Magic: The Gathering Drive to Work Podcast - #714: Red-Green
Episode Date: February 14, 2020This podcast is another in my two-color philosophy series. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm pulling my driveway. We all know what that means. It's time for the drive to work.
Okay, so today is another in my two-color philosophy podcast. This time I'm up to red-green.
Okay, so what I do in these podcasts is I talk about the colors and I talk about kind of philosophically what the colors have to do with each other, how they relate.
philosophically what the colors have to do with each other, how they relate.
Okay, so the first thing I always need to do is really quickly talk through the essence of red and green and I'll talk about where they overlap and stuff.
Okay, so red is the color that believes
in following your heart.
Inside, you have an inner voice that knows what you want.
And the key to happiness is listening to that. If you're happy, celebrate.
If you're sad, cry. If you're mad, go punch somebody.
That Red really believes, Red's whole thing is the idea
of freedom through action. That I want to do what I want to do
and I want to be who I want to be. And part of really living life
is being willing to take the steps you need to be who I want to be. And part of really living life is being willing to take the
steps you need to be who you are, to be true to yourself. Okay, green is a color that believes
that the world is perfect the way it is, that the natural system is ideal, and that the real key to
life is not to change things, but to accept things the way they are. So green is all about
growth through acceptance. That if you accept the natural way, that growth is part. It's not that
green doesn't like change, I guess. Green does like natural evolution. But green wants you to
embrace and become part of the world around you. Green firmly believes that you are born to be part of, you're born into an ecosystem
and that part of what you want to do is understand your role,
accept it, and live it. That you are really,
that green wants you to be part of the system you were born into.
That green wants you to accept your role and how you connect to everything.
Okay, so what do red and green have in common?
Well, the way we were talking ally colors, the shortcut is to go look at the enemy.
Their shared enemy is blue.
So what's blue all about?
Okay, well, blue is all about the idea of perfection.
Perfection through knowledge is blue's thing.
That blue wants to be the best that it can be. It believes everyone is born on a blank slate and that
through proper knowledge and education
and training and with the right tools that you can become
the best version of yourself. So Blue is very much about
seeing the future. About making the choices
that make you become the best thing
that you can become.
Well, red and green, the opposite of that is red and green aren't about the future.
They're about living in the now.
They're about accepting you for who you are.
You know, blue is all about becoming something.
Red and green are about accepting who you are as yourself in the now, in the moment.
So for example, red is very impulsive.
Green is very instinctual. What that means is red and green are the
colors that actually can act the fastest because they're not, you know,
blue acts the slowest. It's thinking things through. And blue, red
and green are all about living in the moment. So they are like, I know what to do.
I feel
it. Now, whether or not it's an emotional impulse or a drive, an instinctual drive,
that red and green know what to do because they feel it and they should do it. And so
red and green are definitely the most immediate in their action. They're the ones that most are about,
I don't need to spend lots of time and energy thinking things through.
I don't need to weigh my options.
I know what I want.
And so red and green are very much about accepting,
sort of accepting within, is how I like to say it.
You know, that blue is looking without.
Blue is saying, oh, where can I go find external things
that can change who I am? Red and green are about, I am
who I am. I need to accept who I am. And the key to understanding what I need
is looking within. You know, that I will have
feelings and thoughts and, you know, I will have things that just
I have to act out and I will act on those. Red and green
are also the most about the importance of sort of,
when I say live in the moment, doing things and being things.
And, you know, red and blue is very much about inaction, right?
Blue is about, I don't want to do the wrong thing,
because if I do the wrong thing, I might miss an opportunity.
So I want to be very careful and deliberate. Well,
red-green is not that. Red-green is the opposite of its shared enemy.
It is not, you know, it is not
carefully think out its things. Red and green are like,
I have something to guide me, that something comes from within,
and I will act, and I will be, and I will do what I need to do.
The other big thing about red and green is that red and green are, they're internal, and they're spontaneous.
You know, like I said, blue is not at all about spontaneity.
Blue doesn't just do something on a whim.
Red and green also, not only are they all about starting to live in the moment,
but they're also about the idea that there's a boldness to them.
