I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 76. Who should pay on a date? Money, dating & dealbreakers with Matthew Hussey
Episode Date: January 3, 2023World-renowned dating and relationship expert, Matthew Hussey, sits with Ramit for an honest and wide-ranging one-on-one conversation on love, money, and the many layers of raw emotion and hidden mess...aging shared between them. Links mentioned in this episode Podcast: Love Life with Matthew Hussey Website: howtogettheguy.com Instagram: @thematthewhussey Connect with Ramit Get Money Coaching with Ramit Download the Conscious Spending Plan Get my New York Times best-selling book Get my no-numbers journal Other episodes Instagram Twitter YouTube If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
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Welcome to this very special episode of The Podcast.
Now normally I get the chance to talk to couples in committed relationships about money,
but there are a lot of aspects that I haven't been able to tap into.
And I've been reading your questions and your comments, and I want to talk about money
and dating.
Like, how do you handle money if you just met?
Or what if you've been dating for three months do you handle money if you just met? Or
what if you've been dating for three months and your partner invites you to Tahiti, but
you can't afford it? How do you navigate that situation? What do you say? And how do
you handle the emotions that naturally come up when you're first starting to talk about
money? Well, what I wanted to do today is to bring
on my friend Matthew Hussie.
I happen to think he's one of the best minds on relationships out there. And on a professional
level, my team, we really admire the work that he does. There are very, very small number of people
who we admire in the self-development world, and Matt is on that list. Personally, he and I are
good friends. He came to my 40th birthday party.
So to just get to sit down and talk to him
for hours was a blast.
And I think you're gonna hear that in today's episode.
By the way, he and I recorded two episodes.
One is this episode that you're listening to right now
or watching on YouTube.
And another is an episode that I recorded
for his podcast, Love Life with Matthew
Hussey, where we covered all kinds of other material. So I would encourage you to check out
his podcast, check him out on Instagram at the Matthew Hussey, and you can find his programs
at how to get the guy.com. Now, on today's episode, we talk about money
and dating and relationships. We also cover things like, why is it so hard for men
to connect with their feelings?
What are some of the common money questions that Matt
hears from his clients who are primarily women?
And I'll also share some things that I've never
shared, like what would be an instant relationship deal
breaker for me.
Now, I joked with Matt that it's just two bros talking about gender issues, but
I want to acknowledge that this can be sensitive material, and he and I always try to be as
respectful and thoughtful about different perspectives as we can be, and I hope you
hear that in our conversation today. So feel free to listen or to watch this on YouTube.
I can tell you that I had a blast talking to Matt. So here we go.
Okay, Matt, there's this famous video of you that's gone viral,
like 10,000 times. And every time I see a going viral, I go,
God damn this guy, how did he get this video to spread so much? You know the one I'm talking
about, right? Who should pay on a date? Yes. I wanna walk through what happened on that video.
I wanna know the behind the scenes.
So there you are on stage.
How many people were in that audience?
It must have been about, I wanna say, two or three hundred.
Okay.
And is it primarily women?
Mostly, yeah.
Okay.
All my stole.
So you're on stage, you're doing your thing
and you have a Q&A portion, and this question gets asked.
Do you remember how she asked the question?
Yeah, she said during the dating period,
you know, after like four or five months of dating,
I just wondering, at what point does it get that you have to pay, did the woman have to
pay when they go out?
The guy is asking that there should be half and half at that point when you already
at what point?
When you already been dating for four or five months.
How do I get him to go back to paying for everything?
Was this essentially the question? Okay, when you heard it, before you started to paying for everything was essentially the question.
Okay, when you heard it before you started to answer, there's always that moment where
you're like, how am I going to answer this?
What went through your head?
Well, the thing is, I thought she was going to go in a different direction with the question
itself.
I almost thought she was going to say, you know, he's been paying for everything for a
while now, but I want to start contributing because it would make me more comfortable.
And it just went completely the opposite way.
It went a shocking way to me,
because I didn't know how to,
it really was like a slightly haunting question
because it was like, are you really asking me that,
especially in front of an audience?
There was no shame about that.
It was just how do I get him to keep paying for everything?
Yes.
So then I waited to see the audience's reaction.
Do you remember what it was?
I remember the audience was quiet and I sort of laughed before I even answered, because I remember thinking, I'd
need to bite my tongue a little bit here, because I could tell immediately, oh, I'm like,
the question itself, I was so incredulous that that was the question that I, there was
some part of me that was like, this is insane. Why would there be this expectation?
And then that was probably why it was funny because I recently did
Red Table Talk
with Jada Pinkett Smith and
They said for the promos they wanted to use the video from who pays on a date, which is hilarious
We're bringing it up because it's like fucking video. He wants me going back to that video.
And I watched the video again,
because they were like,
we need you to sign a release to let us
to use this video in the promo.
And I watched it again,
and I sort of cringed and laughed at myself
because I was like,
why am I so angry?
And I was like, I would never answer a question
in that much of an angry fashion these days, but I think that there was a part of me that was like almost affronted personally, that,
you know, why is it our job to just, why is there this expectation that it is one thing to say
on a first date, I expect the guy to pay, right? I have my own issue, you know, theories on that,
but that's to me a whole different thing
than three months in.
Yeah.
He's been paying for everything and your question to me is not how do we even up a little
bit.
The question is, he's now asked me to start contributing and this seems wildly inappropriate.
So I kind of let the audience have it a little bit on that one.
I love that you did it. So I kind of let the audience have it a little bit on that one. I love that you did it.
So I remember watching this.
You know, I told you I've watched it like hundreds of times
because it was a masterful answer
to a question that, as you said, was surprising.
But also the audience was not really on your side.
Not at the end, they were not on your side.
And I thought you handled
it really well. You told the truth. It would have been really easy to say something that would have
been crowd-pleasing. But I thought you were very honest about it. And I think that in money and love
topics, there's a lot of material that has been neat the surface. It's not written anywhere, but it's nonetheless real.
And it's very easy to all sing kumbaya and say,
like, why don't we just like figure out a way
that works for us?
Okay, fair enough, but when you talk to couples
and you talk to people,
you realize there's some real questions
and ways that we need to navigate.
It's not always easy.
So I love the video.
I've made fun of you for your dirty shirt
in that video, the stained shirt.
Which I have explained was I didn't go to my tour event
in front of an audience of hundreds in LA
with stained shirt.
Disgusting stained shirt.
I'm like, people hug me before the event
and I got many faces of makeup imprinted
onto my white T-shirt.
You tried to make us feel sorry. Hundreds of people hug me to show their affection I got many faces of makeup imprinted onto my white t-shirt.
You tried to make us feel sorry.
Hundreds of people hug me to show their affection.
And that's why my shirt looks so ratty
on this viral video.
I was like, am I supposed to feel sorry right now?
If a video is gonna go viral,
you'd rather it be a video of you in nice, clean shirt.
It's like going viral.
Well, my equivalent would be me having a unibrow, right?
It's like, I really don't need to be filmed on that day.
You know, can we just like, give me till Tuesday.
That's the unibrow.
That's the unibrow.
That you don't go to your audience
isn't capable of giving you a unibrow right before you go on stage.
Okay, you got me there.
Damn, you are good.
All right, well, this is why I get to ask you
the questions today, all right?
Oh my God.
All right, so you speak to many, many of your clients.
They're almost all women.
And what I love is the topics are visceral, they're real.
They're about dating, they're about attraction.
And naturally at some point, some money comes up.
So what I wanna do do is I want to get your perspective on how money plays a part in
dating and attraction and relationships.
You see some of the similar things I see, but you see them through a totally different
lens and your audience is different.
And I love that.
It's like, we're so much complementarity here.
So I have a few questions for you.
Who knows where the conversation takes us?
First off, what are the most common questions
that you get from your clients
as it relates to money and relationships?
I suppose there's those early questions of, you know,
who should pay.
There's the insecurity or fear going into a situation that whatever, you know, my emotional
money baggage is, is going to create problems for me, in dating. Any time we go to a date,
we're buying and selling at the same time, right? So interesting. Meaning what?
We are deciding whether we want a person, but we're also simultaneously trying to be someone they want.
Yes. And so there's the simultaneous thing of I'm trying to on some level be
impressive and attractive. And that's the leverage I'm trying to create leverage.
And at the same time, I'm trying to see if I actually want what they have to offer.
The reason I say create leverages, because if you get, you know, after a date,
there's no point discussing how right for you someone is or is, and if they're not asking you
on a second date, right? The leverages, do they actually want to continue seeing you?
What about when people say to you, why do we need all this artifice?
Why don't we just be ourselves?
Well, we should absolutely be ourselves, assuming
we have a clear sense of what that means
and who that person is.
I mean, a lot of us are being yourself
is an interesting concept because it's a bit
of a moving target, isn't it?
We're always in discovery mode with ourselves. At the same same time as looking in the rearview mirror and saying, who have I
been until now? And once asked my mum, how do you know who you are? And she said, well,
I know who I am because of what I've done and what I'm comfortable with. I said, that's
a pretty good definition, right? We look in the rearview mirror to see who we've been
so far. And now what we associate with ourselves
is really a huge part down to the way we've been living, what we've been doing, what we perceive to
be within our comfort zone. And so it's not always a good predictor of who we will be in five years,
or who we will be in ten years based on how we expand our comfort zone. And I do things today
that I never knew I would enjoy until I did them.
Yeah.
And in the same way that there are foods we like that we never knew they were our
favorite food until we tried them.
So who we are as an evolving thing, be yourself.
If we're not careful, be yourself rather than being a mandate to step into
your own skin confidently and be true to yourself.
It can end up being a kind of excuse for not developing or growing or doing whatever
is the path of least resistance for you.
I agree.
It's if somebody asked me, who are you to me?
I don't even know if today I would have a good answer.
I might naturally resort to I'm a husband, I'm a son, etc. I'm a teacher. I might say,
I like travel, so now I'm getting into my likes. But when we say a BR selves, it's not really
clear what part of myself means. I might say, I'm generous, but how does that show up on a date?
And so, yeah, it's interesting this BRSELF concept, which is simplistic maybe.
It's a sort of hard thing to latch onto.
I mean, I suppose people like Eckhart toll and people who spend their lives talking about mindfulness
and the self-being and illusion anyway, it starts to get really kind of mean.
And when you get to that level, because you go, well, all of these things that I've decided I am self being an illusion anyway. It starts to get really kind of mean.
Manus, when you get to that level, because you go, well, all of these things that I've
decided I am are just constructs anyway. They're just an ego that I've created. I am,
as they say, the observer. I'm not, I'm not the thing that I think I am. That's not me.
And identifying with self, people who are experts in that world will say is the problem.
So when your clients ask you questions about money, it starts off with, you know, who pays
for the first day. It's a very visceral moment. What are the most common ones?
It might be, I deal with a lot of women who make more money than the men they date. So it might be,
how do I deal with a guy making less money than me and the insecurity
that can come with that or the emasculation that can come with that?
Very loaded, vivid words.
That's what I really enjoy about this topic because the word insecurity and empowerment
and he doesn't feel masculine.
That's real. That's very, very vivid.
Okay. What are the most surprising questions you get?
