Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 752: Kristen Ulmer- The Art of Fear
Episode Date: April 19, 2018In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin interview Kristen Ulmer, a former world champion big mountain downhill skier and author of The Art of Fear. Most people have been taught that fear is something to b...e overcome or conquered. Kristen lays out compelling reasons why, rather than taking an adversarial position with fear, that you should make "friends" with fear. You can learn more about Kristen at www.kristenulmer.com and @ulmer.kristen on Facebook. Voted most fearless women extreme athlete! Kristen’s fascinating background. (5:40) Felt like a fraud. The transition from repressing fear to embracing the fear. (11:13) The Brain: The Manufacturing Plant for Fear. (18:45) Why do we cry tears of joy? (22:23) Pushing your fear to the basement. The repression of fear that causes panic attacks. (25:00) Fear was my greatest motivator. I felt invisible as a child. Her addiction to fear and how it made her feel alive. (27:55) How we SHOULD talk to fear. (35:00) Tips to become FEARLESS. (38:42) Building your fear practice. Live practical methods to make friends with your fear. (41:53) PTSD: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder redefined as PTRD: Post-Traumatic Repression Disorder. (55:40) 5 Primary Emotions (1:03:45) Have an intimate relationship with fear. Steps you can take NOW to deal with fear. (1:06:34) Masculinity to femininity. How her parents have shaped her. (1:17:20) Be willing to feel your fear and emotions. What has been the reaction to her book from men and women? (1:21:35) What is my relationship with myself TODAY? How to understand your false-self persona. (1:24:50) Related Links/Products Mentioned: Repression: Finding Our Way in the Maze of Concepts Emotions and Depression | Psychology Today Qualitative Analysis of Emotions: Fear and Thrill FDA designates MDMA as "breakthrough therapy" for PTSD MDMA-Assisted Psychotherapy Hyper focus Is Not Just for Extreme Sports Addicts. Here's How to Increase Your Concentration Every Day How To Hack Into Your Flow State And Quintuple Your Productivity Featured Guest/People Mentioned: Kristen Ulmer (@kristen.ulmer) Instagram Kristen Ulmer - Facebook The Art of Fear: Why Conquering Fear Won't Work and What to Do Instead – Book by Kristen Ulmer Tom Cruise (@tomcruise) Instagram Bill Gates (@thisisbillgates) Instagram Joey Chestnut (@joey.chestnut) Instagram Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? You can get 30 days of virtual coaching from them for FREE at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Get our newest program, MAPS HIIT, an expertly programmed and phased High Intensity Interval Training program designed to maximize fat burn and improve conditioning. Get it at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Also check out Thrive Market! Thrive Market makes purchasing organic, non-GMO affordable. With prices up to 50% off retail, Thrive Market blows away most conventional, non-organic foods. PLUS, they offer a NO RISK way to get started which includes: 1. One FREE month’s membership 2. $20 Off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) 3. Free shipping on orders of $49 or more You insure your car but do you insure YOU? If you don’t, and you are the primary breadwinner, you will likely leave your loved ones facing hardship and struggle if you die (harsh reality). Perhaps you think life insurance is expensive, but if you are fit and healthy, you can qualify for approved rates that are truly inexpensive and affordable. To find out if you qualify for the best rates in the industry, go get a quote at www.HealthIQ.com/mindpump Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get your Kimera Koffee at www.kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off! Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com Use the code “mindpump” for 20% off. Go to foursigmatic.com/mindpump and use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products. Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Also includes 20% if you purchase! Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Have questions for Mind Pump? Each Monday on Instagram (@mindpumpmedia) look for the QUAH post and input your question there. (Sal, Adam & Justin will answer as many questions as they can)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
So while ago, Adam and I and Justin, the three of us, the three amigos,
No, the three amigos, and I wasn't there. No, you were. No.
I was there, but I was talking to another person.
You were sitting, you were sitting on a different table.
No you were at our table.
What's that?
Yeah you sat at our table.
Remember you and I talked shit to somebody.
Who was it that said?
That's when someone made a comment.
I know I remember.
Yeah.
What's the speaker?
The speaker at Spartan made something, like ask the question
and Josh Trent's hand shot up to answer it
Yeah, and then you are like and then just it out of the nowhere is like I know things
Totally burst your laughing
So but you were at our table so I was sitting next to this
very bright-eyed
woman with lots of energy and she was just I could feel her vibe and so me and her started talking
Oh, this would happen. I said something about conquering your fear and she said no, no, no, no
She goes don't conquer fear she goes you need to have a good relationship with it
And I said what me correct that sir. She said be intimate with it. Yeah, be intimate with your fear
And so we started talking about this and she told me that she was like
named the world's most fearless woman. At one point she was like a world champion at
downhill like mountain skiing. Like this is when they drop you off with a helicopter.
At the top of the no joke. It's some gnarly shit. Dude, we watched a video of her on YouTube
yesterday when we interviewed her. And these are the videos that you send to your friends.
Well, we should get the Red Bull videos.
This is the ones where like,
avalanches are coming after you.
Yes, the.
She was sponsored by Red Bull.
We'll definitely have Jackie post one of her videos.
She's got so many great videos.
The other thing that was cool is that we're at that Spartan event.
That was Joe Ducena's private dinner.
And there's, I don't know, maybe a hundred to 200 influencers.
Everybody in there are CEOs and big, big name people.
A bunch of bad asses.
And she was the only, we're just weird why they invited us.
She was the only one that I think intrigued the both of us so much.
So we're like, we got to have a phone number right then and there.
Like, we need to have you on the show.
Yeah.
And she told me that she wrote a book called the the art of fear and it's about
You know developing a good relationship with fear and her techniques that she learned from Zen masters and years of study that she now coaches
athletes and professionals
On to she was untouchable for 12 years. Yeah for 12 years, her records and shit were untouchable.
It's a dominant shit.
I heard that even a lot of females now are just learning how to do it.
She did years ago.
And she was doing that on those that understand skiing and stuff like that.
These were like the old school skis, like technologists.
She's coming.
Yeah, it's came a long way.
Like this, this, these are guys arriving and girls are riding today versus 25 years ago and stuff. Totally different. I think she was doing shit that people are barely
learning to do now. She was doing it back then.
When was she doing this? I think it was 10 or 15 years ago, but nonetheless, 15. Yeah, she's
a bad ass and she did all this stuff and then found herself in the strange situation where
she hated skiing. She was having all these weird, you know, like physical effects,
and she had to stop and figure out what was going on with her,
and it was really her relationship with fear.
The same relationship that propelled her to do
all this crazy stuff was the one that she needed to fix
so that she could live the rest of her life.
Fascinating story, we have a great interview with her.
We ask her a lot of good questions,
we challenge her on a few things,
but I highly recommend this book. I've already started it and it's going to be one of my favorites I can
tell. So this, we're talking to Kristen Olmer, that's the person we're talking about. Her website is
Kristen Olmer, that's ulm-e-r.com. She does coaching on this kind of stuff. I think you can find it on Amazon. It's the art of fear. Why conquering fear won't work and what to do instead.
She's also on Facebook,
Ulmer.Christin is how you find her.
I also want to mention this month,
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And without any further ado, here we are interviewing Kristen Ulmer, the author of the book, The Art
of Fear. When I met you at the dinner, it was at the Spartan race, we started talking right
away. And I looked at Adam Adam like, I love this lady.
I shall just say whatever's on her mind
and Ty was great.
And so we're happy to have you on the show.
But a little bit of background, Kristen,
you have an interesting background
before we get into fear and what you wrote about in the book.
Can you tell everybody a little bit about what you,
you were like one of the top skiers in the world?
I was recognized as being the best woman big mountain extreme skier in the world for 12 years
and then I was also voted the most fearless woman extreme athlete in the
in North America by the entire outdoor industry beating women in all sports disciplines not just skiing.
What? Okay, so let's go let's back up for a second. What is that category, big mountain?
Extreme skiing.
So basically I risked my life on skis for living.
Like if it was a, you fall, you die to send
or a big cliff jump, that's what I did.
And it was during the 90s though, on skinny skis.
And I was definitely way before my time,
like girls today, 25 years later,
are just starting to do the things
that I used to do on skinny skis
on the new ski technology.