You know, blue is a little bit hesitant in the general of,
blue wants to make sure that everything is carefully thought out.
And red and green kind of thrive in the moment.
That the, so one of the things, to use my Myra Briggs, in the Myra Briggs they talk about, there's one of the things, talk about what gives you satisfaction.
Is it the act of completing something
or the act of doing something?
And blue is very much where the act of completing...
I want to think about something,
figure out how to get there,
and then when I've done it, I have done it.
That's what makes blue happy.
Red and green are about the act of doing.
Red and green about...
If you can't enjoy...
The way red and green think is if you can't enjoy, the way red and green think is, if you can't
enjoy what you're doing and why you're doing it, why, you know, like, that's what life
is about. Life is about living in the moment and enjoying what you're doing. And the happiness
is not the end result. It's the act of being, the act of doing, you know, and that red and green very much favor all the things that make acting in the moment exciting.
You know, the adrenaline, the, you know, all the sort of, there's a lot of things that really can be exciting if you embrace the now.
And red and green are definitely the color pair that are most about sort of living moment to moment
and making choices that seem right at the time.
The idea of acting on pure instinct
is definitely red-green.
One of the things, for example,
when we look at groups that are red-green,
because they're not about planning,
because they're about sort of living in the moment,
that they tend to not have a lot of structure to their lives.
they tend to not have a lot of structure to their lives.
It's not as if red-green is sort of like, because I'm
living in the moment and I'm doing what I want to do now,
I live in somewhat, there's a certain chaoticness
to it. One of the things about it is
if you take a look at green,
and you look at, sort of,
green believes that
nature has a wild side and a calm side.
The calm side, the tranquil side,
that is more where green connects with white.
I'll get to that in the next podcast.
But green's tranquil side is on the white side.
Green very much has a part of it that's all about the group.
Green very much understands there's a web of life and we all interconnect.
But that is on the white side of green.
Green also has a more selfish side, a more feral side, a more, you know,
do what I gotta do, hunt when I gotta hunt sort of side.
And that's what ties into red.
That green definitely believes that nature has a chaotic element.
And the chaotic part of green is the part that's tied to red.
You know, the idea that things are going to happen
and that, you know, like, life is messy.
The world is messy.
Nature is messy.
Green gets that, you know.
I mean, red, for example, is the enemy of white.
Red very much lives in the chaos.
Red is like, I'm going to do what I want to do,
and I understand that in the act of doing that,
I'm creating chaos.
Not that Red calls it chaos,
but Red understands the idea that there is a beauty in things,
of not thinking things through, but just sort of living.
And, I mean, red believes that everybody should be free
to do what they want to do.
That is the antithesis of laws or rules or any of that.
Green, well, green does believe that there's sort of structure
and larger rules, so sort of that.
Green is like, look, there's a wild nature.
There's a feral nature.
You know, nature has a wild side. And that when green gets together, look, there's a wild nature, there's a feral nature nature has a wild side, and that when green
gets together with red, it really embraces the wild side
and red and green really have this sort of life philosophy
that, hey, things are going to happen, and you'll deal
with them when they happen, you're not going to worry about them ahead of time
you do what you gotta do with them when they happen. You're not going to worry about them ahead of time.
You do what you got to do and when it comes time to deal with stuff,
you'll deal with them.
But red and green are not about thinking
of long-term ramifications of things,
especially when they get together.
It's sort of about doing what you want to do
and then when things happen, things happen,
and you'll deal with them.
You know, if I'm mad and I punch somebody,
and then that person wants to start a fight,
okay, well now I've got to deal with
those persons wanting to fight with me.
But the idea is that it came out of the natural state
of where you are.
That if you're being true to yourself,
if you're listening to yourself,
if you're doing what you want to do, okay, there's ramifications of that. I hit somebody,
maybe we get in a fight. That means I'm getting in a fight.
And it's not... Red and green look at sort of
the wildness, the chaoticness of it all,
and it's just like, that's the messiness of life. But red and green sort of like,
but that's the beauty of life.
You know, the beauty of life is the rawness of it, is the immediacy of it,
is that people act and do things.
And, you know, if one creature eats another creature or, you know,
you hit somebody, you get in a fight, that's just the way things are.