The questions where you go, wow, I would have never asked that one.
You know, I always struggled a bit with how much
the people that come to me talk about being intimidating
because I, and I want to preface this by saying that there are many, many, many, many women.
It is, there is a genuine problem with strong women intimidating men.
There is a real problem with that.
So I don't want to, I don't want to gloss over that. It's a real thing. And there are plenty of men out there
who have no concept of how to deal with a woman who does not need them in what they perceive
to be the traditional ways. You know what my friends used to do? My friends from Stanford,
they would tell me when they would go out to bars, people would ask them, oh, where do you go to college or where did you graduate from?
And they stopped saying that they went to Stanford.
Because the minute they said it, the guy would walk away.
I was like, what?
It's so interesting.
Yeah.
Then when some of them became doctors, they were in medical school, when they would talk
about being in medical school or being doctors, same exact thing happened.
I don't think a lot of guys realize that.
And I think probably every woman listening goes,
duh, that has happened forever.
So it's really good to share that side of things
that many guys don't realize is actually happening.
Okay, so intimidation.
So that intimidation factor is a real thing.
But I would always be trying to juggle that with what I saw
as the other side of the argument,
which is that saying I intimidate everybody
can be a bit of a cop out.
Why?
There are plenty of successful people in life
and anyone who is in a position of power
or success or has money has the potential to intimidate a lot of people, or to make them
feel uncomfortable.
And yet, we all know people who are in those positions who don't make other people feel
that way.
What do they make them feel instead? Interesting, impressive, equal. You always have
to ask yourself, what are the weapons I've gotten really comfortable using? Like what? Well,
for some people, it's looks.
For other people, it's the amount of money they have.
Mine is my wit on Twitter.
When I crush these trolls who have no chance
of intellectual parity, I go, why you bother?
Just come to me after you studied for the next 25 years
and you know how to try to troll on Twitter.
You have no chance of winning this game.
You think that that counts?
For me and Remy, the we always have this in joke that I want you to have a special account,
like a Matthew Hussey endorsed account where I basically hire you to deal with our trolls.
No, no, you don't have to hire me. I'll do it for free.
You don't understand. I love it.
You know, like, you know, like, where's the phrase from, like, you don't have to hire me. I'll do it for free. You don't understand. I love it. You know, like, you know, like, was it, where's the phrase from like the born movies that say send in the asset?
Like, I like the idea that you're the asset and we just, I don't any, I don't need to worry about any of the ridiculous comments.
I just send you in. Yeah. And, and you just handle it. And then not even as me you handle it as I go thank you for your email to Matthew Hussie.
I'm Romance Seiti and I'll be addressing your complaints from now on.
We have three things we need to discuss right away.
First of all, who made you think it was okay to send this email?
That's already in.
That's already my favorite line is we have three things we need to discuss right away.
It's already the greatest way to start that email.
It just comes so naturally. We have three things we need to discuss right away. That doesn't sound
tweet length. And then the next time you see me, you're like, oh, what's been going on? And I just
pull out 300 pages of emails that I've been sending back and forth to people. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
All right. Everyone says, where, where, everyone I'll teach you to be rich says, what's happened to our CEO?
This is our,
well, he's handling some important matters
over Matthew Hussey's company.
Okay, so I told you my idea for your business.
Do you remember what I told you an Audrey to do
to start a business?
I said, if I sounded like you to,
I would literally start a competitor to headspace,
where I would just talk,
and I would use my fucking British accent,
and I would just say random words,
I would say, you are beautiful.
Can you say that into the mic please?
You are beautiful.
All right, throw that on a loop.
I'm gonna charge 499 a month for it,
and I actually have, I did a little preparation for this,
because I would like for you to read a few things
off the screen, okay.
Again, I think that you could come up
with a very large business of just talking
and I put those headphones on and listen to the two of you
and go to sleep every night.
All right, we'll call it, I'll teach you to be British.
There's a little something I found on the internet,
which I was very excited for our conversation today.
It's a meme, and the meme goes, British people having sex be like, and then they have a few
words I would like for you to read off the screen.
Just tell me if this is accurate.
Just read them slowly into the mic.
See how accurate this is.
Oh, these are unbelievable.
Let's hear it please.
So we've got O heavens.
Go, go, go.
I mean, that's like, there's, that's unbelievable scrumptious.
Go, go, go.
Hmm, yes, splendid. Ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha.
This is, this is a good one.
I'm arriving.
Three exclamation marks on that one.
I'm arriving.
This one's in, I feel like this is more of an injury.
You have to know British accents for this one But this one is it's Tuesday in it
And Tuesday
Tuesday is spelled with two C H E W
In it I double N IT is Tuesday in it. That's that's like a pro that's like in British
You can't even,
Americans don't know what in it means.
And it means like, isn't it?
Yes.
It's Tuesday, isn't it?
So out of all of those,
is that all of them?
I would say probably the one that's closest to me
is Tuesday, isn't it?
Because that's more where I'm from in the UK is we're all from the east of London, my
family.
So we're all the Cockneys, the chimney sweeps on Mary Poppins represented us famously.
And also I realize a lot of villains are they have Cockney accents.
Oh yeah.
If they ever want to make someone seem grubby and conniving
and sort of dark and evil,
they give him a cockney accent.
So thank you for giving me the audio
and just to finish this whole thing off,
we actually have the privilege of having your fiancee
here in the room.
Audrey, can you confirm that Matt has indeed said
in a British accent, I'm arriving.
I think we all know the concept. That's two upper class for me. She knows. She's much more
posh than I am. Okay. I agree. She has absolutely, she is slumming it with me. Because she's from part of England where they talk with a much more...
You're gonna say it, talk nice.
Talk nice. Talk pro... I didn't know.
By the way, every American's like, what are you talking about?
There's different British accents.
If you hear Audrey's accent, she's much more sort of upper middle class.
I sound like sort of the chimney sweep from Mary
Poppins.
So she's, yeah, I thought, I remember when we first got together, I thought like this
is poshier than anyone I would have expected myself to.
Do you think that the company of the two of you speaking both affirmations as well as
x-rated comments?
Do you think it would be worth $50 million
or $500 million?
Well, I leave that, your business valuations,
I leave firmly in your corner,
but I have thought we should do
some sort of like bedtime reading for people,
just like a bedtime story.
Bedtime reading for like PG rated
and then perhaps bedtime reading
for the more British x-rated thing.
I assume that would be the sort of upsell.
Yeah.
Would there would be, yeah, exactly.
There would be a freemium model.
I'll take 10%.
I'll take 10% on Harry Potter level sort of, you know, innocence.
And we, we finish on some sort of dark, sorted,
Cockney porn.
In.
LAUGHTER All right.
Love it.
Gosh, I feel like I accomplished everything I wanted to with this interview.
We could call it that.
This is wow.
I'm going to talk that.
I'm stunned.
You took it in the direction even I didn't anticipate.
Thank you.
Let's talk some scenarios.
I'm so caught.
Okay.
You're going on vacation with your partner.
You've been dating for six months.
And your partner says, I would really like to go to Tahiti.
You can't comfortably afford it.
How should you have that conversation? conversation. You say that sounds like the greatest thing ever. And oh my god, that would
be an absolute dream. But I'm not in a position to be able to have a trip like that, you know,
financially, I, I, you know, which makes me a little bit, whatever,
where inso-authentic emotion there.
I don't want to be the one letting the team down on something that you really want to do,
and of course something that would be awesome, but that's really hard for me.
What do you suggest?
Because what you need to know is you almost need to establish terms
first.
And the terms are, I can't come into this as an equal partner.
Like, financially, I can't come into that trip as an equal partner.
And if that means that it's off the table, then that's important for you to know.
Like I could never afford my half.
You can even be more specific.
Like, I could never afford my half of that trip.
Mm-hmm.
And then you see what they say, because they may say, oh, that's a shame.
Okay, well, no worries.
Or they may say, I'm really mad because I really want to do that trip, but I want you to be
able to do it too, but you can't.
So, wow, that's annoying.
And you say, well, you know, there's lots of things we can do that we can both contribute
to and something I can do. I would hope that kind of a trip to Tahiti isn't the only way
we can have fun. So then you're showing your versatility that you can do other things. Now they may say, well, it's okay,
I don't need you to pay. I just want to do it as my treat. Now you have two ways that you can
respond to that. You can either say, thank you very much, oh my God, that's wonderful. I never would
have expected you to do that, but if you feel comfortable with it, I don't want to get in the way I have a really fun trip for the two of us.
And if you genuinely are comfortable with that, then I'll do my best to enjoy it without
worrying that I'm not able to contribute.
My preferred option, which I think is the best one, objectively, is to say that's unbelievably kind and generous and I feel really
fortunate that you treat things that way, but I want to be able to contribute what I can.
And it is not going to be a lot in the context of the trip, but it will be a significant
amount to me. I love that.
And therefore, I'd like to get X. You can even kind of compartmentalize what you're going
to get. I want to get, you know, the...
The airfare, the Thursday night dinner, whatever it may be.
Like, make it something that's instead of it's just, you know, a monetary value, which
you can do. There's nothing wrong with that, but it's kind of nice sometimes to be connected to the...
Yeah, let me get the flight.
Or let me get this.
And, or let me at least buy my own flight.
I can't afford the hotel,
but let me at least get my own flight.
And when you say that's your favorite,
why is it your favorite?
Because it goes back to something that I know you believe in too,
which is that,
you, look, I tell you a story. I was in New York once, and there was a night out in my mid-20s where
everyone got a table that apparently no one could afford, apart from this one guy.
And by the time the end of the night came, and I was kind of a tag along on this evening,
it wasn't my friendship group.
So I felt a bit uncomfortable anyway because I was kind of like, I don't want to be that
person at the table in the club who's, you know, just the free loader.
That makes me deeply uncomfortable.
The bill came and everyone deserted.
And this was like a $3,000 bill for a table in New York.
And all the people that had been there enjoying it all the whole time,
out of embarrassment, out of awkwardness, out of fear that they would somehow be
roped into being in and over their head, they kind of just deserted.
And this person was left with this three grand bill.
They kind of just desired and this person was left with this three-gram bill. As it happens, the next night I was at dinner with that guy who paid the bill and a couple
of other people.
And I had left a little earlier and I went the night before and I went up to him and I'd heard that he'd paid the whole bill.
I went up to him and I said, um, listen, here's $300.
I wish I could do more, but I can't.
But I wanted to at least do something.
And it was never something that he would have expected, but he turned around and he said,
that is really, really nice.
He said, my own friends didn't even throw their card in.
You don't even know me.
And you've decided to do something like that is a really,
like I'm really touched.
Speak to the character, your character.
And three grand, $300 off a three grand bill
didn't make a lot of difference to him,
but the gesture really did.
But the fact that his own, his actual friends didn't help.
And I was just the guy that felt like
that was not appropriate for us,
just because we couldn't spend that much money.
It wasn't appropriate for us to not do anything.
And there is lots of situations in life where when someone has money, there is a natural
awkwardness and an embarrassment a lot of the time among other people in the room. And they don't know how to deal with it,
and how to handle it.
And I chose long ago that my approach would be to...
