Lex Fridman Podcast - #298 – Susan Cain: The Power of Introverts and Loneliness
Episode Date: June 28, 2022Susan Cain is the author of Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking, and Bittersweet: How Sorrow and Longing Make Us Whole. Please support this podcast by checking out our sp...onsors: - Brave: https://brave.com/lex - Skiff: https://skiff.org/lex to get early access - Mizzen+Main: https://mizzenandmain.com and use code LEX to get $35 off - Athletic Greens: https://athleticgreens.com/lex and use code LEX to get 1 month of fish oil - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex to get 20% off EPISODE LINKS: Susan's Twitter: https://twitter.com/susancain Susan's Instagram: https://instagram.com/susancainauthor Susan's Website: https://susancain.net Bittersweet (book): https://amzn.to/3xE0LWt Quiet (book): https://amzn.to/3QvpOmb PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (06:42) - Introverts (24:42) - Small talk (29:37) - Artistic expression (42:03) - Sad music (49:42) - Leonard Cohen (1:00:34) - Public speaking (1:07:50) - Podcasts (1:15:25) - Famous Blue Raincoat by Leonard Cohen (1:30:47) - Creativity and sadness (1:39:03) - Dark moments (1:47:06) - Parenting (1:55:59) - Advice for young people (1:59:10) - Meaning of life
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The following is a conversation with Susan Cain, author of Quiet, The Power of Introverts
in the World that can't stop talking, and her most recent book, Bittersweet, How Sorrow
and Longing Make Us Whole.
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And now, dear friends, here's Susan, Kane.
You've written on your website that quote, I prefer listening to talking, reading to socializing,
and cozy chats to group settings.
So I think this conversation on the podcast is going to be fun.
What's a good definition of an introvert?
Is something like those three things a good start?
It is a good start in terms of how introverts experience day to day life. I think a good definition
is one that some of your listeners will have heard many times before, you know, the idea of
where do you get your energy? And for some people, they get their energy more from quieter
settings and for other people, they get it more from being out there. So a good rule of thumb is
to imagine that you're at a party that you're really enjoying
and you've been there for about two hours or so
and it's with people you really like
and it's in your favorite place, so it's all good.
An extrovert in a setting like that
is gonna feel charged up
and they're gonna be looking for the after party.
And an introvert, no matter how good a time they're having
and how socially skilled they are,
there's this moment where you just wish
that you could teleport and be back at home.
Yeah, and at the time before the start of the party
to the time of that moment happens
is different for different people.
So like the shorter that is the more of an inch
where you are, is that that kind of thing?
The shorter the moment until you get
to the place where you got to teleport home.
Yeah, teleport home.
Yeah, and then for extroverts, it's the opposite, right?
They're gonna feel, maybe they're working on,
I don't know, focused on producing a memo
that's really intensely interesting to them,
but if they're in that state of solitary mode
of really focusing, they might get stir crazy a lot faster than
an introvert would. And so it doesn't have so much to do with what you're good at as how you get your energy.
And so for an introvert, the source of energy is what? Silence, solitude, and for an extrovert,
it's interaction with other people. What I'd really say is that and this is neurobiological as well is that it has to do with
how your nervous system reacts to stimulation.
So for an introvert,
you're feeling in a great state of equilibrium when there are fewer inputs coming at you.
So they could be social inputs, but that's why an introvert in general would rather
hang out with one close friend at a time as opposed to, you know, big party
full of strangers, because that's just too many inputs for the nervous system. And for
an extrovert, the nervous system needs more stimulants. So if they're not getting enough,
they get that list list and sluggish feeling.
So if you're just walking through the world, like people listening to this, but in general,
how do you know if you're in a trivert?
How do you empirically start to determine if you are in large part in a trivert?
Well, I would start by just asking that question of what happens to you at around the Q
out of Mark, where you're having a good time.
Yeah, I mean, imagine.
But I also find, I'm curious, a few of a different experience from this, but from all the years
that I've been out there talking about this topic, I found that most people really seem
to know once they're being honest with themselves.
And maybe that's the question to ask, is like, if you imagine that you have a Saturday
or a whole weekend, where you can spend your time
exactly the way you want to with no professional obligations and no social obligations,
who would you spend it with, how many people, what would you be doing,
and what is that picture that you're painting start to look like?
Yeah, so there's nuance to this though because I'm sure for extroverse to get energized by
Stimulation whether that stimulation with other people like it depends what that stimulation is right like
Maybe you're not surrounded by the kind of people that you enjoy being around so, you know
Maybe that has to do less with whether some characteristics as your personality more has to do with the fact what like what your environment is like that's always kind of
The question do you want to be alone because everybody around you's an asshole or do you want to be alone because you get an energized from being well
I would hold the variables constant, I guess
The assholes constant and see
And then there's the other thing you kind of observed that there's a lot of people
That will say they get energized from being alone
like
People are exhausting to them or something like that, but at the same time
When you see them at a party they seem like the life of the party. I
Know and I hear from those people all the time. There's so many people like that.
What would you classify them as exactly? Is it ultimately as the source of energy? Is it the
most important thing or like how the heck are they the life of the party? It's a bunch of different
things. You know, so first of all, just to say like a big caveat to all of this is humans are
just amazingly complex. So you can't like explain every individual
humans through these parameters, even though I think the parameters are really valuable. But
that person at the party, it could be that they're more of an ambivert, so they kind of
are more in the middle of the spectrum. That's, it basically means someone who's not extremely
introverted or extremely extroverted, they're kind of in the middle. So maybe at a party, their more extroverted side comes out. Or it could be an introvert who's gotten really good at the
skills of acting more like a pseudo extrovert, and they pull that up at the moments that they need it.
So that learned how to fake it? Yeah. Oh, there's a lot of people like that. And I know this because
like I think out of all the people on this planet, you could
be talking to you.
I've heard from the most number of those people.
Like, they all come and tell me about their experience out in the world, presenting a
face that's different from what they feel.
So, one of the things you talk about is, at least in the West, we've constructed a picture
of success, and that picture is usually one of an extrovert.
Like, when you imagine somebody who's a leader, who's a successful person, that person has
some of the qualities you would associate with an extrovert.
And so there's a lot of incentive for faking it.
Yeah, exactly.
If you want to be successful, you got to be able to fake it, to sort of hang with the
rest of the team, you have to be able to be outgoing and all those kinds of things and
not be drained by the interaction.
Yeah, but I mean, there are also a lot of introverts who figure out ways to draw on their
own strengths and they're incredibly connecting and successful and
they're great leaders and they're not actually faking it. They're more just
figuring out ways to do it their own way. You see a lot of people like that.
Is there advice? Is there a lessons you can draw from that from just
observing how you can be an introvert and be in a leadership position?
Yeah, it's kind of like a mantra of figuring out what your own strengths are and how to draw on them. I think of a guy I know Doug
Cohnant who had been the CEO of Campbell Soup for many years. He's very introverted. He's quite shy also by his own description. And and he really cares about people.
And so when he started at Campbell,
the employee engagement ratings of the company
were all the way at the bottom of the Fortune 500.
And by the time he stepped down 10 years later,
they were all the way at the top.
And he was, it wasn't that he was going out there
and smootzing people, but he really did care.
So he would find out who were the people who had really been contributing, and he would
write to them personal letters of thanks.
And people and these letters meant so much to people, they would like carry them around
with them.
And during his time, the 10 years there, he wrote 30,000 of those letters. So,
like, that was his way of doing it. That was his way of drawing on his own strengths. And,
and, and you know, and like, he did that together with, of course, you sometimes have to go
outside your comfort zone, no matter who you are. So he was doing plenty of that too. Yeah.
It's kind of combination. Yeah, that the writing process and focusing on the one-on-one
interaction, I can definitely relate.
There's something deeply draining, which concerns me about Zoom meetings because it's
some weird brain manipulation.
It's the same word.
Well, because you're not really engaged, but it wears on you the same way that it does
a party.
It feels like you're emptying that bucket for the introverts,
even though they're not participating at all in the meeting. I suppose that's through
physical meetings too, but with Zoom meetings, remote meetings, it's so much easier to invite
a larger number of people into the meeting. So you're draining more and more of the introvert
energy. And I'm probably expert too, but the introvert definitely, there's, I mean, it's interesting. I would love to understand that more because there's more and more push
towards remote work without, I think, a deep understanding of why these meetings are so draining
on people. I just anecdotally have heard from that. But maybe that's because the managers,
the people who arrange the meetings are just not sufficiently yet aware
of the draining nature of them, so that they pull into many people, discussing them to regularly,
so they need to adjust that kind of thing probably.
I think people are starting to realize, but I would say one reason that Zoom is so draining
is because you can see your own self-presentation the whole time if you choose to.
And when you go into in-person, you can't.
So you're kind of free to thinking about that.
So it's like an extra cognitive load that you're bearing the whole time.
Oh, yeah.
And like you might want to, you know, turn off the cameras so you can't see yourself.
But then you feel like, well, I have the ability to.
So I probably should be doing it. And then that alone is a decision that you're making.
Yeah, there's probably studies on this now happening, either half-happen or are happening
of the effect of seeing your own face on camera, because it's reminding that you're supposed to
be acting a certain way. And that's, that is especially a stressful thing. Yeah, you can't be in the moment as much. But I mean, for you, you make the decision to do all
your podcast interviews in person, right? And so. And that's even when it's very costly.
If there's any kind of chemistry that contributes at all to the conversation, which I think most
conversations have come, even the boring work meetings, there's
something there. Because yes, you're trying to solve a particular
problem at this particular time, but underneath it, there's a
team building that's happening. And honestly, people also have
told me about this, why they enjoyed the Zoom meetings during
the pandemic, is like, they're lonely. Yeah about this, why they enjoyed the Zoom meetings during the pandemic, is
like they're lonely. Yeah, yeah. Like they, you know, it's annoying to have to sit and
listen to folks talk about nothing and so on, but they tune in anyway, because it's kind
of lonely to sit there by yourself. And that, I mean, there's a deep connection there
when you would other people.
And that is especially true when they're there in person, which is a huge concern for
me for like more and more offices from a capitalist perspective, realizing, Hey, why are we,
why do we have these large office spaces? Why do we have to get people together? But I
think in some, in some deep sense, we do. But then you also talk about that once we do, we want to protect the introverts.
Like you don't want the open space, which office space, which was a big
fad for a while.
I don't know where people stand on that at this point.
Yeah, I think people are figuring it out in a post pandemic context.
But I mean, I know what you mean.
So before I became a writer, I was a corporate
lawyer for like seven years. And literally the only thing I miss from those years is hanging
out with people at the office. Like, I don't know, just some of the funniest moments I've
had in my life came from being at the office until midnight with the other
people I was working with.
So I know exactly what you're talking about.
So I will say the office is there at that firm and at most firms in those days, everybody
had their own office.
