, that's my takeaway from it.
So it's, you know, I take it as a compliment.
Okay, good.
So it's, I take it as a compliment.
Okay, good.
And yeah, I do find it fascinating that because there's mics in front of us,
it changes the dynamic of the conversation a little bit,
but the conversation that we had afterward
for the next two hours,
there was a lot of good that came from that too
that didn't need to be on Mike.
And I think it was a milestone moment.
Yeah, I think I'm glad we had the conversation.
Yeah.
I just have come to grips with why I push things
the way that I did.
And some people were really, you know, some people were really, really picked up on that.
And ironically, or I guess not so ironically,
but fittingly, even my competitive nature in a lot of ways
is based in the way that, in the way that,
how I identify, what I identify with
and what I find my worth in, right?
And a lot of times I find my worth in winning at things.
And again, that's just another displacement
of my identity into this performance,
meeting some expectation,
whether it's set by me or set by somebody else.
So even the argument that I was having
was trying to get you to realize
that you think about this in the same way that I do.
That, the thing I was trying to get you to think about
was also a symptom of my ego.
And the way I was doing it, it was a symptom of my ego.
And none of this is like super revolutionary.
It's like, it isn't like,
if you had told me that before that conversation,
I probably would have been like, yeah, that's true.
Wanting to be right and wanting to have an argument
and kind of digging into your trench in an argument
is based in ego, but I didn't,
I don't feel like I had a,
to get back what we're talking about,
an experiential knowledge.
A heart knowledge or an ex.
I could agree with it intellectually.
Yeah, yeah.
But now I'm like, oh, I can feel that.
And I think I have just a little bit more
sort of consciousness of that tendency.
So when I go there, when I find myself going there,
when I'm in, and when I find myself suddenly in an argument
being like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa,
has this suddenly shifted?
Do you care anymore about whether or not what the truth is?
Or do you just care about being right?
Because it feels like our culture has gotten to a place
where the only thing anyone cares about is just being right.
Well, I think that what you're describing,
sharing your experience is a source of hope.
At least we got this one data point,
and I wanna be that person too.
That's like, I'm not gonna hold on to something
so tightly that I lose myself, who I really wanna be.
And I think, so I understand why you're saying it's like,
I'm not really in it on a hopeful note,
but at the same time, I think that there's a hopeful takeaway.
Well, I hope so.
Okay, well.
And we should, I'm saying it,
we should make sure we pick dates and that we go off again.
Well, and that's my recommendation.
It's very simple, it's very general.
Make time for yourself.
We did the whole chapter and-
Isolate yourself with yourself.
Yeah, and you know, it's something that I
knew is important that, you know,
my therapist is telling me you need this.
I'm believing that I need this, but it took me,
I mean, I did my little trip to the place
with the yoga thing in the hot tub that, you know,
a couple of years ago, but it was different.
It felt different.
Yeah.
But just making that time for yourself,
you may not be in a position,
especially given the circumstances in the world,
to travel right now, but like,
there's just something about giving yourself
some space, releasing yourself of expectations,
responsibilities, the need to accomplish something
and just letting yourself off the hook
and really spending some time just discovering yourself.
And for me, it was helpful to get away
and also to read a few books that had been recommended to me
which again, I'm not gonna recommend those books.
You don't have to read what I read.
It's just, that was for me.
But yeah, make some time for yourself.
Isolate yourself with yourself.
That's my rec.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
Let us know.
We'll speak at you next week.