That is not like, other colors might say that, you know, you hit somebody, you get in a fight, that's just the way things are. That is not like, other colors
might say that, you know, you've created chaos that you didn't need to make.
But red and green are like, that is the chaos that always exists.
You know, red and green sort of look at other colors and are like,
you can be in denial, you know, you can sort of lock yourself away
and protect yourself, but the heartbeat of life is what matters.
Like, being there in the center of everything
is, that's what living is about. You know, living isn't about sort of
locking yourself away in some sort of sterile environment.
It is about being,
you know, life is a grandiose adventure
you want to be part of that adventure
you want to be part of it
so what Red Green really really embraces
is this idea that
don't look at the wildness
the chaoticness
that is what life is
the idea essentially is
if you live a life locked away behind rules and stuff,
you're not really living life.
You're sort of fencing yourself away from life.
And red and green want to be part of it.
They want to live it.
They want to act it.
They want to be it.
Part of the joy of life is living life.
And yeah, there's ups, there's downs.
That's part of life.
You know, maybe somebody wants to eat you.
You got to run for your life.
Well, that's part of life.
You know, and that red and green doesn't shy away from that.
Red and green is kind of like, I want to accept life as it is
and not try to change it in a way that just, be part of it.
Be in the moment. Live. Be there.
Okay, so what do, so that's what red and green agree. That's what they have in common.
They really have this live in the moment sort of mentality.
Okay, so how do they differ?
So the way I look at how allied colors differ is let's look at the other ally of each color and each of their
other allies are enemies with one another. So green's other
enemy is white. Red's other enemy is
black. Okay, the black-white conflict
is the good of the group versus the good of the individual.
White believes that
the most important thing is the welfare of the group.
You should make all your decisions that maximize that group's welfare,
even if it's not necessarily in your own personal best interest.
Black is like, forget that.
Each person should be looking out for themselves.
If everybody looks out for themselves, then there's somebody looking out for everybody.
So when you look at green and red, green definitely errs on the side of the group,
and red errs on the side of the individual.
Green does believe that there's a larger web of life,
that not only do you have a role, but you have a role that ties into the larger stuff.
I mean, the reason, for example, you need to fulfill your role is that other people depend on you having the role that you do.
If you're a predator and you don't eat the things you're supposed to eat, well, that throws out, it throws the web of life out of whack.
Like, your role as a predator is to eat the things you eat.
whack. Like, your role as a predator is to eat the things you eat.
And so,
while green has a wild side and definitely embraces that and recognizes that because that's part of nature, green does
have this overall mentality that while you're doing what you're doing,
you are serving a larger purpose for doing it. Yes,
yes, yes, the individual creature should do what the individual creature needs to do.
And if you're hungry, definitely eat.
The reason you're hungry, the reason you eat, is you're part of an ecosystem.
And the fact that you're eating things is helping that ecosystem.
That yes, yes, you're living out and doing things you need to do.
Ah, but part of that is part of the larger system.
And that you have to respect and understand your role in the system.
That you have to understand the needs of the group.
Red, red looks within.
You know, red just has a selfish quality that it's driven by what it feels.
But what it feels is very, very much
helping itself.
Now, that's not to say
that red can't help others.
Red is very passionate.
And if others mean something to red,
if I'm in love with somebody
or I'm friends with somebody
or I'm loyal to somebody,
you know,
red does have passion and loyalty.
And red does have emotions
that make it care about other people. And when somebody else is in jeopardy,
hold on, I have a whole thing, I want to sneeze.
Because I'm high to myself. When somebody that Red cares about is in jeopardy,
Red will act. Where Red and Black differ in that way is
Red, when Red looks inside and it's personal, Red will,
Red is willing to put its, jeopardy to help somebody else,
but it's because there's other things that Red has feelings for those other people,
that they mean something to Red.
Red is less likely to just go help a random stranger,
but a loved one, a friend,
Red will fight for their death sometimes to protect something he cares about.
A loved one, a friend.
Like, Red will fight for the death sometimes to protect something he cares about.
But Red is very internal and individual in its desires.
It wants to do what it wants to do.