So it was like a dorm room, you know, or it was like a long hallway with everybody in their
own little dorm room.
So you had tons of privacy, but you would also come out and hang out with people.
You could just start a room, whatever you want.
Yeah, yeah.
And whenever you're home, that means you're kind of open.
You're looking for trouble.
Yeah, and the extent to which you would keep your door open,
was it wide open, or was it half a jar, or just a little bit,
those were all signals.
So is there, because you said re-energize,
is there, do you like to think, and again,
the human mind is complicated, but do you like to think of it as like a bucket that gets
refilled for introverts in terms of energy, of social interaction that they're able to
handle?
Do you think of it like that as a bucket that gets empty and needs to be refilled?
I think of it, yeah, more or less, because I use the metaphor of a battery,
because recharge, it's basically the same thing, different metaphor.
But yeah, but just to add on that, there is a layer of complexity to that,
because you could be somebody who doesn't want the kind of social life, let's say,
where you have to be like on and
presenting and interacting with tons of people all the time, but you'd get really
lonely if you were just by yourself. You know, so what you want is to maybe be in
the company of a couple people you know really well. Like for me, the pandemic was
not actually that hard for me personally. I mean, I lost family, but I mean from
the point of view of what we're talking about, it wasn't that hard because I live with my husband and my kids.
So I knew it was hard on the kids and I felt badly for them, but for me, I was like, you know what?
I kind of I have a lot of social life right here in the house.
That's why you focus and do my work.
Yeah, that's the cool thing about the pandemic, I think it helped people figure out how much they love their family.
That's true.
And, and a while you give your chance to really reconnect with kids, with your kids,
like really spend time with them, it's just fascinating to watch.
Like people actually, it did strengthen the family unit in an often beautiful way,
which just sucks to admit, to have to leave behind at this point.
Yeah, and I think that's part of what people are not going to want to go back to that we
need to solve for, to the extent that work becomes non-remote again.
Yeah.
I think people have just realized how precious those aspects of their lives are.
And, you know, for somebody who's in a conventional office job where you're going home and seeing
your kids for an hour
before bedtime and that's your interaction with them. That's kind of a ridiculous way to set things up.
It's cool that you can get, I think a lot of places give you the option now, which is interesting.
You get to optimize that element of your life. You take the commute and the office work and
the social interaction there. Do you focus on the work at home?
It's also lonely at home, but then you get to see your kids. If you have kids, that's part of the optimization is like, I have some options
now, and I'm going to try to optimize, uh, solitude, loneliness, happiness,
productivity, seeing family, uh, seeing coworkers, the chemistry with the team building with
the coworkers versus just the raw exchange of information with the coworkers is fascinating
to see how that kind of evolves.
Yeah.
And then there's the big, the third space idea of, you know, the spaces where you're in
a co-working space or a cafe or something like that.
So you've got other people around you, but you're not exactly interacting with them,
but they're very much there. And that's huge too. I don't think we think about that enough.
Yeah, that energy is there.
Yeah, yeah. I lived in Manhattan for 17 years before we had kids, and I absolutely loved it. Like I loved it. The feeling of all that energy all around you
But you could be anonymous within it to me was perfect. Yeah, it's beautiful. Like I I I worked
this morning for a few hours programed for a few hours at a Starbucks and first of all
Like wearing wearing suits like like Manhattan is the one place you can kind of fit into
it, because everyone's wearing suits.
You're wearing suits every day?
Well, these days, unfortunately, because I get recognized, I wear usually not suits when
I just on my own life, but yeah, I love it.
I love the way it feels.
And the way I think about the world when I wear a suit, I take it seriously as if my life
is going to end today, like this is what I would want to world when I wear a suit, I take it seriously as if my life is going to end today.
Like, this is what I would want to wear.
Not for not physical appearance, but just for some reason it makes me feel like
focused. I don't know. So even if you're not going to see anyone, you would still put the suit on when you're doing your work.
Especially then. Especially then. Yeah.
Yeah, I really, I really love doing that. So it tells you seriousness of purpose,
something like that.
Yeah, yeah.
Mixing you now.
I don't know what it is.
I don't know what I imagine exactly,
but it's some kind of platonic form of like a mixture
of James Bond.
And like, I don't know who else.
I wish you're fine, man.
Gonna think about when I think about a suit.
You know, I think of Leonard Cohen,
but he was always wearing suit too, but you know.
Leonard Cohen is definitely one of my, as a tragic human, as a beautiful human being.
Yeah.
Through his words, through his own private life.
Yes, I definitely would think about Leonard Cohen.
So small talk, that's another thing. Is that part of the equation of introvert
versus extrovert? How much people enjoy small talk? I kind of went into this whole thing thinking
that it was, but from what I've seen most people, study is that most people don't like small talk.
I think that's why people like your podcasts, because you're like,
don't like small talk. I think that's why people like your podcasts, because you're like, get the small talk, I'm going deep into it from the very beginning.
Yeah, so it's actually, the picture you're painting is like the way you started, like with
your, with the book quiet, and the way you are today is you realize the picture may be
more complicated. Yeah, everything's more complicated. I will say with the small talk thing that
I'm curious if you have this experience, but I find it fantastic to have a career where
I'm known for anti-small talk kinds of topics because it means that anywhere I go, like if I show
up at a conference or something like that, no one does small talk with me. They're like
telling me about the deep truth of their lives from the first hello and I love
that. And in normal life, you have to like, wade through a lot before you know
if people are ready to go there. Yeah. Do you have that experience too? No,
definitely, definitely with people that know me for sure
But you forgot how many people feel like they know you
Because of your podcast. Oh, that's what no, I that counts Yeah
I'm a huge fan of podcasts and I feel it like before ever became friends with Joe Rogan
I
felt like I was friends with him because I was a fan of his podcast
And so like it was I don't I feel like it's a friendship
I know it's a one-way friendship
with all the people I listen to in podcasts. And even people who are no longer with us, like,
writers, I feel like I have a relationship with them. Maybe I'm insane. No, I totally feel
that way. That's the whole reason I became a writer. Like I'm friends with Leonard Cohen.
Yeah. And he's not aware of it. No, I think that's the whole reason for writing or making music or whatever people do.
It's to be able to have those kinds of connections that don't require having to be in a room together
because there's only so many people you can be in a room with in your lifetime the hard thing is is
unfortunately because I value human connections so much and
I only have just like you mentioned sort of a small circle of people I'm really close with
By design it always hurts me a lot to say goodbye to people
Mm-hmm, I can you meet people and you can tell they're beautiful people. They're amazing. There's something so fascinating about them. They've had a complicated life. Like you
could see in their eyes in the way they tell their story in just a few sentences. They've
gone through some shit, but they also found some elements of beauty and then you get to
realize, okay, well, there's a fascinating human here, and all you get to say is a few words here and there, like a funny little joke, maybe a dark joke here and there, and then you just say goodbye, maybe hug it out, and you go on your way.
So like, that's a hello and a goodbye, and your path will never cross again. That makes me like a sad walk, but I guess I wouldn't have it any other way, I suppose, is the reality.
And in you book, you talk about that sorrow, that sadness not being such a bad thing.
Yeah.
And when you just said that, I just thought of this one moment in my life that I haven't
thought of for 20, 30 years or something, But it was when I was in law school.
And a classmate of mine had his friend come to visit for the weekend and the three of us hung out a
lot and we just had, you know, like an amazing time. And then this other guy who wasn't going to
be coming back anytime soon, if at all, sent a postcard to me. And the only thing written on the
postcard was this quote from
Oscar Wilde. And I don't remember the exact words, but it basically said that there's
no pain as intense as the sorrow of parting from someone to whom you've just been introduced.
Yeah. And there's something so intense about that. And so true. I think partly also because when you've just been a introduced to somebody, you don't yet know their difficulties. So
you're seeing, you're seeing the most sparkling version of them.
You're seeing like a platonic version of love and friendship.
And your imagination fills in the rest and some, some beautiful way that
matches perfectly the kind of thing you're interested in. That's how I
feel about ones, like one spoonful of ice cream.
That's why you always finish the whole tub and you regret all of it.
What did you write this?
I think this is on your website that one of the best things in the world is that
sublime moment when a writer, artist, or musician manages to express something you've always felt
but never articulated or at least never quite so beautifully.
So that's the Oscar Wilde line is one line like that
but just a line from a song
or maybe a piece of art that just grabs you.
Is there something that jumps out into memory
like that for you?
I don't know if I have an exact line though.
I mean, that feeling that you just quoted happens to me all the time.
I'm just bad at recalling exact instances, but on the spot.
But the writer Ellen De Boetong regularly makes me feel that way.
He's just this beautiful essayist and like observer of human nature and he's just constantly
expressing things in this gorgeous way
that you've experienced yourself and you feel like
I don't know, it's just this grand act of generosity. You know, you feel less lonely, you feel like this deep sense of communion.
It's such an elevating experience. Even when it's like a melancholy line.
Maybe especially when it is. Yeah, what is that?
line. Maybe especially when it is. Yeah, what is that? There's, um, so the Jack Karek on the road definitely makes me feel that way. Like every other line in
there, uh, four Lauren Rags of growing old. Do you know I never read that book? So
what what was it about that book that made you feel that way? Well, okay, well since you asked I'm going to look at I'm going to linger on this
So this is stories is he's kind of the book the the kind of defining book of the of the beats the beat generation and
It's basically a story of a writer who takes a road trip
across the United States a couple of times and experiences
a few close friends and a few strangers along the way.
And there's a lot of just those melancholy goodbyes along the way.
You meet all these people with interesting lives.
Some of them are defined by struggles.
Some of them are defined by drugs, drinking, women, all that kind of stuff.
And still he just kind of dances around
all of that and is defined by the goodbyes and the passing of time. So a lot of the really
powerful lines are basically like, there's one on there again, I don't remember exactly,
but he meets a beautiful girl at a rest stop. And the girl is getting or a woman is getting on a different bus
than he's getting on.
And so it's that feeling of falling in love for like a second and realizing that like
fate is just ripping that out.
It's just similar to this idea of,
it sucks to say goodbye just when you met,
but it's especially true when you fall in love
just a little bit with that stranger,
with all the possibilities that could lay there.
So there's a few lines of written down.
I just couldn't, I went down this whole rabbit hole
of thinking, one of the lines that grabbed me
a couple of lines from on the road. So one is, what is that feeling when you're driving away
from people and they recede on the plane till you see their respects, this
person? It's a two huge world vaulting us and it's goodbye. But we'll lean
forward to the next crazy venture beneath the skies. So this is him talking
about leaving a particular city. The spoiler alert towards the end of the book,
rather the end of the book,
line ever turned too often.
It's more poetry, but it's a feeling
that captures the book, I would say.