And by the way, when people are embarrassed
or when they're awkward in a situation like that,
even their gratitude tends to go out of the window.
It's kind of an interesting thing,
because to come up to you and say,
like that night, to come up to that guy
and say thank you so much,
is to acknowledge you haven't paid anything.
Yeah.
So just disappear is to sort of cover your eyes and ears
and just go, oh, someone's got it.
Really know that someone had to pick up that whole tab
but you're just like, oh, what happened?
Oh, we were all on a night're just like, oh, what happened?
We were all on a night out.
I don't know what happened to say thank you is to acknowledge that someone has done
something.
So what I've noticed in a lot of situations like that is people don't even really say thank
you because they're embarrassed.
I made a decision long ago that I would either genuinely face to face to acknowledge someone and say thank you and make sure they
know that I know that they had done some, even if it was easy for them.
Yeah.
A friend of mine said to me once, a friend of mine who was much more successful than me,
older gentleman, he once said to me, two things are always true when it comes to money.
He said, and he was talking
about when you have money. He said, everyone thinks you have more than you actually do.
And everyone thinks you won't miss your money as much as they'll miss theirs.
That's interesting. And so, you know, I always made a decision that I wouldn't ever just
disrespect the fact that it might be easier for someone. Because the person that can still go
up and say thank you, or say thank you and here is what I can do. I know it's nothing, but it would mean a lot to me to be
able to contribute something. That's the person you want to keep giving to. Totally. In your Tahiti
answer, the thing that stood out to me, which you did so naturally, but I don't think it would come as naturally to many people was your first part of your answer was
Gosh, thank you. That sounds amazing. I
Would absolutely love to be able to go on a trip like that and then you got into the rest that part
You just rolled over it because it came so naturally to you, but
There's something very powerful about taking a second, slowing it down and expressing your
gratitude. This partner of yours just invited you on a trip. That means they've been thinking
about it. They've planned it. They want you to come along. The money part of it, of course,
you need to address that. But the feeling that your partner wants you to be a part of this international trip, incredible.
I find that when it comes to money, we are so nervous, this frenzied, harried energy
that we immediately jumped to things like, well, I could never afford that.
And I just love how you slowed it down and you started from a place of gratitude. Very powerful. Thank you. And you should never also be afraid to show someone
that you don't need to do something like that. That would be amazing. But by the way, if you wanted
to, you know, because I know that's a lot of money, we could always take a trip, you know, two hours away on a flight and go somewhere and still go and have an amazing vacation,
but do something different. Like, I trust me, you know, Tahiti, my God, that would be incredible,
but, you know, I also, if it's too much, we could go here and do this. Now, they could still come
back to you and say, oh my God, no, I want to do this. I've been wanting to go there for ages
You're the person I want to go with let's do it, but
Just saying something like that is a beautiful thing. I agree it shows someone else that you're a team player
Yeah, you're watching is someone's like you're watching there while it for them. You're not even asking me to but there's a part of me that
That I'm a team player and I want to support you.
And when someone hears that, it's a very powerful thing because you go, well, they're looking
out for you.
They're with me.
And life is going to present a million opportunities where there's going to be some
price disparity or something where one person says, oh, I want to do that.
And the other goes, I don't think it's valuable enough,
or I don't have enough money, et cetera,
to be that versatile.
And to remember that, the point is not Tahiti.
The point is for the two of you
to create an adventure together.
That is powerful.
I had to be reminded of that.
I tried to plan a trip for my family.
It was a very exotic trip.
I think I told you about this.
And it was a little too much.
I learned.
I was like, guys, it's so cool.
I'll do all the travel planning.
And then, you know, we talked about the travel
and the budget and all kinds of stuff.
And even though the money part of it,
I would have been more than happy to assist with,
it was a little bit too much too soon. And I was really down
about it because I had planned and I had prepared, I presented a PowerPoint and I just got blown
out, you know, everyone was like, no, and I was telling a friend about it and she said,
well, you have a couple of options. You can be resentful or despondent, or you can remember that the point of your trip was to have a family reunion.
And it could be there, but it could just as well be in other places.
And sometimes I think when we talk about trips or even relationships,
we have a vision in our mind of what we thought it would be. And when life
throws us a curveball, it's really hard to grapple with that. Like, I was fixated on this
place. In fact, this hotel, this lodge, this that, and my friend, very savvy in her right,
had to focus me on reconnecting with with what's the actual purpose of this?
Is it the glitzy stuff? That would be nice, but it's really about finding some quality time.
This is exactly right. And you want to be someone who helps people connect to those truths.
Like be the person that helps someone else connect to those truths. When you're that person,
that helps someone else connect to those truths. When you're that person,
they realize that they get better with you.
They, it's inspiring.
It's inspiring and you realize,
oh, this is what it's about.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.
On this podcast, you've heard me recommend therapy
to a lot of couples.
Some of the couples are already seeing therapists,
which I love.
But if you wanted to get therapy, if you wanted to have a space where you and your partner
could talk about money and any other topic, would you know where to go right now?
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therapy is really important for a lot of us. My wife and I saw a therapist to help us deal with
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and therapy gave us a place and a time to talk about how we felt.
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Today's episode is sponsored by Element, a very tasty, electrolyte drink mix, and I want to read you a response that I got from one of our readers who started using Element recently.
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Okay, when I was thinking about some of the questions that your readers sent you, and I
listened to some of the questions that they asked on video too, there's one that really
stands out to me and I want to get your take on it. This question about how do you have money conversations in early dating stages without coming across
as rude or aggressive? And as a guy, I thought to myself, that's an interesting question because
I'm not particularly worried about coming off as rude. Well, I should be, I can be aggressive, but it would never occur to me, oh, I need to
not be intimidating or rude or aggressive.
So I asked my wife, I said, what do you think is behind this question?
She was, she just looked at me and rolled her eyes.
And, and, okay, I can see it in your eyes too, that you know, I didn't know.
She goes, time might be an important component.
Women often don't want to waste time if they are dating. Makes a lot of sense. Women
might not want to scare him away. And I said, keep going. I was asking her like, what
else? What else? And she said, you know, sometimes women aren't used to saying what they want
and being rewarded for it. I said, what do you mean? She said, well, think about how we're raised and socialized, you know, be polite, don't speak too loudly, et cetera.
So suddenly that question took on a whole new salience for me. The idea of how do I talk
about money without being rude or intimidating or aggressive? Have you gotten that question
and what is your take on what that question really means?
Well, firstly, you could take out the money part.
You could just leave that space blank
and take that exact question and ask it a thousand
different ways for women, which is,
how do I ask for a promotion without seeming rude
and aggressive? How do I talk about the promotion without seeming rude and aggressive?
How do I talk about the fact that I want a relationship
without seeming over the top and aggressive?
How do I, like there's so many things that if
the women have as a fear of asking that men don't,
men are boldness and even then look at the language shift
that I immediately shifted it to boldness when it was men.
Yeah, right.
There's this natural kind of,
well, if it's a guy doing it, then it's bold.
It's, you know, assertive.
I never worried about being bitchy.
Let's put it that way.
Never.
You just, you actually see it as a quality
that you admire in yourself is your ability to be no nonsense.
And ask for what you want.
And it's very often the moment it becomes a female question.
It gets accused of being all sorts of other things.
Difficult, high maintenance, crazy.
Over the top, aggressive, bitchy.
Like, there's all number of words that are designed to bring women back to a place of
acquiescence and being passive and just going with the flow. And you know, men to a large extent
in dating, not every guy, but there's a lot of men who rely on
That they they rely on that passive state because that passive state is actually how they get what they want
If I can convince you that you're being too
aggressive or
moving too quickly or
You know asking for too much then you might let me have my cake and eat it for longer.
What I want to do is keep seeing you with minimal cost to me and for it to be as easy as possible
and for it to be on my terms. And the moment you start asking for things,
you make my life less convenient. And I want it to be as convenient as possible.
And the greatest trick I can play on you is making you think that what you're asking life less convenient. And I want it to be as convenient as possible. And the greatest trick I can play on you
is making you think that what you're asking for
is unreasonable.
Because the last thing you wanna do
as a caring, nurturing kind human being
is be unreasonable.
So if I can convince you it's unreasonable,
then you're gonna go back to a state of acquiescence. I will have won that
bout or securely because now you're you're associating talking about your
needs, talking about your future, all things that men do all the time. They're
happy to they may not talk about their needs as much but many men are really
good at going out and getting their needs met. When it comes to the future, men plan well into
the future about what they want, right? You talk to look at any guy with a business
goal or with a fitness goal.
Fitness goal. Men are quite capable of looking into the future and delaying gratification
and planning and making a vision for themselves.
And then a woman comes along and says, hey, you know, what do you think about these things
and building this together or how we would discuss finances together or whatever.
And he's like, well, enough with the planning.
Right.
This is a lot of future talk.
Yeah.
So let's talk about how to have those conversations.
From your experience, whether it is about finances or I like our connection and I'm interested
in our relationship, how would somebody say, how do I have this conversation without coming
across as rude or aggressive?
If one of your clients asks you that, how do you respond to that?
You always have to go into a situation, any negotiation, really, or any statement of what you want.
From the fundamental framework of, this is about me, it's not about you, and I don't need you
for it. All I'm really doing is seeing if you're the person I do it with. So now I don't need you for it. All I'm really doing is seeing if you're the person I do it with.
So now I'm not coming from an aggressive place with you.
I'm just stating what I want for me.
I'm talking about the kind of relationship I would be really excited to be in.
I'm talking about the values that I think are really attractive when it comes to how people approach money. All I'm really doing is seeing what your reaction to those
things is. And that doesn't have to always be done in direct ways. It can be done in
very indirect ways. I saw an interview with Anthony Bourdain later in his life where he communicated that, you
know, he's at a stage in his life now where he doesn't want to go and do 12 course tasting
menus. He said, I'm, for me, where it's at right now, is a great bowl of noodles, you know,
on the side of a street somewhere. If you feed me that, I'm happy. He doesn't need to tell you his relationship
with money and food.
For you to know his relationship with money and food
from that little story.
And so what I think we all need to get better at
is rather than asking someone a question
that they don't know how to begin answering,
like what's your relationship with money?
Is there a way that I can communicate through story?
You know, I told you that the fact, you know,
the small thing about like when I was 26, 27,
I bought a nice watch because I'd always wanted a nice watch.
And these days, I wouldn't go and buy that again.
I'm not even wearing it now.
I still own it and I'm wearing a,
what, you know, this is a $150 watch
because it's just not where my head is at anymore.
And if I tell you that,
you already get a sense of what my priorities
and my values are around money,
just from me saying that.
And so what I think we need to do
is go in telling stories,
expressing values through just expressing our likes
and dislikes and then see how people respond to that.
And you're going to very quickly learn who they are from their response to those things.
Love that. I take two big lessons away that connect with me from that.
First, personally, I hate playing from a position of weakness.
I just hate it. I would rather play my own game.
