Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2107: The Science of Becoming a Better & Happier Parent
Episode Date: June 29, 2023Why do men fall into the trap of being a provider first? (2:22) The power and value of adoption. (6:42) The different kinds of fatherhood. (11:54) How dopamine lies behind all addiction. (17:3...2) The dangers of pornography for young men. (22:24) The three macronutrients to happiness. (28:12) The cult of youth. (31:07) The secrets of a successful marriage. (36:06) Tactical methods to improve your happiness. (39:40) Why men become men when they become fathers. (47:25) Loving people is different than using them. (49:22) Educators rather than influencers. (53:03) The importance of having a transcendental practice. (55:23) Electing the hard thing because you chose the divine path. (58:25) The problem with being an activist rather than a volunteer. (1:00:51) The love vs. fear polarity. (1:05:44) Managing the pain so it’s no longer managing you. (1:09:00) Experience and reps matter. (1:17:26) Gambling is an interesting dopamine phenomenon. (1:20:07) Entrepreneurial orientation spectrum. (1:22:30) The five dimensions of human personality. (1:29:25) The “I” self vs. the “me” self. (1:33:36) Life is a pilgrimage. (1:40:38) Related Links/Products Mentioned Exclusively for Mind Pump listeners join IHP and Equi.life for 2 full days of live exhibitions, inspiring keynote discussions, and engaging expert panels The Reimagining Health Summit on October 12-13 in Fort Lauderdale, FL. **Code MINDPUMP for $100 off at checkout** June Promotion: MAPS Cardio | Summer Shredded Bundle | Bikini Bundle 50% off! **Code JUNE50 at checkout** The two faces of oxytocin - American Psychological Association (APA) From Strength to Strength: Finding Success, Happiness, and Deep Purpose in the Second Half of Life – Book by Arthur C. Brooks Marriage Is a Team Sport, Not a Competition - The Atlantic How Wanting Less Leads to Satisfaction - The Atlantic Choose the Activism That Won't Make You Miserable Oprah teams with Arthur C. Brooks on book about happiness Research: Why Immigrants Are More Likely to Become Entrepreneurs How to Be Less Self-Centered - The Atlantic What Is Metacognition? How Does It Help Us Think? How to Stop Freaking Out - The Atlantic How to Hike the Camino de Santiago - Uncommon Path Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned Arthur Brooks (@arthurcbrooks) Instagram Oprah (@oprah) Instagram
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In fact, that's what we talk about in today's episode.
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All right, back to the show.
Always awesome having you on.
You know, when people ask us who some of our favorite guests are or favorite people, your name always comes up.
And I've told you this before, I don't know if I said this on air.
You were a mentor to me without knowing it.
So I literally try to emulate all the things you do.
And we haven't talked about
fatherhood with you on the show and I you
when I talk a lot about this we do we took off we talk offline about the
importance of this we do and I think you're an exceptional father the way you
talk about your kids and now a grandfather now a grandfather right just
recently yeah yeah yeah so it's difference between being a dad and
grandfather yeah well part of it is I'm not responsible yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah like, it's directly. It kind of sounds like the best part of fatherhood
without the responsibility for it.
My grandson is a little bit.
A little three-weeks-old.
So, you know, it's too early to tell,
you know, what the results are.
But my 25-year-old son is the father.
He's phenomenally great.
He's affectionate and engaged and loving it
and having a great time.
I have to, I think he, so far,
he seems like a better father than I was.
Really? Yeah. I mean, I don't know I have to, I think he's so far, he seems like a better father than I was. Really?
Yeah. He, I mean, I don't know.
He's just so into it.
And I remember when I, when we first had our first,
he was my first child, actually,
he's my oldest son.
We were living Santa Monica in those days
and I was working on my PhD and I was just so stressed out.
And three of the weeks into my son being born,
I'm just, I'm going back to work.
I gotta go back to work, gotta go back to work.
It was a complete work of holiday.
My son is a much better balance.
He has a much better sense of what is true,
holy vocation is, which is fatherhood first,
then I'm a husband, and I do a thing for work.
Then I make some money, I like it, I like what I'm seeing.
A lot of men fall into that, that I did with my,
because I have four,
I have two, two, and two.
Older ones and then two younger ones in this big gap.
Yeah.
And I was like that with my first two.
And I thought that's what I,
that was my value.
It was work.
And I buried myself.
For some reason.
Yeah, why do we fall into that, into that,
and what's the dangers of,
or were the negatives, I guess, of that?
Well, we fall into that because, I mean,
there's nature and there's the nurture debate
about all that.
It's absolutely the case that men in general, they see themselves as providers and hunters.
What does it mean to be a good father when you're provider as it turns out?
Well, you had to be more than that,
but the younger you are, the less likely you are to be sophisticated about those things.
And it's nice to see my son acting like an older dad,
even though he's actually pretty young,
that 25, that's all school.
Do you think that's what it is,
then, is if we have, if we were to have kids younger,
that the typical thing is that you just default to provide.
That's what I'm supposed to do.
The bare minimum, I'm supposed to do that.
So even though there's a whole other things
I should probably do as a father,
I'm gonna at least execute that.
Yeah, well, you're providing for the material needs of your family, and you need to provide
for more than that than the material needs of your family.
Now, remember that most men when they're 25 years old are not making bank.
You know, my son's a math teacher in a Catholic school.
He's certainly not making bank, but he has a good, healthy, rounded out sense of what
a being a provider really means.
I didn't.
I frankly didn't, because I was just in this panic.
I was afraid I wasn't able to provide for my family.
I was afraid that I was just gonna screw up somehow.
And so it was just work, work, work, more, more, more,
also I was just ambitious.
So I don't wanna make it look like I was some sort of a martyr.
The truth is I was kind of selfish too.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
A lot of what we learn is from our own fathers
about how to be dads and
our dads were like that. So that's kind of how I, you know, I thought, okay, what I do
is I work and then I hug and kiss my kids and play with them on the weekend. That's what
I thought it was all what it was all about. Yeah. Yeah. And that certainly was the case
for my dad, just like that, except for the hugging and kissing of the weekend. I didn't
get that far. No, just the work part. Well, my dad was a professor like me,
and he didn't work super long hours,
but, you know, so I'm a generation,
or half a generation above you guys,
and so my dad was a generation and a half older
than you guys are, and certainly older than your dad's,
and he, or asked him one time, I said,
Dad, you know, why'd you have kids?
And he said, we all felt like we had to.
Why do you have kids? And he said, we all felt like we had to.
Well, thanks Dan.
It's like, oh yeah.
If I don't want the answers, I shouldn't ask the question.
I feel like a bundle of joy.
Yeah, you know, it's like hooray.
And I asked my mom, she said, oh yeah,
I wanted to have more and all that.
You're dad's like, no.
So just me and my brother.
Now, how many kids you have?
I have three.
So we have two biological kids and we have one adopted daughter.
So my oldest is 25.
My middle son, who is also married is 23, just turned 23 last week and their sister is
20.
So she's halfway through college.
So I'm married yet.
So Jessica and I have talked about, and sometimes I'm like, why are we doing this? We're crazy. But we've talked about, what if we had another
one, right? And it always goes to the business. I never just don't, please, they see my
hair falling out every single day. But I'm good to me, man. I've talked about your hair
I could be president. I say, listen, I have, that's because I had a lot to start with, trust
me, give you another week. But, you know, we talk about adopting But we talk about adopting and it's value and all that.
And if you don't mind me asking,
what made you adopt rather than having?
Yeah, so it's interesting.
So I was studying at a time,
I was doing research as a social scientist
on the effects of serving others.
So that was a key area I was doing research on,
when I was teaching at Syracuse.
It's what happens to you neurophysiologically
when you're behaving charitably.
And I ask this question of my research, what's the difference between doing a little for
a lot of people like writing a check to a charity or doing everything for one person?
Oh, right.
What's interesting.
Yeah.
And it's, I was looking to the data.
The data are like, you do everything for one person.
You get much happier.
Much happier.
You're going gonna get way happier
You get richer happier healthier the whole deal if you turn the whole dial in a person's I will go home and I tell my wife
I was writing it up for a book and and she says interesting. She's interesting says why don't we do more of that?
That's what do you mean? She says
Why don't we adopt a baby and I'm like it's only a book?
And I'm like, it's only a book. What door have I opened?
Yeah, it's like, oh man.
And she turns out had been having this dream.
It's a weird dream.
She's having a dream about a little girl that have been abandoned in a park.
This dream.
She kept having this dream.
Wow.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And she starts praying about it.
And she starts the process, we start the process
because she had me dead to rights.
We had to do this when she brings up.
And we'd be like, no.
And so we start the process of a foreign adoption
with this Chinese children adoption agency.
And the Chinese government matches us up with an infant
at this point, not an infant anymore,
15 months at this point.
And they give us the background
and she'd been abandoned in a park.
What?
You kidding?
I had 12 hours old.
And I was found in a park bench at 1 a.m.
in a little Chinese city.
This is after all the, you guys have already
had a lot of fun.
After the dream,
and then totally, months later, months, months, months.
Oh, so you're like, we have to.
Well, I mean, it was, yeah.
And so I went by myself.
She was not, it's my wife's not a citizen at the time.
And so I went by myself.
The first time they ever had a dad
that had gone and independently done the adoption
because my wife was taking care of her boys.
And so she couldn't go by herself
because she couldn't execute the adoption
as a foreign national.
And they're like, is your wife dead?
I mean, where's your wife?
And so for weeks, I was there by myself in China,
I picked up my daughter Marina,
and she was 16 months old at the time,
very disoriented, very malnourished in the whole deal.
And we still have this weird mystical bond,
as if I had gone through labor.
Oh wow.
What do you mean?
Because I was there by myself.
I picked her up by myself.
And she was the first person she ever met.
I mean, really met.
I was her, you know, she doesn't remember
because she was only 16 months old.
But she has this, we have this bond.
You know, this is as if we've been together
for all eternity.
Yeah, you just as intense today.
Yeah.
Oh yeah, it's incredible.
I mean, I was just there.
I was on tour, speaking to her in Spain last week.
I saw the picture he posted with her right now.
Yeah, yeah, that's my baby. That's my baby, she's 20. Yeah, she's studying in Spain last weekend. I saw the picture you posted with her right now. Yeah, yeah, that's my baby.
That's my baby, she's 20.
Wow, what is it she's studying in Spain
at the Urine Sea of Navar and Pamplona?
Yeah, so that's, except that's, I did not know that story.
Yeah, that's incredible.
Yeah, it's super heavy and it's just the most amazing thing.
Anybody who thinks, you know, people will often ask,
you know, do you get the same neurophysiological connection
to your child if your child was adopted?
And what that is is really asking about a neuropeptide that functions as a hormone in the brain
called oxytocin. And oxytocin is the love molecule. What it does is it bonds you through eye
contact and touch to your friends, to your family members, and especially to your children.
So the three of you guys you've had kids, and when you first lay eyes on your newborn infant, it's like the fourth of July inside your head. You would die for the squalling
disoriented infant, you know, like what's going on? So, I mean, evolutionary biologists say that
so you don't leave your baby on the bus, but it's deeper, man. I mean, it's like, it's, it's,
and so the question was, for long time, long as time, you
get the same oxytocin levels with an adopted child.
And I remember when I walked into, you know, when they're matching up these orphans with
their adopted parents, you walk into this room and they call it your name and they put this
baby in your arms, who doesn't know you.
And she grabs onto my shirt and just looks up at me in my eyes and her little, you know,
eyes into mine. And it was like, shh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, buh, bu guess biological standpoint. I noticed like with my oldest, when my, at the time,
my ex-wife was pregnant, it was like this concept
because I'm not connected to the baby.
I know there's a baby in there, I watch it grow.
And then when he comes out, it like hits me, right?
With each successive child, the connection happens faster
and faster to the point where my fourth one,
the minute my wife said I'm pregnant, immediately I felt
this connection to this,
but is it because I've done it before
and I know what to expect?
Like what's happening with that?
It's hard to say actually,
but probably you were at a point in your life really on
where you were less connected
because of what was actually what was going on in your life.
You're now really keyed in, you're busy.