The evening star must be drooping
and shedding her sparkler dims on the prairie,
which is just before the coming of complete night
that blesses the earth, darkens all the rivers, cups the peaks and folds the final
shorn, and nobody, nobody knows what's going to happen to anybody besides the
four-learned rags of growing old. And it just captures this kind of in the moment
appreciation of the beauty of the world and a sadness over the fact that
time passes and you leave the people you love behind, you leave the places you love
behind or at least the way they were at the time that you really enjoyed them.
And you just leave that all that. Just the sadness you feel when you realize something
about it, like look at her picture, look at your kids grow up, looking at all friends get old. Something makes you realize that time passes and somewhere deep in there
is probably a realization of your mortality. And then it just makes you somehow for
sad that everything comes to an end. And then that's immediately followed by sort of
an appreciation of the moment, like a gratitude that you get
to experience this moment.
Yeah, I know it exactly.
I mean, that's the whole reason that I wrote Bitter Sweet.
It's all about that.
So I know intensely what you're talking about.
And by the way, my husband loves the book, A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway, which
I also haven't read, but it talks about that same thing. You know, groups of people traveling around together and the group coalesces into some magical
formation, and then one person leaves the group, and it's never going to be the same again, and then
they move on to the next one. Yeah, I mean, I think that's the deepest essence of human nature.
deepest essence of human nature, the feeling of longing for some kind of state of perfect completeness, completion, perfect love, the Garden of Eden, all of it, and the feeling
that you're never going to quite attain it, but you get glimpses of it here and there,
and that those glimpses are some of the best things that ever happened to us.
And they're diffused with sadness because they're not the real thing or they're not the full thing.
They're just a glimpse, it's a glimpse of what we long for.
So the sadness that we might feel is always connected to the ways in which we fall short from
the perfect thing that were like there's always a thing you're longing for. And the sadness has to do with the getting a glimpse of it, but not quite
getting a hold of it. Yeah, yeah. So it's always losing. It's always losing, but it's also always
that, but it's not, that sounds really depressing, but it's, it's not, you know, it's not
depressing because you experience this all the time. It's also, those are the most beautiful moments I think life offers. I mean, it's intense, intense
beauty in those moments because it's getting closer to the real thing that we long for.
So what about my loss, losing love? Is that also a beautiful thing?
Well, the moment you're talking about, I think it's easier to appreciate the beauty of it all
in the moment because you're experiencing the loss and the love all at the same time.
You're kind of experiencing the loss and the love all at the same time. Whereas if you're talking about straight up loss, like a betrayal or a bereavement or whatever
it is, that's, it's different.
It's quite overwhelming.
So, losing loved one kind of thing?
Losing a loved one.
I mean, I will say that the truth that I think that we can come to after a lot of time on this earth is the
idea that love exists not only in its particular forms, so not only in the form of the one person,
you know, that one person we love or that other person we love, but love itself is a state that we have access to. And so over time, the loss
of person A can heal and you can tap into a kind of bigger river of love.
Yeah, I mean, I had this, it comes from Louis, Louis K. It is show. Damn, I love that line. I mean, there's a he's toxic and older gentleman and
Louise is all like sad about
Losing a loved one or like getting rejected essentially like a breakup and then the older gentleman
gives him advice saying like
Basically criticize is Louis for saying why are you moping around? Because this is the best part.
Like losing love is the best part.
Because that's the real loss is when you forget.
Like feeling shitty about having gone through a breakup
is when you most intensely appreciate
what that person meant to you. Like you most intensely appreciate what that person meant to you.
Like you most intensely feel love in some strange way by realizing that you've lost it,
by missing it, wishing at this moment, I wish I had that.
Like that feeling, that's when you feel that love the most, the absence of it.
So the older gentleman gives advice that that love the most, the absence of it, so the older gentleman gives advice
that that's the best part.
And if you're good with it, you can last for the longest.
It could be the most sort of prolonged experience of deep appreciation and emotion and so on.
So that's kind of a, that's a nice way to look at loss, which is a reminder of how much
somebody meant to us.
Yeah, I mean, I think there's a lot of truth in that because, yeah, you wouldn't care so
much if it weren't something that mattered to you.
So it's always a signpost to the direction you really want to go to, and that's always
what it is.
Yeah, and it's interesting to see the way the mystical versions of many of the great religions
all point in this direction, whether you're looking at Sufism or the Kabbalah or in Christian mysticism,
you see this idea that the longing for what you lack is the
very thing that gives you what you're longing for. So the longing is the cure. I mean,
that's the way the Sufi poet Rumi puts it. The longing is the cure. And he says, be
thirsty, like be as thirsty as you possibly can. That's what you want to be.
The good stuff is the wanting, not the having. Yeah, yeah, of course,
tell it to a person that just broke up and it'll be like, shut up, asshole. I had her
him back. Yeah, no, absolutely. Those are the kinds of life lessons that only work when
you kind of step away for a while. They don't work in the moment in the moment of excruciation.
There is something about the fact of knowing that all humans are in that
experience together that is also incredibly uplifting.
Well, that takes time for people to realize like, you know, like
heartbreak in your early teenage years or something like that, could
feel like this is completely the most novel.
Yes.
And the most dramatic pain that any human has ever felt, right?
Or maybe even when you're younger.
And then one of the process, one of the things you realize is that everybody goes through
this.
That can be an awakening to the fact that we're all in this together.
This human condition is not just a personal experience, it's an experience we all share.
And that's a kind of love, the unity of it.
Yeah.
You can get to experience.
That's a really deep kind of love.
And I feel like we're prevented from perceiving that love as,
it's actually the most obvious kind of love
and it's right there and it happens all the time,
but we're prevented from perceiving it
because we're not really supposed to talk about things
like that, there's something unseemly about it.
Oh, it's also in the West,
it's the individualist society.
So there's a pressure to see the individual as a distinct sovereign
entity that experiences things. And it's not the unity between people is not obviously sort
of communicator talked about who's part of the culture.
Yeah, it's not part of the culture. And yet, you know, you see it in our behaviors because
we're humans. So, you know, why do people listen to sad music?
I mean, one reason is they're hearing expressed for them.
Like the musician is basically saying to them,
this thing that you have experienced,
I've experienced it too, so have lots of other people.
But they're saying it all without words,
and it's transformed into something beautiful.
And there's something about that
that's just incredibly elevating. And people don't know it but like there's one study that I have
in in Bitter Suite that found that people whose favorite songs are their happy songs play it on
their playlist about 175 times. The people who love sad music play them about 800 times.
75 times, with people who love sad music, play them about 800 times.
And they say that they feel connected to the sublime when they're listening to that music.
What, what do you think that is? So what is that? What, what is it in music that connects us
to the sublime through sadness? I mean, I've been to different theories like the whole reason I started writing this book is because I kept having this
reaction reliably to sad music. And I realized that for people
who I knew who were religious believers, the way they
described their experience of God was what I was experiencing when I would hear that music.
Like all the time, it happens over and over again.
So you wonder what that is?
Yeah, so I started wondering what that is.
And lots of people have tried to figure out, you know, what that's all about.
And there are different theories that it's expressing.
It's like a kind of catharsis
for our difficult emotions that it's as we were saying a sense of being in it together.
We don't react in that sort of uplifted way when you just see like a slide show of sad faces
which is something researchers have actually tested. No one really cares when they're seeing
the slide to the sad faces, but the sad music,
they're really reacting.
And also, they don't really react when they're hearing music expressing other negative
emotions, like martial music or something like that.
It's just the sad music that gives people this elevated sense of wonder.
So I think it's the combination of the sadness and the beauty. And I think it's just tapping into the essence of the human source code, which is a kind
of spiritual longing, whether we're atheists or believers.
There's this feeling of longing for a state and a place of perfect love and perfect unity
and perfect truths and all of it and like an acute awareness that we're not there in this world.
And, you know, in religions, we express that through the longing for Mecca or Eden or
Zion.
And artistically, we express it with d'Arthie longing for somewhere over the rainbow or
Harry Potter enters the story at the precise moment that he's become an orphan. So he's now going
to spend the rest of his life longing for these parents who he can never remember. And that's
there's something about that state that's at our very core. And I think that's why we love it so
much. Well, it could be, you know, you can have the Ernest Becker theory of denial of death,
where at the core of that, the warm of the core, as
Jung said, is the fear of death. So we're the longing for the perfect thing as to do with
sort of becoming immortal, as reaching beyond the absurdity, the cruelty of life that all things come to an end for no particularly
good reason whatsoever, or one we can rationally explain.
I know.
You know, I wonder about that all the time.
Like, I know obviously there's that idea from Becker and throughout philosophy and
the tale of Gilgamesh about the idea that the thing we're longing for most of all is immortality.
But I feel like it's not only that. I think it's more so or also, let's say, to lay down with the lambs finally, you know, for like the fundamental calculus of the
universe to just be different where life doesn't have to eat life in order to survive.
And yeah, just a completely different situation.
I wonder.
That immortality would not solve.
I wonder that could be a very kind of modern thing, because surely so much of human history is defined by violence and glorified
violence that doesn't give inklings of this lions and the lambs.
So much.
I mean, I know all other stuff is in the Bible to you.
There's other stuff in the Bible and the Bible is in that particular aspect doesn't necessarily
reveal the fundamental motivation of human nature that could be deeper stuff, you know, but yeah, that is a beautiful that is a beautiful picture, but is it just about humans or is it all about all of life and you have to think about.
to think about what is the perfect world look like. It's not just the lines and the lambs laying together, is, you know, how many lines and how many lambs and, you know,
what, having just had a few very technical conversation about Marxian economics versus
Kenzie and economics versus neoclassical economics. What is the economic and the government system look like for the lives and the labs that
we're longing for? So then you start to build society on top of all those things, but you
still, you return to this. What are we longing for? What's the role of love in that? What's
the role of that sad melancholy feeling, the feeling of loneliness? Is the feeling of love in that, what's the role of that sad melancholy feeling, the feeling
of loneliness, is the feeling of loneliness fundamental to the human condition.
Like, are we always striving sort of channel that feeling of loneliness to connect with
others? Like, we want that feeling of loneliness. Otherwise, we wouldn't be connecting.
Is that fundamental? That feeling like you're alone
in this, even when you're with other people, sort of alone together, you're born and
alone, you die alone. Maybe loneliness is fundamental.
I think the longing for union is fundamental. It's just that it looks so different for
different people, you know. And coming back to where we were, what we were talking about
at the beginning, you know, union looks incredibly social for a lot of people and hardly social at all for others,
but everybody needs some version of union.
Yeah, people have been telling me recently about polyamory and all those kinds of things.
So I'm having probably grown up in a certain part of the world.
I'm very, I'm very monogamy centric, none in a judgmental way, just for me, what makes me
happy is one person for all.
For my whole life, basically just dedication.
Yeah.