And then, when the time is right, play from the top. And I remember something recently happened. My publisher was talking to me about
a deadline. When is this thing going to be ready? You know what I said to them? I said, at this point in
my career, I don't do deadlines. They were like, my agent got involved and all this stuff and they're like,
we need to, I go,
put whatever you want, it'll be done when it's done. To me, that is the ability to play
from a position of strength,
but when I started off, for example, my podcast,
I knew I didn't have strength, I was a nobody.
And starting the podcast, yeah, I had my own community,
but I didn't know anything about podcasts.
So I was like, we're just gonna do it our way.
When I hear your examples of,
if you play your own game,
you're naturally playing from a position of strength.
This is who I am.
This is what I like.
You're just playing your own game.
The second thing I learned from what you said
and I love is people are really attracted
to a powerful vision.
Someone who's really confident has vivid ideas
of what they love in their life.
So when you say, hey, this is what I love.
In my life, I would like to travel to these continents.
It gets me really excited when I'm able to do X
and bring my family to Y.
Gosh, whether the person agrees or not,
I think a lot of people get inspired by them.
So when you share that advice with your clients,
what would stop someone from walking into a day and say,
you know, this is who I am.
Doesn't mean it has to be you, but this is who I am.
Feeling like you have no leverage.
Let me put the question back on you for a moment,
when you were able to say that to your publisher,
like at this point in my career, I don't do deadlines.
And what you're really saying there is,
I've built my own life, I'm not about to suddenly
have someone from the outside dictating to me in this way,
but what gave you the,
the, what leverage gave you the confidence to feel like you could say that?
I do have leverage, it's true. I have written books, they've been successful, there's a track record,
and worst case, I just don't need to do this project.
So that, and I would say that, you know, someone can't necessarily replicate the first couple of things you said
because that comes from,
I'm in a bit of a power position
and I know you want this book.
But the last one is free totally to anyone.
If this doesn't work out, I don't need to take it.
It would be a great thing, but it's not your lifeline. And when people go into dates,
there is this sense for so many people of having no leverage. So you think they have leverage,
but they just don't realize it. You can create your own leverage by how you see life.
One of them could be kids. I really, I know want to have kids and I know I have a certain window to do that biologically and
That makes me feel like I have no power
Because the next person I'm on a date with I'm like it has to happen and it has to happen soon. So
I'm not in a power position. I have no leverage because I really want something from you
I need a person to have kids with and I
Therefore need you for this
there's and to have kids with. And I therefore need you for this. There's getting to a certain age
and feeling like my leverage is disappearing because I'm becoming invisible. And at a certain
point in life, and at certain age, who's going to want me? So there's that leverage, there's that
feeling of I need to say yes to whoever comes along now because every day that goes by, every day I get older, I lose my looks,
I lose my body, I have the stigma of being older, even psychologically in people's
eyes.
So, I'm losing my leverage.
People have the opposite feeling of gaining leverage.
They feel like especially women who feel like they're in a world that does not value
women who get older. It only values
women of a certain age. So how do you respond to that? You have to take case by case and say,
let's look at these individual things and say, what relationship are you going to have with
dating in general? What relationship are you gonna have with another person?
If it's kids, I was walking down the street
in New York with my publisher, Karen Renardi,
who is incredibly independent, fierce woman,
strong feminist, who when I said to her,
this is a real problem that women are giving up
all their leverage when it said to her, you know, this is a real problem that women are giving up all their leverage
when it comes to dating because they feel like they need a man to have kids. What do you suggest?
And she said, why on earth would you rely on someone else for something that is a life goal of yours?
If it's that big of a life goal, not saying if it's like a nice to have and you're like, you're now
going into the world of potentially single parenthood when it's not to have, and you're now going into the world of potentially single
parenthood when it's not something that was like an absolute must-have life going in the
first place.
But if it is, then her view was, why would you give that power to somebody else?
You can take all that power back. If you say that, okay, you know what?
And my opinion on this is really evolved
to a point where I think to myself,
what's the plan B that if that happens,
I'm absolutely ready to make the new plan A.
If I don't meet someone and have kids by certain age with someone, I am going to do it myself through a
surrogate, or I'm going to do IVF myself, or I'm going to look into
freezing my eggs, because at least that might buy me some time and
some options. There might be a certain point in my life where I say,
if it hasn't happened by now, I will do it myself. And that's my plan B.
And there's a plan C after that, if that can't happen. You know,
if I find out I can't have kids, what's my plan C? Am I going to adopt? Am I going to
see this in a different light altogether? You always have to have. In any part of life, you have
to have a plan B that you're willing to make the new plan A and that's not a cop out. That's not
settling. That's your way of saying, I am invincible because I can be happy if this doesn't happen.
I can take Plan B and invest in it to the point where it absolutely is the new plan A,
and it's better than my original plan A ever would have been.
I was watching the South Park documentary six days to air, where they talk about, you know,
South Park has the shortest production run of any animated series.
And they have six days between coming up with the concept and literally delivering it
to the network, which is extraordinary for something that not only has to be story-borded
but then animate it.
And it's funny because Trey Parker and Matt Stone were talking about the fact that, you
know, they have a show that we live in a cancel culture where you would think that South
Park would have been canceled a thousand times by now, but they joked that they kind of
grandfathered into the status of being able to say whatever they want. But they said they're
always ready to be canceled. And the Trey Parker said, you know, we love fishing, the fishing rods are in the car.
If, if, if it ever goes wrong, if we ever get cancelled, if they ever say, hey guys,
uh, you went too far, we're pulling the show, they said, the fishing rods are in the car.
We're always ready to go move out to the lake and fish and be happy doing so. So,
in dating, the way you create leverage is that you can start with the leverage of,
it doesn't need to be this person.
I'm not the luckiest person alive
that I found this one attractive person who likes me.
Yeah.
There are going to be others.
If one person thinks you're attractive,
by definition, many people are capable of finding you attractive.
Because no one's that individual and that unique
that you just happen to me in a world of now 8 billion people,
you happen to meet the one that could have been attracted
to you that you're also attracted to.
That is insane.
There are other people.
Your leverage is not only that there are other people,
but also that your leverage is,
I don't want anything that doesn't feel right.
If I was in a relationship with someone who tramples all over me,
who can't meet my needs, who doesn't care about my needs,
that's worse.
Anyone who's been in that situation for long enough
ultimately always comes to the same conclusion that it's worse
than going out there and trying your hand of finding something better.
Even if that's something better,
is holding on to who you are and your friendships
and your own identity and not obliterating yourself
in the name of staying with someone who doesn't respect you.
I think about feelings.
You say it doesn't feel good, it doesn't feel right.
I'm not sure I would have known what felt right
when I was younger.
Actually, I'm not even sure if I know now.
I wasn't really taught how to feel.
In fact, if you ask me, what does that feel like to you?
I would have given you, I think blank, blank, blank.
A lot of men do that when they come on my podcast.
I go, how does it feel?
They go, well, I think, I go, no, no, no, no, no, no.
I said, how does it feel?
It doesn't come naturally to me.
I've had to train myself a lot.
I've had to learn a lot.
I find myself, I have to rely on crude guidelines
sometimes where I go, remember, it's not about thinking, it's about feeling, and I have
to try to physically tap into it.
I look at my wife, it's just, she's operating on a different level, you know?
It would, it's just so natural, and she can connect things that would take me 25 years to do.
So when you say it doesn't feel right, can you just explain one, how do we know if it feels right?
And two, as a guy, how do you connect to your feelings? Because as I said, it did not come naturally to me.
Yeah, it's a great question. It didn't come naturally.
Well, it came naturally to me in some ways.
I've always been an emotional person,
and a sensitive person.
You cry when I text you sometimes.
I like that.
Yes, I do, I do, but not for the right reasons.
Yes.
I can cry easily.
Really?
Can you cry on command? No, no, no, no, no. I can really can you cry on command?
No, no, no, no, I wish I could do that so much.
I saw this video, it's around on the internet somewhere.
They have a filmmaker, he puts somebody sitting down,
they're on an oddly enough beach and he turns on a clock
and they just try to start crying.
So there's like a man and he's just like squinting,
you know, can't cry.
Two minutes go by nothing. Another guy, another guy, fourth person is a woman. She sits down like
she just shrugs and then like seven seconds later she starts crying. This is one of my favorite
videos on the internet. So then I said to my wife, can you cry? Like on command. And she was like, I don't know if I can cry on
command, but sometimes you just need a good cry. I was like, say that again. What? What?
You sometimes you need to the last time I cried. I mean, it's probably got to be one of
those movies. You know, at the end of the movie where the general is saluting and there's
like rain coming down and there's like rain coming down
and there's like all this military brass
and the bad, why am I crying?
I don't know, just a tear.
Just a tear.
Just a tear.
One tear.
And then I go, ah, stop it, stop it.
She goes, sometimes you need a good cry.
I was like, what?
Yeah.
But, tell me, so you can't cry on command.
No, I can't do that, but I do.
It doesn't take a lot to make me cry
Okay, and the feelings the part about what does it feel right? How do we know if it feels right? What does that mean?
well, I
How does it know if it feels right? I think that we have to try to tap into
Look, there's a couple of things to say on this. If we've not ever really known how something should feel,
then we have a problem because we don't even know
what feeling we're supposed to be looking for.
We don't necessarily know that anything is wrong.
Sometimes for me, feeling was getting an A plus in school.
That's right.
Honestly, that's what feeling was was achievement. And I think
that's actually quite good. I think it's great. That's why, you know, we dominate in grades,
but you miss an element of the emotional connection. Yes. And that can be hard to connect to if you're
out of practice.
And there are people, if you take relationships,
there are people that have been in toxic relationships for so long,
that they have how a relationship should feel is a distant memory,
or it's not even one that they relate to.
It's more habits like we're going to sit down
and we're going to start sniping at each other and arguing.
That's what they know.
Yeah, and then people who have grown up in a certain environment, in a certain household, that's
also all they know.
If it can be hard to tap into, even just to believe that different kind of feeling or
a different kind of relationship is possible, can be hard if you've been in a certain situation
for so long. And it's why it's really important to build relationships,
to build friendships, to have mentors that are different to you and who experience different things
are in different kinds of relationships. Because one of the gateways out of our little prison of
thought and feeling is to see that the world is bigger
than our experience of it. And the other people are, oh, you always have to have a curiosity
that says, why is that relationship less fraught? Why is my friend's relationship not
one of constant exhaustion.
Right, why do they never complain about the things
that we always complain about?
You know what I think the beautiful thing about feelings is,
and I say this again as somebody who was not really raised
to talk about my feelings,
but now I feel much more connected than I was before,
and I also see how much work I have to do.
When I talk to couples where one
person, usually the man, is disconnected from his feelings. And he's just like arms across,
not into it. What I find beautiful is that even he who has not practiced connecting to emotions
has probably not had a good experience in the last 10 years
when we go through a role play and I encourage his partner to say something really nice all the caveats aside all the all the kind of comments aside
just something really genuine and what they appreciate about their partner almost always
He smiles and
almost always, he smiles. And he's connected.
And what that tells me is deep down,
we all have this ability innately to connect to our feelings.
We know when something feels good.
We know, we all remember a teacher we had that made us feel inspired,
that made us feel supported.
We all remember when maybe we saw someone who looked at us in a certain way,
and we felt good, but gosh, it is hard to stay in that practice.