Yeah, it likes a system of freedom
so everybody can do what they want to do.
But Red is very self-focused.
So the conflict between Red and green very much,
well, both of them have a wild side,
and both definitely embrace living in the moment.
Green has a bigger picture of sort of what role that plays,
and green cares more about how others are impacted.
Not that red can't care, not that red is...
Red can care about other people,
but in a more selfish way than green cares.
So when you're talking about their internal conflict,
it is very much about sort of who are you looking out for?
Who are you embracing?
And like I said, green fundamentally, when you get down to it,
does care about the larger system, and red cares more about itself.
Okay, so what exactly do the colors care about?
What is their end goal, and where is the overlapping of that end goal?
Okay, so red wants freedom.
Red wants to do what it wants to do.
Red wants the ability to live.
Red doesn't want to be constrained.
Red's big problem is it doesn't like things that keep it from doing what it wants to do.
Green, very much about acceptance. Green wants to grow.
Green wants to be part of the natural system.
Okay, so where is the overlap between freedom and acceptance?
And the idea there is that
you can sort of see where they lean together.
Red believes that the way to live life
is by accepting
that this inner voice that you hear,
that this inner feelings that you have matter.
That red very much wants you to accept.
I mean, green wants you to accept the world around you.
Red wants you to accept the world within you.
Red wants you to accept, you know,
the idea that if I feel something,
I need to act on it.
I need to accept that that's important.
Green wants to have a freedom to let life live as it's going to be.
Green's big problem is when other colors, blue and black in Green's case,
try to change the natural order.
They try to
they don't accept their role in the universe.
They don't accept
they try to mess with the delicate web.
And so Green very much
like Red and Green start crossing over together
in that they have this shared idea that there is a natural state where the world is at its best.
The natural state for red is everybody's following their heart.
Everybody's listening to their own internal compass.
Green is where everybody's accepting the role they play and is being part of it. But in both
cases, in red and green's cases, sort of ultimate happiness,
the ultimate end goal is about
recognizing that there's a system already set in place
that can bring you happiness.
That part of being happy
is recognizing this system exists.
Now given, red system, green system,
a little different,
but the key to happiness
is an internal discovery,
you know what I'm saying,
that part of what both red and green want is,
and like I said, the internal discovery is a little bit different between red and green,
but they share this idea that part of growth,
part of life is coming to grips with sort of the larger truth.
And either you lean into a larger truth
and thus are happy,
or you lean away from a larger truth
and that leads to unhappiness.
You know, that if you reject your role
in the ecosystem
or you don't listen to your inner voice,
that's the path of doom
as far as red and green is concerned.
So where they overlap and share, it's this real sense of, of recognizing and understanding what the world is about and
what your role is and what you have to do. Um, and you know, they, I think red and green really believe that the key to happiness is
two steps. One is recognizing and understanding
where happiness comes from and second, acting on it.
You know, red and green are definitely, you know, the shared enemy is blue
who is the most about inaction, they're the most about action.
So part of red and green's end goal also is,
it's not just recognizing, but it's then living that life,
being that life, fulfilling that life,
being in the moment and living in the moment.
And, you know, Red and Green really feel that...
Sorry.
Okay. Red and green really believe in the idea of being in the flow.
And what that means is that there's part of life, there's an excitement in life in being... The idea of the flow is that
when you get in the movement where
everything is moving and you are being part of the movement all around you
and that you recognize that there's an excitement that comes from
living, knowing that at any moment things can happen and
dealing. There's a great excitement from being part of what's going on,
being part of life in a way that is immediate and, you know, that you can feel it.
And so if you're living a red-green way of life, it is like, I am trying to enjoy every part of life.
I'm trying to be there. I'm trying to be present. And I'm trying to
not numb myself, not
live in denial, not pull myself away. Be
there, be in it, and be part of it.
And so how does it achieve these goals? But what is red and green? Well, like in it, and be part of it. And so how does it achieve these goals?
What is red and green? Well, like I said, part of it is
internal recognizing what's going on. Part of it is
a mental acceptance.
A mental...
A big part of the red-green philosophy is
that you have to get it.
You have to know what you want.
You have to know that.
So part of it is an understanding.