Because I've just seen through relationships with people and objects in my life, the longer
we stay together, the deeper the tie. So that's just the empirical thing. And yes, that
probably is a personalized thing. That's just true for me. It could be very different
brothers. Maybe it's connected to the introverted thing. Maybe not. Who knows? Before,
before I leave, because you mentioned songs, sad songs sad songs what what are we talking about what's a good what what's song do you remember last crying to oh
gosh well
I literally I literally dedicated my book to Leonard Cohen he's played such a huge role in my life like I love him I love him
such a huge role in my life. Like I love him. I love him. And I've loved him with this crazy love that I've never been able to understand for decades. I think I understand it a little better now.
But so you got so you're better friends with him than me. I'm so does it make you is it the
musician or the human to because the human is a it is a torsion soul in a way.
I'd say it's the musician. It's the musician. I actually was thinking about this the other day. I mean, obviously he's not alive anymore, but I was kind of running the thought experiment.
If he were alive still and I had the chance to meet him in person,
would I want to do that? And I'm not really sure that I would because
would I want to do that? And I'm not really sure that I would because he represents for me symbolically everything, well, everything, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll
I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll,
I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll,
I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll,
I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll
I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll,
I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, They might or might not express if you were just like hanging out with them and having a coffee.
And I'm happy to know him that way.
He can express himself, I'm sure, in the way that you know him as over coffee too.
Yes, he does.
It just requires like a focus of remembering, like a deep focus of connection.
That's why I like when I interact with folks,
it's so draining for me because I'm putting all my whatever weapons I got in terms of like deeply
trying to understand the person in front of me and doing that dance of human interaction, the humor, the intense kind of delving into who they are.
Which requires navigating around small talk type of stuff and just like compliments and so on.
In general, depending on the culture, depending on the place,
they'll sometimes flower stuff with smiling and like compliments like, oh, I love you. This is great.
But that's all great.
But you want to get to the core of like, what are the demons in the closet?
Let's talk about it.
And that could be exhausting.
That could be really exhausting.
So from a Lena Copa perspective, you get more and more famous.
It can be hard sometimes because he probably is also an introvert.
Oh, yeah. I know he was an introvert. Oh, yeah.
I know he was an introvert because he actually tweeted about my book when it came out.
So that was a precious moment for me.
Something about who should all be listening to the quiet.
I can't remember exactly what he said.
But yeah, yeah.
No, he definitely was.
He struggled with depression, which I wonder if that's something that's also connected
to interversion.
But perhaps not actually, perhaps that they're very disjoint.
And also connected to sensitivity and many sensitive people are introverts.
So it's kind of like a Venn diagram, about 80% of highly sensitive people are introverted,
but then some are extroverts.
And then not all introverts are sensitive.
So it's complicated, but he was definitely a sensitive type.
Well, there's on top of that, you see like the percent of artists relative to the average
that suffer from depression.
So creative people is very high.
Very, very crazy.
Yeah.
And then the number of artists and successful artists who were orphaned when they were young,
who lost one parent or both parents, like an astronomical number.
I have it in the book, I don't remember the percentage, but huge.
And he was one of them.
He lost his father when he was nine.
And his first active poetry was, was he took, his father made suits.
That's why I thought of him when we were talking about him or his suit.
And he took one of his father's bow ties and wrote a poem in his honor and buried the poem
and the bow tie in the backyard.
And that was like his first creative act.
You know that song, Chelsea with all number two?
Sure.
Where he met, I guess it's about Janice Joplin.
Janice Joplin, yeah.
What a fun, intense and cruel person she is.
Yeah.
So I guess, have you ever seen, I'm sorry to interrupt you,
but have you ever seen his son, Adam Cohn and Lana Del Rey
perform that song together?
Oh, wow, no.
It's incredible.
I've descended to you.
Yeah, so that for people who don't know I don't I mean
Maybe I don't know it goes I remember you well in the Chelsea hotel you were talking so brave and so sweet
Giving me head on the unmade bed while the limousines wait in the street. There's a good line in there about
About being ugly. Oh, yeah, we are ugly, but we have the music. No, before that,
from a guy's perspective, it was, oh, you told me again, you preferred handsome man, but for me,
you would make an exception. Yeah, so good. Well, she continued that thread in later, because I think
she said that he was lousy in bed. That was that right?
Yeah, she publicly said that, which is like, man, is there...
Just, okay, for people that don't know, I think this is a true story about them interacting
and being together for a very brief time, I don't know, dating, but just connecting, falling
in love in this very particular way that I think famous musicians, poets, can, which
is like, it's impossible for that kind of thing to last. But they did for
brief moment. There's like a sadness to it because it's so momentarily. But it's
so epic. Yeah. Yeah. And that these two past crossings,
you just look at that we know these famous people and it's interesting to watch.
Yeah, and you don't even have the impression that they're thinking it's going to last.
They more know that it's like a blaze of an intersection. Yeah. And the, you know,
the limousines are already waiting while they're in the moment in the middle of it. And then it's done.
already waiting while they're in the moment in the middle of it and then it's done. But he's talked about how his music, he said something like some people are more inclined to say,
hello with their music, but I'm rather more valedictory. That's what he said.
What is valedictory? Like saying goodbye, like the valedictorian's address.
Interesting.
by the Felgic Torians' address. Interesting.
You know, so many of the songs really are about some form of parting or goodbye or imperfection
or something, or like the broken hallelujah.
Yeah, that's awesome.
But that's the thing that's so incredible about him is the way that he's taking all of that and pointing it in the direction of transcendence.
Like it's not just pure sadness, it's sadness and beauty and that's the thing.
Yeah, there is a feeling of transcendence in a lot of the songs.
It's a sadness and transcendence.
It's a goodbye, but you're moving on to some bigger thing, but in
a sort of a theory-alway, not like a proud, arrogant way.
Yeah. So his favorite poet was Garcia Lorca. He actually named his daughter after him, his daughter's name is Lorca. And he talks about how there's some poem
that Lorca had written that made him realize that the universe itself was aching, but the
ache was okay because that's the way you embrace the sun and the moon. And that's what I think is, that's why I think there's this whole rich being in, in this
bittersweet tradition that he embodies that's like the essence of beauty.
You know, it's the way you embrace the sun and the moon.
The song, Hallelujah.
I return to that often, have been me to play it.
I have now a friend who wants to sing it with me.
Is this singer?
Mm.
Mm.
What is, when somebody says they're a singer,
do they have to be good?
Because then no.
But I would say yes, I was in a band for a while
I sang for a while, I was always bad.
But I enjoy it, I enjoy it was always bad, but I enjoy it.
I enjoy it.
I enjoy lyrics.
I enjoy words.
Yeah.
When sung or spoken, they capture something.
They can get in that moment.
Tom Wathes a huge favor to mind for that reason.
Although he often, his lyrics are often not that simple.
I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal
bottomy. He's always playing with just like these weird word play that's especially
in the English language is trickier to do. I'm fortunate enough to know
another language which is Russian so I get to understand that certain languages
allow for more world word play than others
English for that reason. I don't think has a
Like
Like a like a culture of you know what I mean to push back on what I'm about to say but there was no
Culture of word play
Until hip-hop came along
so like word play until hip hop came along. So like distorting words in interesting ways
for there to be a rhythm, a rhyme.
And at the same time, you capturing some really powerful
message plus humor.
All of that mixed in.
Actually, hip hop does a really good job with this.
But there wasn't a tradition,
if you look at poetry in the 20th century,
there wasn't really a tradition of that in the United States, but
there was, in other parts of the world, in certain in Russia.
Interesting.
Empowered also, not just by language, by the fact that you go through a world war where
tens of millions of people die.
Something about mass death of civilians that inspires great literature and music and art.
Yeah, absolutely, because you start telling the real truth, I think.
Yes.
There's no more reason for small talk.
That's funny.
I always have thought that if I could choose any other medium besides writing, it would
be singing.
I knew a singer.
No, I mean, like I'm really not.
I just love the idea of it.
But then I also think, you know, I'm fundamentally a shy person.
So I think it's much better that my medium is writing instead of thinking.
So like, it all worked out.
That said, you're also an exceptionally good public speaker.
And you're not supposed to be mathematically speaking.
Mathematically speaking.
You're not supposed to be a good public speaker.
Oh, you mean because of shyness or?
Yeah, because of shyness, because of introversion,
because of all those kinds of things.
Oh, yeah.
But lots of introverts are public speakers, actually.
Like, this is one of, I knew this from the studies,
but then also when I started going out on the lecture circuit,
I realized that all my fellow speakers
at all these conferences I was going to,
they're all introverts, because, you you know there are people who like spent years
figuring out some idea and now they're out there talking about it. Oh, they're in their head figuring out the idea. Yeah, how do you explain how do you explain that the
the public speakers would you say the good public speakers are usually introverts?
No, I think there's just different styles of it and I think that we just have
the introverts? No, I think there's just different styles of it. And I think that we just have,
when we hear the word public speaker, we have a really limited idea of who that person would be.
So for me, I used to be very phobic about public speaking, and part of the reason for it was because
I thought that being the kind of person I was, didn't equal being able to be a good public speaker because you're only imagining, you know, like the super kind of out there showmen. But I think there's another
style of public speaking that's more reflective and thoughtful and conveying ideas and people
like that too. Is there advice you can give on how to overcome that?, like if you're a shy person, how to be a public
speaker.
Totally give that advice because I used to, before I would give a speech, is, you know,
if I had to do it in law school, if I knew like today was the day when I was going to
get called on in a law school class, I literally one time vomited on my way to class.
Like that's how nervous I used to be.
And yeah, the way to do it is through desensitization.
You know, it's like been figured out.
It's the way to overcome any fear.
You have to expose yourself to the thing you fear,
but in very small doses.
So you can't start by giving the TED talk.
You have to start.
I started by going to this class for people
with public speaking anxiety.
Where, on the first day, all we had to do was stand up and say our name,
and sit down, and that's the victory.
That's fun to watch all those people with anxiety.
Okay, that's the first step.
And the step, one step at a time.
Yeah, and then with this class, you go back the next week,
and he would have us come to the front of the room, and stand up with this class, you go back the next week and he would have us come
to the front of the room and stand up with other people standing next to us so that you
didn't have the feeling of being all alone in the spotlight through others sharing it
with you.
And you would answer some questions about where do you grow up, you know, where do you
go to school and you declare victory and you're done.
And then little by little by little, you keep ratcheting up the exercises
until you get to the point where you can do it.
And then you start having successes and you realize,
oh, you know, actually I can do this.
What about like writing versus improvising?
Because I knew a few people, sort of,
the colleagues of mine that were working on TED Talks
and it feels like you're supposed to write the thing
like way ahead of time, and you practice it,
and they help you and all that kind of stuff.
I don't think I've ever practiced the speech
once in my life or lecture or any of that.