Everyone has something they connect to and they may not be good at going there, which is
why every time you notice something that makes you feel something, you should take a moment,
pull out your phone, pull out the notes and just write down what's happening right now
that's making me feel
something. Everyone has it. It's a bit like, what is it for you? Oh my gosh. Let's do good and bad.
Oh, many. Let's do emotional. I write them down all the time. Anytime something makes me feel
something, especially if I want to feel it again, I write it down. Really? So you just have a note
to yourself. What would be an example? I called them emotional buttons. Any time, like recently I was doing my virtual retreat
and there was a part of me,
part of me beforehand is always like,
oh my God, this is a marathon.
You know, this is so much.
And then I had a thought where I was like,
you know what's really cool?
It's a month stage for like 30 hours of speaking,
or more or less over the course of these three days on the virtual retreat.
And I really speaking is my craft.
That's what, that is, if anything is my craft speaking.
Yeah.
And I thought, oh, this is so cool this weekend.
And I thought this naturally, I didn't even try to think it.
I just, it was a thought that popped into my head.
I went, oh, this is 30 hours locked of practice for my craft. That's amazing.
And that became like, I felt when I heard that internally, I felt something. I was like,
all of a sudden I got excited. That's this. About doing it. Instead of seeing it as this giant,
like, oh my God, I have this huge thing coming up. And, you know, as much as I love it, it's so much work.
And so I went, I'm logging 30 hours.
I'm going into the dojo this weekend.
And I'm logging 30 hours of training.
And that became an emotional button for me that connected to me to my feeling.
So it was a way of, you know, PFA, physiology, focus action.
That became, in the F column, it became a way
of orienting my focus in order to create a feeling that I wanted to be able to access
again. And then the third one is action. Well, you know, the rich role has a great phrase
which is mood follows action. And if you can, there are certain things that you know if
you do them, you will reliably create a feeling.
And that's why I tell couples to start their rich life review with a compliment, a compliment
about money because it is so unnatural to be positive about money.
But when you start it, the feelings follow. And then it becomes a habit. And that, by the way, is a really important role in life.
Anytime something does that for you.
You have to remember it.
You have to write it down and keep a record
of the things that when you do them, they worked.
And you're glad you did them, because you can trust that.
What you can't trust is the you before doing it.
I've left Jiu-Jitsu one day and that's kind of become my hobby outside of work.
I left it one day and I felt so good.
I was walking down the street and I remember saying to myself, oh, I have to do this every
day.
This is, and now I have to do this every day.
Now, I don't do it every day, but I do it
around three times a week.
But I remember leaving thinking, I have to do this a lot
because this made me feel so good.
Now, I can tell you, rarely do I feel like going
to jujitsu before I go.
Rarely.
But I can't trust that guy.
The guy who wakes up in the morning
and has to put on his ghee and drive to jujitsu,
I can't trust that guy because he will say anything
to get out of having to do this thing.
Even though he likes it.
Yeah, but he's not even connected to the fact
that he likes it right now.
It's just an obligation. It's just an obligation.
It's just an obligation.
Every time I do it, afterwards, I lay on the floor and everyone lays on the mat and does a
five-minute meditation, which by the way is our focus if you look at it in the PFA model.
But every time I sit down for that, I lay down for that five-minute, minute meditation,
I feel like, oh my god, I'm so glad I did this.
This feels so good.
I feel so good.
So it's really important to recognize, doesn't have to be something as obvious as exercise.
It could be, you know, I remember sending a really positive note to someone in my life
who had just gone through a breakup.
And I sent her a note saying,
like, I just wanna let you know, I'm here for you
and I know how hard this can be.
And she was so grateful.
Yeah.
And it made me feel so good to have sent that message.
And yet so often, it feels like one more chore
to add to the thing, to like have to reach out
and check in with someone or whatever.
That's another one of those things where mood follows action, showing up for someone
in my life isn't necessarily something I want to do before I do it.
But after I do it, I feel so much more connected in life.
Well, you and Audrey did that just the other day and it meant a lot to me.
You know, I was doing my book talk here in LA for my journal, two of you came out, you
had to drive to get there.
It meant a ton that you came out.
And I remember that.
I think we all remember what it feels like to be supported.
100% a friend of mine.
Yeah, someone said to me, Jesse Itzler said to me, if someone loses someone,
if someone dies in their life,
and you don't reach out to them,
they won't easily forget that you didn't reach out.
I remember about, you remember the positive things,
but you also remember the negative things.
And hopefully over time, you can focus more on the positive.
But just as the recipient of that support, it meant a ton.
I love that. And it's beautiful to hear it because you never know how much it means to someone
unless they tell you. But the gift of it is that it also made us feel connected because we're
showing up for a friend. And we're there and it's not our event. And we're sitting in the audience
like everybody else and watching you do your thing.
And we left that event and we felt more connected.
And I think that, you know, Audrey, Audrey has really helped me with this because I know
that since being with Audrey, I've invested more in the people in my life because I watch
the way she invests in the people in her life.
And I think that as men, we're not always,
some men are much better at it than others.
I certainly have men in my life who are much better at it than me,
and I always have been.
But I fall into the category of it wasn't something that I was a natural at.
It's not taught to men, right?
When you look at who's doing the emotional labor of staying in touch with families
and organizing holiday travel and birthday gifts, someone's never the man in a heterosexual relationship.
Right. And look, it gets really complex because you can say, is that because men just naturally
are not geared to do that stuff or have they been socialized that way because men have learned that they're
not rewarded for how connected they are in life. They're rewarded for how much they achieve
or how much their ability to go and get things and make things and, you know, just build
things and make things happen in their life and be dominant.
And I think the word they use is for money is provide.
Provide?
I asked them what makes a man he and they always say
provide I provide and you know I take care of the my wife or my family
Yeah, and I go well if you're not doing that sometimes they get laid off or something happens
I go who are you then and they are stumped right not day
I shouldn't say they we because if I was not providing
say they, we, because if I was not providing, what would I be? And that becomes for men, especially, it often becomes an existential crisis when they lose their career. Weirdly, guys who do go through
that actually might have a shot at being happier because it forces them to reassess their weapons.
Because the old weapons are no longer going to work because they can't walk into a room now
and feel like the richest guy in the room.
It makes you turn to the things that don't cost money
as a form of connection and valuing things differently.
That point, you actually get a shot at connecting more.
This is the thing that is a real problem for men in general,
is that so many of us, we walk through life
completely disconnected.
And so if I were to ask, what is your three friends who you go to when times are tough?
I would say 75% of the guys I talk to would be like, I don't have three.
And even if they had them, they'd be like,
yeah, but I wouldn't have that conversation.
No, I would text them and send them a funny link,
but it wouldn't be that.
And if they asked me how I'm doing,
I might say, I'm going through a tough time right now,
but it's all good.
Yeah.
You know, they're not having the kind of conversation of,
let me call my friend tonight and sit on the phone
for half an hour and tell him that I'm really struggling
and I'm feeling insecure right now
and I feel like I've lost my confidence. The old ways that I used to feel good about myself
no longer working and I feel lost, they're not saying that stuff. And so there is this, there is
this terrible, you know, there's plenty of ways that you could argue it's better to be a man
than a woman. Right. When even by women's reasoning, there's plenty of ways you could say,
you know, men have it easier, men have it better. But I don't think this is one of them.
I think the disconnection that men feel and the loneliness that men feel and the way that they
they kind of drift from anything that
is not transactional or tactical is
creates a hard existence for men in their head. This example of
men being emotionally disconnected. I think is a
very powerful
insight for men to understand how hard it is to go against how we've been raised.
So, for example, I know a lot of guys who go, I don't understand why it's so hard to just talk
about money for women. Why don't they just bring it up? Why are you worried about being aggressive?
Just talk about it. And my wife will go, well, we're raised to not talk about money. We're not rewarded for being that assertive as you are.
And a lot of guys are like, well, that's your problem.
Just talk about it.
But when you flip it and you say, well, why don't you guys just emotionally connect with
your bros?
They're like, what the hell are you talking about?
I think what we need to understand is we are raised in a context.
We are raised with certain cultural values rewarded.
There are also many differences biologically, et cetera.
And it's not enough to simply say, just do that.
It's not enough, it's really hard.
And I think this example of men disconnecting
is accessible for us, because I bet every guy I know would agree to some extent that it's
hard to emotionally connect.
And everything in your life, you know, for most people these days, I would argue everything
in their life is pulling them away from that kind of emotional connection, because it's
trying to get you to care about shit that doesn't matter.
I have plenty of stress in my life right now now and I have things that I'm trying to figure out and you know I've got a lot of different things happening
at the same time and you know this week I've been a bit overwhelmed and and us sitting here
and having this conversation which feels for me very connected is a way out.
So this is the solution for all men is to start a podcast.
That's pretty much how men connect these days.
I didn't know everyone's already done that.
I know.
Well, this is left.
Every human is like the only one left.
And then I even started one.
I was like, shit.
You know, it gives me a moment of access to something deeper,
which is, yeah, you and I felt like it was a great idea
to do a podcast together. But now I'm like it was a great idea to do a podcast together but now i'm in it and i'm having a conversation i'm like oh this is this feels meaningful and this feels like i'm accessing truth and
i don't feel that when i'm scrolling through instagram i don't feel that when i'm worried that i'm not doing enough for not getting enough for the numbers on enough, or it is connecting to those truths. And we need more things in our life that make us do that.
Yeah, there's this running joke that men need an excuse
to get together.
That's why they golf.
And I find it to actually be quite true.
I rarely take a guy's trip, rarely.
And we've talked about this.
Like we should do a guy's trip, but it rarely happens.
And so what I have observed and my solution is, okay, of course, I would love to take more
guys trips. We definitely should, but at every occasion where I can get together any excuse,
I'm going to take it. Burk days, let's do it. Anniversary, well not anniversary,
we're not going to all grow out on that one,
but other examples where we can, totally.
And so sometimes I think it's just,
no matter how independent or assertive you are,
it's hard to fight against culture sometimes.
It's difficult to get a bunch of guys together
unless there's an excuse.
Okay, fine, let's find an excuse.
That's been my solution.
I think that's a good hack.
And look, you've said something important
which is it's hard to fight against culture, right?
But what you have to do is be brave enough
to just, almost empirically, just go,
what works for me?
What makes me feel something?
And then even if it's not within my culture, let me just listen to that.
Totally agree.
What makes me feel something?
Because I can be guided by that instead of the kind of insecurity of, but my culture
doesn't do that.
You almost just want to forget the insecurity, just tap into what makes me feel a thing that I like feeling.
It sounds so simple, but when you pay attention to those things and then you make a note of them,
you can almost trust in repeating that. You don't even need to know why.
Just repeat them.
Me and Audrey left your birthday and we we, you know, we've felt really
lucky to be invited to be part of that weekend celebration.
And this is, you asked me for what's an example of like an emotional button. I wrote down.
And I'd read, I know this because I read it two days ago. I went back. I have a whole folder
of emotional buttons. And two days ago, I sat in front I have a whole folder of emotional buttons, and two days ago,
I sat in front of my computer and I was feeling quite down and overwhelmed. And I said,
let me just return to my emotional buttons, let me just return to the things that make me feel good.