Another part of it is the...
There is a energy
that comes from interacting and being part of life.
You know, that there is a
a lot of what red and green sort of believe is
that if you understand this is true
and then be there, if you're present for it,
that there is a...
It is something that, I mean, you will feel it emotionally,
you will feel it physically, you will feel it spiritually,
you will feel it, you know, like, emotionally, physical, spiritual, even mentally.
I mean, you'll...
When you're living in the moment, you can use all these things, and you spiritual, even mentally. I mean, you'll, when you're living in the moment,
you can use all these things and you can focus toward it.
And so it really, it's about understanding and action.
It's about understanding what you need to do,
taking action to do it.
And so that is how Red and Green are about achieving its goals
is really not being afraid,
not being afraid by making mistakes, not being afraid by Not being afraid by making mistakes.
Not being afraid by doing, you know, by...
Like, the idea that Red and Green believe is,
hey, life's messy.
If something goes wrong, you'll fix it.
But don't be afraid of the thing going wrong.
Don't be afraid of the idea that
I shouldn't act because maybe I'll do something wrong.
Ah, so you did something wrong, so then you'll do it right.
And the other thing that the red and green believe is
part of learning is doing things wrong.
So getting things wrong is not a bad thing.
Making mistakes is not a bad thing.
You know, screwing up is not a bad thing.
As far as red and green are concerned,
look, the way you become the best you
is through experience. So that actually is a good thing, that
red and green are big on experience. They're big on
you are going to become the best you by
understanding what it is you want and by pursuing that thing and
recognize that you will get better at being you by being you.
Like red and green very much has the philosophy of, hey, you learn by doing.
You know, how am I going to get better at something?
Do it. Do it. You'll fail.
You'll learn from it. You'll try again. You'll get better.
And through repetition, you'll improve.
you'll try again, you'll get better, and through repetition, you'll improve.
Okay, so what does red and green despise?
What is negative red and green? And I think there is the
idea of
red and green really dislike when external things
keep you from this desire to sort of
be true to who you are.
That could be
rules or structures that prevent you from being what you want to be.
It could be people that deny, you know,
well, on some level, if you look at sort of the enemies of blue and green.
So let's first look at red's enemy, white, really says, I'm going to make structures that keep you,
I'm going to make rules and laws that keep you from doing what you want to do.
laws that keep you from doing what you want to do.
And black, green's unique enemy, not sharing with red,
is very much about, I'm going to do whatever I want, damn the consequences.
And that I don't care about the ecosystem and I don't respect the ecosystem and, you know, if I want to
kill something just for the act of killing it, I will.
And then the shared sort of red, green, enemies, blue,
which very much is about this idea of inaction,
of that I want to look at life from the outside rather than the inside.
I want to...
A lot of what negatively drives red and green is this idea that
there's a lot of the other colors
take this approach of
I know better than life itself.
That I'm not going to listen internally.
I'm going to act externally.. I'm going to act externally.
And I'm going to do things
that keep others from being true to themselves.
That is where red and green, I think,
have the most problem,
where something prevents them,
something like that some external force is saying,
you can't be true to yourself.
We will prevent you from being true to yourself.
And red and green do not like when they can't act in the moment.
And there's a lot of different ways, whether that is
a philosophy that sort of negates the importance of the things that red and green value.
Like a lot of what blue does that sort of negates the importance of the things that red and green value. Like a lot of what blue does that sort of causes problems
is sort of say, hey, no,
don't listen to yourself. You know, don't listen to your impulses
and instincts. That's gonna, you know,
don't, you don't have to be
who you were born to be at some level. Blue is about, you can be what you want.
So don't, don't let these impulses guide you. Don't let these
instincts drive you that you're, you're better than that. You can, you can
be what you want to be. Not, you know, not what, not what your internal
has to be. And red and greens are like, the, the, the
thing that causes red and green the most problems is
anybody who is making the barriers
to do that. And a lot of times, it's a combination of things.
One is, it could be, I'm setting up barriers
that make it hard for you to do what you want to do. It could be,
I am not appreciating the things you appreciate.