I know it's really good to do,
but do you find that relief, some of your anxiety,
preparing well, or are you not able to do
not preparing well, or are you not able to do not
preparing well at all? I definitely like to prepare before, but the kind of
preparation that I've done for my TED Talks is completely different from what I've
done for everything else, because TED Talks are more like a theatrical event
where it's like a one-person show, and of course if you were going to go on
Broadway with a monologue, you would know every word, so it's like a one-person show. And of course, if you were going to go on Broadway
with a monologue, you would know every word. So it's kind of like that. And so I would rehearse it
over and over the way you do that. Isn't that more anxiety? Like going every single word?
It's so much anxiety because yeah, you're not even so freaked out about being on stage so much
as what if I forget something? Yeah, yeah, absolutely. I mean, they do things like the last head talk I gave,
I actually did forget something halfway through.
Like I just couldn't remember the next line.
And so I had to walk over like over there
where my notes.
And so I did that and the audience like very kindly
clapped while I did that and then I came back
to the spotlight and kept going
and they edit that out.
You're done.
So there's a fan their emotions.
It's a kind of, but still, it seems really,
it seems really stressful.
Like I'm now, I'm not sure if I'll ever publish it,
but I've been, most is for personal journey,
but I've been working on a series on Weight For It, Hit Learn
the Third Reich, sort of looking at the historical context of everything because of my family
was so much affected by that whole part of history.
So for me to rigorously, I've read a lot about Stalin and Hit Learn, and for me to force
myself, one of the best ways to force yourself to really consider
material is to have to talk about it.
Totally.
And so that's why I'm doing it.
But I'm playing with ideas of some of it, maybe like 20% is written down on paper, but
the rest of it is my thoughts in the moment.
And that's a difficult balance to strike, because if you write a lot,
you're going to be more precise, you're going to be more accurate,
but you're going to miss some of the deep, like honest emotion.
The silences won't be correct.
Or the silences between the words won't capture the depth of feeling.
Unless, if you're somebody like me, if you're like,
I guess that's what actors and actresses have to do.
Like, basically, even though the script is fully written,
you improvise between the words, between the lines.
Yeah.
But that's a scale.
Well, it also takes so much time.
I mean, I experienced that with the TED Talks.
It's like you get to a stage, so you're memorizing
everything word for word.
And at first, in that process, it comes out in a really
wooden way, the way you're saying, like the emotion's gone.
But once you really know it, so you've internalized the words,
then all the emotion comes back. And you can say them in a completely different way. You know, and you're really speaking it, so you've internalized the words, then all the emotion comes back
and you can say them in a completely different way.
You know, and you're really speaking it from the heart,
but you have to know it so well before you can do that.
I would never recommend it,
because it's just like, it's so time consuming.
It's an inch well, in your case, it works out beautiful.
Like when it all comes together,
it is a theatrical thing.
It's like a musical or whatever.
I'm going to, I think I'm going to come out with a one-man show on Broadway,
singing, no, I'm inspired.
But for real, where are you going to talk about Hitler and Stallone and everything you're learning?
Me too.
Have you ever thought of using the medium of just speaking into a microphone but without
the video?
I'm curious about this because I fell in love with podcasts originally before there
was ever this whole video component to it.
And I realized there's something so primal and magical about having someone's voice in
your ear.
And my favorite kinds of interviews still,
very few people do it this way nowadays,
but my favorite kind are when you're just talking
into the microphone.
So it's not over Zoom, it's not in person,
it's just you in the microphone
and the other person in the microphone and they're in your ear.
It's like the ultimate in intimacy.
Oh, you made it from the interview perspective
this is your favorite.
Yeah, but it would be interesting also is with the kind of thing
you're talking about of just speaking, like just you and the mic. I would love to be in
person, but you can't see the person. I wonder what that's like. Good. It would be me
and like they're all there, but behind a curtain. No, you said your eyes closed. You just
caulk and you have your eyes closed or whatever you have because I think you still have get the same kind of chemistry because it's not just the visual. I don't even know that because obviously I've trouble making eye contact.
But is I don't know if the visual stimulation is the necessary thing. There's something about the way audio travels that captures the intimacy where some people actually have headphones on.
Like Joe does this have headphones on, that's really intimate.
Like, there's something about that sound going directly into your ear.
Yeah.
Yeah, there is something primal there, yeah, for sure.
I've thought about it, definitely.
As some of my favorite podcasts are like that, WTF with Mark Marren, that's audio only.
There's a few audio- only pockets that I just love.
And what is that?
I still go on Clubhouse that was a social media platform
where it's audio only.
And it's so interesting.
The interesting thing about Clubhouse in particular,
is people from all walks of life can tune in.
And they just have, it's,
somebody needs to do some research
in terms of introversion on that one,
because I don't feel any of my introvert, um,
like triggers happening because, uh,
so nobody can see you as just audio and nobody is offended.
If you're just sitting there quietly, just listening.
So you can, you can participate whenever you want or not.
Yeah, it's like the ultimate social freedom.
You can listen as much as you'd like.
You can participate if you want,
but you don't have to, it's no big deal.
Yeah, if I'm actually a physical party,
somebody's gonna look at me and be like,
why, there'll be that pressure to speak,
but you don't have to, in that kind of audio setting.
And there's that intimacy.
Like you can, when it's audio-only, it feels like you can reveal a lot more of yourself in some kind of honest way.
I don't know what that is. What is that?
But I don't know, but I assume it's tapping into something really ancient.
Like we used to tell stories around the fire.
Like our whole storytelling tradition was oral originally. So maybe that, but we used visual
stuff. Like, that's you could actually see the person. It seems like the
kind of the fire seems like the visual elements so fundamental to social
interaction, but there is something primal about audio. I wonder what that is.
And still that's why I mean most people listen to podcasts, I think audio only, they have it in their ears while they're doing stuff.
Yeah, that's how I do it.
And then that's how I do it. And that's where the friendship, like, is formed. It's weird. The deep connection with other humans, it's formed because they're in your ear. And you get to see them grow, you get to see them,
be bored, experience, excitement, anger, and fear and all those kinds of things. It's fascinating,
it's fascinating. The world of podcasting is fascinating because we're in this world of
essentially radio, even though we all have all this high definition content, all
this like TikTok style, fast stuff and still podcasting.
I know and we still choose to do this.
It's weird.
Because at the end of the day, I think that's really what people want most is just to talk
to each other and to know what people really think.
And podcasting of all the media that I've ever seen is the one where people come closest
to telling you the truth.
And, you know, to telling you, like the good and the bad and the bitter
and the sweet and all of it.
Especially long form.
There's not enough time.
Yeah, exactly.
I had to explain this to people,
like you talk to CEOs and stuff.
They don't understand,
they're starting to understand which better.
Now as a hard requirement, with like CEOs and stuff,
it has to be three hours.
I say like this.
Wow.
Because there's something, they can't be doing marketing stuff
for three hours.
They break.
They start being human, they start joking,
they start relaxing.
And if they can't, that also tells the kind of story.
But I do that kind of torture for CEOs only.
Anyway.
Yeah, when I was getting my publishing house, did media training with me before Bittersweet
came out, and they were preparing me for like the five to seven minute interview that you
might have, you know, if you go on some quick TV thing or something like that, and God, I hate that. It's like, it feels like they're, you're basically having to
not tell the full truth somehow because you can't, you can't tell it in such a short
amount of time.
Well, the other, so to me, podcasting is just the best thing that's ever happened.
The, the other downside of the seven minute interview is I think you could do a really good job
with that, but the dance partner has to be very good.
It's actually challenging for everybody involved.
It's much harder for everybody involved.
Because if you can do, I can imagine like a Christopher Hitchens type character who's
just super witty, then that you could do a seven minute thing.
You can get to the core, a bit
of sweet. You can get to the core of the book without asking those generic small talk questions,
because too many people in that short form interview are just asking very generic questions.
They're doing small talk for seven minutes. That's like, all right. You only get seven minutes.
You only get one interesting question. Go ask the weirdest,
the deepest question that also energizes the other person. It's an art form that people
don't take seriously. I think the seven minute thing, five minutes or even less. And then
the commercials, which I...
Yeah, and I've noticed that many of the best podcasters or ones where when you're on my
side of the table, you feel like it's more of a conversation and less like an interview
where you're answering all the same questions you've answered a million times before.
Yeah, it's really interesting how different the experience is.
And you're right, the audio thing,
if you can lose yourself in that, the intimacy of that,
and you don't even remember what stupid stuff you said.
Because people, I've seen that,
I mean, people don't give them enough credit as,
you might not be aware or might not be a fan,
but Joe Rogan is an incredible conversationalist
and that he makes you forget that anything is being
recorded that you're talking at all, he makes you forget time and you just enjoy yourself and that's
whatever that is. And then you plug into that primal connection to other humans.
What's your favorite Lena Cohen song? Famous blue raincoat? Do you know that one? Yeah, I maybe I'll play it. Yeah
For people who don't know what red cone, and this is your first introduction to him. It's gonna sound so gloomy
But it's so good. He's got this deep rich voice
Tori and most covering famous blue ink. Oh, yeah, no, we want
We want the original just like how a lujef walkly covered down let her coin. That was a really good one
That was a really good one. Yeah, and I also really like Rufus Wainwrights cover
But famous Blurrain coat for people who don't know it. It's basically about a
love triangle and it's told from the perspective
of a man whose wife has just been with another guy who is also his friend. And he's writing a letter
to that other guy. And he's reflecting on the way that all the relationships have changed in the wake of this event.
So they're still friends.
So they're still, well, he refers to him as my brother, my killer,
which is such a Leonard Cohen thing to do because it's always like, you know,
it's light and it's dark all at once.
Nothing is ever all one thing.
Yeah, I love this song. Yeah, right? I mean...
He just speaks of it.
And the fact that it's four in the morning and it's the end of December, like those are
transitional moments, you know, it's night going into day and it's December going into the new year. That's not an accident.
There is something about December, this, whatever, there's certain scenes you can paint in your mind.
There's a poem by Charles Boccosco called Nirvana. It's a young man traveling through the middle of nowhere
in the snow.
There's something about the snow.
Either the rain or the snow can put you in a certain kind of
mood.
They just, what is it, James Joyce, the dead, the snow is falling
and Dublin.
Yeah, it can put you in a place.
I mean, David Yaden, who's a researcher in psychedelics
and consciousness at Johns Hopkins, he's a great guy.
And he's done research that has found that when people are in their transitional moments of life,
you know, and it could be a career change, it could be a divorce,
it could be that they're nearing the end of their life, that they very often will say those are their most meaningful moments,
and their most spiritual moments.
And so I feel like that's what Leonard Cohen knows how to tap into instinctively.
The year after he died, his son, Adam Cohen, made a memorial concert for him
where all these famous musicians came to Montreal where they had lived and performed his music.
And my husband, who's not a Leonard Coon fan,
and he's not a bittersweet type at all,
but he knows how I feel about him.
He's like, you know, you should really go to that concert.