So is this the skiing that you see?
I'll see, I'll watch these YouTube videos
where it looks like just someone just going off
the side of a mountain and it does look extremely dangerous.
That's what you're talking about.
Yes, I risk my life.
You do that, but you get apples,
you get everything falling away.
Yeah, I was on the US ski team for moguls as well at the very beginning,
and very quickly I had to make a decision,
which what do I do?
They're two completely different sports,
and so I picked the big mountain extreme skiing,
which was definitely the road less traveled at the time.
Wow, now you did this in a relatively short period of time.
I heard you say on another interview that you started,
you picked up skis at a relatively old age age compared to other people who do this the whole lives before
they get to that level.
You started like 20, right?
Or something like that?
Well, I skied since second grade, but I had never had any formal training.
And I skied in jeans until I was 20, which is another way of saying I wasn't very committed
to the sport.
I wouldn't even, and I didn't have rich parents.
And it's really rare to find a skier, professional skier. He didn't have rich parents, right? Especially on the US
ski team. And so I'm kind of the poster child for its all mental because I became world-classed
two completely different sports, mogul skiing and extreme skiing without any formal training.
And I was competing against girls on the US ski team or in the world that had had the best trainers
their whole lives had gone to high school ski academies.
It was very unusual how successful I became
without any training.
Well, now doing this kind of competition in sport,
now your book is the art of fear.
And so you're writing about fear
and how to handle it and work with it and all that.
It was this part of your training,
doing these type of races
and sports?
Was that where you developed some of the concepts?
Being a fear specialist, I'm not a doctor,
I'm not a psychologist, I'm not a scientist.
I just have, at this point, 30 plus years of practical,
real world, in the dirt experience of dealing
with a tremendous amount of fear to draw from.
And then also studied with a Zen Master for 15 years,
has, I've been operating as a mindset sports coach
for the last 15 years.
And I've just really had some real world experience
of experimenting with what works
and what doesn't work in super practical terms.
Did you go to learn all this stuff
because you were battling with some issues?
I find a lot of times when people are very proficient in a particular area, it's because
they had to figure it out for themselves.
That's what at least would drove them to.
Like you said, you were with a Zen Master.
Were you dealing with something for yourself that drove you that?
Absolutely.
I was called fearless.
I felt fearless.
I didn't feel any fear.
It never even occurred to me to be afraid out there,
which is bizarre.
And it seemed like the media was more fascinated with that
than even my skin itself,
you know, this thing that I could do with fear.
And what I realized later is that I was not only not fearless,
but fear was behind every single moment
of every single decision I made,
both as a motivator,
as the thing I was chasing,
I was actually addicted to fear, but I was also repressing fear to the extreme.
And we can, you know, the language conquer, overcome, let go of fear.
Like I was just really good at that.
You can get away with that for about 10 years.
And then all of a sudden, your life just starts to go south, become unraveled.
And for me, I started having PTSD because I'd seen a lot of near-death experiences, accidents.
I had had a lot of near-death experience, seen a lot of friends die in the mountains,
and I didn't know how to deal with the emotions properly.
I was burnt out because I was fighting a war with fear, and it was taxing all my resources.
I became injured quite a bit because I became such a rigid stoic person to not be afraid.
When you think about trees, if trees are rigid and there's a heavy wind, they break.
I was so rigid and the slightest bubble passed a certain point, I would just break in half.
That's where my injuries came from.
I also just started to hate skiing.
Like there was just something seriously wrong in my undercurrent after about 10 years.
And I quit skiing in order to figure out what that was,
which was a bizarre choice because I had transcended the ski industry.
I didn't even have to ski anymore to make a living.
Like I just had to show up at the parties and drink a can of red bull.
I get paid, right? But I just couldn't take it anymore so I quit. And I set out to figure out what
had gone wrong.
Well, so what did that feel like? So you love doing it, you're kicking ass. What did
it start to feel like where you started to say, like, oh, I don't like the, how did that
show up? What were the symptoms? Mostly just the burnout and just the hatred of skiing. I love to personify skiing
and skiing had killed a bunch of my friends. I wasn't okay with that.
Skiing was this thing that I actually dreaded doing after a while, which was crazy because
it had given me such a wonderful life. I I just, I would say the burnout was the biggest issue.
And I also had to sleep like 10 hours a night
just to be able to function.
You know, what was up with that?
So it's like almost like you were in this high state
of stress all the time and then your body
needed to kind of broke down,
needed to rest and recover.
You know, it's, it's, it's,
with situations like yours, it's so difficult
because the way you operated made you so successful
at what you did.
It must have been so hard to let go of that
because that's what had made you succeed,
that whole overcome and not feeling fear
and now you're at this point where you're examining
what you're doing, you hate it.
How do you let go of what made you so awesome?
Well, I was also embarrassed about who I was.
I didn't like who I was as a person.
I just felt like a fraud.
Like there was something inauthentic about how I was living my life.
And that's also another symptom of repressed fear.
When did you start figuring out that, because I've heard you in interviews, and when we
talked, actually, what really picked my you know and when we talked actually what really
picked my interest is when we talked at the dinner either I made a comment or someone else made a
comment at the table of something like how you don't how you shouldn't feel fear or how you can
overcome fear or something like that and then you spoke up and you said no that's terrible like
don't ignore that feeling you need to you're supposed to feel it, and you need to embrace it.
And then we talked a little bit, and it really blew my mind.
When did you start making that transition, that understanding of how to work with fear?
I started studying Zen, and I was asked perhaps the most important question of my life right
away by my teacher.
And that question was, allow me please to speak to the voice of fear.
And you guys don't know what that means, but it was voice dialogue.
And I kind of shifted and shifted.
And I couldn't find my essential fear.
I couldn't find it.
And so I raised my hand and I said to the Zen Master, I can't find my fear. And he laughed and he said, yeah, I kind of figured that.
And he started talking after about 10 minutes,
all of a sudden everything made sense.
I had been repressing fear in order to ski the way I wanted to
and that's why I was having all these problems.
And other people I've learned over the years,
if they repress fear,
some of the rampant problems that we have in our society, like depression,
panic attacks, anxiety disorders, PTSD, insomnia, underperforming, burnout, all these things are the
result of the repression of fear. You know, we're all in such a repressive attitude approach towards
fear, and it's just not working. And then in order to not deal with our fear further,
we then take medication to try and get rid of it further.
It's like we're declaring war against ourselves.
This war against fears are war against ourselves.
And so I'm kind of like the PR director for fear.
First of all, we've got to stop repressing fear.
It's causing so many problems.
It's not working.
Even all the methods and modalities that we have to deal with are fear, like meditation,
tapping, you know, positive affirmations, deep breathing exercises, float spas, all of
that, are just other ways to kind of get us through a moment and have less fear, but
it's actually exacerbating
the underlying cause of all the problems that we're seeking to solve through these methods.
And so I, you know, my ears always perk up at the dinner table when somebody talks about
fear and they use the word conquering and overcoming in the same sentence.
I'm like, ah, you know, as a matter of fact, you know, maybe you might want to reconsider
that.
Well, because that's so, what you're saying
is so opposite of what everybody else is saying,
at least when it comes to fear now,
in terms of repressing feelings, if I were to tell someone,
don't repress, when people repress themselves sexually,
or when they repress other emotions,
people will agree and say, yeah, if you repress yourself,
you'll get what's called a symptom eruption world,
it'll explode out in some unhealthy way.
But you never hear that about fear.
Instead, you hear, like you said, conquer, or here's how you don't feel fear.
Here's how you deal with it.
Can you talk about some of the, I guess the current techniques and then how you would do
it your way or why they're wrong?
Like, let's talk, like you just talked about like float tanks
and stuff like that.
How would you deal with situations
then rather than, you know, going to a float tank
or trying to breathe your way through it?
Well, we'll get to that.
Let's keep outlining the problem at this point.
Let me give you one of my favorite analogies.
So imagine that I love to personify fear
and I sometimes see it as a roommate or a spouse or an employee
in your corporation, but let's go with child.
And imagine that you're a parent to a whole bunch of children and half your children you've
named Joy, love, gratitude, forgiveness.
And then you also have these children fear, anger, sadness, despair.