Like a lot of what blue does is it takes things that red and green care about
and it frames them in a way to make them look like they're irrational or dangerous
or, you know, the way blue sees the world is one where you are, you know, the way blue sees the world
is one where you are, you know,
it takes all these things that red and green take
as being fundamental and sacrosanct
and saying they're dangerous
and should be avoided.
And so red and green, I mean, the thing that really negatively drives red and green
is anything that causes them to sort of slow down. Anything that causes
them to reflect. Anything that causes them to
have to, like red and green don't want to answer. Like that's another big thing
is red and green are the colors least about talking.
You know, blue loves to talk. Even white and black like to talk. Red and green
live your life.
Nothing good comes about examining things or talking things through.
Red and green really much live in the idea that
the way you become the person that you become, the way that you really embrace who you can be is by living, is by being.
And I think the thing that its enemies really harness is making people question their inner voices.
Making people say, oh, is that impulse doing something bad?
Is that instinct making you do something you shouldn't be doing?
And it really works to question that.
Okay, so now we get into the big question is, what are the
strengths and weaknesses of the color pair?
What does red and green do well?
And what does red and green do poorly?
Red and green excel.
Their strength is red and green is the color combination that can act the fastest.
It's the least tied down.
The natural state of red and green
especially when you get them together
is the most willing to say
I value
listening to impulse and instinct
and acting in the moment
and not slowing down
for anything
I trust my impulses
I trust my instincts
I trust that whatever I feel is the right thing to do
is the right thing to do.
And if I'm wrong,
if something doesn't go the way I hope it'll go,
I'll adapt.
And that adaptation.
So, red strength is a couple things.
One, it is the most spontaneous of the colors.
It's the color willing to act the quickest
and act the boldest.
It is the color that can most think on its feet
and most, you know,
it sees acting in the moment as,
I mean, the strength of acting on the moment is the idea that it's not limited.
Because it's willing to follow its feelings, it can act very fast and quickly.
And it very much is adaptable. Another strength of red-green is it's probably the most adaptable color combination.
Because it lives through action, you know, it is used to sort of learning through action and dealing through action.
And if something goes wrong, it doesn't throw red-green.
Red-green is like, okay, I'll just do the next thing.
Now, the biggest negative, the weakness of red-green, as I like to say,
your greatest weakness is your greatest strength pushed too far.
So the idea is red and green strength is that it can act in immediacy.
It has spontaneity. It has adaptability.
But the downside is it's short-term.
It's short-term thinking,
that it acts in the moment.
It doesn't think about ramifications of what it's doing.
And it gets itself in trouble
because it doesn't pride or value any sort of institution
or any sort of larger sense of structure.
It's just doing what it's going to do.
And because of that,
it can cause itself problems in the long-term picture.
That it is not a life of stability.
It is a life of constant flux.
And while there is value in that flux,
there also is danger in that flux. And that red-green
definitely, like, if you sort of said
what color is the happiest? I might say red-green.
It's doing what it wants to do. It's living its life. It's there.
It's in the moment. And red and green will have highs and lows.
It's not that everything's always great for red and green, but it is, it's embracing who it is and it's very liberating
who it is. And so red and green definitely have a lot of happy times because it's living
in that moment. But on the weakness side, it also causes itself endless pain. It also,
you know, it also, in one of the joys of living in the moment
is you, you get to be happy now, but it can cause problems that can cause complications.
And so red-green is not the color that is very much about understanding what comes down
the path. The other big sort of, I mean, at some level, part of being adaptable, part of, of, of being
able to go, what comes to you is that it also, Red Green never has, you know, Red Green never
gets formal training. Red, Red Green, um, will never be more than what it is, to a certain extent.
Meaning, the way that red-green gets better is it does what it does, and through experience, it learns.
But what that means is, it is going to be what it is very strongly and very good.
But it is never going to be anything other than what it's set out to be.
That it's never going to get a formal training.
It's never going to...
It's just going to do what it wants to do.
And thus, it is not picking up other skills.
It'll pick up the skills it needs in the moment,
but it might not pick up skills that could help it in the long run.
Because it's never planning ahead
and so it's never sort of doing things that might not pay off
in the short term but will pay off in the long term.