I mean, you guys are successful and busy.
I mean, I know because
I'm a fan. So, this is my favorite podcast. And so I, but at the same time, you're older and you're
more dialed in to what the experience can actually be. So this is one of the things that people
will actually tell me. So, you know, I'm a Catholic, so I know a lot of these big Catholic families,
six, seven, 10, 11 kids.
And what they'll all say is, man, I wish I were the father
with my first child that I was with my 10th.
Yeah, they always say that.
I feel guilt over them.
You get better at it.
You get better at fatherhood.
That's what it comes down to.
It's true, and I actually feel a little guilt,
like the way I'm with my youngest kids and my older ones, I mean, I was not as great.
Well, it's got to be a combination
of both maturity and practice, just experience.
You're a lot, they're obviously on the later one,
so your wiser, more life experience,
and then you've done this before,
and so you're also more of a child when you're younger.
I mean, you're a younger man,
which means that hormonally,
you're attuned
to different things in your own life as well. You want to hunt more. You want to, you know,
you're out walking the savannah with a club more than when you're older. You have more of this
fluid intelligence to go solve particular problems. There's a difference between different
sorts of intelligence is really interesting. So you're now what you're 43. 44, 44 now. And and what happens is that your fluid intelligence is
you're the intelligence that everybody has men and women. That gives you the capacity to work hard
to focus indefinitely, to work alone, to solve problems. It's your startup entrepreneur intelligence.
That peaks in your late 30s and starts to decline.
And that's the reason people burn out in their mid 40s.
If they're real entrepreneurs and hot shot lawyers
and dentists and electricians, everybody,
they tend to burn out in their 40s.
And the reason is because they're not making progress
anymore about what they were really good at,
which was intense focus on my work.
Sure.
That's the bad news.
The good news is there's a crystallized intelligence curve
behind it, it's a different kind of intelligence.
It's increasing through your 40s and 50s and 60s
and stays very high in your 70s and 80s until you die.
That's your wisdom curve, your ability to connect the dots,
to identify patterns.
Pattern recognition, the ability to explain stuff.
You guys are gonna notice,
because you're all in your 40s now, right?
I mean, and that you're getting better and better
and better at explaining complicated ideas.
And look, I've been listening to you guys for years,
and even I hear it, you're clearer and better at why?
Because you're crystallizing intelligence.
It's not just because you have more experiences,
because you have the teacher brain.
Now, dad with the hunt on the
savanna brain versus dad as the teacher, these are different kinds of fatherhood.
Totally, right?
Now, what you might call the first one, the father brain, the second one, the grandfather
brain, I'll let you know. Right.
But that's the reason that you have the different kind of experience with your grandfather.
Your grandfather came from Sicily, right? Yeah. Yeah. And he, you had a different kind
of experience with your grandfather, right? He from Sicily, right? Yeah, and he, you had a different kind of experience with your grandfather, right?
He was a different,
when I would hear stories from my mom
about how he was as a dad,
as a kid I didn't believe it.
Yeah, because he was a maniac as a father
and he was super mellow as a grandfather.
And my dad, even,
my kids will go over there
and they'll throw,
I don't remember my two-year-old,
like hit my dad in the face
and my dad laughed,
I'm like,
this is not the same man as my mother.
That's because he had crystallized intelligence.
And that's you with your second batch of kids.
That's actually kind of what's happening.
It's much more on the crystallized intelligence curve.
It's not that you're calming down on the contrary.
You're, you've got plenty of energy.
You mean, you guys are killing it in your business.
The point is that you look at the world differently.
You're not the soul.
You're not the ninja.
You're not the assassin anymore. You're the eminence. You're the world differently. You're not the soul, you're not the ninja, you're not the assassin anymore, you're the eminence,
you're the explainer, is the way that this works out.
Interesting.
And it's a different style.
Interesting.
And you said in one of your past books
that this is the key to finding happiness
as you get older and retire,
is to understand that and then shift gears into that.
That's right.
If you keep trying to do what you were good at at 25,
you're gonna be really frustrated.
And you see a lot of people who athletes
where this happens to, of course.
And it makes perfect sense.
They think that it's a physiological phenomenon.
Like you're not curious.
I don't have the strength.
I don't have the balance.
I don't have the agility.
I don't have any of that.
Well, it's also you don't have the brain.
You're 25 year old brain when you're 40.
You see guys who kind of bend the curve a little bit,
like Tom Brady, but nobody escapes this,
nobody escapes these patterns.
And the good news is that if you can actually
get on this crystallized intelligence curve
and do what, you know, where you're building teams,
you're mentoring others, you're explaining
your recognizing patterns, you can make way more money, and you can be way happier.
That's how if you can transform your business model
from the first to the second, you can do,
I mean, it's guys' limit, actually.
You bring up Tom Brady, I can't help but think that I wonder
if that's what makes him wrestle with retiring or not retiring.
It's like my physical body still,
I could still get out there and play good enough
with these young guys,
but then maybe mentally he's going through this transition
in his life and so he can't quite.
He never saw himself as a coach, really,
you know, this is a computer athlete.
When the coach is a true teaching role,
but there's another problem that actually comes
from performing at that kind of high level
for a lot of these guys.
So, and that's a different set of neurotransmitters.
So we all know what dopamine is at this point.
Nobody knew what it was 15 years ago, only neuroscientist.
But everybody knows that dopamine lies behind all addiction.
And the reason is because it's the, it's the neuromodulator of anticipation of reward.
Oh, so it's not even the reward, it's a warning.
Yeah, exactly.
So you think about something that you're really into.
It's like, I want a roast beef sandwich. Yeah, exactly. So you think about something that you're really into, it's like, I wanna roast beef sandwich,
something like that, because you're hungry.
That spikes your dopamine, then it goes way back down
so you go in search, because your dopamine is low,
and you want it back, and you're only gonna get it again
when you get the roast beef sandwich.
Interesting.
Now, what exceptional achievers, you guys,
I mean, your hunters, what exceptional achievers do,
they rewire their brains.
So their dopamine is almost exclusively relegated to the experience of exceptionally high achievement.
This is the reason that child stars are screwed up for their whole lives.
Oh, they can never get that again.
Yeah, they wired their brains.
It's like getting addicted to methamphetamine at age 13.
You're never going to have a normal life because your brain is wired to get the satisfaction
in the anticipation of the reward
only when you do this really bad thing.
Now, I talk to athletes and actors all the time
because of my work.
And I got a really interesting email from an athlete,
very famous professional athlete not long ago.
It was like, yeah, I retired.
And the last 10 years have been great.
I'm making ton of money. My business is going really well, but I don't feel it, man. I don't feel
it. What you don't feel is the dopamine that you only get when you do the hardest thing
in the world. What you can't do watching you.
Wow.
But you can't do anymore.
Now, does the brain, because I know that there's plasticity, but I know that there's certain
things, especially at certain ages, that it'll be plastic and then it kind of shapes and
forms itself relatively permanently.
Is this something then you just have to struggle with because you were young and you felt
this...
We rewire it.
Yeah, you got to think to yourself, like, okay, it's just going to feel different and you
got to manage that.
Okay.
Well, sort of.
So the brain is a lot more plastic when you're an adolescent, for sure.
That's the reason that, with when you're raising kids, back to the subject of fatherhood,
the most important, you're not gonna get your kids
than, you know, never smoke weed
or never smoke cigarettes or never drink beer.
The key is do it as late as possible.
Delay, delay, delay.
The right strategy is not never.
The right strategy is not now.
Because the longer they wait, the less plastic their brain is,
which means they're less they're gonna carve their initials
into the tree of, this is how I get my pleasure.
They're not gonna be cocaine monkey.
And so for example, if you start smoking cigarettes
after 25, you'll never be addicted probably.
If you start smoking cigarettes before 15, one month,
you'll be addicted.
This is a really interesting conversation for me
because I've never been able to articulate
what the relationship that I've had with recreational drugs.
I didn't do anything like that until after 25.
So I was like a goody goody kid my whole life
and then I got to a point in my life
where I started hearing some positive benefits
of psychedelics and things like that
and I've been marijuana has some benefits.
And so as I got older, I allowed myself to,
and I've always had this relationship with like,
I don't need it.
I don't take it or leave it.
Yeah.
Take it or leave it.
So that explains a lot of.
Totally.
And in his, in the way he grew up,
he follows that like, like literally like,
this is the person I should be addicted.
Right.
And he doesn't because he waited.
Right.
That makes sense.
That's really the key.
So if you can get your kids, I mean, the drinking age should be probably 25. It won't be. And the truth is, that's not a political
point. I mean, it would, for political reasons, I would just assume have a B18, unless you have an
arrest or irresponsible behavior, and then you can't buy alcohol. But as long as you're responsible,
you should be able to use it. But I understand that neurophysiologically it's a different phenomenon.
So that's the key that you waited.
I didn't.
And I was doing all that stuff when I was 13 years old.
That's why I don't touch anything now, because I can't.
I can't do it.
I can't touch anything.
So it's harder to break that relationship.
Where I've always said that we've talked to actually off-air about this, where I can,
I can allow something, and everything, even down to the simple things like caffeine, like caffeine, or anything that we consider
a classic drug, I can allow it to come in my life,
and then I was, I don't need it, and I could take it out,
and then I don't miss, it's not a big deal.
It's adult brain.
And your adult brain is that particular way.
And so you're gonna get your anticipation of reward
other ways for sure, and no doubt there are other things
you gotta be careful with.
Other behaviors, other ways of thinking you got to be careful with.
Everybody's got this.
So, one of the biggest dangers for young men today, and this is another fatherhood issue,
there's way too much exposure to pornography.
And pornography is a total dopamine enhancer.
You will, so the internet pornography is like fentanyl.
It's taking a dangerous but natural opiate
and then supercharging it in the lab.
That's what's going on.
It's what will happen with internet pornography
as you have access to it
and you can accelerate the experience
to keep up with your dopamine.
Your dopamine anticipation of the reward,
and then I want that feeling back so I want more.
And so you go into stuff that's harder core
and harder core and harder core.
When kids have access to pornography
when they're 11 and 12 and 13 years old,
there's a good chance they're not gonna have
a normal sexual relationship
or get the satisfaction that they're supposed to
for the rest of the life.
So as a father today,
do you would you say this is maybe one of the biggest things that we have
to be aware of today?
That maybe we were 20 years ago wasn't as...
People are paying attention to weed.
They should be a paying attention to porn.
Porn is dangerous.
Look, it's dangerous for every single person watching and listening to us.
It's dangerous for guys our age.
But if you're 11, 12, it's could be lethal.
The way I heard it explained from someone, and this really hit home for me was that the
type of novelty and the amount of images you could see, not even the wealthiest kings
hundreds of years ago had access to that much on their own.
That's like half an hour for somebody surfing the web.
So our brains are just, they're not designed for this,
and it causes some serious problems.
It's a huge problem.
It's a huge problem for your sons.
It's a lot less for women, for all sorts of reasons.
But maybe that's, maybe that that supposition
is an acronym to get this point.
Maybe the females and their brains will catch up
to this at some particular point.
It's usually been concentrated on young men
because young men are more curious about it,
traditionally have been.
And so also the same philosophy as the drugs,
because we're, is delay as long as you can.
So it's a delay?
You're not gonna say never you can't see it.
Yeah, right.
I mean, this is just, you live in the world.
You're not gonna go live in a cave or a commune
or a cult compound or something, unless that floats your boat. That's not going to go live in a cave or a commune or, you know, a compound, a cult compound
or something unless that floats your boat. That's not my thing. So the key thing is just delay,
delay, delay, delay, delay, delay. And then what if people see pornography for the first time
at 25, they're more likely to be like, hmm, I like my life. Yeah, because I know that like back in
the day, it was like you're like you get imprinted, right?
Whatever that is in terms of like an opportunity
and you have some relationship with somebody
and you're exposed to something like that sexually
and that stays with you so much more
with your formative brain in those years.
And so it just makes perfect sense.
If you're now you're just inundating your mind
with all of these different, you know, novelty acts and things like so early, like
what's that going to cause?