Despite your best intention, would you be able to treat all your children the same way?
Of course not.
Right, and so what we tend to do,
we have these love, enjoy, and gratitude,
and forgiveness practices,
and we kind of like to go with the light side of life
to solve our problems.
So we feed and nurture and show off to the world,
these children, this love, this joy, this gratitude.
But on the other side, what do we do with these other children?
Well, we lock them in the basement and we throw away the key.
And they're down there with no food, no water, no love,
no sunshine.
And just imagine for a moment that you were one of those children,
how would you feel living under those circumstances
where everybody hates you?
Oh, yeah, you'd feel absolutely terrible. Right. And how would you feel living under those circumstances where everybody hates you? Oh yeah, you'd feel absolutely terrible.
Right.
And how would you act out?
I mean, would you be okay with just being locked
in the basement under these circumstances?
No, of course not.
You'd probably get a lot of tantrums and yelling
and you want to be heard.
They're fighting their way out.
Right.
So that's what all of these unpleasant, negative experiences,
you know, that we push them down, we ignore them, But all of these unpleasant, negative experiences,
we push them down, we ignore them, we avoid them,
we try to control them, we try to fight them,
the language around that.
And they're down there in the basement,
and they're screaming, and they're yelling,
and they're burning the house down,
doing anything they can to get out.
They may feel depressed.
Depression is really interesting.
Like Latin, the word depression is Latin for pressed down.
You know, when you press down, you're on motions
or these negative feelings, they become depressed
and they're so too do you as well.
And so, you know, you're now abusing this huge part
of who you are, they're acting out.
And next thing you know, you're going to have panic attacks, you know, the fear is showing
up in the middle of the night, hijacking your mind and keeping you awake, or maybe fear
is showing up as anger instead or sadness showing up redirected in other ways.
It's just such a bad idea to treat your children.
How do you think one formulates fear as an emotion?
How do you think that it comes about?
So the amygdala, two almond-sized nuggets
at the top of the spine, determining safe or not safe.
And it's the primary filter from which all information
kind of comes through your brain,
determined safe or not safe.
It's the manufacturing plant for fear.
And fears with us actually every single
moment of every single day in nearly every interaction we have because life is a scary experience.
Even sitting here right now, I'm afraid of saying something stupid or coming across as an idiot.
So I feel afraid. Of course I feel afraid. So it's the manufacturing plant for fear. The
amygdala is. And then perceived threat, and there's always a threat, will send a shot of discomfort to
the body, and that's what fear is.
Fear is just a sensation of discomfort in the body.
It's actually very, very simple.
That's all it is.
Do you think it's more responsive than?
So, because that's kind of like the classical belief of emotions is that something happens
and then this is a response that our body is giving versus it's constructed, which is something that
I'm more subscribed to, which is it's not only that, but it's a series of events or things
that have happened into your life and then it's your brain downloading on processing
all that and then trying to predict what potentially may happen.
Like, what do you think?
My experience with fear is that it's that sensation of discomfort in your body.
And a lot of people think that fear is in your mind. We say things like it's false evidence
of pureing real. It starts to seem irrational and crazy and making stuff up. That doesn't
seem right or real or projecting the future or kind of like obsessing about the past. If that's how fear is showing up for you and that
super complicated way instead of the simple way that I've outlined, then what
probably has happened is you are repressing fear and fear is really really
clever at getting out of the basement. It will not be denied and it will
hijack your mind and run its unfulfilled agenda in a loop over and over again and start to come out as
Irrational fear. Do you feel like that's because we treat it like a different emotion though because if it was just like any other emotion
Then you would be at comfort with it and you wouldn't suppress it like that, right?
Well, you know, we we kind of treat all the emotions in a repressive way. I mean even joy
Like does anybody remember when oh, that's an excellent. It's an excellent point treat all the emotions in a repressive way. I mean, even joy.
Like, does anybody remember when?
Oh, that's an excellent point.
I really, I just had a breakthrough recently
talking about joy.
It's funny you've just pointed to that
where I was talking to somebody
and we were having this very therapeutic session
where we're talking about my childhood
and bringing up all these memories.
And I got really emotional and I was gonna cry.
And he says, okay, let it out.
What's wrong with you?
And I said, no, I'm not sad. It's actually, I'm thinking of a thought right
now about my sister that brings me this overwhelming feeling of joy. And it made me want to
cry. And it made me realize that, wow, even something that's happy and positive in my
life that's joy, I had suppressed and was not allowing that to come out. So it's funny
you went to that point.
Yes. And I'll get to that in a second.
Like when you feel joy, why do you cry?
But the example I was gonna give was Tom Cruise
jumping for joy on the couch.
When he met his future wife, Katie,
and we considered him unstable
because he showed his joy in a excessive way.
We cry and we apologize for it. You know to mom, I'm afraid and mom says there's
nothing to be afraid of, which is a lie, it's total bullshit. Of course there's something
to be afraid of. Anger, we don't do that. We definitely repress anger. Now, back to your
point, why do we cry when we feel joy? Well, the emotions are so connected. And if you
repress one, you kind of repress them all. You can't selectively repress an emotion without affecting
them all. Like, for example, modern anger, what we know is modern anger, 95% of it is just
undelt with fear locked in the basement coming out instead is anger. Kind of like the child who has a really horrific home life, you know, he doesn't want to feel
afraid, it feels powerless, so he's angry instead, because it makes him feel more powerful.
So when it comes to crying tears of joy, that's kind of a combination of joy plus sadness.
Like I was watching the voice and the winner, of course,
crying tears of joy is when they won.
And yes, you're happy and you're feeling joy,
but the motions are so connected.
They're also crying for the last 20 years of struggle
and how hard it was to get to this point
where they just won this important competition.
So when you're crying tears of joy, there's also sadness, like with your sister,
maybe you were like sad that you didn't get to spend more time with her.
And that was where the tears were coming from.
So tears of joy are joy plus sadness.
Well, that's interesting.
It actually makes a lot of sense.
Something you said that really blew me away about suppressing fear and erupting
and panic attacks and stuff.
I've known several people who suffer from panic attacks.
And each time they've had them,
it was according to them out of the blue.
Like I was talking to them and I said,
well, what happened?
Why did that?
Because then, of course, they think they're having a heart attack.
They think it's some medical emergency.
They go to the emergency room.
They do all the tests and they're like, no, you're totally fine.
You're not dying.
You're not having a heart attack.
And then I talk to them afterwards because I care about them.
And I'm like, well, what did you eat?
What did you do?
Was something scary happening?
And they'll be like, I don't know.
I was just sitting there in traffic.
Or I was just at a coffee shop and then all of a sudden,
I felt this, like I was having a coffee shop and then all of a sudden, I felt this,
like, you know, like I was having a heart attack
and it was a panic attack.
And it's literally like, it's an emotion
that you're repressing, repressing,
and it just explodes at, it feels like, at a nowhere
because you're not connecting it to the fact
that you've repressed it for so long, you know.
And a lot of these emotions are undesirable.
I mean, I mean, it looks like we, it sounds like from what you're saying, it makes perfect sense
that we tend to repress any outward, you know, expression of emotion, but definitely the
quote unquote negative ones.
You know, those are the definitely different for everybody.
Well, let me tell you what panic attacks are in no uncertain terms.
If you're not dealing with your fear in an honest way and you're pushing it down in your
system into the basement, I say the basement, the basement is really your body.
Imagine a balloon that just gets more and more full of undelt with fear.
All of a sudden, it just pops and explodes into your system all at once.
So the repression of fear is the cause of panic attacks.
And I've talked to a lot of people
and what they're given is prescription drugs,
anti-anxiety medication.
Benzos, or...
Right, are they're told to go and talk to a therapist?
And the thing is emotions are felt in the body
and they're meant to be dealt with emotionally.
But when we go to a therapist and deal with our emotions
intellectually and we try to a therapist and deal with our emotions intellectually,
and we try to rationalize them away, or use our mind like a sword
to conquer or overcome them, it's just false evidence, that kind of thing.
You're now dealing with your emotions intellectually.
And it's just a bad idea.
And actually, talk therapy exacerbates the problem.