And under the things that make me feel really good, I put Remete Trip.
Wow.
Because that, I, and that, by the way, that trip came at a very busy time for me
in Orgry. It wasn't easy for us to get there and to do it. We had to change a lot and in changing a lot,
we were like, holy shit, we've got a lot going on and a, you know, by the time we get back or we
going to be overwhelmed, we felt all of that. But we did the trip and then we left and we had met so many, we had spent
quality time with you. We met your amazing family. We got quality time with the people
you love and we both left so filled up, like really filled up. We felt like connected.
And I remember I had that same feeling I got after jujitsu. I went, oh, I need to do this
like this is important.
Those things are so rare, aren't they?
Those feelings you get, unless you engineer them.
They don't have to be.
You can engineer them.
And when I hear you sharing that you keep
a list of emotional buttons,
it just makes me, first of all, I realize I have that too.
I bookmarked my favorite inspirational articles or videos.
And sometimes when I'm feeling down, I bookmarked my favorite inspirational articles or videos and sometimes when I'm feeling
down, I go back to that.
Sometimes when I need to write something moving in a way that I'm not psychologically there,
I connect through that.
It also makes me realize that the best people I know, the people who are really masters
of their craft, they just take copious notes on whatever is important to them, right? Whether it's emotional buttons,
I have a story toolbox technique. I'm keeping great stories that I hear from people and I use
them in other places. And so when it comes to money, what would the equivalent be? What
should couples be thinking about in terms of keeping notes of what matters to them or
what moves them.
How would you apply it to money in a relationship?
Oh, it's perfect for that because the one thing that doesn't get us out of bed really is
a number and the clinical kind of going and working hard just to add zeros to the bank account.
But when you're connected, like I, look, there was a guy that once came
on my retreat years ago, his father had died in a tragic accident. He worked in a country
side on a farm in England. He had a tall business, a power tall business, and the barn
collapsed in on his father and his father died. And when this son came to my retreat,
he was grieving his father.
But on top of grieving his father,
he had inherited this power tools business
that he had absolutely no interest in.
And he felt that it would be dishonoring his father
to simply sell it in a fire say,
or just liquidate it because he felt like his father had put years into it and that it still had potential.
But he also wasn't passionate about it.
And I said to him, well, what would actually excite you? It's funny because now that I remember
this story, it feels like something you would have said.
But I said to him, what would excite you?
And he said, well, I don't know,
I just, the truth is, the business just takes up so much time
and it requires so much of me and I would need to automate it
in order to be able to actually step away from it
and so on.
And it was all sounding so clinical.
And I said, okay, so what, forget the,
I get that you need to automate it.
That's part of the strategy.
But what actually excites you?
And he said, well, I really love California.
This was a guy living in England.
I really love California.
And I would love to be able to like,
work in California
in the sunshine and I said, okay, well what?
You know, he said, but you know, he kept feeding excuses.
Like, but you know, that I don't even have a visa
and I couldn't do that.
So I said, okay, just this rewind for a moment.
And by the way, this is very personal to me
because I used to dream of living in America
when I was a teenager long before I ever knew how the hell I would get here.
And I learnt very early on that you have to just crowbar your way into your dreams and into
the things that you want more of in your life.
And I said to him, we'll look, what if we just could get you two weeks in California, six
months from now, where you'd be working?
I said, where, like describe to me where you're working?
And he said, well, I guess I'm in a cafe,
I'm outside, I'm working.
Very vivid, I love this.
Yeah, yeah, he said, I'm close to the beach
and I'm on my laptop.
And guys live in in Venice, California,
I know exactly where he's picturing.
And he was like, can still do stuff for the business, but I'm doing it from my laptop in this
cafe. And I said, look, why don't we book those plane tickets? Like, it's six months from now.
Yeah. You don't need to automate the whole business in order to be able to do that. All you need
to do is automate it to the point where it buys you two weeks,
not to be where you normally are.
You can still do things for the business.
You said to me, you don't mind that.
So we'll still do things for the business,
but from a distance, I said,
can we get you two weeks?
And he said, I think I can do that.
I think I can make two weeks happen.
I said, great, let's book the flight today.
And every time you're working,
every time you're doing those what are very boring things to have to automate the business,
I want you to think about the cafe in California. And that's not some pipe dream of in years from
now. I'll be in some cafe in California. No, no, no, no. In six months, you're going to be doing
that and everything you do right now is contributing to those two weeks. And by the way, if you can get
yourself to, you can get yourself for. Once you've done the two, everything that you will have done
to get yourself those two will be in service of the next time you do it where you get yourself three or three and a half.
So, to me, what we did was we took a situation which was,
I've inherited a company I don't want,
I have to do the boring work of trying to automate it.
This is not my life, I don't want it.
I'm working in some dreary place that I don't want to be working in.
All of which was never going to inspire him.
We created an emotional button.
Yeah, I love that.
Out of this scenario that was very real.
You created, you helped him visualize his rich life.
You lowered the stakes.
You don't have to move to California just two weeks.
You had him buy the ticket, taking action, and then you gave him a Y.
Now, when you go back to work on
Monday, you are working towards something. It reminds me of a principal, one of my mentors,
Jay Abraham taught me of how to turn a weakness into a strength. It seems like a simple concept,
but I've found it to be very profound. And if I think about dating, sometimes I just think about
how to reposition something.
You know, people come to me and they talk about their money.
And sometimes they have a lot of money,
but they feel bad about it.
And one of the questions I asked to turn a weakness
into a strength is, what would it feel like
if it were easy?
What would it feel like if it were easy?
So sometimes if they have money, they go,
well, I wouldn't agonize over the price
at Safeway. Okay, what else? Well, my money would be invested automatically. Okay, what else?
We wouldn't fight. What? And notice they say we wouldn't do X. I say, what would you do?
We always want to focus on the affirmative behavior. If we think about the dating world, I remember a frame, a way of thinking about
going on dates that I didn't do it intentionally, but it just came to me. And I just remember
this thing I used to tell myself, I was living in New York, I was single, and I would say,
I'm going to have fun tonight. One way or another, I'm going to have fun. I hope that my
date has fun. I think if I have fun, they'll have fun. I hope that my date has fun.
I think if I have fun, they'll have fun.
And I get to go to a cool cocktail bar.
That was it.
I knew I was gonna have a great time.
And I think that attitude can be infectious.
If you're gonna have a good time,
they're gonna have a good time.
I remember a Navy SEAL, he wrote this thing where he said,
when other people do pushups, they get tired.
When I do push-ups, I get stronger.
That's great, isn't it?
I just think, wow, what would it look like if it were easy?
If I have to do 200 push-ups,
I need to get my mind right
because it can't be something that I go,
oh, if I have to go on 100 dates,
it can't be something where I go,
oh, because that's infectious.
So what would it look like if you were easy?
What would it look like if I were really enjoying this?
That kind of reframe can be so powerful.
And it's not, I think what's important about that
is it's not some kind of fake reframe
that you're trying to sell yourself on,
but your brain is going, yeah, okay.
Yeah, you know it, you know it, if it's a fake one.
The ones you just said are both, they resonate with me as well, your cell phone but your brain is going, yeah, okay. Yeah, you know it. You know it if it's a fake one.
The ones you just said are both, they resonate with me as well because they're real.
Yours was, I'm gonna get 30 hours of time on stage, log it.
You even had the word log it.
That's real.
Now to someone else, it would make no sense.
They're not trying to log any hours, but to you, it is intensely personal.
Which is what makes emotional buttons. So kind of, that's what makes
them work is that they're very, they're very personal. Yeah. And it's not to say that your
emotional button wouldn't work for somebody else. It might work for someone like you, but
often, like, if you were to read my emotional buttons folder, it would be embarrassing for me because they're very specific and they're very weirdly nuanced towards me and my associations.
But that, you know, that idea of when I do push ups, I'm getting stronger.
That's real.
That's real to that person.
That's real, yeah.
And even your dating one, it resonates with me because it's like, it doesn't feel like it's a,
you're not selling yourself on some nonsense.
It really is, if you just looked at it that way
and you said, what's the worst that I get from this?
I get to go out, tell some jokes.
I like New York, I like going to cool venues
and checking them out.
If every day I picked a new cool venue that I didn't know before, then I even just ticked
the box of getting to know my city better.
On top of that, I am going to get to, I'm getting a night out in the city and I'm going
to interact with someone.
Have a great conversation.
Exactly.
That really is a win.
And the fact that you took it, it
doesn't surprise me that you're able to recontextualize dating through that lens because
of that. There's something that Tim Ferris says that I really liked, which is that if
you can create multiple wins for one thing, then it's kind of like you can't lose. If what you did there was you created multiple wins
to be had out of going on dates,
I get to know my city better,
I get to go to a cool cocktail bar,
I'm just gonna have, I need a break from work.
So hey, whatever happens, this is a break from work.
Like you can find multiple wins.
Then if the win that I've meet someone I really like doesn't happen,
you've already had four wins out of it anyway.
I think the same way about writing my book right now,
I'm on book two, I know that there's some part of me egoically
that wants to do really well,
but I also have multiple wins that I'm getting out of this.
I'm getting to be a better writer by writing a book.
I am able to pull more of myself into this one than ever before. That feels like a win. I'm ingraining a ritual that's making me more disciplined, being forced to get to know my own
content better by writing it because it's forcing me to go back to videos I haven't watched in a
long time and reconnect with them and be like, how true is that still?
Do I want to adapt it?
Do I want to amend it?
So my speaking is on fire right now
because I'm so close to the content.
So it's actually making me a better speaker.
All of these things are wins regardless of whether that
book goes on to be a best set.
Exactly.
The outcome is independent.
Yeah.
Let's take that principle of recontextualizing.
And let's take a couple. Let's say, in your case, she comes to you and she says,
we fight about money a lot. Every time we talk, it's a fight. It's never positive. And we both
walk away resentful. What are some ways that you can recontextualize that relationship with money?
I think that is essential to understand why is this happening this way?
Let's just do a role play. I'll be that person and you be you. And I'm saying that my partner,
every time we talk about money, we fight. And I just hate it.
And I don't want to talk about money, but I know that we need to, because I don't feel good.
When you talk about money, what creates the fight?
Where in the conversation does the friction begin?
Right away.
Immediately, one of us will bring something up, and it's about how my partner spent too much,
or my partner will say, why did you do that?
And I just feel this tension in my chest. and it's about how my partner spent too much or my partner will say, why'd you do that?
And I just feel this tension in my chest.
So the tension can come from both sides.
It doesn't just come from them.
Sometimes it comes from you.
Usually it comes because my partner will ask me a question
and I just feel put on the spot.
I feel like I'm being interrogated.
Sometimes I feel like a child I have to answer
what my partner asks. So is that because right now you feel a lack of independence when it comes to
your money that there's that you feel like a child because you feel like you have to
answer for everything all the time? I feel like my partner doesn't trust me.
for everything all the time. I feel like my partner doesn't trust me.
Right.
And I get the, I'm the recipient of that lack of trust.