It's a huge problem. It also shears it off from another human being. Yeah. I mean, the
whole idea of sex is it sex, it links people up together in very, very profound ways that
that's pair bond mating. And it is whole idea that men can't parabod mate.
That's complete nonsense.
Of course.
It's complete utter rubbish.
The problem is that when they're used to shearing off the sexual experience from the connection
to another human being, then it becomes harder and harder and harder to do.
They can't maintain a relationship with another person.
They have no concept of what an actual human partner would even find satisfying and intimate
because all they have is actors.
I've read some statistics that on the surface, you're like, well, that sounds like a good
thing, but then you think about why and you think maybe that's not as good.
I think for the first time in a long time, and you might be familiar with this, that kids,
and I talk about teenagers, are having less sex and dating less than ever before.
Now, a surface, you're like, oh, that's a good thing. They shouldn't be having so much sex.
But really, it's really a reflection of something much deeper, a little worse.
It's a whole bunch of things that are in unlocking. It's absolutely the case.
So you find that they're having about a third less sex than their 20s than they were in the 1980s when I was in my 20s.
A third?
A third.
Wow.
Yeah, there about a third less likely to say they're in love is back then. They're half
as likely to get married and half as likely to go have a date. So it's not like this is
just the end of the traditional institutions. This is not people are less in love than
they used to be. They're having less sex than they used to with actual human beings.
Meanwhile, pornography is exploding.
It's not rocket science.
You don't have to have a PhD to figure out
this statistical connection between the two.
At the same time, of course,
the way that our culture is trying to treat
the idea of actual relationships is the polarization
and the culture war are setting people
against each other and making people afraid of each other, making people afraid to have relationships
with each other. And I get it, I get the liability, and I get the fact that there's a lot of abuse in
the past, but the truth is that happiness is love full stop. I mean, my whole career is the,
you know, is the science of happiness, and it comes down to happiness as love, three words,
is what it comes down to.
And the most intense, profound experience of love that any of us is going to have is romantic
love.
That's just it.
Pear-bonded, serious romantic love is the most important happiness experience people are
going to have in their lives.
That's why a long, happy marriage is so critical to being happy, especially for men, by the way.
Men get more out of it than women do, as a journalist.
We actually live longer with marriage and here.
Yeah, and happier.
We happier.
They had died earlier, I think it was.
But I can't say it's on it.
Really?
So, I want to ask you about marriage in kids because it's funny when I think about it,
right, I have four kids.
For sure, I'm more stressed. Definitely spending more money.
Yeah.
Definitely have less time for myself.
Definitely have less time to do hobbies.
And yet, if you ask me,
would I ever trade it and go back?
No way.
Of course not.
There's no way.
It doesn't make sense on the surface.
What's going on here?
Why am I so much happier,
even though I'm more stressed,
more sleep deprived, spending more money,
less likely to do, or less able to do things for myself.
So, there's a straightforward answer to that,
but it starts with the definition of happiness.
So, most people, when you say what's happiness,
they talk about the feeling I get when I'm with the people
that I love, or when I'm doing the things that I enjoy,
it's not a feeling.
The feeling of happiness is evidence of happiness.
It's not happiness itself. It's like the is evidence of happiness. It's not happiness itself.
It's like the smell of your Thanksgiving dinner
is not the Thanksgiving dinner.
It's evidence of the Thanksgiving dinner.
Your feelings are evidence.
It's so it's the smell of the turkey.
The actual Thanksgiving dinner is a combination of three things.
And everybody who's a mind-pump fan,
all of us pump heads,
know that all food is protein carbohydrates and fat.
It's just three macronutrients.
And you need a macronutrient profile that's balanced and abundant, it's healthy.
You're not overloading on highly glycemic carbohydrates, all the stuff that everybody
who listens to the show knows.
Happiness is the same.
There's three macronutrients to happiness that you need and balance and abundance.
They're enjoyment, satisfaction, and meaning.
Those are the three things you need in balance and abundance. They're enjoyment, satisfaction, and meaning.
Those are the three things you need in life.
Enjoinment, satisfaction, and meaning.
And all three of these things are very deep and very complicated and as a whole scientific
literature behind each one of them.
It's not like straightforward pleasure and fun and no, no, no, no.
I mean, enjoyment is not pleasure.
You should never stop at pleasure.
It's pleasure plus the love of other people,
plus making memories.
So it takes work.
Enjoining takes actual work.
Satisfaction is the joy that you get after struggle.
That's what satisfaction is, right?
And there's a whole science of that.
And meaning is a combination of coherence,
why things happen, purpose, direction, and life
and significance.
There's a reason for things.
And so those three things together are your macronidure and profile and you need to be
doing that.
Now what's going on when you have kids?
It's a perfect, you just nailed what a being a father is is the perfect balanced meal.
Yeah.
And what happens is, but it's a different meal than what you had earlier in life.
When you were 20, you had higher enjoyment and less meaning.
And now you're 44 and you have less enjoyment and more meaning.
And you've changed your macronutrient profile to be more appropriate to this point in your
life.
Having kids that's a pain and you're tired and you're stressed and your enjoyment is lower,
unambiguously.
But your meaning is higher.
Very fast.
That's what you it because you know,
that's your, on more of a carnivore diet.
More of a carnivore diet of half.
Yes.
That's, that's so awesome.
Yeah, we're talking about earlier about the, you know,
neurochemicals and neurotransmitters and how younger brains
are different than older brains.
I can't help but think about how modern life,
you know, when you become an adult,
or when you do adult things now is later in life.
Adolescence has been stretched out more and more
in order to earn a good living.
You got more education.
You need to spend more time learning things.
Is there a consequence of starting life later now
because our brain,
because obviously we evolved to start earlier,
or is it better?
Like what's, what are the differences? Part of it is that we actually don't need to start earlier, or is it better? Like what's one of the differences?
Part of it is that we actually don't need to start later,
but we elect to start later,
because our culture treats infantilizes us
till we're a lot older.
And we've been in the past.
There's a cultural problem with treating 26 year olds
as if there were 18 year olds.
26 year olds are, I mean, old enough to be parents,
old enough to go to war, old enough
to, I mean, hold elective office, certain elective offices.
I mean, 26 year olds are grownups.
And the fact that we don't treat them as grownups is a huge cultural problem.
The fact that we would have sort of these men, child children that are acting, it's unbelievable.
And part of that, part of the reason for that is that we have this cult of youth,
but part of it is that just we're so rich that we can continue to infantilize our
own kids and take care of them, helicopter, parent them, and not let them actually grow
up.
And that's a big problem for happiness.
It's a huge problem.
I mean, we actually need to let our kids grow up.
We need to treat them as grown-ups.
We should treat our kids as grown-ups by the time they go
off to college, making their own decisions,
making a lot of their own mistakes.
But it's hard.
It's really hard to do, because you don't want your kids
to screw up and you want to save them
when they're actually making mistakes.
And, you know, I've been looking at these data
for years and years and years, but the problem is I got to do it.
I'm a scholar of this junk, but I'm also a dad.
And so it's interesting.
I remember when I was, I got three very, very different kids.
And what I would ask them to do is to make a business plan for their lives
when they're in high school because they're entrepreneurs in their lives.
I'm VC.
So, I get a business plan.
But it had to be creative.
It had to be individual. And you
know, my little son, Carlos, Carlos is, you know, he's a character. He was a handful.
He was a pain, man. It's like I had a frequent flyer program into the principal's office
when he was in high school. Is he the one that's jacked? You told me. Yeah. He's the infectious Carlos and Carlos is he's six foot five. He's two hundred and
three pounds and he's four percent by fat. I know he's that tall monster.
He's in the he's a scalpseniper and mink or he's down at Camp Pendleton. He's
he's he's living his best lives married now. He's living his best life for
sure. But you know Carlos in high, he comes to me when he's graduating and he's gonna graduate maybe.
And I said, what's your plan?
Now it's your plan and he says,
I'm not going to college.
No, I'm a college professor.
My father was a college professor.
His father was a college professor.
This is a family business.
It's like, I'm not going to college.
I'm like, and he said, and he had me dead to rights
because I said, you know, really?
Do you think you're going to the best life?
And he said, what were you doing at this age?
And I said, well, I was getting tossed out of college.
I didn't finish college, so I was 30, right?
And so he says, I need to figure this out.
So when he worked as a farmer for two seasons,
Dreyland weed farmer, a panetta hoe, picking rocks out of the soil,
building fences in the nature of the Marines. And now you can ask him,
these are these two questions I ask young people, by the way, about meaning in life.
I can tell if you have a meaning crisis in your life,
I ask you two questions, diagnostic questions, for why are you alive?
And for what are you willing to die?
Oh, wow.
Those are the two questions.
And I'm gonna tell you what the answers are,
but you gotta have answers.
And if you don't have answers, you've got a problem.
Wow.
And he didn't have answers.
How did you, as a dad, that must have been,
like you said, you're a professor,
you come from a lineage of professors.
Yeah.
How did you deal with that back then?
Because I, you know, I ran to situations
with my kids where I'm like, I just want to make them do what they need to do. How did you
deal with that? Did you make mistakes? Totally. Totally. I was, you know, I didn't do it right.
I had lost my temper. I, you know, my patience was no good. And looking back on it, I can look
like this, you know, wise guy, because now I'm at grandfather and, you know, look all grandfatherly
about it. But the truth is, you do the best you can. And then, and then keep loving each other.
And then ask for forgiveness a lot. Make sure that you're working as a team with your wife,
because, you know, they will divide and conquer you 10 times out of 10 if they can. You have to be an
impenetrable force with your with your wife. You guys know what this is like.
I mean, your four year olds already doing this, right?
It's like a formal wedge between you.
They're smart.
Speaking of your wife is a wonderful woman.
You had the opportunity to talk to her
and she's been so helpful to Jessica.
And you guys have been married for a long time.
32 years.
What are some of the secrets of doing that?
Because obviously you went through challenges
and struggles, everybody knows.
Like, what are the secrets, because you guys are such great
couple, such wonderful people.
I mean, I know you guys off, you know, off air.
Uh-huh.
What are some of the secrets of that?
Yeah, it's, it's, I've written about this a lot.
I've written about what are the successes, not just of marriage,
but of having a happy and harmonious romantic life
when they come down to.
Um, and that the bottom line is making sure that you're and harmonious romantic life when they come down to.
And the bottom line is making sure that you're growing together as people, as opposed to growing apart as people. And that sounds sort of simple, but it isn't, because you're going to go through all
kinds of changes in life. You're going to find that one of you is going to get more religious than
the other. This is, this happens. Almost inevitably happens in almost every couple that one person starts to feel more religious,
especially after age 40, that one person has a different concept of what they want to
do professionally than what the other person does.
One person goes through a period of depression, very, very common, and the other person's
got a band.
You get, it's two rivers that are going parallel to each other, and if they break apart,
start going in other directions you're in trouble
but if basically when when your partner is changing that's when you decide to change
That's what it comes down to and sometimes it's you and sometimes it's her
Yeah, in 30 years is a long time. So it's like if you're going through it and it's been a year
Yeah, you got 29 more. Yeah, yeah, you'll find that couples that are more or less happy
because there's no such thing as a happy couple.
There is just couples that are mostly happy.
All right.
Look, living with another person, right?
So what it comes down to, they'll look back.
You'll talk to these couples who have been married
for 50 years and they'll look back
and say, oh, that five year period was brutal.
Like five years, because you know,
that five years is how long most marriages last, right?
Because especially marriages melt down.
It's about a third of marriages break up in the United States
at this point.
People I would say half's not half.
But still, it's a lot.
And so if you basically are willing to say five hard years
for 45 good ones, I'll, yeah, I'll take that.
I'll take that.
So that's the key is being,
is this commitment to the love, commitment to the love
and everything is subservient to the love.
It's like my career is subservient to the love.
It is, I mean, I'm not gonna sacrifice the love of my marriage
for a gig or for money. Who am I? And when you think about it like that,
you're like, yeah, yeah, theoretically, yeah. But then the problem is moment to moment to moment,
you got to make these decisions. So today I got to make a decision about that. I'm willing to
sacrifice my wife being mad because I'm going to do this thing. But all those little decisions add up
to having made the wrong meta decision. So you see the point that I'm trying to make
along these lines?