And I felt so ridiculous.
The whole family went all the way to Montreal on a Monday.
On a Monday.
On a Monday, it was just like a random Monday.
And we got on the plane, like,
so like everyone's at a school, just so I can go to this concert and
and I got there and at the beginning I was feeling like this was all a terrible mistake because
it's all these other musicians playing this music and I don't actually really want to hear them
like I'd rather listen to him on YouTube. And then a musician named Damian Rice came
and played famous Blu-Rain code, and he sang it,
and he did the most amazing thing at the end.
The whole thing was amazing, but then at the end,
he sang this musical riff that was like,
all I could say is it was like a musical lamentation of the ages. And the whole
audience just rose silently to its feet. And it was one of the greatest moments that I've ever had.
There are sometimes certain artists in a cover can capture in some kind of deeper way,
like carrying the thread of the power of the song.
So, been listening a lot to Johnny Cashhart,
which is a 90-snails Trent Rezner song.
Oh, you talked about it on your podcast with Rick Rubian.
Yeah, it was Rick Rubian.
When I reached out to you,
like I love that interview and I love that song also.
Yeah, yeah.
So there's that, there's the Kennedy Center honors
where they celebrated certain artists. They did that for Led Zeppelin and
I forgot what a name is but the least thing of heart
Performance there would heaven and it's like if you're like
All right, you take one of the great sort of rock songs of all time. What do you do in front? Oh the cool thing is
You get to perform this in front of the artist,
while there's still there, you know, there's still a live. So you get to watch you sort of perform.
And in that case, the president, President Obama is there and she's just knocked it out of
the park, but at the same time, without out doing the original somehow, right? You're just
making it your own. You're making your own
not it's not, but not the part completely, not the parting from the spirit of the original.
It's tough because the original hallue by Lenin Cohen, it's just not, it's, it's so powerful,
but it's just not as good as some of these covers. Well, I think I think it's the words and the melody and then the covers take it to a different place.
The thing that Leonard Cohen seems to do well, he I don't think he did on on on hallelujah,
because he was almost being playful on hallelujah. Like I don't know,
as opposed to that deep melancholy like painful longing thing that Jeff Buckley did and others do too.
I wonder if it's because in a way he, I don't mean that he over-edited it, but he apparently worked
on that sound for years in which to gazillions of verses and checked most of them out.
So I wonder if we're hearing his version after he's like a little tired with that
process. Yeah. Well, that's the other thing is like maybe from a book tour, you know, is like,
you get tired of saying the same thing over and over and over and over. You forget the,
you forgot like the initial look, the heart of it. Yeah, but I actually got a chance to hang out
with Dan Reynolds who's the lead singer of Imagine Dragons.
And this is an incredible band, Super Pop.
So the most played band on like Spotify or something.
Is that right?
It's like a really huge Imagine Dragons phase.
So we were listening to their music a lot.
So real to be hanging out with them and he's such a
down to such a good, like very few people I met in my life are just as good of a human being.
And that has to do with the fact that he's struggling, he struggles, he's still I think
struggles, but he's struggling for a long time with depression.
And so out of that pain, you see, born, this really good human being,
this really good relationship with his wife like that,
like, when times are good, they lean on each other for like, they're deeply grateful for those
precious moments. So it's beautiful to watch, but he said that it's really important to feel the song every time.
Otherwise, people know, people are really good
at detecting your bullshit.
You can't fake it.
You really have to feel it every time.
You have to feel the emotion of it.
Whatever the emotion is.
Of the original time, you wrote it.
Yeah, which is interesting,
because I thought you could maybe fake it
But he's he believes person he's a cuz he played in front of the gigantic crowds and over and over and over and over and over and over He's like no every time you have to have to be there
But there's gotta be times when he's about to go out and he's not feeling it and he has to figure out some way of getting
himself into that heart-based. Well, that's what he's saying. You have to otherwise you're just, that's the job.
Right.
Don't take the job then.
And he loves it.
He says the biggest struggle in fact is the come down from that, which is like you have
such a beautiful experience of connected with this large number of people sharing a song
that you love, and then it's such a
rush of connection. And then you have to, you know, when you get off stage, you're now back to
normal life. And that's why a lot of musicians get into heavy drugs and all that kind of stuff,
because you're looking for that rush again. It's very tough to, like, go into this,
that rush again. It's very tough to, like,
been going to this,
speaking of introvert,
because he probably isn't introvert,
as is like,
you have to find that calmness
and how do you find the calmness
when you were just playing
in front of tens of thousands of people,
or hundreds of thousands,
whatever that number is,
that rush of connect,
and everybody, there's love in the air,
and you still have to find that,
like, inner peace and calm.
That's interesting, because I, so I don't know if this is the introvert in me talking and the writer
in me talking but I don't know like I I love most the moments where let's say I'll get a letter
from a reader who will tell me what something I wrote meant to them and and they'll talk about
having had that kind of moment of you know the communion between the writer and the reader and obviously I wasn't there physically when it happened so talk about having had that kind of moment of, you know, the communion between the writer and the reader.
And obviously I wasn't there physically when it happened.
So I wasn't getting that kind of rush that a musician would get in a concert.
But just the knowledge of that having happened out there in the world, do you do something
that I added to it?
Yeah.
It's the most amazing thing.
You love it.
But see, imagine, imagine imagine reading thousands of those letters and then it's such a strong rush that
never thing else doesn't.
It could be overwhelming, I guess.
But like anything else, you have to come down and find a complex, like for example, the
danger of getting letters like that, you start taking yourself too seriously.
You think like you are a special person somehow but that's you really want to avoid that feeling to yeah i don't i don't actually experience that is that much different from when i'm on the other side of it like the reader and
some other writer has made me feel that way to me it's the same thing yeah me too yeah it's a cool it's like it's the same thing. Yeah, me too. Yeah, it's a cool, it's like a virtual hug.
I think it's like, I was just listening to something
about the different Russian writers.
I was mentioning him to you this academic,
his name is Gary Solmorson,
and he studies Russian literature,
and he was talking about, I don't know if I'll be able
to get this right, but basically that the people
misunderstand a work like Anna Karenina and that we think of it as telling
us that you're supposed to live, you're supposed to have like these grand, tempestuous romances
that might end in death or despair or whatever it is, but you know, you should be in it for the intensity of the emotion.
And he's saying actually that's not,
that's exactly not what Tolstoy was saying,
that actually it was the opposite,
that he was really making,
he was really advocating for everyday life.
He was saying it scenes from everyday,
like he was juxtaposing Anna Karenina
with all these other couples who were just living happily and quietly day by day. And that was what he believed was the
ideal. So as opposed to the ground rush and as opposed to the intensity.
I wonder if he is there a depth to the, is there a romance of just the day to day?
I think there is a romance to the is there a romance of just the day-to-day There is a romance to the day-to-day. Don't get
Don't get distracted by the dopamine
Roll-coaster ride of the the grant romantic notions. Yeah, and enjoy it while it's happening because those are life experiences also
But not to mistake those for being everything. Where's he from?
He's a professor at Northwestern at Northwest. And apparently his lectures are like the most popular
around campus.
Well, people love him.
Gary Saul Morrison is an American literary
critic at Sloblist.
He's particularly known for his scholarly work
on the Great Russian novel lists, Leo Tolstoy
and Fierroder Dostoyevsky.
Morrison is Lawrence D.
Professor in Arts and Humanities
in Northwestern University.
Yeah. Wow. And there's a lot of incredible work. And then I'm sure
looking through the lens of Russian literature and the romance of all of that
he's looking at modern at the modern world. Yeah, I think you should have him on
your podcast. And quiet flows the vodka or when Pushkin comes to shove the
Carmudge and guide to Russian literature and culture. This is like one of the
silly books he has on the list.
Okay, cool.
What are you saying?
I'm sorry.
Oh, no, I was just saying, yeah, like, I find that when I take photos on my phone, I hardly
ever take photos at the moment you're supposed to, like everybody's gathered for some event,
I'll forget to take the photo, but I take a lot of like scenes from everyday life, because
that's what I actually want to remember in the end.
Yeah, yeah, I'm the same.
The same.
It's actually concerning, because it's bad for productivity, because I love everyday life
so much, then why do any ambitious big thing?
Your productivity is pretty good.
I don't know that you have to worry about it. I do. So I want to launch a business. I have a dream outside. This is a fun side thing.
There's been a lifelong passion. Anyway, I like building stuff and I haven't been doing that as
much as I would like. That's because largely, because I like sitting in silence and enjoying the beauty that is
just nature and life.
And when there's people, there's people.
I love people.
I love everything.
And so when you love everything, why go through hell to build a company?
Yeah, it's a valid question.
I mean, I think you have to have a really good reason for wanting to do it.
But then your heart calls you for the certain, sometimes you look out into the mountains
and you say, for some reason, I long to go there, even if it means leaving the tribe and
putting yourself in danger and doing stupid shit, that's a human imperative for exploration.
Yeah, absolutely.
Like when we were talking about, you talking about this idea of longing being,
like the source code of humanity,
I think that's also the source code of our creativity.
It's the same longing for Eden.
It's like you're always reaching for
something that you want to get to or that you want to build.
Yeah.
It's the best of us.
What do you think?
You write about creativity and sadness.
You practically speaking, how should we leverage sadness for creativity?
Is that sort of in the artist domain, in the writers domain, in the engineering domains,
and so on?
It's definitely in those domains, but it's in all domains.
You know, we're all going to face pain in this life at some point, and we all have the
ability to weather it and withstand it and live with it for a bit and then try to transform
it into something that we find beautiful. You know, and it's very easy to notice the grandeur of like the painting hanging on the
gallery wall or the new company that's just been created, but it takes a thousand different
forms, right?
You know, you could bake a cake or like in the wake of the pandemic, we've had more people
applying to medical school and nursing school. And after 9-11, you had people applying for jobs,
as firefighters and teachers. So there's something in the human spirit that takes pain and turns
it into meaning when we're at our best. And when we're not at our best, we deny the pain and then
take it out on ourselves and on other people.
So there's a kind of fork in the road of what to do with it.
But we know, I mean, there's all these studies that I go through in the book.
There was one where the researchers had people watch different movies, like happy movies,
sad movies, bittersweet movies. And they found when people watched Father of the Bride,
which is like the ultimate bitter sweet,
you're walking your daughter down the aisle,
kind of feeling, that was,
they would give them creativity tasks
after watching these different movies.
And the people who had been primed for bitter sweetness
were the most creative.
They were like primed to remember finality, you know,
like love and finality, basically. Love and impermanence. There's something about that that's,
that gets us to our most beautiful state. I wonder if it is, I mean, there's studies like that,
there's a, I don't know if you looked into the Terra management theory. Yeah, that's really interesting
stuff. So they, especially intensely, have you focused on not just sad but traumatic like death,
primal with death and see how that changes your mind.
