Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - A Review of Episode 1208 Jordan Peterson
Episode Date: December 13, 2018Jordan Peterson is one of Joe Rogan’s best guests to have on. He’s a clinical psychologist and knows a shit ton of shit about human nature and behavior on the individual level. He has a great book... called 12 rules to avoiding chaos. Check out their conversation it’s great. Enjoy my review folks! Please email me with any suggestions and questions for future Reviews: Joeroganexperiencereview@gmail.com
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Verano, verano, reciclar es tan humano
Esa lata de aceitunas que te tomas a la una
La crema que se termina cuando estás en la piscina
El enbase de ese polo que no se reficla
Solo hay una lata de caballa que te coves en la playa
La voy a usar en las patatas y del refresco la lata
Un enbase de paella y del agua
La botella, como ves es muy sencillo
Los enbases del verano Siempre van a la amarillo So this episode of the JRE review is reviewing the conversation that Joe Rogan had with Jordan Peterson, like many Joe Rogan fans a favorite guest and an incredibly interesting guy.
It's just always so great to have him on the way that he speaks, the kind of knowledge that he throws down.
It's not to say that everything that you always agree on, but he definitely brings about very interesting points and ways of looking at things
that at least for me were like very contrary to how I saw life and
understanding of my actions and things like that before. If you're not super
familiar with Jordan Peterson he has a great book called The 12 Rules for Avoiding Chaos.
I think it's called, it's a very good book. It's like 12 essays that are really fascinating.
And then look up his videos online. It shows a lot of his lectures and speaking events, speaking engagements.
You get a real feel for like who he is. There's a lot of his dialogue out there.
When there's a lot of content just like Joe Rogan's, it's hard to hide yourself. You know, it's
hard to hide who you really are over and over when you've got thousands of hours of like you speaking
out on the web. So you get a real feel for who he is. I think genuinely he's a really good guy
that wants to give back and do a lot of good and help people feel. I think genuinely he's a really good guy that wants to give back
and do a lot of good and help people feel a lot better. He's a clinical psychologist,
what he used to be, and now mostly does lecture tours. So he starts the conversation with Joe,
just getting into the lecture circuit and how it's kind of amazing that thousands of people will come
out now to listen to academic lecture tours, you know, in young people too. It's like
almost making it cool again. Well, again, I don't know when it was ever popular, but it's
fascinating that people are going to these things. honestly I would too if he if he ever
put one on in a town near me I'd be interested to go I think it is really
fascinating there's a lot of other more useless ways you could spend your time
and you know people are looking for help and they're looking for leadership it's
some things they're lacking now and men especially trying to figure this out.
One of the criticisms that Jordan has and he brought it up in the conversation is that
people give him a hard time because mostly only men listen to come to his lectures and
follow him online and do those sorts of things.
The more he's been thinking about it, he just decided recently that, you know,
this isn't a negative.
Does it matter who follows him?
He didn't pick him.
You know, he'd be happier to have a more diverse crowd.
But if it's just men, mostly men,
mostly young men, mostly even if they're white guys,
he's like, it's helping their lives.
It's improving their lives and they can help improve other people's lives
And I think that's an excellent point. It's like don't get hung up on on those things, you know, just be
Just just be happy that you can do good
The main credence of a lot of what he says and when he's talking back and forth with Joe is the understanding of more
Responsibility people need to take more
responsibility on. They don't. If you think about each of the actions that you've taken a day and you're
like, is this a responsible action? Or is this a child-ish action? And it's quite easy to categorize
either. And if you did it for a whole day and more of your actions were kind of childish, like maybe
they were negative, maybe they were reaching out, maybe they were like giving someone a hard time, and really it's just you projecting onto them.
You might find that there's just not he does it with like clinical psychology,
like actual data and it's really fascinating the way that he's done it.
With more responsibility, he truly feels you'll feel a lot better, Joe agrees.
The things that are worth doing come with more responsibility.
So bear a heavy load so you don't become bitter Really like if you if you bear heavy load you don't become bitter people do get bitter though, you know
um
Yeah, and if you don't if you don't bear that heavy load what moves in as Jordan says
Will be hellish will be awful like um and that's fascinating. It's like it, there's no way around it. You have to
grow older, be more responsible, bear a heavy load, take on responsibilities, kids with
rest of it. Otherwise, you just feel awful, which is crazy, because we always just think
about when in the lottery and retiring and doing nothing and being less responsible, but maybe that doesn't work
You know
He talks a lot about thinking about things you're avoiding right?
So instead of like goal setting like what are you avoiding? What are you afraid of break down the things you're afraid of in the smaller pieces?
You know and then these small pieces can be can be chipped away at you don't have to see it as Mount Everest
you just see it as one
step in front of another. And that's always great advice, even though it's hard to not look
at that mountain. You're like, okay, one step in front of another. He and Joe talk about
facing your own demons and that it's very hard. But your ability to beat it is stronger,
which is actually amazing.
Like to think about your resilience, like if you actually sit there and face your fears,
you will get through it and it's the path you're greatest potential.
So doing difficult things, bearing that heavy load, scaring the shit out of yourself as
I like to call it, is really good.
You know, taking yourself, whether it's even like sitting in the sauna for like longer
than you can handle or going to a circuit training class that really
wears you out or doing some sort of a public speaking engagement that really makes you feel
awful.
It's always afterwards you just feel so accomplished and amazing and it's really never as scary
as you think.