If you can, and you know my wife and I,
we teach marriage prep to couples that are engaged.
And it's really interesting.
And we talk about, it's a class that we call called,
his needs, her needs.
And she jokes that it should be, you know, her needs and his need. We're kind of simple.
I mean, go ahead and hold on.
Before you keep moving him, he's got like, there's so many things I want to go deeper.
I'm going to back you up on some stuff because I feel like there's so much there.
First of all, I want to go back to the metaphor of the happiness formula, the macronutrients, because I just
won. I just blew my mind. I love that. And so I want to ask you deeper questions around
that. So if you break down the first of all the three macros, so I don't forget again
of what enjoyment satisfaction and purpose. Okay. So if you were talking to somebody who
wants to improve happiness and you looked at their
their their breakdown of their macronutrients and one was way off. So take me through each one.
What would be some tactical things you would tell them to go do to improve that balance. So
the big one for young people. So this is this is I mean a lot of young men are listening to us
watching us. And the reason is because they want the product, which is that they want to be
healthier and better, and they want to improve their lives.
Now, young men are really attuned to that first one that enjoyment one, but
they're having trouble because they're getting stuck on pleasure.
And they're not making it all the way from pleasure to enjoy it.
And I see this a lot with young men.
So let's start with that one.
Number one is that pleasure is something that you can you can get a lot of
immediate
satisfaction from alone and
enjoyment never happens alone
This is important. This is just a rule of thumb. There's a practical rule of thumb. So I think I think that pornography, video games,
television, you know, if you're doing stuff alone,
you're getting, you're stopping with pleasure
and that will not lead to happiness.
Even food, eating food by myself, pleasure, eating it
with someone else.
It's always moving, it's always social.
So pleasure plus communion with others,
plus consciousness means you're conscious
of what you're doing.
That's how you get to enjoy it.
If you're doing stuff without thinking
and you're doing it alone, you're doing it wrong,
that's the rule of thumb.
Again, I can come up with exceptions
in the whole thing, but that's the rule of thumb
because you asked about very practically having that.
That's number one, and that's the biggest one I see
for one of the biggest constituencies for it.
Now, that isn't the only constituency for MindPomp,
I'm 58 years old and I'm a fan.
So there are some aging pump heads on the Harvard faculty.
The second one is satisfaction. Satisfaction is a really, really tough one because
mother nature lies to us about it. Satisfaction is the joy that you get when you achieve something.
And if you don't work for anything, you won't get satisfaction. And almost everybody knows that.
If you cheat to get an A, you don't get satisfaction from the A.
If you work hard and do an all night and you get the A, then you get a lot of satisfaction
from it.
If you work hard all week, you're going to enjoy your Saturday more.
And if you don't work hard all week, if Thursday and Friday look just like Saturday, Saturday
is a lot less fun.
That's what it turns out to be.
If you are working out every day, you're gonna get a lot more satisfaction
from the gains that you actually get,
as opposed to what you talk about.
If it's pure PEDs, it's not the same little satisfaction.
You don't get the same psychic return
on what you get otherwise.
The problem is this, we get fooled into thinking
that we will get that satisfaction in the last.
And that's not how we're wired.
Mother nature wants us to strive,
but their mother nature wants us to think
that we'll get happiness from that forever
and get fooled by that again and again and again.
That makes us run on what's called the hedonic treadmill.
Run, run, run, run, more, more, more, more,
because it wears off immediately and you want the next thing.
Oh man, I want to get that car.
I'm going to love that car. I'm going to love that car.
It's going to be so great.
And a month later, it's just your car.
So you're running for the next thing, next thing, next thing,
next thing.
Here's the way to break that cycle.
Everybody should be ambitious, however,
if your formula for satisfaction is more, you're going to fail.
You're going to be really, really frustrated.
The right formula for satisfaction is all the things that you have divided by all the
things that you want.
So, it's halves divided by wants.
You need a strategy for having more for sure, but you also need a strategy for wanting
less.
And if you have both strategies, then greater satisfaction that
last will be yours. That's the second, very practical strategy.
Well, that's, so that's, so let me like unpack that a little bit.
So that no matter where you're at in your financial state, you can
still find this happiness because you can either one, find ways to
set goals, achieve them and have more or go the other direction and
learn to want less.
And you should do both.
And if you're a monk, then just the want less strategy.
Fine.
But if you're the rest of us, then you need both.
I want to look, I'm a business.
I wanna grow my business.
I wanna sell books.
I wanna do my thing.
I wanna spread the gospel of the science of happiness
to as many millions of people as I possibly can. More, more, more, but what I want less of, I need to want
less of the personal glory, I need to want less of the admiration of strangers, I need
to want less of the power that I think that this can actually bring me because those things
are, those are idols, man, those are idols.
And so I have games that I play with my MBA students at Harvard.
I have a game called What's My Idol. There's four idols in life, by the way. Money,
Power, Pleasure, and Fame. And Fame means prestige or admiration, means a lot of different
things to different people. Money, Power, Pleasure, and Fame. And the way that we play is
we say, okay, what's your idol? You don't actually know until you eliminate the ones that aren't your idol, right?
So for me, I don't want power.
I don't really, I mean, I was a CEO for a long time.
I hated being called boss, because I don't like people
having power over me.
I don't like having power over the people.
Okay, kick that one away.
Okay, what's next?
I've got money and pleasure and honor,
admiration of other people left. I could, you know, money's not? I've got money and pleasure and honor, admiration of other people left.
I could, you know, money's not that important to me.
There's not that much stuff I really want to buy.
I mean, I have the car I like and I have a house
and I don't want another house because, you know,
it's another house.
So I'm gonna worry about it, right?
Okay, pleasure or fame.
I can, I'm pretty, you know, I'm pretty Spartan.
You know, I'm as one day a month in the gym, right?
I mean, I'm willing to suffer.
So I can kick away pleasure, okay?
But, you know, that leaves me my idol,
the admiration of people.
I want the applause.
And here's the thing, once you know your idol,
you will have recognized the thing that always leads you astray.
Every time you do something you're not proud of about yourself,
it's always because of that thing.
It's always because of that thing.
It's like, yeah, I'm ashamed of myself.
I did that because seeking out that little pleasure
because pleasure is your idol.
But once you know it, then you can manage it.
Knowledge is power of you.
So get on that thing, recognize that thing, offer that thing up, ask your partner, your
wife to help you with that thing, and you do much, much better.
So that's on the satisfaction side, how you understand that equation, have is divided
by wants, and that's how you manage the wants.
I love that.
Yeah, I love that.
It's very practical.
Yes.
And these are tools that work.
And the last but not least is the meaning part.
And the meaning part of the purpose part is you got to ask those two questions.
The two questions are, why am I live?
And for what would I be willing to die and go in search of the answers?
My son found it in the Marine Corps.
Now he's got a dangerous job.
And I ask him, why are you alive?
Because God made me.
For what would you be willing to die?
For my faith, for my family,
for the United States of America.
Boom.
I mean, that's not everybody's answers,
but those damn, those are solid answers.
And I'm proud of them.
But he's the point he's just happy.
Because he's got the answers.
Again, it's all for you, those.
You can just think about raising kids.
Like every single one of those, I'm like, oh, having got the answers again. It's all three of those you can just think about raising kids like every single one of those
I'm like, oh, I having kids does that
Form a hoodlid. It's hard to get those without having children like let's say somebody listening
He's like I don't want kids. I keep hearing about how it brings all this joy and meaning and whatever
Where do I go see searching for those things and what are people typically five people who find those things who don't have children?
Where do they typically find them?
You can find them in work. you can find them in service,
you can find them in community,
you find them in loving other people,
is what it comes down to.
The way to think about kids is not,
it gives me all this joy,
it gives me all this fulfillment.
What it does is it completes who is a person.
And the way that it completes who is a person
is through struggle.
It's a struggle. Having children is a person is through struggle. It's a struggle.
Having children, having a family is a struggle.
And that's actually what rounds you out as a man.
That's the reason that men really become men when they're fathers, a lot, for the very
first time in their lives.
And that's the reason that, you know, not everybody, I mean, different people are different.
But when you meet a lot of guys who never get married
and have kids, never settle down and have kids,
they're always kind of childlike.
Yeah, that's true.
Not all of them.
I mean, I don't want anybody to unsubscribe to Line Pump
because I'm not just said, but that's a pattern.
The people will say that these guys,
they seem kind of hard to domesticate.
It's also the fact that after 30, if you've never been in a permanent domestic partnership
by age 30, you have a one and three chance of a substance abuse disorder.
Oh, wow.
For men, not one.
So that again, what age?
30.
30.
If you've not been in a permanent domestic or a semi-permanent, what feels like a permanent
domestic partnership married or probably living together by age 30, the data say that
you have a one in three chances of suffering from substance use disorder.
Is that because you're searching for something in the wrong place?
No.
Two things.
Number one is if you're addicted, you're less likely to be in a partnership, but also
if you're not being domesticated by a permanent loving relationship, you're more likely to
get to fall in love with a substance.
You know, you said love other people.
You're one of my favorite examples of this.
I, you know, you feel it when you meet you the first time.
I've seen you with other people
and it looks like you're doing that with other people.
And you meet with such different people
that you wouldn't think, you know,
they would be all-be your friends
because they come from different walks of life, whether it be politics or religion or celebrities, but you genuinely are able to do
that. How do you do that? Because it can be hard for people to do that to other people. We say,
love people. And you're like, I don't like that person because of this or I don't like that person
because of that. What's the, like, what, how do you do that? Well, loving people is the different
than using them. And there's a tendency to look at other people
instrumentally. And that's a huge mistake.
When you meet, and you guys meet people who are very well known,
I mean, you have guests on the show who are really, really well known.
When you meet somebody who's authentically famous,
President of the United States, whatever, they know when you're objectifying them,
just like an incredibly beautiful woman knows when you're objectifying them,
just like an incredibly beautiful woman
knows when you're objectifying her.
And some people they kind of like to be objectified.
Everybody likes to be admired for some characteristic
that we have, whether it's our success
or our money or our looks or sense of humor
or intelligence, whatever it happens to be.
But the truth is that nobody's gonna relax with you
when you're objectifying them.
Objectifying people is sinful.
It's the wrong thing.
Our father's taught us not to objectify women.
We don't look at women and reduce her to her physical characteristics.
It's a bad thing to do.
We learn that.
Like, what are you staring at, boy?
I mean, remember that.
And I appreciate that, right?
But we do that to people constantly.
And the mistake that people make
when you're meeting somebody that you admire
is to objectify them in a particular way.
And that makes intimacy impossible.
That makes actual friendship impossible.
Don't objectify them.
Love them as an actual person.
Treat them as an actual human being
with actual human feelings.
Not just as a bundle of things that you really
like and want to be around.
Plus, that makes it more... saying that makes me think like sometimes you have a celebrity
or someone you follow and you tend to idolize them and then it's like they're either perfect
or if they're not, oh my gosh, this is all my... but what you're saying is like they're
a human.
They're flawed just like I am.
And so if I don't like this particular thing or agree with this particular opinion, that's okay.
What about the opposite though?
With someone maybe you do not like hold up
or put up on a pedestal or someone to,
we actually talk about the software.
Sometimes I get frustrated when we are quick to judge
somebody because there's things that we don't like
about how they do versus I've always chosen
to look at somebody and you can do so many things that I don't like, but I'm going to find the thing that I do like and focus on that.
What is the advice to interacting with people that their values don't align necessarily with you or if you don't like maybe some of the things you do that and how do you still come off as that person because I feel like that's part of what cells are asking to.
Yeah, I mean, one of the, another form of objectification is to reduce somebody to their
opinions, to their political opinions, for example. That's just another form of objectification.
So it's like, yeah, you know, you guys are like into capitalism. Well, I know everything I need
to know about you. Right. That's like saying, you got big muscles. That's all I need to know about
you. So you kidding me? Yeah. That's one part of who I am.
It's one outward characteristic of who I am as a person.
And so making a commitment to yourself to not do that
because once again, the objectification problem,
it leads to less happiness and less prospect
for productive and fun friendship
is the way that it comes down.