So the way to not have panic attacks anymore
is actually turn towards your fear
and start to have what I call a fear practice
where, you know, for me emotional intelligence
is our ability to feel our emotions.
I think about them, but feel our emotions in an honest way
and have them help us come alive.
So, and, you know, I want to tell a funny story too in an honest way and have them help us come alive.
So, and, you know, I wanna tell a funny story too while we're at it.
I was in the Walmart parking lot the other day
and I saw this guy, I was right at dusk
and he seemed to stride.
He was looking for his keys.
I helped him out.
We couldn't find him.
I finally said, well, let's retrace your steps.
Where'd you last see your keys?
And he said, well, you know that bar over on State Street? I said, sure. And he said, well, I parked said, well, let's retrace your steps. Where'd you last see your keys? And he said, well, you know that bar over on State Street?
I said, sure.
And he said, well, I parked outside, went inside,
had a beer, walked back out, no keys.
I'm like, well, that bar's like half a mile from here.
Why are we looking for your keys here?
And he said, well, the lights better here.
Okay, I made that story out, obviously.
Fine.
Oh my goodness.
But it illustrates a point.
It's like we go and try to have like these gratitude practices
and meditation to feel better and float spas
and we think that this is gonna calm us down
and it's just crazy as a story.
It's like we're looking in the light
for what we're trying to find.
And really, whatever it is you won't look at is actually the key to freedom.
If you're willing to look at your fear, then you will address your panic attacks.
If you're willing to go into the darkness, you'll find your keys.
Well, I think you can say that about all emotions.
I think not just fear, I think they're all that way.
If you have this ability to just learn to feel them and understand them, then you have the ability then to unpack them and figure out where
is this stemming from. Now, question I had because it's out jumped right into like your adulthood,
the book, and skiing. I'm actually really curious about more of your childhood because
many of the people that I have met that I think that areless have had something that either one happened to them or a upbringing
that has forced them to look at fear differently than the average person.
And it's become very easy for you to do it.
Like you said, I just started skiing and it wasn't like I was overcoming fear at the time.
You just were able to do it.
Did you have something early on in your life that you can recall?
Have you ever unpacked it that deep and thought, why was I so unique that I was able to do it. Did you have something early on in your life that you can recall? Have you ever unpacked it that deep and thought,
why was I so unique that I was able to even start
heading down this path where most people would be just
totally stopped because of fear?
Well, remember before I said that beneath my relative reality,
I didn't say it this way, but fear was with me
every single moment of my ski career and I didn't realize it this way, but fear was with me every single moment of my ski career.
And I didn't realize it.
I felt fearless, remember?
Well, it turns out I had a really crummy childhood.
I was really lonely.
I didn't have any friends.
My parents were checked out.
And I had such a deep fear of being invisible,
or fear of not being loved.
I'll tell you what, you jump off a 70
foot cliff.
People will recognize you.
People love you, you are no longer invisible.
And so fear actually was my greatest motivator.
And so if you look, if you even talk to anybody that's accomplished anything and if they're
willing to be honest with themselves, they'll admit that their insecurities, their demons, kind of the dark side of life,
the negativity is actually the thing
that's motivating them.
You know, our greatest wounds are our greatest treasures.
I also became addicted to fear during my ski career.
Oh, what do you mean addicted to fear?
Well, people call people like me a adrenaline addicts.
Well, beneath the adrenaline is fear.
We actually should start changing our language around this.
These people are fear addicts.
Let's get this straight.
And I loved feeling fear because it made me feel alive.
Like neurochemically, fear and excitement
feels exactly the same way.
Like if you're feeling excitement,
for sure fear has something to do with that.
And if you love feeling fear, you won't feel fear,
you'll just feel excitement.
But it was pathological in me.
Like I was as addicted to fear as a heroin addict
is addicted to heroin.
And it became super dangerous,
and I'm really lucky to be alive.
Do you think that's because of the result
that it was giving you?
That was because going back to your childhood
and feeling almost unnoticed to all of a sudden,
now all of a sudden you're doing these things
that people are looking at you like, holy shit,
she's a badass.
And do you think that you were more addicted
to the in result than actually the fear itself?
Do you think it was what you were receiving
because of that because you were neglected that for so many years? Well, I just felt so dead inside
when I was a kid and this made me feel really alive. So it was an over-comensation, like a big
pendulum swing. And I always say that, you know, you hit a kid upside the head with a frying pan
enough times when they're a kid and they might just be motivated enough to start, you know, the most, or to run a, you know, two-minute mile or start a great business
and just work a hundred-hour work weeks. You know, there's always some sort of pathology behind
our motivation. And, you know, this is actually a good segue into fear of failure.
So take fear of failure. Some people are super motivated into fear of failure. So take fear of failure.
Some people are super motivated by fear of failure.
Bill Gates actually credits fear of failure as being a motivator for him.
But then look at the guy that sits at home but firmly planted on the couch and he blames
fear of failure for holding him back.
Like what's the difference between these two guys?
Well, it's a very, very simple difference. If you embrace
fear, if you enjoy feeling fear, if you become intimate with fear, it's a motivator. But if you're
resisting the fear, if you don't want to have anything to do with it, it'll hold you back.
And actually, I've learned through this whole process that that super unpleasant, icky feeling that we associate with fear?
That's actually not fear.
What that is is your resistance to the fear.
It's your, I don't wanna feel this.
I wish this weren't so.
That's the icky feeling.
Fear is actually awesome.
That's why I think it's so much of it.
It stems back to the childhood
because you've got comfortable with that feeling.
I know I've been known,
it's someone people have called me fearless before
and I'm like, I don't really think of myself fearless,
but when I start to look back all the way to my childhood,
I also had a rough childhood growing up.
And so the things that scared me as a kid,
when I look at the things that scared me now as adult,
I just kind of like laughed at them,
like really like talking like this, like yeah.
So I might, the first time we got on a podcast, the first time I had to do
something in front of a camera, like, hell yeah, I was scared, but I've gotten so comfortable
with, well, what's the worst case scenario here?
What's, I embarrass myself, people make fun of me so fuck, so what?
Who gives a fuck?
I mean, as a kid, losing a father at seven years old and dealing with abuse and dealing
with all these other things like that was way
scarier, you know, being seven, eight, nine years old going through that. So I think that I've just become a custom to
being comfortable with fear being a part of life just like any other emotion of happiness, sadness, joy.
It's just another emotion that's giving me feedback about what's going on. Like that's the way I think that that it is and I think a lot of people that didn't that have been maybe
like that's the way I think that it is. And I think a lot of people that didn't
that have been maybe sheltered growing up
and that weren't maybe forced into a situation like that,
struggle with this conversation right here of,
you know, it's so easy for you or I to say,
just go after fear and brace it,
because we've been embracing it since we were young,
but somebody else who's maybe been sheltered their whole life
and they're now in their thirties
and they're scared to death all the time,
and that's what's keeping them from coming out, really tough for them to make that connection. It sounds like it's a skill like anything
I guess you gotta practice it
It's true and if you feel fearless one of two things is happening
Either you are merging with fear and it's not showing up as fear at all, but rather excitement or focus or sharpness
Kind of like bambi. Let me give you a great analogy.
So animals have a great relationship with fear and Bambi's eating grass in a field and
all of a sudden there's some rustling in the bushes.
The amygdala perks right up, sends a shot of fear to the body and so she perks up and
her hearing's better, her eyesight's better.
She's totally in the present moment,
like the zone flow all these things that we talk about.
And her hearing's better, she's there.
It's a tiger, right?
She starts running.
She becomes a super athlete,
like Bambi plus fear equals super Bambi.
She runs faster than she ever has in her life
because of the fear.
Then she's back eating grass in a field
somewhere. As if nothing had ever happened, she doesn't have PTSD. She's not paranoid that
it's going to happen again because there's this whole system in place and she has a healthy
relationship with fear. And she's not, you know, like fear just can show up for people and
just make them uber humans. Okay. So that's a super healthy relationship with fear.
That's one way to be fearless, you know,
because the fear is supposed to come into
through and out of your system
in between 10 to 90 seconds
for as long as the, there is there, and then it's gone.
So it's the dwelling that's really, you know,
the problematic part of fear.