In general, I'm realizing I've had a bunch of traffic today
so you get a little extra thoughts on Red Green.
The thing that I like about red-green
is that, you know,
one of the things that I like
about the color pie in general is
I like to think that every color
and every color pair
has a view on life
that is worth thinking about,
that's worth examining.
Each way of life has its strengths and weaknesses,
but it is neat to say,
what is somebody who is living the true,
in this case, red-green experience,
what are they doing?
And the thing that is kind of fun,
the thing I sort of enjoy about it,
like one of the things that is neat to me is to say, you know, can I tap into my own like red greenness
where, you know, and, and the, there definitely is something, um, of overcoming your fear
of, like, I think a lot of what drives people is fear. And red-green
is the lifestyle that in some ways is least driven by fear. You know, that it's kind of
like, a lot of fear is, what if I do the wrong thing? And the red-green philosophy
embraces the idea that
there's nothing bad in the wrong.
That I know that if you look at blue or something,
it's this idea, if I do the wrong thing, I might forever mess up the long-term plan.
I might miss out on, I want to perfect myself and I might make the wrong decision and then I'm not being the perfect me. But red
green really has this idea that there is no wrong. So if I do something and something happens, then I
adapt to it and I learn from it. And that red green has this really nice mindset that I like about this idea that, hey, don't let fear run your life.
Don't let the idea that things won't go the way you expect them to go be problematic.
That sometimes in life, some of the joys of life is that something happens that you didn't anticipate.
That something happens that you couldn't see ahead of time.
And that some of life's best things you never would know had you not experienced because
sometimes things happen that you never planned for, but those could be the most exciting
things, you know, and that in being in the moment, in living in the moment, that you
get to, yes, you have highs and lows lows but life's going to give you highs and lows
but you get to experience things full hand
and that part of that life experience, part of being in the moment
part of just going with the flow is that you get to
sort of see a part of yourself you might not normally get to see
and you get to learn about yourself in a way that you might not normally get to learn about yourself.
And that there's something
very liberating about stopping to worry about
mistakes driving your life. That once you go out there and get
your hands dirty and make some mistakes and realize, hey, you survived
it, you know,
it's very liberating.
That the red-green philosophy is a very liberating philosophy.
It very much is this idea of, um, there is an inner you.
You know, there is a, there is a, an optimized version.
Like, for example, just to contrast with blue.
Blue is like the idea is the perfect version of you requires time and energy to learn who that is.
The red and green sort of perfect view is it's there.
It's in you.
You are the perfect you.
But you've got to understand it and maximize it and learn. It's not that red-green means that you immediately are
the best at what you can be. What red-green means is if you just be true
to yourself, the act of living, the act
of doing will make you better. It will optimize you for
who you are. That red-green has this idea that you have
skills and you have natural talents and that
lean into them. Be part of that. And that
through the experience of living, that's
how you get better. It is not
becoming something that you're not. It is not trying to learn from something you aren't.
It is about embracing who you are and living who you are. And so Red Green very
much has this philosophy of true happiness does not come from without, does not come
from other people, does not come from other situations. I mean, other people involved,
does not come from other situations.
I mean, other people involved.
But it comes from you being true to you.
And that, I mean, like I said,
one of the things that I, I mean,
where I appreciate the color pie philosophy is every color pie essentially has a lesson to learn about life.
And the big lesson about red and green, I think
is don't, don't let fear run your life. Don't let the worry of what could happen prevent
you from experiencing things and being things and doing things. Um, and I, I, I like the
idea of, um, like one of the things that if you, like, talk about how do you become good at something.
And a lot of the beliefs are about doing it.
Experience.
You know.
Red Green, I guess, also is very big on experience.
Is very big on, you know, Blue, for example, is all about education.
And red, green is like, ah, you know what education is?
Doing and learning.
That's how you learn, by just going out and being the things that you are.
So I think for those that are like, one of the things that's interesting to me, one of
the reasons I love the color pie is that it's a whole bunch of ethos wrapped up together,
a whole bunch of different philosophies wrapped up together.
And that part of, I think, living life is recognizing the idea
that different people have different philosophies.
And it's not that other people are right or wrong.