So it's just like anything else.
It's like, I don't like you because of that one thing
is like, I wanna be around you because of that one thing is like I wanna be around you
because of that one thing.
It's interesting.
So I bet you guys are starting to experience this more.
So you're on the road more than used to be
because you're doing events now
and you're getting recognized, right?
You're getting recognized in airports,
especially when the three of you are together.
That then it's like obviously it's the mind pump guys
and it's people treat you weird, right?
They know us.
They know you, and they know more about you than you know about them because that's what
being a little bit of a famous is all about.
They can tell you the name of your wife, for example, that's creepy, except that it's
not because you mentioned it and they listen to the show.
But they treat you in a way that's slightly awkward and uncomfortable.
And that's what's going on with people of this world, historical significance, they're
getting all the longer.
That can warp the character.
The key thing is for you guys is making sure that it doesn't start messing you guys up.
Because that's what will happen to people who experience a whole lot of fame and get
addicted to it on the dopamine cycle.
Then pretty soon, they don't want to be anything except objectified because that's what gives them their shot of the neuromodulator.
You know what's interesting about that Arthur is that we started this so late, like we
weren't kids, right? We started this after we had businesses, we were all in our mid-30s,
by the time we got traction, we're late-30s. And none of us, that's the thing that we
like least about this business is the getting known or the fame type of deal.
And I think it's because maybe we started later, because we talk about this all the time.
How do we done this in our 20s?
You would have wired your brains to it.
Oh, we would have been a hot flame that burns out.
Well, you would have been influencers.
Yeah.
You would have been, you guys are educators.
Oh, you're actually educators.
Oh, I like it so much.
Thank you so much.
It's true.
I mean, you guys are in the information business. your educators, your actual educators. Thank you so much. So much better than this, and all of the sudden, it's true.
I mean, you guys are in the information business.
And you authentic, the reason I started listening
to this show years ago, before I met you,
I was, you didn't know when you met me for the first time
that I was, you came to an event that I was doing.
You didn't know that I was a fan of yours.
Right, why?
Because you wanted my good, and you wanted me to learn things.
Every time I turn it on, it's like, huh?
Yeah. You authentically were trying to teach me things
as opposed to convince me of things or trying to influence me to do things.
I never felt manipulated by you guys because you're educators.
Awesome. Yeah. Thanks. We're good salespeople.
Yeah.
I noticed the upsell now, what are you?
Something I've been wanting to tell you.
And I want to say this on air is you
played a huge role in my spiritual progression.
OK, so the audience knows where I started and how I've
moved along.
And one of the reasons why you were so influential, Arthur,
is sometimes you meet people that are spiritual and religious
and they just come across as like preachy or righteous
or you're not like that at all.
Like you just, I want to know more
because you just seem to be living it
and you're just wonderful person.
Like, what's like, how do we do that?
How do we go from like, oh, now I'm spiritual
and I know these things to like you.
Like I said, you influenced me
and I don't think you were trying to,
you were just yourself.
Well, I want you to be happy.
I want you to be happy.
And one of the things that you find
is the people who are happiest
have a transcendental path in their life.
Now I'm a Catholic.
It's literally the most important thing in my life.
But I'm also a social scientist
that I can tell you that that's not the only path to the happy, you just say everybody's got to decide what the right path is, you know,
cosmically and, you know, eternally or whatever. But for, for living a happy life, having
it, having something bigger than you, something spiritual, something philosophical, this bigger
than you, is incredibly important. It's something that you need to be thinking about. Otherwise, look,
I mean, life is so tedious. My job, my money, my lunch, my commute. It's just, it's like watching
this same episode of Better Call Saul every single day for the rest of your life. It's terrible.
And so, but if you can zoom out on it, you can get peace and perspective on your life. For me,
that's the faith in my youth. For other people, it's reading the stoic philosophers
or walking in nature or studying Ohan Sebastian,
Bach's fugs or starting a meditation practice.
But the truth is, we need a transcendental practice.
Now, what draws people to that?
If you want people to be happy and you know that's the case,
you're not gonna get that.
I'm not gonna get that by kicking down
Sal's door and shoving a crucifix in his face.
That's not going to happen.
The way that it's going to be winning is excellence.
Have people say, I mean, excellence in life, the way that people are going to want to,
I mean, just even things that are less, they're more ephemeral, less cosmic than what we're
talking about here.
And people want to get in better physical shape.
What's going to attract them to it?
The answer is excellence.
It's going to attract them to it.
And that means whole life excellence.
Why are we having a conversation about the science of happiness on mind-pump?
Because of the mind part, not the pump part.
I'm also interested in the pump part.
You know, you come to me for the mind that go to you for the pump, but also go to you for the fact that you're integrating the two
for the whole person excellence, which is incredibly win some. And people want to know what the power behind
that is. For me, part of the power behind that is my relationship with God. And if somebody says,
hmm, tell me more, all the better, because I want they're good.
I want I will the good of the other,
because I love you, that's why.
I love how you portray your faith.
And this is something that I grew up in the church
and it's been a real struggle with the culture of that
and just how to present that to people.
And like I just have always wondered why,
you know, Matthew 7 was just like like just went right over everybody's head.
Can you describe why do we focus so much on the negative and why do we focus so much on other
people's inadequacies versus just loving them and. So you're talking about love your enemies,
pray for those who persecute you. You've been told you should love your neighbor,
you should love your neighbors and hate your enemies.
I give you a new teaching.
Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.
Because it's hard, you know,
and because we're going according to the,
you know, it's interesting.
Life as a human, one of the beautiful things about it
is that you don't just have this animal nature.
You've got a divine nature. And we get to choose. But left up to mother nature, we're going to go low.
We're always going to go low. You're going to go for pleasure over enjoyment. You're going to be
on the hedonic treadmill of more, more, more, more, more. You're not going to understand what the
formula for actual meaning is because you're going to overlook that entirely.
The divine nature that each one of us is called to do is to do these hard things.
And again, fitness is a metaphor for this of doing a hard thing that doesn't feel, that
it's like, it's much easier to sit on the couch and play video games and watch TV and
eat hogging dots.
I mean, it's much easier to do that.
But you elect the hard thing
because you choose the divine path.
That's what it comes down to.
Love your enemies is the divine path,
precisely because it's the hard thing.
And we're like, we don't have,
we're not throwing a dart into the general population
for the people who are watching and listening to us.
Now, you watch and listen to mind pump
because you want to choose the better path, which is the
harder path.
So then the question is, what is the better path in every part of your life?
What is the mind pump for every part of your life?
That means, okay, yeah, you're going to get into the gym.
Yep, you're going to clean up your diet.
Yep, you're going to treat your wife right.
Yep, you're going to develop yourself spiritually.
Yep, you're going to love your enemies.
Look, it gets complicated real fast.
But the divine path is a divine path.
And the good news is that you can find it and work on it for the rest of your life and
make progress for the rest of your life.
That's awesome.
How long have you been teaching college students?
So I started, I got my PhD and I was 34.
And I went immediately to Georgia State University in Atlanta for three years then with Syracuse for seven.
Then I stopped and I ran a think tank in Washington, DC for 11 years.
I was president of a think tank in DC.
Then I came back and I took a professorship at Harvard in 2019, often on for decades.
Lots of differences with these generation, the new generation versus the older, what are
the similar challenges or different challenges?
People are people.
People are people are people.
What happens is the culture changes a little bit
and the polarization in political life
has filtered itself into academia.
And so the biggest problem that I see,
the worst thing that we've done to students
in the current generation is that we've told them
that you should hate
your enemies and that you need to fight instead of love and that the right way to make the
world better is by being more pugilistic, to be an activist instead of a volunteer.
Wow.
You know, that's the biggest problem.
We have a huge activism problem in this country.
If you want to make something better, you you gotta scream and yell and hate the right people
and curious sign and cancel.
And that's nonsense for happiness,
but it's also nonsense for progress.
You need to love more, love more, love more, love more.
That's what it comes to.
You want a better world?
Love more.
You wrote,
I also think too that what you brought up earlier
about just focusing on one person,
or just your immediate community, you're going
to have way more effective impact in that direction versus trying to solve the world's
problems through these.
Holy, there's this great ancient scripture in the Jewish Talmudic book of the Sanhedrin,
which is that a man saves the world who saves a single man.
Oh wow. Look, the whole world is a person. I mean, a person is the whole world.
I mean, each one of us is the whole world. That's what it comes down to.
And the idea of I'm going to, I'm going to, you know, sprinkle droplets of water on the ocean.
And no, man, no, it's interesting because we don't see people very much.
You know, we don't look at people.
There's so many people that we overlook constantly.
I mean, we look at,
we're in California right now,
which is, you know, the best place
and the worst place in a lot of ways
because this becomes so utterly unlivable
because we've stopped seeing our brothers and sisters
as people,
but rather as kind of wards of the state
and basic outcasts. And so, you know, the way that we've neglected entirely marginalized populations
at the government level. I mean, you see the evidence of failure when you go into San Francisco,
it's like Blade Runner. I mean, it holds so true. truly moly. You can't believe it, but that's really a lack of love
is what it comes down to.
It's a lack of love on our own part,
and it's not even a political statement that I'm making.
And so what we all can do to redress that,
I mean, you don't have to find a homeless person
and take them home, but you do need to look them in the eye
and treat them like they're actually human being.
It's funny because I was taught
given this lecture to a bunch of college students,
you know, Christian college students.
And I said, look, do you wanna lift up another person
you gotta make them needed?
Because that's the essence of dignities, we need it.
Not to be managed by the state and by welfare,
but to be needed by other people.
And I said, I'll give you an example. We were in New York City. I said, there's, you're going
to find a homeless man within a block of here. What do you need from him? And these students are like
baffled. They were completely confused by the whole question. And I said, you know what he needs from you, who's a sandwich perhaps.
You need his prayers.
You need his, if you're a Christian, you believe that God hears the cries of the poor.
You need his prayers.
So next time you're going to give that guy a sandwich, look him in the eye and say,
by the way, would you please pray for me and my family?
Because you need those prayers.
You said that at your talk that when we first saw you,
you told that story and it got me emotional
and I've actually done that sense.
And it was so profound.
And the profound part of it was,
every time I've done that,
I've done at least three times,
is the look in the face of the person, shock.
What, what?
You're asking me for what?
And then absolutely, absolutely brother. And it's like, they'll do it. Unbelievable. It's human connection. Yeah.
And look, there's more that we can do. We need programs and we need policies and I got it. But what we need in this, we have a society that's becoming bereft of love.
And that's the problem. And if we actually got back to the basics of love and human connection, then we could figure out the policies.
You know, a guy like you, I can't imagine you, because you're so connected with politicians as well, and you worked in Washington.
And politics is like every, you ask the average person, what do you think about politicians?
I mean, I hate him.
Terrible.
And you talk about polarization.
And I mean, as we're talking, the two least popular people
in the world are probably going to end up what it looks like. Running against each other,
how the hell does this even happen? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. How do we change? How do we change this? How
do we change this? How do you how do you walk among these politicians and work with them and they
love you and you love them? And I see you talking with them. And there's on both sides of the aisle. And
like, how do we how do we do this? So we're in a we economists we call it a suboptimal equilibrium. You know we're
in a there's a sort of the game theory around this. It's very easy to get into a situation where
the worst people are encouraged to do the worst things. What happening right now is that we're
in a fear polarity. Any family or company or community or country
can is either in a love polarity or fear polarity.
And a fear polarity is one in which the vehicular language
of what we're doing is fear,
and we're mostly afraid of the other side.
So even though we don't like our own bully,
we're afraid of the other bully more.
Oh, I see.
So that's how the polarity of national politics
is working in the United States. And what you need to do that's how the polarity of national politics is working in the United States.
And what you need to do is to flip the polarity to a love polarity.
And that will happen from time to time.
It doesn't mean everybody loves each other all the time.
It's not like this is, you know, Berkeley 68 or something, right?
Because that's done since, right?
But the truth is that that's where there's a lot more trust.
And we find that a different period is in American politics.
We find that with Democrats and Republicans, we find that my parents thought that Reagan was terrible,
but they trusted Reagan.