If you recognize the fear, you stay in the fear,
but then you anticipate the fear going forward and that brings the anxiety.
Well, saying that suggests that you have some control over this whole process.
So let me now tell you. Do you believe we don't have control at all of it?
Either it happens or it doesn't? I believe that the only control that we have
over fear is our perception of it.
If we see it as a good thing,
it'll be an asset in an ally
and one of the greatest experiences we have here
on Earth helping us come alive and be in flow
and in the zone and all that.
If we see it as a negative,
we will spend our entire lives fighting a war with it,
a war that will ultimately prove unwinnable.
And whatever you try to control,
winds up controlling you. And for example, like, that will ultimately prove unwinnable. And whatever you try to control winds up controlling you.
And for example, like, let's say you're my fear.
I said that I love to personify fear.
You know, you're my roommate.
You know, this is how most people talk to fear.
And you're my roommate, you're permanent.
Like, we're gonna live together for a while.
We would have a lot of fun by the way.
We would.
But out of all of us in this,
I'm the coolest one to hang out with for sure.
It's so obvious.
Yeah, that's true.
All right, so this is almost people talk
to their roommate called Fear.
Like, I hate you.
You know, you're too blame for all of my problems,
all of my holdbacks.
I want nothing to do with your dead to me.
You know, I'm going to do everything I can
to just ignore you, block you out or avoid you.
You know, how does that make you feel? Me talking to you like that. Yeah, it makes me feel this big, you know? Yeah. doing to do everything I can to just ignore you, block you out or avoid you.
How does that make you feel?
Me talking to you like that.
Yeah, it makes me feel this big.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
So, that's how fear feels and fears will not be denied and will start to exert itself and
scream louder and louder like I talked about.
Now I'm going to talk to you the way that I talk to fear now.
Like, hey, I'm so sorry,
I abused you in the past. You know, I didn't realize how magnificent you were. I'm going to spend
the rest of my life making it up to you. I wrote a book about how great you are. You know, let's go
out and be magnificent together. Let's go have some adventures. Like, you're what makes life worth it.
Right. We're excited. Right. Yeah, we're going to have fun. Right. So however your relationship
is with fear is the relationship you have with yourself at your core. So if you have a hate you,
attitude towards fear, you actually hate yourself. If you're embarrassed by your fear,
you're embarrassed by yourself. If you fight a war with your fear, you're fighting a war with yourself
that's being carried out in your unconscious mind
that's taxing all your resources.
Right, makes perfect, complete and perfect.
Well, the ironic part though,
about even like a metaphor like that,
is that a lot of these words are just made up words.
I mean, when you look at the world,
there's some emotions that we describe that don't even exist
in other cultures.
Fear happens to be a popular one across the board, but we're the ones that have constructed
this idea of what fear should look like.
And for some reason, for so long, our society has decided that it's a sad or a scary thing.
Why can't it be a positive thing?
Why can't it be something good?
Why can't it be joy?
Why did we have to separate it? And that be an evil emotion that we feel when it has all the, we can show examples all over the place
of where people have been extremely successful because of this emotion fear? Right, we've just gotten
in a really, really bad habit. And I want to come full circle because I mentioned there's two
different ways to be fearless and I kind of left everybody hanging on that. The first way to be fearless is to become intimate
with your fear and then it doesn't feel like fear at all.
The second way to be fearless is,
and you mentioned that you don't have big issues with fear.
You know, just pay attention to my words
and just see which one are you.
Because for me, when I felt fearless during my ski career,
I would have guessed that I was intimate with fear,
and that was true, but this other thing was also true.
I had a bit of a paradox going on,
which I both loved fear and chased it,
like a Labrador chases a ball,
and I also hated it and repressed it to the extreme.
And when you make your life all about one thing,
which I was during my ski career,
you can have a love-hate relationship with it. And when you make your life all about one thing, which I was during my ski career, you know,
you can have a love-hate relationship with it.
You know, like anybody that's married knows that you can love and hate your wife at the
same time, right?
So the second way to get to fearless, and this is how most people try to get to a state
of fearlessness, where like, let's say you have a difficult job and you're afraid of
screwing it up. Of course, you're going to be afraid up. Of course you're going to be afraid.
Of course you're going to feel fear. And we call it anxiety because it's easier to say
anxiety than fear, but anxiety is just another name for fear. So you have a lot of anxiety
at work. And you know, short of quitting your job and sitting in an ashram and singing
kumbaya your whole life, that's just part of the deal. You know, you are going to feel fear,
especially if you're doing something important with your
life.
So, what people tend to do is they get to work with the breathing exercises and the meditation,
they exercise a lot, and they do all these things, they see a therapist to try and feel better.
And it works.
You know, otherwise these things wouldn't be taught.
It gives them temporary relief.
They think, okay, well, I feel better now.
But it's kind of like, if you ever had a fork sticking out of your eye, and if you meditated
and took three deep breaths and focused on the parts of you that don't hurt and had a
gratitude practice, you're going to feel better, right?
But guess what?
You still have a fork sticking out of your eye.
So there's still this fear.
You're now repressing it. You're exacerbating the underlying cause. Fear will not be denied.
It'll start to become harder and harder over time to not deal with that fear. And God forbid
you even take a single day off of meditating and you're just going to feel like shit all
over again. Right. Next thing you know, you may be fearless at work, but then you come home, you bring it
home, and you're arguing with your wife, you're kicking your dog, you're road raging,
you have insomnia, all of a sudden one day you have a panic attack, and all of a sudden
you realize in order to save my marriage or in order to save my health, I either need
to take medication and then lock my fear, you know, 10 feet in concrete below the basement, you know, that'll do it.
Or I need to quit my job and give up my hopes and dreams, you know, because you're still fighting
war with fear. It's just a really bad route. And so what I'm proposing in this book is that we find
a way to make friends with fear. We have a fear practice. We're willing to go in the darkness to
find our keys, what we're looking for, and
Maybe this would be a good transition to that next. Yeah, you mentioned something
You said facing your fear not intellectually, but emotionally
Like you know, we try to do it intellectually instead of emotionally. What does that? What does that mean because that sounds?
Sounds interesting to me
I've found that there are four different ways people deal with fear. The first way I've been
outlining, they repress, repress, repress. And it works, but there's consequences for that.
The second way that I see people dealing with fear, and this is definitely a step in the right
direction, is that, you know, I mentioned it comes into, through and out of your
system in 10 to 90 seconds, you want to accept the fear as normal and natural. It's not a sign of
personal weakness. It's just what it means to be a human being where fearful creatures life
is scary. Like, you're still in your head, though. It is a step in the right direction because you're
reframing the way that you see fear. And like I said, neurochemically, fear and excitement are the same thing.
Like all of this is just kind of intellectual understanding that fear is actually not too
bad.
Like I need to stop repressing it.
Like, but we're still in our heads.
So next step would be to learn how to feel fear.
Like to deal with our emotions emotionally instead of intellectually.
And our brains are so good at figuring everything out.
We definitely put our thinking minds on the job to figuring out emotions.
But if you're in your head thinking about your emotions,
that means you're not in your body feeling them.
And so once you learn how to feel fear,
that quite organically takes you into your body and
out of your mind. So if you're a super-heavy guy and you're in your head all the time, monkey-mind,
monkey-mind, right, that's also a sign of not dealing with your emotions or a way to not deal with
your emotions just by thinking all the time. So learning how to feel your emotions is where I start
with clients like I help them have a fear practice where they just notice the sensation
of discomfort in their body.
We can do it right now.
Yeah, please.
But there's one more step so we can...
We don't want to forget about it.
Because you're explaining me when you talked
about the Heide guy, I'm like, that's me.
Right.
I want the answer.
All right, so let's bookmark the last step
and just focus on this one.
So I want you guys to just maybe close your eyes
and I just want you to find
any sensation of discomfort in your body. And you don't want to think about the sensation.
You just kind of want to drop into your body and find it now. And I, and give it a name,
like for me, I feel anxiety and I feel it in my chest and my throat. What do you feel? And even if it's not fear, if it's anger,
if it's sadness, if it's frustration,
fear has something to do with it.