Even if you really fucked it up, you can go back do it again.
It's not as
bad. It just isn't. Joe loves the way that Jordan engages with people. So Jordan Peterson
does a lot of interviews on TV where like often feminists or other people will come at him
and he just supports his position. And what he's trying to do is not be a feminist or be anyone in particular. He's just trying to get to the truth of an argument using logic and like a core value of ethics.
And then also the clinical psychology that he knows, like he has really Joe says the way that Jordan engages people is almost like
Hoys Gracie back in the early days of UFC, but for the intellectual dark web.
And that reference just goes back to how Hoys would just come out.
He looked unimposing and he just fucked everyone up.
He made everyone else's martial art look like shit.
And in a way, this is what Jordan is doing.
And they're bringing more and more intelligent people out
to kind of trip them up.
And, you know, they learn the way that he talks now
so they can prepare better for it.
But at the end of the day, these people are just coming out
to win.
And I don't really think that's what Jordan is
is necessarily trying to do.
He talks a little bit about negative comments online, you know,
are just as bad as negative comments in real life.
So they hurt as much, right? But he also says positive ones don't have the same power.
So when someone in person gives you a compliment, say, says something very nice to you in person,
it means a lot. If they say it online, it means a little bit, but not as much, but the negative ones
really hurt. So they go back and forth about the amount of If they say it online, it means a little bit, but not as much, but the negative ones really hurt.
So they go back and forth about the amount of followers they both have on Twitter. I think Joe has well over a million. Jordan has about a million.
And they talk about, you know, don't look at the comments. Just don't bother.
You know, not that it's not worth reflecting on how people are perceiving you, but they're just some very angry people out there.
And not everything is, is like welcomed criticism.
And it's really just, a lot of it's not necessary.
Which is cool, that's a good lesson, I think, for anyone that's active on social media.
Don't get too hung up on people giving you a hard time.
You know, at least you're doing something, at least you're getting on with it.
Maybe they're not. Maybe they're sad. And, you know, angry. I don't really,
I get angry. Sometimes I get annoyed with some things, but I don't write, show you reviews.
Um, I just, I don't know. I just feel like it's just best just to, if you don't like something,
don't go back. Don't listen to it again. Don't't listen to it again don't go to that mall don't go to that bank don't go to that
restaurant just do it that way I don't think you necessarily need to put it
online I don't know how helpful that is I might be wrong I don't know always
what I'm talking about but there we go talks a little bit about in the work
place how you want to be the guy that works 10% harder. And Joe really
appreciates that because Joe works a hell of a lot harder. But when you work 10%
harder than most of your colleagues and especially 10% longer shifts, you often
get 40% more return financially. And this is some statistic that Jordan had. So if
he throws it out there, it's not a bullshit one.
He knows where it's coming from.
You know, it doesn't mean he did the research himself
or gained the stats, but he knows that it's coming from,
you know, a reputable source.
And that's really interesting because 10% more
is not a lot more, but 40% is.
So put in the work, you know.
Talk a little bit about prejudice and how it's unfortunate in society,
but it's necessary, like sexual selection
is always prejudicial.
I mean, it really is. Beautiful women aren't just like
sleeping with any old ugly guy, like they're very selective
and that's always going to be the way.
And it's an acceptable prejudice,
but it really is that.
And then he often talks about a quality of outcome, is not going to work.
And this idea of a quality of outcome
is like everybody gets the same thing,
but he says that you lose so much motivation
and people just aren't working the same
and some people just are less capable.
And it's very difficult to create this.
Everyone gets the same kind of idea.
You just want to pull people out of poverty is really where it's at.
He moves on to an interesting thing about managers and he goes,
a manager may have 20 employees and let's say he treats them pretty bad.
But no matter what, you're only getting
one-twenty if of that brunt if you're one of his employees. It's not always likely that
that manager is picking on you with all of his frustration. He has twenty people to deal
with. It may feel like all the frustration comes down on you, but that's just a bit of
an ego thing.
Managers have a lot of responsibility and it's not always power. Managers, it's a tough
spot for them. And I find that interesting because I've worked for managers before that
I didn't respect and were very frustrating and you know you just never, I didn't at least.
I didn't take a step back just to think really what was going on there. Like what were
they going through and how could I fix it? This is why reading a Jocka Willink's book is always good. The dichotomy of leadership.
He puts a lot in there that's such a great book because it just says, hey take yourself
out of this, figure out a solution. You know make this person like, make this person
respect you, understand where this person is coming from, and he has tasks in there.
And at the end of the day you just feel better because you're not fighting with your boss or you're not angry at work
Which is shit how most of us are feeling a lot of the time really
um and
That's kind of it
Then they talk lastly just about kind of like trolls and haters online haters of successful people
Just about kind of like trolls and haters online haters of successful people
They hate their own failure and resent others that do better, right? This is a lot of people that we all know and if it's hard to see yourself as one of those people that those thoughts creep in
But be trying to stay
Mindful of it think about it and think okay, you know why
Why am I mad about this?
Why do I hate this person so much?
What am I jealous of?
What do I really want?
You know, where is the me part of this frustration?
And it's a tough question, but a good one to reflect on.
And they should stop and listen and learn instead of complain right so you know
haters can do that haters can take a minute learn listen and on that note
even to the haters out there thanks for listening I appreciate you guys
there be more this week and love you boy
and love ya boy!