And I knew a lot of people who couldn't stand Bill Clinton,
but they more or less, they trusted Bill Clinton
to be competent as a president,
and to work with the other party when it was actually possible,
because the polarity was basically shifted.
The good news is in politics,
there's a lot of good going on at the local level,
not here in California.
California. It's chaos. Sorry, I isn't politics. There's a lot of good going on at the local level, not here in California. Um, California.
It's chaos.
It's chaos.
I don't care.
I feel bad to keep the guys here.
You see in a lot of places where there's,
you don't quite know if it's a Democrat or Republican.
You don't quite know because you have these people
that are dedicated to doing a lot of good.
And you don't, you don't agree with everybody,
but they want to hear particular voices.
They want to make progress.
They don't want to,
in a fear polarity the way that it works is,
if I don't get 100% of what I want, I've lost.
Okay.
Now, you guys don't do that.
I mean, you guys have, this is a multifaceted business,
and you're buying a selling property and doing all kinds
of stuff that's beyond the scope of the podcast.
When you're doing that, you actually want the other party
to win.
You want that. Why? Because you might want to do business with that other person again.
And you think about it in a different way. I love polarities, one that's win-win-oriented.
And that's what's going on in state and local politics in certain areas.
That's what's going on in a lot of American's lives. And that's what we got to bring back.
And so that's what I'm talking about. You know, what are you actually doing
so that you can make that cool? And sometimes it is. And of course, it will be again. It's just
that this is a very tough time. And so that's the reason that we have these two characters that are
going to be like, it's like set as nice as possible. 130 million Americans. That's the best we can do.
30 million Americans. That's the best we can do.
You know, before we got on air,
you mentioned that your teachings
have now the amount of neuroscience is increased dramatically.
I'd love to hear maybe some things that either one,
you're currently learning or currently speaking
and teaching about right now.
Yeah, so I am, I just finished up a book
that's coming out in September with Oprah Winfrey.
Which by the way, congratulations.
Thank you.
That she's a fantastic co-author.
How did you meet her, by the way?
Did she contact you?
Yeah, she's a reader of my column in Atlantic and she enjoyed my last book called From
Strength to Strength.
So I went on her podcast and we just, you know, we hit it off like a house on fire because
she's super in ideas.
And so we wound up meeting and she said,
you know, we write book.
I'm like, huh.
It's just an Oprah shirt.
It's like, let me think, yes.
Yeah.
And it was phenomenal and really, really rewarding experience.
So that's coming out in September.
That's done.
That book is done.
And a lot of it is, interestingly,
it's parallel to what I wind up teaching in my class at Harvard,
which is more and more about the mechanism of action when we're talking about happiness.
So the most interesting questions and happiness, they don't come from social science.
They come from philosophy. They come from theology. They come from art and music and poetry.
And that's where the interesting questions come about. They're talking about love, and they're talking about the meaning of life, and all that.
Then you have to answer, why do things happen
the way that they do in my head?
And modern neuroscience over the past 30 years
is exploded in the way that we understand these things.
And so there's two branches that are going on
simultaneously.
One is about neurochemistry, and one is about
the basic mechanics.
So it's just the anatomy of what's happening. And so it's quite interesting. I'm doing both at
the same time. We've talked about dopamine and oxytocin and serotonin. We've talked about
these things in this conversation so far. The anatomy turns out to be really interesting
and very complicated. And so I'm studying this all the time because I wasn't trained as
a neuroscientist. I was trained as a social scientist. And so I'm studying this all the time because I wasn't trained as a neuroscientist. I was trained as a social scientist.
And so I've got the statistical and mathematical methods and experimental methods.
But understanding the mechanisms and the anatomy is really, really hard.
I mean, the brain is a very complicated thing.
But it's super interesting because I'm learning about things that always I knew,
but now they're making sense in a different way.
I'll give you an example. When you feel pain, like when you go to,
a bad thing happens to you when you're squatting.
Now, maybe that hasn't happened to you guys yet,
but by the time you're 58 like me,
it's almost inevitable.
How did you last week?
Surprise.
And by the way, if all of your aches and pains
are gym-related, good on you.
Right? It's supposed to, I got up off the couch wrong pains are gym-related, good on you. Right?
It's supposed to, I got up off the couch wrong.
You know, that's not what you want.
But something happens and it hurts.
There's this, there's two components to the pain.
There's the sensory component, which is it hurts in that place.
And there's the affective component, which means I don't like it now wanted to stop.
Those are two different sensations, and they're happening in two different parts of the brain.
The affective component, I don't like the pain, is using the same part of the brain when
you have psychological pain or emotional pain.
It's the same part of the brain.
Wow.
So, when you're rejected by somebody or your wife yells at you, that affects, it's called
the dorsal anterior singulate cortex.
It's a very ancient part of the brain, It's dedicated entirely to physiological and psychological pain.
That's the key thing to keep in mind.
When you're in the gym and you're doing the right thing, so you're doing occlusion reps
on your biceps and you feel like you're going to die.
What's happening is you have lots of sensory pain, but no affective pain.
Because you want the pain.
And so it's not actually, you're not like,
I hate it, I hate it, I hate it.
It's like, oh, it hurts so much and I love it.
Now can we shift the pain?
Yeah. Okay.
That's the key.
Once you know this, this is the reason that the neuro-mechanics
or the neurophysiology is so important.
Because once you understand this,
you understand the difference between,
you're forming a little off on your dead
and then getting hurt and actually wrapping up your arms
and feeling like your biceps are gonna pop and it hurts.
I mean, that's pain.
I mean, that's really, really painful, but it's so good
because you're doing it on purpose
and you're doing it your own way.
Then you can start thinking about hard things
in your life in a different way. Because once you way. Then you can start thinking about hard things in your life in a different way.
Because once you do that, you can start thinking,
look, I can manage the affective component of my pain
and the biggest problem I have in life
is the affective component.
I'm being inhibited from doing things
because I'm like, I don't like it.
I don't like it.
I'm gonna decide to like it.
I'm gonna decide to like it.
You can start taking the pain and sacrifice
and challenge in your life
and turn it into opportunities just like building your muscles. That's what it turns into. And so
for I'll give you an example, you have conflict at home because we're married men. There's going to
be conflict today. Right. It's yeah, I'm not even home,
but it's conflict this morning, right?
And okay, so is it gonna be more like,
you did something wrong on your deadlift?
Or is it gonna be more like,
I'm subjecting my biceps to intense pain.
And it's your choice.
It's your choice.
You know, when you have a conflict
and you have a disagreement,
you can turn it into trying to actually get hypertrophy in your relationship.
I know you for growth. Absolutely. By turning it into that. The way that you do that is like, okay,
the bad form is, I did this and you did this and I and you and me and you.
And starting to talk about us and we, that's when you start to get hypertrophy.
And guess what, the affective component of the pain
from this conflict is gonna be dramatically decreased.
How do I understand that?
I mean, this is a life lesson,
but I got that from the neuro anatomy.
That's interesting.
You know, it's funny, we talk on the show all the time
about the physiological response to pain
and then your relationship to the pain.
It's funny as you're saying this,
we've all experienced this as trainers.
You'll train with somebody who's never exercised before
and the pain that they feel from an exercise.
They'll drop, it's common, they'll drop away.
Oh my God, but then they develop a different relationship
with the pain through practice.
So what you're saying is you can change your relationship
to pain, psychological and physical to the
point where it still hurts, but it doesn't have to say.
You don't have to separate.
You're separating out the effective and sensory components of the pain.
Wow.
You're separating those two components from one another.
Once you do that, you win.
Once you do that, you're managing the pain and the pain is no longer managing you.
That's how you do that.
That's why neuroscience is so critically important for what we're talking about here.
It'd be interesting to see the people they study to figure that out, right? You'd probably
people, because you would take monks that can meditate for that.
Or you're people who like, or MMA fighters and just take beatings and they can shift the
way they've received.
They figured it out without knowing, right.
Actually, what's going on? They've just kind of figured it out that, and it's also the
funny thing. There are a lot of people who out. And it's also the funny thing.
There are a lot of people who are like,
some people are perverted, they're like paying.
And they've done it in a not very constructive way.
Well, we just speculated, I don't know,
last week on the podcast,
we were talking about Justin's history of playing football.
And I'm like, you know, what is,
and I was actually asking the guys,
what is it you think is a different about that person who gets hit, decleated the first
time in football and gets back up and goes, oh, I want to do that again.
First is someone like me, I remember when I got played football for that.
I was like, oh, this isn't for me.
I don't want to do anything.
There has to be something going on and use explaining that neurologically, that person
has that ability to already should have what they did.
Well, the experience and the practice,
the practice is because this,
all this stuff comes with practice.
Managing your dorsal anterior singulate cortex takes reps,
and this gets us back to the early part of the conversation
about how it's different to be a dad
when you're 44 as opposed to when you're 26.
What's going on is that you're up at three o'clock
in the morning with a dirty diaper and a feeding,
and that creates all sorts of affective pain.
You know, it's like, I wanna be asleep,
I don't wanna be doing this.
I can't believe that she's just lying there.
I mean, all this affective pain that you're feeling.
And when you're 44, it's like, I handle that.
I've handled a lot worse.
And when I manage this kind of thing, I get better.
You have the sense of, and that's what's happening.
Okay, so explain to me what's happening
on a neurological level when I do this.
Okay, so I've shared this before
with talking about how I've overcome fear
and struggle in my life.
As I've practiced this over years, I've learned that
the bigger the fear, the
greater the challenge, the more rewarding it is on the other side. So I've learned over
years to when I get those moments of, oh my God, I'm scared, oh my God, this is so bad
to actually reframe and go, oh, you know what that means? If this is the scariest or the
worst time ever in my life, that means when I get through this on the other side,
I'm gonna have one of the best rewards.
So what's happening there, logically,
that I've figured out that I can't put words to?
You also, there's a couple of things happening.
Number one is you're more experienced.
You just didn't have the reps to know
that it was gonna be okay.
You've seen to the end of the story already.
That's a big consolation to be over 40.
That is a big consolation that nobody under 40. That is a big consolation. That nobody
under 40 knows. That's the by the way the reason that people over 80 are much happier, generally
speaking, because they have more emotional regulation because they have more experience.
So they feel the same negative basic emotions. The negative basic emotions are discussed, sadness,
anger, and fear. Those are the basic negative emotions produced by the limbic system of the
brain. And they get, they're giving you signals that there's a threat. Like, don't
eat that or you'll die or, you know, better run. That's a predator or, you know, sadness,
don't be disconnected from that person because you'll wander the frozen tundra alone and
die or whatever it happens to be there are all signals to you. What happens when you're
25 is everything feels like a mortal threat
and you don't know the end of the story.
By the time you're 40, you're like, yeah, I've seen the story before.
It's gonna be okay. I don't like it, but it's gonna be okay.
And when you know something's gonna be okay, you can do anything.
And when you're 80, you're like, not only is it gonna be okay,
it's gonna be okay by tomorrow.
And so I'm gonna cut to the, I'm gonna cut till tomorrow
and start feeling better already. I'm just gonna cut to the, I'm going to cut till tomorrow and start feeling better already. I'm just going to, I'm just going to cut to the chase and start feeling
better. And so these are like, yeah, that sucks. But you know, tomorrow I'm going to feel
better. So I'm going to get ahead and start feeling better. And that's what's happening.
The second thing is now you've got reps on satisfaction. Remember, satisfaction is
the reward after struggle. So when you get a lot more experience on that, you start
to see struggle as something
that's gonna have a reward.
And your brain is,
it's started to make that connection
between the struggle and the reward.
So when something starts to hurt,
you're like, oh no, oh no, oh, but I know it's gonna happen.
I know I'm gonna get an ice cream sundae at the end of this.
I know it's gonna be so good when I get through this.
It's kind of like,
I'm hitting your hand with a hammer because you know it's gonna feel so good when I get through this. It's kinda like, I'm hitting your hand with a hammer
because you know, it's gonna feel so good when you stop.
That's hilarious.
So, okay, so in terms of pain and all that,
it's fascinating to me because I've noticed too,
like there can be a dark side to that in terms of like,
I've learned those same things where I'm like
re-associating it and I'm actually seeking it out.