If it's a feeling of, for some people that's listening,
maybe worthlessness or powerlessness or self-esteem issue,
any kind of unpleasant feeling beneath that,
you will find fear has something to do
with jealousy, beneath the jealousy is always going
to be fear, all of that.
So just find any kind of discomfort now
and tell me what it is.
I can say I have anxiety and it feels
I can feel it in my chest a little bit
and it revolves around being a good.
I just went through a divorce two years ago and I have dual custody with my kids.
Now hold on, I'm going to interrupt you.
You notice what just happened?
You immediately went into your head.
I did.
And you found a reason for it and you're trying to understand it and you're trying to justify
it and explain it.
If I did.
Like all of a sudden you're dealing with your emotions intellectually.
Okay. explain it, like all of a sudden you're in your head, you're dealing with your emotions intellectually.
Okay, so just drop back in.
All I wanna know is what you feel and where you feel it.
I feel my heart pounding faster than usual.
Okay.
I feel discomfort in my stomach.
Like I don't know if it's frustration related or what.
Right, and even if it's a physical discomfort,
like the pain from an old broken
leg, there's always some sort of emotional discomfort around it too. Lower back pain,
for example, neck pain, that kind of thing, shoulder pain. You can go and get that massaged
away all you want until you deal with the undelt with emotions behind that shoulder
pain, the knots are just going to come back. I've seen that so many times in clients,
as a trainer, so many times.
Right.
So a lot of what we feel that's so uncomfortable in our body
is the resistance.
And I talked about that before.
I have an equation in my book,
suffering equals discomfort times resistance.
You know, if there's no resistance,
the discomfort is not a problem.
Like, picture somebody getting a tattoo.
You know, there's people that are addicted to getting tattoos.
Like, pain, you know, they, if they're completely merging
with the pain, becoming intimate with the pain,
it actually is a gorgeous experience.
But if they're in resistance to the pain, it's a horrible experience.
And it's the same thing with uncomfortable emotions.
So notice your reaction to that emotion that discomfort.
Do you ignore it?
Do you avoid it?
Do you fight it?
Do you try to rationalize it or talk about it with a therapist to try, as a way to try
to get rid of it?
Just notice your reaction to that emotion.
And then let's just stay here right now.
And we could either spend some time feeling our resistance
to it, which is one experience.
Because if the resistance is bigger,
then the discomfort itself, that's the bigger issue.
Like, for example, I had to give a speech,
let's bullet proof.
I gave a speech at bullet proof conference.
And I speak about fear and anxiety, and I'm about to go on stage, and I'm absolutely
pickled in fear and anxiety.
Like, what the heck?
And I don't teach fearlessness.
There's very few people that are willing to call themselves fear specialists because
they feel like they have to teach fearlessness
And they have to be fearless themselves. It's not only not possible, but it's actually undesirable
I was gonna say you wouldn't want it be fearless just like you wouldn't want to be without any other emotion
Right, so but you know when you're about to go on stage for an important conference like this and give a speech about fear and anxiety
You kind of don't want to be having a panic attack, right?
Like that would be really embarrassing like this and give a speech about fear and anxiety, you kind of don't want to be having a panic attack, right?
Like that would be really embarrassing.
So what I did is I ducked behind the building 15 minutes before I would about to go on.
And with my equation in mind, suffering equals discomfort times resistance.
First of all, I close my eyes and I realize, okay, it's normal and natural for me to feel
this way.
This is a difficult thing I'm about to do.
It's not a sign of personal weakness.
And that kind of realization can be huge for people.
Just that alone, you know,
there's not something wrong with me
and that I feel this way.
And then I noticed what I felt, which was anxiety,
it was in my throat and it was a level 10 out of 10.
And then I noticed I was resisting it.
I didn't wanna be there, I didn't wanna feel this way, and it was also a level 10 out of 10. And then I noticed I was resisting it. I didn't want to be there.
I didn't want to feel this way. And it was also a level 10. So then I spent some time just
feeling my resistance. And I just repeated over and over again without trying to get rid
of it. I don't want to be here. I don't want to do this. I don't want to do this. I just
want to be home with my husband on the couch watching a movie. I don't want to be here. I
don't want to do this. And it's kind of like a whining child. You know, you give a whining child your undivided attention, they calm right down.
And so my resistance calmed down to a level one. And then I spent some time feeling my discomfort,
my anxiety, which we're going to do next. And I gave it my undivided attention. And without giving it away, let's just do that now.
So just close your eyes.
And I just want you to feel that discomfort
without trying to get rid of it.
That's the key.
If you're doing this as a way to try and get rid of it
or calm it down, it won't work.
If you're too smart for that crap, you just feel it.
for that crap. You just feel it.
Or audience is like, what the fuck is going on?
You're doing it with us.
Yeah, just do it with it. And I'll keep talking. I'll keep talking softly.
So just spend some time feeling it without trying to get rid of it.
Give it your undivided attention. It's been trying to get your attention. Has something
to say. The words don't matter. The feeling is all that matters. Just pay attention to that
feeling. And when you're ready, just tell me what's happened. I mean, I feel like it lost its sharpness or edge.
Exactly.
And that's what happened for me.
I then felt my anxiety.
I gave it about a minute, and it went down to a level one.
And so I mentioned there's two ways to get to fearlessness.
One just consumes your whole life, and it becomes harder and harder to do.
Then you have to take medication and you have to like compromise your dreams and you know
your relationships go south and you start having depression and panic attacks and PTSD and
all that and you know it's just a really tough route.
But if you actually turn towards your just comfort and learn how to feel it, then it kind of goes away.
Interesting.
Like you're taking away its power.
Yeah, but even that is a little disrespectful to fear, you know, and I mentioned fears too
smart for that crap.
It's like I'm giving it some love.
That works better for me, giving it some love.
You feel as the hardest time with this.
I know you work with professional athletes,
and that being like one of their mechanisms
to drive them forward, being successful,
and also simultaneously repressing fear,
how do you work with the transition then to maybe,
you know, they're retiring,
or they just want to be more balanced.
Like, how do you work with a high performer like that?
I've found that the most difficult people to work with are the people that are in their heads all the time
and they've built a shrine to their thinking minds and their intellect, like super smart people,
because they want to put their intellect on the job
towards fixing all problems.
And that's why, you know, emotional intelligence in our society is actually seen as our ability
to cognitively understand our emotions and control them, which is crazy.
And so if you're really invested in your intellect as being the solution to all problems,
it's kind of like, I have a bunch of tricks, this is one trick, you know, picture, like,
how old are you?
36.
36.
So for 36 years, you've put a dollar a day into a jar of money and you're very invested.
Wish I did that, yes.
You're very invested in who you believe yourself to be. You're very
invested in your revelations about fear, your beliefs about what to do about fear. You're very
invested in your intellect as being the solution to all sorts of problems. And so getting you to have
a different experience is like asking you to throw away that jar of money. Right. Right.
experiences like asking you to throw away that jar of money. Right.
Right.
So, people are very invested.
Also, having gone down the same path of a repressive attitude towards fear because I
mentioned it works.
You know, it makes you feel better, it gets you through a moment and people have done
some great things by repressing fear.
My ski career was done through repressing fear and I was the best in the world for 12
years. It's like people can be very, very invested in their way
that they found that works to deal with the unpleasant side of life.
And I find that only when the,
because there's payoffs of having that repressive approach towards fear,
only when the costs of doing that exceed the payoffs
will somebody finally reach out to me
and be willing to do the work.
Now, it's a lot of work to repress fear your whole life
and it will consume your whole life.
Anything that you won't deal with,
you give magical powers to.
It's also work to make friends with fear,
but it's actually a lot easier than you think.
And the first step is me kind
of getting people to throw away that jar of money, throw away that investment that they
have down this one path and consider traveling down another route.
Well, I'd be ahead of you for sure. Oh, no, you wouldn't. I love a challenge. I do my best
work with superheadie guys in particular. Yeah, I have all sorts of tricks. So I have,
I have, where the challenging part I have is that I think
that much of this is based off of the belief
that the classical theory of how emotions are made,
which is that it's a reaction to something
versus that it's something that we've constructed in our heads,
which is more of what I believe is that.
So because if you were to take two kids
that were seven years old and one kid saw,
you know, just happened to be watching ESPN
and saw the one crash all season on downhill skiing
and the girl killed herself.