And when you go to that place where you don't feel trusted,
which can be an infantilizing position
to be in the first place, is that I'm not trusted.
Yeah.
It's like, did you clean your room?
Right.
I'm an adult.
But in your reaction to that is actually a beautiful opportunity to step into that adult
role.
But right now, your reaction to it, you're actually stepping into the child's state by your reaction to it. So when you go,
when they don't trust you and all of a sudden you tighten up and you start yelling,
you're immediately that teenage state that they've put you in, you're playing the role.
So how do I change it? This is actually a really interesting opportunity to see what your relationship is really made
of and what it's really worth by changing the way you react to it and playing with the
way you react to it.
But asking yourself, what would an adult that I really value, I really respect, someone,
you know, pick a woman or a man that you think is awesome that you
think would handle this very differently. Captain John Luke Picard done okay I keep trying
to get my wife to watch Star Trek and she's like I don't need to watch that Chewbacca
stuff I'm like oh my god okay that's a problem that's a we have a larger discussion we're
gonna do some coaching on that after this but go. I want to come back to that. Captain Picard guide me. So you're Captain Picard.
Well, how would that person react? I mean, how would Captain Picard
call it react? First of all, anyone listening, I know everything about Captain Picard. Captain
Picard crosses legs, pull down his uniform, and he would be sitting with his Earl Grey tea and he would say,
I would really like to understand where you come from when you talk about money with me.
Captain Picard would not wait. He would not react.
When yell. He would never yell. He would become and he would be the one initiating the conversation because he's a leader.
Wow, I never thought of that.
I guess I just assumed that if it's about money, I have to be the one answering the questions
instead of being the one initiating the conversation. So the leadership that you want to be given credit for is something you have to model
in the way that you respond. And that then will teach you whether your partner is just responding to
to a teenage energy that you're going into,
or whether they're not willing to allow you
or they don't think they want you in that adult role. And that's a whole different conversation.
If you are coming as the leader,
if you're coming from a strong place,
and then they still try to infantilize you. That's no
opportunity for a secondary conversation, which is, hey, the way that you're
speaking to me is not appropriate given the way I'm coming to you. Meeting you as an
equal, you know, we neither one of us want to be in a relationship where we
don't trust or we're
not trusted. So how do we get to a place where there's real trust, which is a straight-up
pick hard line? That's right. I love this. The point is that if you were able to reframe
this situation with your partner as, oh, this is actually a, like, this, you know, the Marcus Rillius phrase, the obstacle is the way.
This is a chance to make this obstacle, the catalyst for growth in your relationship and to
actually use it and to become a social experimenter in your own relationship.
What happens if I react in a new way that my partner isn't used to?
What happens if I speak from a different place?
What happens if I'm more curious?
What happens if I lead instead of just react?
That's a chance for you to grow.
It's a chance for you to step into the very role that you're accusing someone of robbing you of.
And it's actually a chance to see
whether your partner really can respect you.
Because right now you may not be giving them
the kind of behavior that is creating that respect.
But if you give them their behavior
that creates that respect in the dynamic and
they still try to put you down in certain ways or control you in certain ways that you
are not, you know, you shouldn't put up with, well now you have a bigger conversation to
having your relationship, but that's now you are going to see what your relationship
is really made of.
And that's a huge, huge, that's an important thing to know.
I love the questioning and the curiosity you brought to that in that roleplay.
How are you reacting? What does it feel like?
Feels does it feel infantilizing? And it allowed me the person in that example to really connect
with it. And also to realize, I play a part in that as well.
I play a part in the way I'm reacting
and for you then to connect with me and say,
who would you like to be?
Sometimes it's as simple as just asking,
who do you wanna be?
What is your rich life?
Where do you wanna go?
What would you like your dynamic to be?
I think sometimes we get so caught up in
what we don't want to do that we
forget about what we do want to do.
So that was a very powerful reframe.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I had a little phase in my life where, because I had a little bit of money in my pocket,
I was like, I always wanted to do the best version of everything.
Yeah, yeah.
Like it was always about, you know, what's even if it was like
kind of tough to do financially, I was like, no, no, no, but I don't want to go unless I do this
version. Yeah. And then I would see, you know, certain people that I knew and loved. And they were
having so much fun doing their version of it, which wasn't even, it wasn't anywhere near my version of it, and they were having so much fun and they were so connected. And, and it was a real lesson
for me because I was just like, it's not that I don't think it's ever worth doing the
best version of things. You and I both were the same way in that we really, we really
value when people do things at an exceptional level. You and I think very similarly in that way.
But I'm always careful these days not to confuse that with knowing that I can also have an amazing
time doing a different version of it. And you know, I, this one of the things I love about my
partner orjury is that we, I can say, let's go do this thing.
And she'll be like, yeah, that, you know, like, that's so much. We could, you know, why
don't we just go and do this? It'll be so much fun. And she presents, it's like she almost
presents me with an option, just not that I need it anymore. But in case there's some
part of me that thinks that I need to do this over the top thing. She's like, no, no,
no, but we can have all of that by doing this thing.
Yeah. And connecting with the purpose. And if you want to do it in this level, great.
But it's not this. Yeah, but we can still achieve all of these things without that. And
I may still, and there are plenty of occasions where I still, to her rolling of the eyes,
go, now, I want the best. I'm go, now we're gonna do this crazy thing.
And she rolls her eyes and we're like, she's like,
okay, fine.
But that's also a beauty in and of itself, right?
Because that is what you are looking for.
And what she doesn't do is go,
well, I think that's a really bad use of,
you know, she doesn't then fight me on that
because she's like, oh, I get it.
In this moment, for the right reasons.
He values doing this thing.
See, to be able to have conversations like that,
especially over the course of a lifetime with questions like,
what car should we buy?
Where should we live?
What kind of housing, private school or public school for children,
pay for their college travel,
et cetera.
There's so many big questions.
You have to be pretty savvy.
You can wing it.
You can talk about how you feel, and that's okay,
but from my perspective, talking about a rich life,
you also have to be pretty skilled with your numbers,
because these are big questions.
You can't just buy a house on feelings.
It's got to be, hey, do we know our ratios?
Do we have our conscious spending plan? And so to be able to master all of these things, it's almost like a chef.
It's not enough to know how to cut a vegetable. That's great. You need that. You also need
to know the heat on the stove and how are we timing this? And do we have the right plates?
It's just beautiful ballet of everything coming together. And when you finally do it,
you both come up with a vision that is your perfect dish made for the two of you.
And you look at it all the work that went into cooking that dish, all the skills necessary,
the tools you brought, and you look at it. And maybe it doesn't look the most appealing to somebody
on the outside, but it's perfect for the two of you.
Yeah, and that's what I've always loved about what you teach is that it's very, very focused
in the same way that I talk about emotional buttons as being very personal.
You talk about a rich life as being a very, very personal intimate experience and knowing
as a couple, what does that mean to you? It can be completely different
to what it means to anyone else. I mean, at its core, for me, I know I can live with a
downsize in where I live. I know that if I had to, I could like strip most things back. Yeah.
Wait, what, but you, what could you not strip back that expensive watch?
No, I don't care. I could sell all the watch.
I like to nice watches.
I could sell them tomorrow.
I don't care that much.
I, I think the freedom to eat what I want to eat.
Well, that's a good one.
I food is so important to me.
I love it so much. That's a really good one. I food is so important to me. I love it so much. So really good one. So I
what about your gym? It would be very sad if I couldn't eat delicious food. The gym,
yes, but but I'd be happy to just do a version of it that was free. Okay. I wouldn't need to,
you know, I could do, I could work out my own circuit and do it that way. So I could give up that
if I had to.
I can't, I'm trying to think of what I would not be willing to give up.
I, if I didn't have the freedom to travel, that would, that would bother me.
Like if you had to really make compromises on when to go or how often to go somewhere.
Well, you know, there's always the excitement. I love, I love travel and I love food. And I love
the idea that, you know, let's go to New Orleans this weekend. And just even if it's for two
dates, let's just go see a new city, you know, let's go and experience the food in Charleston. Let's go and, you know, like, I, that, I live for that.
That's so, that's, that's my idea of fun.
So I would want to still be able to do that.
But, but,
I'm not going to talk about that.
I've accumulated over time.
When I really strip it back,
I don't need, I actually don't need that much.
I really don't.
It's kind of illuminating to realize that.
Very freeing.
We moved to New York for a couple of months just to live there
and we took a couple of suitcases and I was like,
this is a simple life.
I had my little laptop and my little rice and
So freeing if I always resonated with that. Did you see up in the air with the yeah, I always resonate with that backpack thing like I know just putting down the the backpack and but it is interesting though
I have a wealthy friend of mine. She's older and she has a mansion in Malibu
I've seen pictures of it.
It's one of those houses that has its own name.
So you know it's like really big.
And she lives in a small apartment now.
She also has that house they go there sometimes,
but she lives in a small apartment.
I said, why do you live in an apartment?
She goes, it's a lot to take care of that place.
And I like this simple life.
And I go, yeah, I think at some point,
I would like a bigger place.
And she said, you want that now until you have it.
And then you realize you might not need it.
So the lesson I learned was sometimes you have to go
through the process of spending on something
only to realize, I didn't really need it.
Yeah, I think it's almost, I don't know, because as you were saying that, I was, I had,
I have the same instinct.
I, the word that occurs so much in my life these days is simplification.
Totally.
Just want a simple life.
You have to fight for it, though.
We talk about it with personal finances.
You have to fight for simplicity, just a few credit cards, just a few accounts, just a few line items you tracked because otherwise you become,
you follow the tailwags the dog and you wake up and one day your entire calendar is filled of
stuff you didn't make decisions about five years ago. Fight for simplicity. But then the downside
of that is that people go, well, you're just an old dude who's not getting rich
off crypto.
Like literally people in this group I'm in,
they have this asset allocation.
So I'll fucked up.
I go, what are you talking about?
You own 30 different asset classes and they look at me.
They go, wait a second, your asset allocation is basically
9010.
What are you talking about?
You only own this diversified
low-cost portfolio. I go, yeah. And we both look at each other like we're each from a different
planet. But in my opinion, I'm right. And to avoid the mimetic trap, you know, that you do just
do it or want it because someone else wants it. It's, you know, there's very easy traps to fall into.
I mean, me and Audrey went to Hawaii for the first time this year
and we just were instantly in love
and we didn't ever want to leave.
And your brain goes to something,
oh, wouldn't it be a man's problem?
Oh, man.
You know, have a, imagine having a place here.
And sometimes I hear you in my head
and it's just like, if you wanna go to Hawaii,
just go, rent a place and then give the keys back.
Yeah, it's the best.
And leave.
But it's so unglamorous.
For whatever reason, we just love,
I gotta own this place.
Oh, it's so much of it, Zego, right?
So, Ego, and my ego is, well, first of all,
I'm like financially speaking,
that actually doesn't make any sense.
But secondly, I love the simplicity of,
I get to pick my favorite place.
I get to pick an absolutely amazing property,
or hotel, or villa.
I go in, everything is ready.
I've got my perfect food in the fridge.
My clothes are unpacked for me.
Love the convenience.