Seeking out opportunities make me uncomfortable
because I know there's growth there,
but then at what point does that become
like a self-sabotaging type of mentality?
Yeah, well you know that no benefits come without costs,
but you also have to have a prudential judgment
about cost-benefit analysis.
So you guys know, for example,
if you're investing in real estate, you've got to hold some
debt.
I mean, unless you're bootstrapping everything, but you're not going to own very much real
estate if you're bootstrapping your whole portfolio and paying for everything in cash,
you're going to carry some debt.
That's got risks.
They're manageable risks.
You got to understand the risks.
You get more experience with the risks, et cetera, et cetera.
And you take out a new, every time you sign a you sign a mortgage like, oh my, it's always
gets your attention when you're signing a mortgage and you owe a million dollars or more, for sure.
Or whatever, whatever that number, that high number is for you. But you can cross the line
into being in prudent, and people do that all the time where they're basically taking on too much
cost relative to the benefit.
And that's, and one of the things you find is
some people will only get their dopamine
from disproportionate risk.
They're these risk takers.
Gambleers.
Yeah.
And what'll happen with that is pretty interesting.
So people who are, who get the,
gambling is a really interesting dopamine phenomenon
as a matter of fact, because what you find is that
there's the casinos have figured out
how to give you maximum dopamine if that's your thing. The way is that if you kept winning predictably,
you wouldn't get any dopamine. It has to be very unpredictable. And you have to lose, too.
Yeah, you've got to lose to get the right amount of dopamine, too. And so they understand that that's
how the neurochemistry works. And everybody kind of gambles in their own way. And what happens if
you become too much of a gambler and their costs start to cross across the benefits,
it's a problem.
The other thing is that there are certain things
that where the cost is actually really, really damaging.
You know, we didn't want to get into a bad fight with your wife
and say terrible things that are hurtful
and she's going to remember for years
just because you want to have makeup sex.
That's a bad trade.
Right?
That's so good.. Right? That's not so good.
Depends on the sex.
Your results may differ.
Hard to argue.
You're very experienced working with entrepreneurs.
You comment on entrepreneurship.
What about the neurochemistry or the make up of entrepreneurs?
When I meet other business owners or people who start,
there's a lot of famous sayings,
like an entrepreneur someone that's willing to work
80 hours a week to avoid working 40 hours a week.
Like crazy statements like that.
Like what is it that makes an entrepreneur
and entrepreneur versus somebody who were delusional?
Yeah.
So there's a whole literature,
psychological literature on what's called EO,
entrepreneurial orientation. And it's, called EO, entrepreneurial orientation.
And it's, everybody is on the entrepreneurial orientation spectrum,
it's from zero to one, zero would be where there's none and one is where you're pure.
Nobody is on either pole of the entrepreneurial orientation spectrum.
Everybody's along that line.
And getting more exposure to risk and understanding it and being able to manage it,
become more comfortable with it,
will move you closer to one, everybody.
But almost everybody has a predisposition toward it as well.
To be an actual natural entrepreneur,
the estimates are about 2% of the population.
2% of the population is a natural entrepreneur.
They're like, yeah, I don't, and they'll say,
it's not like working for anybody,
but really what they want is they want it's a mutation from the norm and they want the thrill.
Now, where, where do you see it most evidently? We think of his business startups. It's immigration.
Immigration is a single most entrepreneurial thing you can do. Why? Because entrepreneurship is
the willingness and ability to put your capital at risk. Totally. What about your linguistic capital? Your social capital, your
religious capital, your emotional capital. All of it. That's way more important than your
financial capital, because most immigrants have like no financial capital. They're putting
all this stuff at risk, and that's the single most entrepreneurial experience. That's
the reason that when the United States starts cutting off the flow of immigrants, we
become less entrepreneurial.
We need like, bring them in, bring them in, bring them in, bring them in.
That's the ferment that's going to continue to make us a very upwardly mobile progress-oriented
entrepreneurial population is bringing into people who've got the mutation.
They're in the 2% in their country and they're going to bail on their country.
You know, the de-stefinos, right?
They're like, Sicily is boring and has no opportunity.
Bub-I, that's what you want.
You want to self-select for that in your culture
and then make it super easy for people to display that
in business and in work.
Then you want to make it easy for them to do that.
And that's the kind of culture
that will actually lead to the greatest amount of progress.
You're mentioning mutations,
so there's genetic components to this.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, well, that's somewhat speculative research.
I say for sure, because I think it's very compelling,
but there's, we've mapped the human genome,
and they haven't found the entrepreneurship gene.
No doubt it's a combination.
It's a combination of all sorts of effects,
is what it comes down to.
But it's unthinkable that this is not something that's in no small part genetic.
So I've had this conversation with my family. So we're obviously all from immigrants and America
has always been known to be this entrepreneurial place built by immigrants. So it's like we took
the 2% from the world and America at one point was a lot more than 2% entrepreneurs.
Right.
If you consider that and so this jeans have been passed on and so we just have a culture that's been built around.
That's right.
Then you get mutants.
I mean, when did the shafers come here?
Well, I don't know.
Long time ago.
Yeah.
So it means you're a mutant.
Yeah.
That means that you basically mutated from that because you're like, I like it.
Yeah.
Now, everybody's an entrepreneur
with the enterprise of your life.
And that's an important thing to keep in mind,
that risk management, willingness and ability
to try new things in your personal life.
And for most people, the most entrepreneurial thing
they're gonna do with the enterprise of their life
is fallin' love and stay in love.
I mean, you get married.
It's a very entrepreneurial thing to do.
That's like, I don't know.
But I'm signing this thing.
I'm in a bed half of everything out.
It's a very entrepreneurial thing to do.
And so it's important to talk to young people today
about are you an entrepreneur or not?
I mean, the stupidest thing I see are these
like young guys today who are willing to put
$10 million of somebody else's capital at risk,
but they're not willing to fall in love. That is so non-ontrappinereal, right? And it signals to me
that's not a real entrepreneur, and somebody I would not invest in. Oh, wow, that's a build.
Yeah, that's interesting. Yeah. I had a really weird like entrepreneurial journey because I did it
when I was in my when I was in high school, like at 14, 15 years old, out of necessity.
You can't know when would hire a 14 year old, so I had to figure out how to end.
We didn't have a lot.
So I had to figure out how to make money.
So mowing people's lawns was like the obvious answer as a kid.
And then I had the opportunity to, when I was late high school into junior college, got
to work for a dairy.
And it was like a very small organic dairy
back then that was private and I got to see how hard they worked. Husband and wife with
two kids never took a day off.
Within the founders?
Yeah. So it was just small mom pod dairy. We only had about 150, 200 cattle or so in an
almond ranch. And I mean at one point I got close enough in the family
to see the books and realize these people worked every day
of their life to have the freedom to say their entrepreneurs
and literally was like clearing 50 grand a year.
And I thought, oh my God, I don't wanna be an entrepreneur.
It's way harder than I thought it was gonna be.
Then go work for a company for years
that I loved working for, but realize
that the bosses had control of my paycheck.
I could work hard, I could be successful, but even then these cop plan changes would come
out every year and it would dictate how much I could or could not make and I didn't like
that.
And that kind of drove me into, then I fell in love with that.
I fell in love with the ability to have that autonomy
and control.
Yeah, no, no.
And you've definitely got the gene.
You've definitely got the gene.
And anybody who's like, I'm going to go and do whatever I have
to do to make money at 14.
That's an entrepreneurial thing to do.
Most people don't do that is what it turns out.
And if we had every single person had the gene,
it would be a nightmare.
I mean, our society would be completely ungovernable.
Right?
It was like the mind pump guys times a hundred million.
It would be, well, it would be a different kind of country.
That's right.
We'd have to figure out other structures of the policy.
But free gym membership for everybody. No, it's like, wow, that's right. We'd have to figure out other structures of the policy.
But free gym membership.
I know, it's like, wow, let's experiment with Anarchy.
You know, I don't know.
That's so true.
But we gotta have enough of it.
You gotta have enough of it.
You become a moribund country with a, you know,
just an economy that doesn't work at all.
It's got no dynamism, it's got no adventure.
I mean, you look, you see places like this around the world
and that's not what we want to be.
How worried are you that we're heading the other direction?
I don't like it.
I know, I know your whole documentary was the,
obviously, opposite of that, right?
So, what do you see happening?
Do you think that we're moving in this more
socialist type of direction?
And yeah, part of it is the aging in the population.
People tend to be less open to new experience.
And the human personality is really thought of
as having five dimensions to it.
Openness to experience, conscientiousness,
extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism.
And as you get older, there's certain things
that are really good.
Naroticism tends to fall as you get older. You tend to be less hung up about dumb stuff as you get older, there are certain things that are really good. Naroticism tends to fall as you get older.
You tend to be less hung up about dumb stuff as you get older.
People tend to be more agreeable as they get older.
It's like, it's too much hassle to be a jerk.
And so people get agreeable.
The problem is that openness to experience tends to fall a lot.
So it falls by about 50% between the ages of 19 and 60.
And you're just less open to experiences.
That's one of the reasons that, you know,
19-year-old dudes would be like,
y'all eat that.
Yeah, y'all eat that.
I'm down, it's like, I'm down.
It's like, what is it?
I'll take it.
It's the famous last word.
I know, I know, it's like the famous last word.
It's like, watch, look, no hands.
And part of that has to do with the lack of connection
between the wiring, the prefrontal cortex,
and the amygdala, which the amygdala is part of the limb of connection between the wiring, the prefrontal cortex and the amygdala,
which the amygdala is part of the limbic system that governs excitement and fear and
the prefrontal cortex, which gives you a potential judgment.
The executive center of the brain, when they're not wired together, then risk taking and
cost benefit analysis are not communicating properly.
That's the reason that my son joined the Marines at 19, and he probably wouldn't
at 39.
It's kind of what it boils down to.
So under the circumstances, though, the dark side of being less open to experience is
that you're less likely to be entrepreneurial.
And as we see the aging of the population, we're going to have a less entrepreneurial country
and less we have more immigration.
That's just the way it's going to be.
There's no two ways about it.
We're going to be on the trajectory that we're on right now, 25 years from now, it's going
to be retired America.
And we're going to act like a retired guy.
And I don't want that.
Yeah, it makes me sad because I could see the argument on both sides, but really if people
come here and they don't get free stuff,
that's the problem.
Come over here, we'll pay for everything,
then that's different.
But if you come over here, like when my grandfather came here,
they're not gonna get free stuff.
You can only contribute and make that easy.
I feel like that would be the solution.
Well, there's a lot to it,
but the other thing that's worth keeping in mind
is that it's very politically correct in my business to say
I want more skilled immigration. We have 85,000 H1B1 visas for people to come into the United States and start businesses and work for Google, etc.
And we should change it to 200,000 or 300,000 whatever it is to be.
But the truth is that people who are unskilled are super entrepreneurial.
Yeah, they're super entrepreneurial.
And even if you have lots and lots of services, I mean, and this is a political discussion
where they should have more fewer services to be sure, but that's not going to deter somebody
or encourage somebody.
It's like, I, you know, I'm going to go to America where there's a better system of income
redistribution.
No, nobody's saying that.
They're like, I want of this place,
and I want to go to that place,
because there's more to do.
That's good point.
I'm gonna go to a place where I'm living there illegally.
I mean, say what you want.
That's taken a lot of risk.
That's living in a very risky way as it turns out.
So I'm of the view, and also by the way,
the data are very clear that that that low scale immigrants. They hardly displace any native born Americans.
They there's almost no displacement in an economy that has 3.4% unemployment. Uh-uh. Yeah.
That's just not going on at all. So for me it's like more and more and more. I want more
everybody. Part of it is like my grandparents were illiterate,
first grade, education, orphans, and the wrong religion. And so if I'm like, nah, nah,
close the gates. I take some nerve, man.
Yeah, nah, that's a great point. You know, you wrote in one of your articles, great articles,
by the way, in the Atlantic. But I believe in one of what we talked about the connection between intelligence and like mental illness or mental health problems.