And then also saw some other accident in extreme sport
and got really, really hurt.
And then the first time they got on skis,
you know, had a really bad experience with it.
And then asking that person to do something
like a downhill ski may be a different feeling of emotion
than the person who saw the opposite.
So I'll watch DSPN, saw the girl stick the landing,
fucking people celebrated, they put a ribbon on her.
And then the first time they got on skis,
they were a natural, They fell right into it
Now those two people are gonna experience this emotion that we're calling fear right now
Around downhill skiing completely different. Wouldn't you agree?
Yes, and this would be a good time to talk about PTSD
PTSD is when you go through a difficult
Experience a horrific experience even which will happen
to you.
You will come in contact with horrible people, you will see horrible things, nobody is going
to be immune from that.
I actually like to redefine PTSD as instead of post-traumatic stress disorder, post-traumatic
repressive disorder.
And PTRD equals traumatic experience times resistance or repression.
Like, I don't want to deal with this.
And so, how can two people see that horrible crash and one person, you know, all of a sudden
it kind of has them,
winds up being one of the more interesting turning points in their life where they now kind of turn over a new leaf
and maybe they start a new company
and it makes them come alive
and it kind of gives them meaning and purpose
in their lives and et cetera, et cetera.
And somebody else, they just collapse inside
and they just go numb and they can't deal with it
and they're panic attacking all over the place and they just go numb and they can't deal with it and they're panic attacking
all over the place and they're depressed and suicidal and they don't know how to deal
with it.
It's really just how you react to the trauma.
If you don't want to deal with the emotions around it, if you lock them in the basement
and throw away the key, like I said, you give them magical powers and they will take over
your whole world.
Well, that's why I think it's that that trauma or that emotion is different for every person.
It's going to be unique. There's never going to be two of the same people that feel the
same emotion from the same series of events. So that's where it's like, you know, again,
we take parts of the language and we separate one word of that umbrellas, all of these different types
of potential emotions.
If you look at like, and I forget what tribe it is,
but there's a tribe that exists today
and there's a culture around that tribe
that's been around for a long time.
And the word sad doesn't even exist in their vocabulary.
Like sadness is not an emotion.
And then so we go go, wait a second,
you've never had somebody die in your family?
Well, yeah, they have a term for when someone dies
in their family, what that is.
And so what about when you lost to a vendor,
you lost a kill that was supposed to be?
Well, yeah, there's a term for when you were hunting something
for survival and you fell short and you didn't get it.
Instead of us unbrelling it under all sadness
is the same or all fear is the same.
And this is the part of unpacking
and the heady part of me of why I think it's important
to look at how it was constructed
because it's gonna be uniquely different for everybody.
And if you don't address that
and you purely go off of this trying to feel this feeling
versus to understand it,
where is it coming from, why does it feel this way?
I think that it's really tough to be able
to communicate that across the board,
everybody because we're all so uniquely different.
Well, what you've just done is taken
something really simple, like sadness or fear or anger
and made it very complicated, right?
Like, what if when we're sad, we just be sad.
And when we're afraid, we just be afraid. And when we're afraid, we just be afraid.
And when we're angry, sadness is supposed to
kind of break open our hearts to compassion and empathy.
And maybe that's why I don't know anything about this.
Why is it though?
Why is it that way?
Because we've decided that way for someone.
Here's why can't it be something of more
that opens up joy and excitement for us?
Why can't it, if we know, if you know,
we especially with your experience with fear,
that there's such a great positive side to it,
why do we even look at all emotions?
Why have we categorized them that,
why does this emotion have to be so detrimental to us?
Why can't it be a strength of ours
or why can't it be a good thing when we experience these?
Because we've built a shrine to our intellect
and our thinking minds.
Well, that, or we've, over years and years and years,
we've accepted that this is the prevailing theory
that, okay, this is how you act when this happens,
when it's like, well, maybe if I reframe
that differently in my brain,
maybe I can, it can be a total different experience for me.
Yeah, are you familiar with the multi-disciplinary association
of psychedelic studies and the work
that they're doing on PTSD?
I'm a volunteer for.
Oh, so because what you're saying totally, I mean, when you look at the studies that they're
doing with like the MDMA trials that they just released with PTSD, what you're saying
makes perfect sense in the sense that you have people with PTSD and you know the studies
I'm sure better than I do since you work with them, but they have people with PTSD, and you know the studies, I'm sure better than I do,
since you work with them.
But they have people with PTSD, very difficult to treat,
you know, forms of PTSD.
They go in there, they take this, you know, the substance,
and it allows them to feel, or at least face,
what's causing these issues, and they're getting cured,
like a 70% rate.
Is that what they're kind of finding?
Is that kind of, is it helping them do what you're talking about?
All right, so you've given me a tsunami of stuff to do.
Let me try.
Podcasts speed number, real quick here.
Let me, my job is to simplify things,
because emotions are very, very simple.
And I know that I'm challenging to go extremely deep,
by the way, so I just, just sort of,
I love it. So let me kind of take you on a journey, you know, starting back,
maybe our great great grandparents. Like you look at photos from the 20s and what do you
see? All these people standing around stoically, you know, we have been repressing emotions
forever. Our humans have a long history of avoiding anything unpleasant
and emotions we're actually seeing even at joy and love is frivolous. Love is not an
emotion but that's another conversation. So, but like that's where we're come from. So our
grandparents repress their emotions and you know especially if you have a hard drinking family
right? For sure you come from a lineage of repressing emotions. And life back then
consisted of like, whether you caught two beavers or three beavers or, you know, what do we have
for dinner tonight? Like it was very, very simple. But now the world is sped up so much. More
happens in 24 minutes than happen in that era in 24 years, right? And so the amygdala is manufacturing fear like Joey Chestnut eats a hot dog
really fast, right? So there's just fear, fear, fear everywhere. And the amygdala is freaking
the fuck out, right? And so we have so much fear and we call it anxiety because we don't want
to call it fear. Like the guy on Wall Street would never say I'm pickled in fear, right?
But he will say I'm pickled in anxiety.
It's almost a right of passage.
Like if you're not pickled in anxiety and you work on Wall Street, then you're not working
hard enough.
So we're pickled in, we call it anxiety.
It's really fear.
And none of us know how to deal with it.
You know, we've never known how to deal with it.
And so this is a real turning point in our evolution.
Like we can't keep speeding up and just dealing with it. And so this is a real turning point in our evolution. Like, we can't keep
speeding up and just dealing with this. And no wonder people are taking more and more
drugs, opioids, antidepressants, antidexiety. Like, we don't know how to deal with this because
what we've been doing, what's the definition of insanity?
We're going to do the same thing over and over expecting something different.
Right. That's what we're doing. The same thing over and over again with adapting in the
medit- I mean, we're coming up with all these wonderful methods
and modalities and meditation helps people with PTSD
tremendously because if you have a fork in your eye,
fork sitting out of your eye, you're gonna feel better.
But it's just a symptom relief.
It's not dealing with the underlying problem
and the underlying problem is none of us have figured out
how to feel our emotions.
And we're getting more and more in our intellect
and people are talking faster and faster
and we have San Francisco and everybody's so smart
and becoming smarter and we're so far out of the station
of our essential core nature,
which is we are feeling emotional
human beings.
And the five primary emotions, and when I say primary, it's kind of like primary colors,
like red, yellow, and blue, make up the entire color spectrum, our five primary emotions
actually make up our entire reality, our entire human experience come from fear, anger, sadness, joy,
and some people like to say sexuality, but I prefer erotic, which includes a sexual,
but isn't limited by it.
So these five primary emotions, which are feelings, simple feelings, like you know, you're
eroticism when you feel it, You know anger when you feel it.
It's very simple.
You know, we have just started dealing with them
intellectually and we can't understand them.
So we do the next best thing is we judge them.
And our mind has gotten really good at, you know,
tall, short, right, wrong, good, bad, right.
That's a good emotion, that's a bad emotion.
And so we put them in these boxes like fear bad, anger bad, sadness bad,
and then we get to work trying to control them.
And it's just not working.
And ultimately we can control them by medicating them away,
but there's consequences, there's cost to doing that.