I don't know if those creativity studies but they have interesting, I think a little bit attainted by political bias, but maybe not.
I mean, psychology is a complicated field,
but they study like who you're likely to vote for.
If you're primed by existential,
like by thinking about that.
Like a fear of mortality.
Fear of mortality.
I forget what the conclusions are, but.
I think they find that people become more tribalistic.
Yeah.
And like there was one study where they found that after they primed people that way that
That they would get then give them the chance to put
Hot sauce on a meal that their political opponents were gonna be eating and they put way too much hot sauce on
After they've been primed to worry about death. I think it's the core
We're simple creatures. So I actually, like, in the book, I spent a bunch of time with people who are working on
radical life extension, you know, the quest to live forever.
And people asked them a lot, questions like, you know, the kinds of questions you were talking about
earlier, well, like, how are you going to feed everybody? And how is there going to be space for
everybody if everyone really could live forever?
And what about conflict when we have an intensified conflict? And their answer to that is
they point to terror management theory, you know, and they say, because it's the fear of death,
they're basically saying it's the fear of death that are causing our conflicts in the first place.
And that if we remove the fear of death, we'd have saying it's the fear of death that are causing our conflicts in the first place.
If we remove the fear of death, we'd have less conflict to contend with.
And that, I don't really buy that.
It's possible that that's true, but are you also, how does the expression go throwing
out the baby with the bath water?
Are you also going to remove basically any source of meaning and happiness in a human condition.
I guess very possible that death is fundamental to the human condition, the finality.
Yeah, and that's the great philosophical question, and I went to a conference of people who are
working on this, and I thought that they were gonna be talking about those questions all through the conference.
But the MO is much more like, we're so happy
that we're here with people who have gotten past
all those quipples.
You know, we just know there's gonna be meaning
no matter what.
The basic assumption is, let's try to extend life indefinitely
and then we'll figure out if that's a good decision.
Or more like we're sure it's a good decision. Or at least that was the, that was what I felt.
It's either we're sure it's a good decision or we're sure that it's good to believe that it's a
good decision meaning like there's no downside to that even if we find out it's wrong.
But yes, there's a kind of certainty.
Obviously, you want to extend human life.
That's the kind of assumption that always seemed...
Now, it could be true, but just like the people who over-focus on colonizing other planets.
It feels like you neglect the beauty
and the struggle of our life here on Earth.
I've sort of the same kind of criticism
whether it's thinking about Valhalla
or any other afterlife,
is you have, if you're not careful,
forget to make this life a great one. Whatever happens afterwards.
So yeah, definitely. But from an engineering, from a biology, from a chemistry perspective,
it's very interesting to think, how do we extend this thing? Because it does seem that nature,
the way it designed living organisms, it really wants us to die.
Because that's part of the selection mechanism. This part, it seems to be fundamental to evolution.
Because people young, they need protection.
Once they're young brain, they get to explore a lot,
get to figure out the world, they come up with their own novel ideas,
how to adapt, and how to respond to that world,
and then get older and older, they like stubborn and stuck in their ways.
And so we need them to die.
So we make room for new life that's able to adapt to the changing environment.
If the old doesn't die, then you're not, you're going to get stale and not be adaptable to the changing environment.
But maybe it doesn't have to happen so soon.
Yeah, maybe it doesn't.
Sex pressing, listen, I'm a big fan of pressing snooze.
In the alarm clock, I'm in the same way.
I do, I'm one of the people that believe it's, or I don't definitely believe, of course, I don't know, but I think
death is a fundamental part of life.
But yeah, if I'm out of my deathbed, I'll share how it's snoozed as many times as possible.
Yeah, I know.
And it's interesting because in some ways, I really, I share your instinct.
There was one scientist who I spoke to at that conference.
He's one of the leading advocates and he said,
you know, that's a story that we've invented for ourselves
because we have no choice.
And if you really believe that you have no choice,
then it's adaptive to tell that story that death gives meaning to life.
Good point. But if you really think you could try on for it
Would you still be telling that same story and I've been thinking about that question ever since
Yeah, yeah, no, they got a good point. They got a good point no matter what as an engineering and a scientific pursuit
It's a beautiful one
In your own personal life, if you can go there.
Sure. What's been some dark places you've gone in your own mind, grief, loss, sad moments,
moments of sadness that have made you a better writer, a better creator, a better human being.
you a better writer, a better creator, a better human being?
Well, I mean, I've been through a lot of bereavement just in these last couple of years with COVID,
but even before that, I mean, there's all kinds of stuff
I write about it in the book.
And in some ways, I feel like I can write about things,
those kinds of things better than I can speak them.
But I had a really complicated relationship with my mother growing up, where we had a kind of
garden of Eden to my adolescence
and to, you know, growing independent from her and starting to have different religious views
and different political views and all kinds of things. And we had a pretty intense break that I described in the book. And it was so intense
that even though after that, we still would get together for holidays and talk to each other
on the phone and all that. There was a sense in which like it was over at that point,
the relationship was over. The Garden of Eden was no more.
Yeah, yeah, it was like a feeling of like, yeah, like I know what Eden was like and it's
not there anymore.
And I think it was all the more confusing because like if you lose someone to actual
bereavement, you go through a morning process and people have thought for thousands of
years about how to do that. But with something like this, there's no process because you're not even
admitting to yourself, especially when you're like in your teens and 20s, that you're mourning something.
So, but it was the case that for decades, for decades, I could not answer even the simplest question
about my mother, like, where did she grow up without tears in my eyes, or more than tears
in my eyes, like embarrassing tears. So I would just try to steer the subject in another
place. But I will say, you know, two things happened. One is that I've spent the last six, seven years writing this book about joy and sorrow
and loss and love and all of it.
And I've really come to terms with all of it.
And then the second thing that happened is my mother now has Alzheimer's.
And in her Alzheimer's, she's still actually the same person.
She's forgotten most things, but she still has these conversational lanes that you can
travel down that are like the way she always was.
And the way that she was when I was a kid, which was so incredibly loving and so connected
and so warm and sweet and funny and all of it, all the things I remembered.
Like it's all come back. And for all these decades, I had been wondering whether that garden of
Eden I remembered had actually happened or whether, you know, that was just like the fantasy of
a child. And, you know, maybe it was always difficult and I had not seen it. But I'm seeing her now and I realized that it was all true.
Everything I remember, it was all true.
It all happened because it's happening again.
And you returned to the Garden of Eden for a time.
Yeah.
And to childhood, it's always a question of whether you can return to that place
Well, I don't know I don't even know if I'd say I've returned because I'm a different person now and I don't
I need her and
Are you sure? Are you sure? Yeah, you see a different than the
The then the 10-year-old
Well, okay, no, I mean I'm the same person in terms of my need for love and love of love and
all of that. But I don't look, I'm not dependent on my mother for it the way I was then. And that makes
the experience really different. Yeah, they're younger. She's a, she's a God figure. What is that?
The roots to parents such a funny civilization will live?
And there's a depth of connection to parents that's probably more powerful than anything else
in terms of its formative effect on who you are.
I think it's the most powerful.
And in fact, when this started happening, I got to college and I took a class in creative
writing and I tried to write a fictional story,
a fictionalized version of what was happening.
And I called it the most passionate love
because of what you just said.
And the teacher actually said to me,
she was like, you know, you should put this story
in a drawer and not take it out again for 30 years
because you're way too close to it.
Yeah.
So I've now finally written it like 30 years later.
it. So I've now finally written it like 30 years later.
And yeah, you're probably still too close to it though.
I don't know though, I mean, I do think like I think everybody goes through experiences in this life where you're experiencing like a fundamental pain of separation and desire for a union and it takes so many different
forms. And this was my primal form of it, but you know for someone else, it's a betrayal or
a bereavement or an exile from a country of their birth or whatever it is. But...
And then you get to solve that puzzle for the rest of your life.
that puzzle for the rest of your life. Yeah, in fact, I really do believe that the original love that we long for, that one
of the great things that you learn as you grow older is that the love exists in some
plane that's more general than the particularized form in which you first knew it.
Yeah, I mean, that's why despite all the cleapy interpretations, why even though segment
for it is probably wrong in the details, it was the first one to sort of suggest that
our experiences, I mean, he said that that was really controversial at the time when
young people, they start having sexual thoughts like age two or something, whatever the hell he said.
So you develop this kind of connection to the opposite sex or whatever to your mother,
to your parents.
And I think while a lot of that is shown to be probably not true, what is like a deeper
truth there is your first early experiences of love or depth of connection are probably somehow
strongly formative of your conception of love and your definition of the perfect thing you're reaching for for the rest of your life. Yeah, I think that's right. And you can really see it when
you become a parent too. You know, you can just see like there's... Don't screw it up. Yeah, you know,
I have to say like, I mean, not gonna would, I actually feel like we're doing pretty well.
Like my kids are teenagers now,
and I really had thought that I wasn't gonna repeat
the issues that I'd been through with my mom,
and I can say, I really am not.
Yeah, like my mom for various reasons,
just had a lot of trouble with my independence,
and I just don't feel that at all.
So yeah, there might be other things you're totally blind to.
I guess that's possible.
Is that the way of parenting?
You saw the problems of the past, but there's the other new one.
I guess I'll find out in under 20 years, but like so far so good. What wisdom?
About parenting, can you can you give from your own experience of from your writing?
Yeah, well, oh my god, there's a lot to say. So on the bitter sweet side of things, the wisdom that I
would give is that especially for kids who are growing up in relative comfort with everything going
pretty well, they get the idea that real life is when things are going well and when things
don't go well, it's like a detour from the main road as opposed to understanding that it's all the
main road.
And I tell the story in the book of this time that we went on this family vacation where
we rented a house in the countryside.
And the house was next to this field where we lived to donkeys that our kids fell in love
with.
They were like really little at the time, two boys.
And they're spending all this time feeding carrots
to the donkeys, and it's all beautiful.
And then comes the day where they realize
that we're leaving in like two days,
and they're never going to see these donkeys again.
And they start crying themselves to sleep.
And the usual things that parents might say at a moment
like that of like, you know, maybe we'll come back
or another family will feed them, will feed these donkeys. None of that made any
difference. But when we said to them, you know, goodbye is part of life and this
feeling you're having, everybody has it, you've had it before, you're gonna have it
again, you'll feel better in a couple days, But this is the way it's supposed to be. This is natural. That's when they stopped
crying because I think that's when they stopped resisting. Yeah.
Like, it's one thing to feel the pain of goodbye and it's another thing to be feeling like
this isn't supposed to be happening. It's the resistance part of this isn't supposed
to be happening that makes life really difficult.
Yeah, this is...
As opposed to a more clear-eyed view of what it really is.
This isn't D supposed to be happening.
There's a show called Yellowstone that I recently started watching.
Yeah, no, I've heard of it.
We actually started watching it, but only a few minutes and didn't get into it.