Why is there a connection between being smart and having mental health issues?
Yeah. Well, it's a good question and a lot of people will ask that, but it's part of it is that
when you're inside your head too much, it's very easy to
be very, very involved in
what philosophers call the difference between the eye, self, and the miself.
You're two people.
When you're looking in the mirror, you're the guy looking and you're the guy being looked
at.
That's two people.
That's the eye, self, or this is the miself.
The eye, self, is observation about the world.
The miself is your reflection that you're perceiving in everything and all of your interactions and
your social media mentions and the literal mirrors around your house. And what happens is you have more and more and more ways to be the me-self and to be
observing yourself in your feelings and my thoughts and my fears and everything when you're in your head all the time, which people who are more and
sort of traditionally intellectual and educated and
traditional means they tend to be. And that's not good for you.
The truth is it's not good for you.
Me self is, I mean, you gotta have it,
so you know who you are,
and so you don't get fired from your job and whatever.
You know if that girl likes you or whatever,
but we're way to me self, way to me.
So I was very interested in,
I had a conversation with a guy that I know,
Elizabeth Boston, who was a fitness influencer.
So this is a guy, an educator influencer,
fitness influencer, like, and personal trainer,
and this is a guy who lived all year round
at sub 10 body fat, all year round,
and was magazine covers,
because it was a little bit before social media
is what it is today.
And for 10 years, 16 to 26.
And he said he was so unhappy, he was so unhappy.
And the way that he solved it,
it's a very smart guy.
So the way that he solved it,
he literally took every mirror out of his apartment and showered in the dark for a year.
Wow. What? So that he couldn't see his body. That's
wow. And he didn't know that what he was trying to do is to turn his entire life from
me self to I self. Wow. And he cracked the code. He did. He cracked the code.
Oh, any other tips on that? Still a good shape. He's still in good shape for
has a relationship with it. Yes, yeah, for strengthen health. Yeah. Any other tips on that? Still in good shape. He's still in good shape, but has a better relationship with it.
Yes, for strength and health.
Any other tips on that?
My oldest is, he's very smart, highly intelligent, definitely gets stuck in his head, definitely
gets stuck in that.
Any other tips?
Yes.
So use it for good advantage.
So there's a technique called metacognition.
This isn't my new book that I'm just finished with Oprah, about one of the most important
principles of emotional
self-management is to separate out your feelings from your experience of your feelings in the
following way.
Feelings occur, emotions occur because there's signals about the outside world to you.
People think of emotions as good things and bad things, emotions are signals to you so that
you get proper calories and know it or run away from a tiger.
Bad feelings are so that you'll act fast.
Good feelings are that you'll be attracted to something
so that you're surviving past 100 genes.
That's what feelings are all about.
That's what they're for.
And they're limbic.
They come from an ancient part of your brain
and they happen to you.
Now here's the key thing about being a fully formed,
evolved human being.
You can be managed by those feelings
or you can manage those feelings.
So if you're of an intellectual bent like your son, the key thing is to get into the
space between your feelings happening to you and you deciding what you're going to do.
This is really critically important.
So you say to yourself, for example, this is what meditators do.
It's like, Arthur's feeling sad right now.
How interesting that Arthur's feeling sad right now.
What are we, Arthur's feeling sad?
I can't totally talk about this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's the gap.
And there's lots and lots of ways to do that.
Journaling is a way to do that.
That's when people go to therapy,
I've never been therapy,
but when people go to therapy,
they're learning about themselves
so they can manage their own feelings.
So you use your intellect,
which is an executive function
of your brain is largely part of the prefrontal cortex
that bumper of tissue behind your forehead.
And you say to that, I'm gonna analyze myself
and see what these things mean.
That's what I'm gonna do.
I'm gonna journal this thing, I'm gonna talk about this thing
and gonna talk about it with close friends,
I'm gonna meditate on this particular thing,
and I'm gonna get really, really super interested
in these particular feelings.
That's metacognition, that's awareness of awareness,
that's the most human thing you can possibly do.
Yeah, that's what makes this human.
So it's like observing the feeling, no judgment.
Oh, no judgment.
Isn't that interesting?
Like you're watching it.
Yeah, isn't that interesting?
Huh.
And then you say, if I were advising Sal on this feeling,
what would I tell him?
Wow.
So this would be a good tip for anybody
who can get managed or run by a particular feeling.
Cause I have good relationships with a lot of feeling.
Some of them I don't.
Some of them can run me.
So if you have a temper, for example.
Yeah, so Jack, that's a common run.
So that would be a good strategy.
Like, oh, I'm mad, interesting.
Right, let me look.
Okay.
For sure.
You got to figure out which one,
and for a lot of people,
the real problem is sadness.
The problem is in the sadness.
The problem is that they're being managed by their sadness.
Wow.
That's the problem.
You choose by getting into the gap,
how you're gonna manage the sadness,
and it starts with your analysis of it.
Like, why am I feeling that? Wow. What's the best going to manage this sadness. And it starts with your analysis of it.
Why am I feeling that?
What's the best way to use this for good?
Why is this happening?
This is extremely interesting.
Explore why versus letting it dictate what you do.
Then you can do all kinds of good stuff.
I mean, there's this, I read a lot about emotional substitution,
which is to say that once you've established that
there's a particular emotion, and that you want to rack in a particular way, then you can choose a reaction
that's also appropriate. In any situation, there's more than one reaction that's appropriate,
but only when you're in the gap can you choose the appropriate reaction. For example,
you're really feeling negative about something. You can choose to say something negative,
or you can choose to make joke. Both are entirely appropriate to this. When you're, you can choose to say something negative or you can choose to make joke.
Both are entirely appropriate to this.
When you're feeling pessimistic, you can choose to, even though you're pessimistic, to be
hopeful, hopeful is to say, something can be done and I can do something about it.
I don't know what the odds are.
But you can only do emotional substitution once you've gotten into the gap on this otherwise, you know when your kids are little and you're like, you're son you use your words, but you're asking him to do is to be metacognitive.
Yeah, wow. That's what you're asking him to do and very reactive people are piss poor at that. That's when people that they feel mad and they yell. And when you're most ashamed
to yourself with your kids, it's where they pushed your buttons and yelled at them, always.
And that's because your limbic system was managing you. Totally. And you weren't met
a cognitive. It was a dad. You're not made of stone. So someone's going to have happened
the other day. He's treating it as sister and I. Totally. Yeah, totally. What's what's
getting you most excited right now? What are you what are you getting into the most that's getting you excited?
Yeah, I'm really excited about this collaboration
with Oprah Winfrey because it's a brand new world
and what I really like is adventures.
So I have a company called ACB Ideas
that's sort of dedicated to propagating the science
of happiness all around the world,
of writing and teaching and speaking about this.
I don't know, so ACB?
Yeah, ideas.
It's just the company that actually manages a lot of what we do.
And it's beautiful because I've got these colleagues
that are super into it, and I'm very excited about it.
But we have, you guys have an order of operations
for MindPom, right?
I mean, you have a mission and you know what you're trying
to do, and the order of operations literally is an order.
My order of operations is for full.
I'm going to serve God.
I'm going to lift up other people.
I'm going to have fun adventures, and I'm going to make a really good living.
And it's in that order.
It's in that order, man.
And I'm super excited about the fact because I'm living the way I think God wants me to
live.
I hear every single day now from people 10 10 emails a day from people like that thing really
helped me.
And I'm having an incredible adventure because every day it's like this, what is happening?
What is happening here?
And last but not least, it's a good living.
And I'm really lucky to be making a good living.
I'm really, really grateful for that.
So that makes me excited to have this particular business.
I'm an entrepreneur.
You know, I didn't think that I was gonna be running a business.
I mean, it's completely concordant with my work at Harvard
because I have a lab at Harvard
that I'm working on this part of the same whole thing too.
And it's just, man, I'm busted.
I can't wait to get up in the morning
and I wake up, go to the gym, go to Mass, hit the coffee,
and get started.
Every day, right?
Every single day.
Where do you do Mass?
You have a church nearby, like how do you find it?
Yeah, I find it.
My wife and I, we bought a house because there was a mass
schedule at a local parish that we liked.
I'm going to walk to her whatever.
6.50 in the morning, it's a mile from my house. So I get up at 4.45, I work out from 5. 6.50 in the morning is a mile from my house.
So I get up at 4.45, I work out from 5.6.
This went, I'll give text from you sometimes.
Yeah, yeah.
That's when you hear from me.
Yeah, yeah.
6, I'm thinking, well, I gotta tell you how to sell this.
You know, the clip between reps, between sets.
And at 6.50 in the morning is mass.
It's done by 720.
I've got, hit the coffee maker because I strategically use caffeine
to block my adenosine 90 minutes into my day,
to 120 minutes into my day.
The neuroscience is very helpful in that.
And then I work, if I'm at home,
then I have uninterrupted creative time.
And if I'm on the road, like I'm here in San Jose,
maybe I have an app that tells me where the mouse is.
I got up real early and went to morning mouse.
And then I got to see you guys.
Wow.
That's fast.
You just recently did a huge high.
What was that hike you did in Europe where you did?
It was like a commina.
The commina to Santiago across Northern Spain.
Yes.
What is that?
That's so I kind of looked it up and it's like this insane.
It's a pilgrimage.
It's a pilgrimage.
Yeah.
It's an ancient, ancient, religious pilgrimage.
But most people who do that are not religious. And you don't have to be religious to do it. It's a pill, it's like a pill- Yeah, it's an ancient, ancient, religious pilgrimage. But most people who do that are not religious,
and you don't have to be religious to do it.
It's a walk, if you do the whole thing, it's 800K.
Oh wow.
It's 33 days of walking,
because your whole gig is walk, walk, walk, walk, walk, walk.
And but it beats you down, mentally beats you down.
Did you, who'd you do it with by yourself?
I did the first time with my wife,
and the second time with my wife and daughter.
And, but I didn't do the whole 33 days.
I just did the last eight days,
because my wife's like, no.
And at some point, I'm gonna do the whole 33 days.
And I'm gonna do the loan or in weeks at a time
with different people, but, because I wanna do it.
And by the way, walking is incredibly,
I've heard you guys talking about walking.
Oh, it's the best.
I mean, everybody thinks it's like you guys lift, and you're really, really ripped.
So, no, no.
No, walking is the best.
One of the best.
It's ergonomically sound.
It's incredibly good for your body.
Totally.
It's great on the joints.
And you're walking 25 K a day.
It's beautiful.
And you just, is it an easy walk or is it like hard?
Sopping down, suppin' down, suppin' down.
Does that mean 25 K a day?
You can do that.
Totally doable.
Anybody who's in remotely good shape
and has decent shoes, you can actually get that done.
But every day and you're offering up prayers
for different intentions and for when I'm doing it,
I'll be going to Mass at these Romanesque churches
along the Camino that have been continuously going Mass
every day for a thousand years.
And it's heavy, man.
That's awesome.
It's heavy.
My wife and I are talking about deep things
that we have in a town has to talk about
and think about for a really long time.
And our love deepens and our spirituality gets deeper.
I mean, a pilgrimage is a very,
it's almost an every religious tradition
people do pilgrimages.
And almost every religious tradition,
when I go to India a lot,
and I just got back from India last month and
you always see
Pilgrims walking along the road walking along the road and if they're walking to something because life is a pilgrimage
We're all walking towards something and the reason that we have
Intentionality that gives us energy is because we actually understand what it is that we're walking toward and the people who don't have that sense of purpose who can't answer the meaning questions
Why are you alive for what are you willing to die?
They're not they're just kind of well either sitting on the couch or wandering in circles
But once you see your life is kind of a pilgrimage and maybe even use the metaphor with a real pilgrimage. It's good
It's really good. Awesome. Yeah.
Arthur, always my favorite podcast. I just love it. And I love the work
that you're doing, you're helping people and you're relentlessly
positive and funny. It's just great. And the first, by the way,
everybody who cuts to the last hour, after the last hour, don't
do that. Listen to the banter is the best part.
We have a good time, but we really appreciate you Arthur. You always make time for us and so we love that.
Thank you guys for what you're doing. Thank you for your work.
Thanks again. Thanks.
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