It's just, you know, that if you can understand that there's many ways to live your life
and then when you meet other people, understand what choice they've made, it makes you see people in a different light.
So for example, if I meet somebody who is at their core
a red-green person, what I'm trying to say today is, this is who they are.
This is what they want. That being a red-green person
is about looking within, listening to your heart,
listening to your gut, listening to your gut,
doing what feels like the right thing,
and then embracing the idea that
life's messy,
and I'm just going to get in.
Like, for example, a red-green cook.
I'll give you a minute.
I think if you took something like a white-blue cook,
that is about taking classes and reading books
and, you know, really learning about the essence of, you know,
I will learn to cook because I will learn all there is about cooking
through people who can teach me the essence of what being a good cook is.
And that's great.
And there's lots of people in the world who, hey,
the way you want to see the world is by seeking out education and learning from things.
A red-green cook is going to get in the kitchen and make something.
And the first thing they make, probably isn't that good.
But they'll learn something, and they'll make something else.
And maybe that thing's probably still not that good,
but maybe a little bit better.
And you'll keep doing things. You'll keep acting on things.
And the idea essentially is how do you become a good cook?
Ah, cook. Keep doing it.
And that, you know, when the dust settles, yeah,
maybe a white blue person has their book of recipes that they've carefully crafted
where red green is like, ah, I just bake and I throw things in and I taste it
and I go, eh, this needs a little more salt.
The red-green is going to live in the essence of
a true red-green chef
is somebody who,
it's about just feeling what the right ingredients are
and feeling what the right amounts are
and tasting and just reacting.
And that's okay. That's a cool thing.
One of the things that I like about the color pie philosophy
is that each color really has its own way of being.
And so hopefully today, I want you to recognize the values of red-green
and what red-green is about.
And I...
I don't know.
I get a kick out of this sort of...
I'm looking at it.
Anyway, I'm almost to work.
So we are...
Like I said, we have a little extra draft today.
So you get the extra extended version of Red Green.
But that's the cool thing about it.
On some level, the irony of ironies is Red Green...
If my podcast were based solely on the color pair
and not on my drive to work,
red-green probably would be the fastest in and out.
Live life, do this, see ya!
So it's kind of funny talking about it.
Red-green is the color that hates,
like red-green would go, enough!
Stop talking about me, move on!
Go do something!
So anyway, there's some irony in that.
I get to talk a lot about red-green. It's a color pair that at least wants me to be talking about them.
But what I will say I guess is, I guess the red green lesson
is, hey, maybe
every once in a while act like red green and see what it feels like. And maybe what you'll
find is there's some coolness there. That there's some excitement
embracing the now,
embracing the moment,
and that sometimes in your life you want to do something,
and just do it, live it, be it.
Don't worry about the consequences.
Don't, you know, just enjoy the act of doing.
And that, I guess, is the lesson today of Red Green,
is, you know, sometimes you just want to get in there and be and do
and that it's okay to get messy and it's okay to make mistakes
and it's okay to, you know, have flaws and have things
not go perfect. That is not such a horrible thing.
And that from that, there's a great beauty of living in the moment
and being there.
So the way I'll wrap up my Red Green podcast is say,
you know, maybe we need to see an opportunity.
Try living life a little bit on the edge, in the flow, you know,
rather than thinking things out, just act in the moment and try it.
And if it's something you don't normally do, maybe you'll see some of the joy in that.
That there's a lot of fun in living in the moment.
And so, red green, I tip my hat to you.
But anyway, I'm now at work.
So we all know what that means.
It means the end of my drive to work.
So instead of talking magic, it's time for me to be making magic.
I'll see you guys next time.
Bye-bye.
Okay, my thing does not want to shut off.
Maybe it's red-green living in the moment.
So, uh...
The extra part to save you guys,
probably some of you stopped listening. So, uh, the extra part to save you guys, probably some of you
stopped listening. He's like, he said goodbye. Um, but sometimes my machine does not want to shut off.
So it just really likes red green. It's embracing my red greenness. So anyway, um, goodbye. Why
won't you shut off? Okay. There it is. Okay. Anyway, I hope you enjoyed this podcast. Bye-bye.