So there's just a quick, it's not a spoil, there's any kind,
but there's a father
taking out the sun for the first time to go hunting and you know, to shoot their first buck.
And the sun is really sad because he pulls the trigger and he took a life. And the father says
that everybody gets killed in this life. That's the way of nature. That's the way each one of us is going to get killed.
And it's interesting because I didn't really think of it that way medically discuss that a bit, but basically there's something, whether it's a truck
or a bacteria, something's going to kill you in the end.
And that was an interesting way to look at it, because we tend to think of humans aren't
supposed to be killed.
We think of murder as one of the sins, sort of one of the things that you don't do in society.
But you know what, we do.
That's a more technical discussion, whether we ultimately get killed by something in the
end, but into some degree, that's true, at least for most of us, that there's something
that gets us, whether it's cancer, those kinds of things.
It's interesting.
But yeah, that reframing of this, it's supposed to be, this is the way of the world.
Yeah.
Though it's funny, I mean, you know, at the same time that I just wrote a whole book about
the fact that this is the way it is.
Like, I really do believe this is the way it is.
And with this reality, there's an intense beauty that comes along with it.
So we have to accept the reality to get to the beauty.
I believe that.
And at the same time, there's a part of me that's just like, yeah, but give me the magic
wand to make the world different.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't know how much of this is a female thing too.
Like, I was watching with my son, my 12 year old the other day.
We were watching this show about the battle year old the other day. We were watching
this show about the Battle of Thermopoly. And it was like all about, you know, Valor and glory
on the battlefield. And I said to him something like, gosh, don't you just wish we lived in a world
where you didn't have to do all this in order for everyone just to live their lives.
He just looked at me completely puzzled.
No, you know, like to him, it all just seemed self-evident that the world would be structured that way.
You know, and he had like the 12-year-old admiration for the valor at all.
But you wonder if that's nature or nurture. I wonder what that world
looks like. We do live in a world where murder is seen as bad, but you look at a lot of
the human history. I don't know if they had the same kind of conception of that in terms of you have to ask what kind of murder you know for what purpose
in a war was a way of life. It's interesting. It's interesting if we can imagine
properly a future that is different than ours in terms of operating under different moral systems. But I'd like to say with living indefinitely or living in a society with no war, like how
fundamental is war, how fundamental is death, humanity.
I think it's so fundamental to our source code.
I just wish that our source code were different, basically.
Like, I can't get past that wish. There's, there's brain computer interfaces that try to merge.
So, greater and greater with smartphones, we're already kind of cyborgs, but greater and
greater merger of computational power.
So literally adding source code to our original source code, just a different, there's the mushy biology that runs source code. And then there's more cold electrical systems. And then they integrate
together. And potentially one day we offload the magic that is human consciousness, also
into the machine. And then we'll get to see, see. Maybe they'll be a little bit less as
whole issue about the whole war thing. That'd be more. But there is I think, even when I
think about engineering, human intelligence or superhuman intelligence systems, I feel
like they also need to have the yang yang of life. They have to be able to be afraid and to be sad and all those kinds of things.
But maybe it's because I'm a product in this particular environment.
Maybe sadness is a human, useful human invention, but not a universal one.
This is what I don't know, because this is where I come back to the, as I told you, like
the original reason that I wrote my whole book was the
feeling that somehow in the expression of sad music is what other people see when they talk
about God.
Like there's something so there's like an ultimate beauty there.
Yeah.
But I don't know if we have access to without that, but maybe we do.
But I can say in this world, that's a great way to get access to that state.
Is it within the reach of science to deeply understand this?
You think?
To understand that why if you're sad when you're listening to a song?
Or why you feel someone to love when you're listening to a sad song?
Just to a sad song, right?
Yeah.
Why the sad song opens up some kind of deep connection to something you can call divine or something,
whatever the heck that is.
Yeah, I do think.
I mean, we have like really early signs of it from the research, and I'm sure we're just
at the scratching the surface stage.
But I mean, like we know, for example, that the vagus nerve, which is so fundamental that it governs our breathing and our digestion,
our vagus nerve also activates when we see another being in distress. There's like an
instinctive impulse to want to make it stop. And the theory is that that's an evolutionary
design because we had to be able to respond to the cries of our infants,
you know, and from that ability grows the greater ability to respond to other people's cries too.
So that's probably just, you know, the very first step in being able to understand what all that is.
We've already given plenty of advice, but broadly, what advice would you give to young folks
today about career or about life, whether they want to be writers, lawyers, scientists,
musicians and artists, whatever the heck they want to be?
How can they live a life they can be proud of?
Okay, here's what I think you should absolutely do that thing that you're dying to do, but you should always
have a plan B and a backup plan and a way of earning a living no matter what happens.
Because I feel like people, we have this narrative in our culture of like with the glamorous thing is to
figure out the thing you love and then risk everything to achieve that. But first of all,
a lot of people aren't comfortable with that level of risk. And second, when you're living with that
level of risk, that's a cognitive load too. And so you don't have the full emotion and heart to be able to focus on the thing that
you actually really love because you're stressed out about it.
So I'd say, get the backup plan in place and then do the thing.
My advice would be the opposite.
I'm moving the romantic.
Well, I think the truth is be aware of the cost not having a plan B has to do it deliberately
if you don't, but I, you know, I'm with Bukowski, I'm fine with what you love and let it
kill you.
I think not you have to actually know your personality.
I know if I have a plan B, I will not try as hard on plan A, and I would likely take plan B.
Because if plan A is the risky thing, I just work way much better in the state of desperation.
So I'm with my back against the wall, and you have to know that about yourself.
I think that has to do with...
So I think we can refine it to say you actually have to really know yourself and how you respond
to different kinds of Rick
Like I would not do well in that kind of situation. I'd be like up at two in the morning worrying about it. Yeah, where is
If I have some like it doesn't have to be paying the rent in some grand way
But I if there's some basic way of paying the rent then my heart's free to do the thing I really love
That's hilarious. I for me the only way I'm free is when I don't know how I'm going to pay the rent.
Yeah.
Because otherwise, I'll find a way to pay the rent.
That's not at all a source of deep fulfillment for me.
I see.
So it's like if you don't have the expression, I don't know I don't know something like the dog at your back. Yeah, deadlines.
Then you won't actually do it. I create real or artificial deadlines, anxiety and so on.
So yeah, you have to. Yeah, so really the advice is know your triggers.
But but we're still saying the same basic thing of like do the thing you really love.
But but just set up the
strategy as the rest of your life.
Appropriately to your personality.
Exactly.
Exactly.
What do you think is the meaning of life?
The meaning of this whole thing.
Probably has something to do with whatever we feel when we listen to a sad song.
Yeah.
I, because two things come simultaneously to my mind when you ask that question.
And I've been asking it since I was four.
I remember the first time I did.
Um, the question is more important than the answer probably.
Yeah, keep asking.
I don't know.
The first one is beauty and I don't know why beauty is so important, but I just know
that it is impossible to define, perhaps.
Is it, is it definable?
Yeah.
Other than you know it, when you see it, I don't know.
I mean, just.
Has to do with that line.
Yeah.
You feel something when you just see it, do you hear it?
Yeah, you just see it and it's like, like some, it's whatever can deliver you to that mode of transcendence
where you're no longer purely in your own self and you're in something higher. And when you're in
those states of mind, you know it because you have the temporary sensation that you could die at
that moment that the people you love could
die, and it will all be okay, because there's something else. So that's my first answer.
And the second answer is the need to relieve psychic pain. Like other people's psychic
pain. I don't know why that's just that's just like an impulse that I have psychic pain is more like like suffering of a form
What it would yeah, but I mean
What what is there particular yeah, just making the world
better and
less pain
Let less pain to go around in general
Hence here the sort of optimistic desire and longing for a world without sort of destruction,
without malevolent destruction.
Yeah, a world where that wouldn't be necessary.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
But yeah, like, I, so I had this moment.
It wasn't so long ago, I was doing some interview and somebody asked me, like, what are you
longing for right now?
And my answer at that moment was like, you know what? I'm actually at this moment in life where I'm not longing for anything.
I'm at this particular way station where everything is the way I wanted to be.
Of course, the minute you say something like that, you know, you're going to be proven wrong
because like an hour later, I get a letter from a reader who I've been in touch with over
the years and he was telling me about like a psychic struggle that he's going through.
And I just feel like, oh my gosh, if there were anything I could do to make it that his
life wouldn't have been such that he would be in this position in the first place. Like his struggles had to do with a long life history.
So I don't know why I feel that. It's funny, but I do those moments when you are just at peace,
there's nothing else you want. I feel like that's like a temporary repose, like a pause.
Like, exactly. You could. You bet your ass a desire follows that at some point, but you get
to enjoy those little moments. Yeah. And even when I said, even when he asked me and I answered
that way, I said, this is a way station. Like I knew it was temporary, but I didn't realize
it would be disrupted like an hour later. And so to give you push back to your statement about the possibility of, you could say beauty
and basically alleviating suffering.
There's a quote I really like from Hunter S. Thompson that pushes back against that, which
is for every moment of triumph, for every instance of beauty, many souls must be trampled.
But that's a very hunter as Thompson.
And you know how he ended up,
he's not the greatest philosopher of all times,
but he's certainly a beautiful, a chaotic human being.
Well, that's true.
And I will tell you that my nickname for my husband
is Gonzo, kind of because of him,
you know, he invented that form of Gonzo journalism where like the, the writer is totally in
the story.
And my husband, like, that's his personality.
He's like in everything that he does.
He's really in it.
He's really present.
He just lives that way.
So, so his name is Ken, but I call him Gonzo, like 90% of the time.
Well, then that's a beautiful way to end this season.
This is, thank you for your work.
Thank you for being who you are.
Thank you for initially at least making me feel okay about being an introvert and educating
and making the rest of us feel great about being introverts.
It's like half the world or whatever that has got is a lot of people.
Thank you for being you.
Well. And thank you for talking today. It was awesome. This was people. Thank you for being you. Thank you for talking today. It was
awesome. This was fun. Thank you so much. It was so great to talk to you. I think it was
the what I said to you when we first got connected is thank you for your way of being in the
world. I really, really love it. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Susan
Kane. To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you some words from Susan Cain herself.
The highly sensitive introvert tends to be philosophical or spiritual in their orientation,
rather than materialistic or hedonistic.
They dislike small talk.
They often describe themselves as creative or intuitive.
They dream vividly and can often recall their dreams the next day.
They love music, nature, art, and physical beauty.
They feel exceptionally strong emotions,
sometimes acute bouts of joy,
but also so sorrow, melancholy, and fear.
Highly sensitive people also process information about their environments, both physical and emotional,
unusually deeply.
They tend to notice solutees that others miss,
another person's shift to mood,
or a light bulb burning a touch too brightly.
Thank you for listening, and hope to see you next time.
you