And then when I leave, goodbye.
Here's your question.
And by the way, you also now don't feel like
you are a prisoner to Hawaii.
Where if next time you've,
a year from now you fall in love with somewhere else.
You go, well, we really have to justify this place we have in Hawaii by keeping going there,
even though you now have another place that you really want to go to.
So it's freedom.
It's freedom.
It's not making yourself encumbered all the time by these things.
And I've learned some hard lessons in that department, but it's, I don't
know, simplification for me feels really good. Maybe there'll be a time in my life where
I want to expand again. I don't know. But for me right now, I love the idea of less.
You call me when you want to spend the next two, four, five million dollars. You know,
I have some suggestions. Okay, I got a couple more scenarios for you. I just discovered that my partner has $75,000 in debt
and I'm worried how that's going to affect our lifestyle.
How do I have that conversation?
I think the first conversation you have to have is with yourself.
You have to start by saying,
what are my reasons for being with this person?
My reason for being with this person wasn't that they had no debt.
My reason for being with this person, even when I didn't realize they had this debt, was
for any number of qualities that they have that I think are really special.
And I think it's important to start there because otherwise you just start focusing on the debt
and going, I don't want to be with someone with this much debt.
But you have to start by going, no, why am I here?
If it's just an average relationship,
and I'm like, well, I was just here
because I had nothing better to do.
But now that I've realized there's this whole debt inconvenience,
I was the point?
If you're there because you go, oh no, there is something truly special about this human
being. And there's something I really value about this person, or there are many things
I really value about this person, then you have to keep that firmly in your mind because
everyone's going to come with something.
No one, everyone's got something.
Some people's baggage is dead, other people,
they have a kid already, and you have to deal
with those circumstances.
Some people are paying 1.25% to Primerica,
getting fucking ripped off, don't do that.
What wasn't an example I was gonna use,
but yeah, that's why we make a great team. You know, someone, someone may come with an illness or someone, there's
always going to be something. No one comes perfect. And you have to then go, okay, well,
what is, if I really value them and I want this person in my life, then this is their thing.
Okay, this is their thing.
Let me remove money from it for a moment.
Most people have something.
This is a thing that they have.
Okay.
So now that I've established, I really value them and they're important to me.
What does this actually mean?
And what am I most afraid of here?
And then you start looking into that.
Am I afraid that this debt that they have
is a sign of a much deeper recklessness?
Right, and have I seen evidence of that?
And have I seen evidence of that outside of this debt?
And can I voice that to them in a way
that communicates with
them and shows them that, hey, look, the debt we will figure out, and over time, if you say
you have a plan to pay it off, and you know, you've shown me that plan, and I feel confident
that you have it in hand, the thing that still concerns me is that there's a,
there was certain decisions made along the way
that seemed to reflect different values than the values I have.
And now that we're a team,
whatever is behind that decision making
is now a part of my world too.
And if they then are able to,
to talk to you in a way that you feel confident, oh, okay,
I'm able to contextualize this.
I'm able to see who you were then
versus who you are now.
I'm able to see that this is a historic thing,
but it's not a present day thing,
but it's a historic thing you have to solve.
That's a different thing than worrying that this is now a trait.
This isn't a circumstance that's entered your life. It's a trait that's entered your life.
And that trait now is going to ruin my life because all of this recklessness,
that's what's behind a lot of fears like this.
Yeah, it's going to be with us forever.
It's going to be, yeah, you're going to be with me forever.
And whatever recklessness created this, you're bringing into my world now.
That's a fear we have.
It's almost like when you've got to really explore what's behind what I feel about this
thing.
Am I worried this person's never going to pay off this 75 grand and that it's going
to become my responsibility?
If so, let's talk about that. Or am I worried at all is what's
really behind this contempt? Like, I see this 70 grand debt and I can't believe that you're
the kind of person who would do it. Right. And I would, I've been, I've had a completely
different, different level of discipline than that financially in my life. And behind
what I'm really feeling is contempt. I have contempt for that quality in you
that has led you to this place.
Okay, wait, hold on.
Before we go on, what would you have contempt about
in a partner in that circumstance?
No, just in you.
Oh, like me?
You.
Like, I would have contempt if I met someone
who's paying 1.5% to a financial advisor.
I'm not gonna lie, break up with them on the spot.
I told my wife that last night,
if I ever find out you're paying 1.5%,
they were gonna have a real difficult conversation.
And she was like, okay, I know, I would never do that.
Fuck, I love you.
What would it be for you?
Temptful.
I think, oh God. I think it would be if your partner just wouldn't talk about
something that was bothering them. And at all, and you tried everything you could, and they
were just like, nope, because for me, the 1.5%, even though it's sort of a joke, it's not really
a joke. It reflects on my ability to talk to them about money and a rich life, and it's just a fundamental values difference.
You like to dig in and communicate.
You see that as a way to do it.
If they just were like, nope, don't wanna talk about this.
Maybe it would be for me if someone was really just
all about themselves.
What does that mean?
If they had just that kind of a heavy streak of, all about themselves. Where is that mean? Where is that mean?
If they had just that kind of heavy streak of narcissism
in them where it was,
there was just a lack of authenticity and a lack of empathy for other people or for me.
So example would be, like I want to go here,
I don't care that you don't want to go, I want to go.
And if you don't go, I'm going to be mad at you.
Yeah, yeah.
And that, and you know, if someone on top of that is kind of,
kind of gas lights your needs by reducing them to not,
like you're being unreasonable or makes you feel like
you're having those needs is a problem.
Yeah.
And that you're the one being too, you know, you're being too difficult or you're being too
needy or you're expecting too much, that maybe could send me towards that feeling.
That's a pretty good one.
I still think that mine might be the one point.
Yeah, 1.5.
Yeah, just why?
I don't even know what you mean by that.
And I had now have contempt for it.
Yeah.
Spread the word everybody.
If they're paying anything above point four, five percent,
we got a real problem.
It's, I love the idea that this is sort of secretly
why you got me on the podcast.
Just to make, just to like fill me out on this issue.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is the Trojan horse.
Okay, you know what it is?
I watched Jerry Seinfeld that coffee in cars or whatever.
And somebody said to him,
could you ever be friends with somebody
who you didn't think was funny?
Yeah.
He thought about it for a second, he goes, no.
Yeah, now he's a real,
he's a real artist when it comes to comedy.
I agree, and then I thought to myself,
could I ever be friends with someone
who has digital programs that they sell,
which I think are shit?
My answer is no.
I'm telling you the truth,
because I take it personally.
I spend a ton of time and money with my team building these things.
We take a lot of pride.
My name is on it.
And for someone to come up with some bullshit and sell it on TikTok, you know, and just
be like, oh yeah, buy my thing in 1999, Bobo.
I mean, like, I can't be your friend.
Right.
Do you think that's too petty?
No, I think that's all right. I will say that I've got sort of, you know,
friends who believe in things that I sort of
are some part of me.
Flat earth.
Well, flat? No, I don't have any flat earth.
Okay.
Okay. Politics.
We sort of, you know, someone's,
you know, when someone sort of says like, I'm a witch. No, what the fuck are you talking about? You know, when someone's like, sort of if, you know, someone's, you know, when someone sort of says like, I'm a witch.
No, what the fuck are you talking about?
You know, when someone's like, sort of believes
they have psychic abilities or the...
Oh, let's have to people in LA.
Oh, Zooda, Mercury, some bullshit.
Yeah. And then you have to pretend that it's real.
You, you know, you have to sort of just not
along and just wait for the conversation.
I just, I'm inspired by my nieces and nephews,
they're like a 10 years old.
When you ask a kid something
that they don't understand or like,
this is what they do, they go like this.
And then they just get up and leave.
They literally just walk away and I go,
these kids know something that we don't.
If you don't like it, you just leave.
So some annoying person wearing those wide brim hats,
talking about mercury and all this nonsense and stuff. And oh yeah, it's because you're a Scorpio and what I deeply, deeply want to do.
Just get up and leave. But instead what I do is, oh yeah, it's really interesting. So what are you watching on TV these days? You know, you just have to fall in love with the 80%.
What? Some people are 80% smart. Oh, that's good. And good. You're always so positive.
I need this. There's people that I listen to. Do you have you ever been listening to a speaker?
Just tell me who you're talking about so we can get specific here. Who's this person who's 20%
student? You know, like you two hours in and they're
saying really insightful things. And you're just like, well, this person's on fire. Like
it's just every time they speak, you're just like, this is great stuff. And then all of
a sudden, they like drop in something that they say, they say, they say, yeah, they say
some nimbibull shit or something. And I go, some that you realize all of a sudden that there is some area of what they believe
where you are planets apart.
And it's tempting at that point to go,
oh, I just can't deal with this person.
I wanna write them off.
Wait, what if I do that?
Will you do that?
Yes.
Is there a problem?
Wait, is this a problem?
This sounds good to me.
The problem I have with it.
You want to know?
Yes.
It's actually not that easy to find people who don't believe some kind of wacky shit.
Fuck.
You might be right.
So the problem is, if you don't find a way to love the 80% of them and sort of just make
your peace with the 20%, then you end up hating 80% of people.
Wait, I'm trying to think this is getting very deep right now. This is supposed to be me asking
you questions. You at best can have like 10 friends. Yeah. Because the rest of the world believes
something inside. I think you might be right. I think you've made me have a new lens on the world.
And I don't know if I like myself after this conversation. Well, I'm certainly going to
make you less entertaining. If I have to be like bullshit and normally I'll just verbally
eviscerate now you're going to be like, oh, that's really interesting. Tell me the 80%. I really love this. Like, fuck, you ruined my entire career.
I miss the old roommate.
I miss the old roommate that would tear people apart.
I don't want it to go away.
But what am I supposed to be more compassionate?
No, just, I got married.
I got married.
I hang out with me more because that's like a Yin Yang scenario.
I know.
We complete each other.
Well, let me just tell you what I loved about our conversation.
We, I talked to couples. They're typically married or they've been married a long time.
The thing that I heard over and over today is you reminding me to connect
what I'm doing to the, or star.
So if I'm trying to think about why I love somebody, connect it back to
this. It's not about their debt. It's about why did I find this person attractive in
the first place? If I am having a conflict about money, we can talk about the money, but
why am I feeling this way? Do I feel infantilized? Why? What do I want myself to feel like? And
that is something it comes much more naturally to you. I know you work
at it, but I love hearing your perspective on how to talk about money because deep down the rich
life is not just about money. It's about how we talk to each other and how we create these experiences.
And I can think of nothing more powerful than remembering what is the rich life and then let's use money
and love to live it.
So thank you very much.
You're very welcome.
It's a pleasure.
I love our conversations.
All right.
Thank you, Matt.
Thanks, man.
Appreciate you.
All right.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode.
It was a special one for me.
I think Matt and I both had a blast.
Of course, I recorded another episode on his podcast called Love Life with Matthew Hussey.
Go check it out. You can also find him on Instagram at the Matthew Hussey and check out his programs and his videos and how to get the guy.com.
I will see you back next week.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Remete Saiti.
Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
If you haven't read, I will teach you to be rich.
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I will teach you to be rich system into your personal finances.