Now, why does MDMA or Iowaska work with PTSD is because it gets us to turn towards the
thing that we won't deal with, the thing that we've been ignoring or avoiding or controlling
or, you know, fighting or trying to overcome or conquer.
You know the language.
I hate the word conquer and fear, the word overcome and fear in the same sentence. It breaks down that kind of defense mechanism
or barrier between you and the uglies, the darkness.
And broker's a conversation between you
and that discomfort, that negativity in an inclusive way.
It's like, I'm willing to look at this
for the first time in my life.
And one session of MDMA can solve PTSD.
One conversation with your negativity
or with your fear in this case can end depression,
can end panic attacks and anxiety disorders.
I've seen it happen.
I'm kind of like a resource without the drugs.
I've worked with people for just six hours.
And a lifetime of depression lifts.
It's crazy.
I'll just conclude by a great quote by Bruce Lee.
Oh, no, hopefully I can remember the quote. The less effort the faster and
more powerful you will be. It's a lot of effort to not deal with the negative
side of life and all your shit that you won't look at. And it ultimately makes you
weak. It does take effort to deal with your shit and your fear and all that.
It's a lot less effort, it's surprisingly easier
than we thought, and it will not only resolve your problems, but it will ultimately make
you powerful.
That's beautiful.
I love it.
So, very simply, and maybe it's not, maybe there is no simple answer.
What are some steps people can take listening to the podcast to get them, you know, kind of
move in the direction that you're talking when dealing with fear? What are some steps that they can take listening to the podcast to get them, you know, kind of moving the direction that you're talking when dealing with fear.
What are some steps that they can take?
So I mentioned feeling your fear and I said that that's only kind of the third step.
I'm just starting to see people.
There's just a few out there.
Most of these people are leaders in their communities or CEOs of major corporations or the best
athletes in the world at their sports because I ask a lot of people what's your relationship
with fear and they don't know anything about what I teach.
And this is the word that I had in my book and thank God it's been confirmed by all these
people, but they say I would have to say that I have an intimate relationship with fear.
Now, that is a gorgeous word.
And if you learned how to feel your fear, you know, that's one experience, but there's
still some separation between you and the fear.
It's like, I'm feeling it.
But when you have an intimate relationship with fear, there is no separation between you
and the fear. There is no separation between you and the fear. And, you know, it's kind of this
gorgeous
experience that that Bambi has, you know, taking her into higher altered states of flow and
consciousness, and next thing you know you come alive with fear. Next thing you know, you're not doing things
Despite the fear. You're doing things because of the fear. It's like fear becomes this gorgeous resource that makes us feel more alive, that makes
us more motivated, that makes us more creative, that kind of is a sign that we're on the right
path towards learning and growing, because there is no learning and growing unless you step
out of your comfort zone where there exists fear.
So fear actually, I have a long history of repressing fear and I look back on my ski
career.
And if I had an intimate relationship with my fear back then, I would have been such a
better athlete.
I wouldn't have had so many injuries.
Maybe, maybe you think.
Well, yeah, you know, it takes you into a flow state, though.
It takes you into the zone and little else does.
Like you look at extreme sports, you know, taking it back to extreme sports,
extreme sports are notorious for taking people into the zone.
Why is that? Because there's fear.
There's a real fear of death there. You can't
avoid that. Right. You have to get in the zone. And so these athletes, what they're doing is they're
merging with fear. They're becoming intimate with fear. Do they know that that's what's happening
out there? Definitely not. But these people are a lot more willing to feel fear than most of us,
right? So there's some sort of love affair going on there. And so they merge with the fear and it's the fear that takes them into that heightened state of awareness and
focus and bringing your A game. You know, that is, you know, and we know that with flow
states, I don't know the number. I think it's like four or 500 X. If you're in a flow
state in your work, in your life, in general, in your sport, you know, you are four or five hundred times more productive and magnificent.
And we don't get that it's actually the fear that takes you there.
And you said there was a pathology that you could create with fear, like some of these
athletes where they're, they have a relationship with fear that's different than the average
person, which is why they can get in that flow state
But then becoming addicted to fear can become pathological and you said you had experienced that was that carrying over into
Like if when you were on the skis was that addiction to fear creating risky behaviors and stuff outside of the sport?
Oh, yeah, my most extreme example was I was hella skiing in Alaska and the we weren't skiing
the the weather was terrible and finally I'm like this is ridiculous I'm just gonna go home.
So I had to cash in my hella chips and I hitchhiked out to the hella pad and I got picked
up by a psychopath who threatened to rape and sodomize me and murder me and throw my dead
body on the side of the road and now keep keep in mind, I'm a ferratic.
And I've been sitting in this dumpy little Alaska town just understimulated for nine days.
And my reaction to that was, thank God, I'm being interesting.
Wow.
It's finally happening to me.
And I wasn't giving the guy the power trip he wanted. So that
probably saved my life. And I didn't get raped. And none of that, um, he dropped me off
and down. He's like, she's that scared. Like, yeah, he's like, oh, this is no fun. Right?
She must be a cop. I just sat there smiling at him. Like, wow, this is great. You're like,
you like take a left right here. And, um, you know, of course, I didn't want to get murdered
or raped or satanized. But but I just was fascinated by the experience.
And so I got dropped off.
I'm like, there's something seriously wrong with me, right?
How old are you right there at that point?
Now I was in my late 20s or early 30s.
And so this set me on course to figuring out what that was all
about.
That was part of, I know, I mentioned the beginning of this that I have 30 plus years of practical real-world experience dealing with fear and in all so many different levels.
I'm like, groomed by the universe to be the fear expert.
I didn't study about fear in college, you know.
I didn't study it about it in the lab.
fear and college, you know. I didn't study it about it in the lab. I, like I've learned what, what is really going on, just on a practical, personal level, you know, and there's 7.5
billion of us and we have 7.5 billion different relationships with fear. I do not expect anybody
to relate to mine, but I do have a fascination with brokering a conversation between people and their fear
to figure out what is going on and is this the best
relationship possible and that's how I work with my friends.
Yeah, probably why you see some people who, you know,
athletes or musicians or artists who seem to be addicted
to this feeling and then they get addicted to drugs
or bad relationships or whatever because it's pathological.
So you want an intimate but healthy relationship with fear,
is what you're saying.
Right, and this brings up another point.
A lot of people will hesitate to recover
from these horrible problems that I've outlined
that are associated with the repression of fear
because they really are addicted to the drama
that comes from their problems.
I see a lot of people that don't want to actually heal
their PTSD or their depression
because then they wouldn't know who they are.
They wouldn't have that kind of stimulus.
And a lot of that stimulus comes from fear
kind of recirculating from the basement
and acting in a crazy way.
You know, they'd be bored out of their minds
if they didn't have that drunk.
Well, yeah, what do you think that is that makes people
even seek that out?
Like that they would want to keep falling in that cycle.
Is it because it's comfortable for them?
Well, subconsciously, obviously,
because you know, in the front of their mind
they're scared or it's awful or oh, I hate being here,
but you keep bringing yourself back here.
So what is it that causes people to do that you think?
Well let's look at a soldier for example who has PTSD. Now more than likely if that soldier
has PTSD after being at war it started in childhood and how he was raised. More than likely when
he says I'm afraid mom said there's nothing to afraid of, which is the worst thing you can say to a child, because it's just not true.
And it's, I call it fear-shaming.
And a lot of men, most of my clients are men actually, because they've been a motion-shamed
their whole life.
So anytime you send a message that it's not okay to express or feel your emotions, even
if they're coming out in an immature way, that's fear-shaming.
So that soldier then goes and has this devastating horrific experience and then comes back, doesn't
know how to...
Oh, and by the way, in boot camp, the image of the soldier standing there, while the drill
sergeant's yelling at him, while he's just stoic, standing there, it is hard to miss. Like, even though it's not explicitly taught,
it's kind of like it is explicitly taught to these soldiers.
So repressed, repressed, repressed.
Otherwise, you know, your emotions could get in the way
of your job.
Right.
And so then they go through this horrific experience.
They don't know how to deal with the emotions.
They repress them, the fear, the anger, the sadness.
It's locked down there.
And they also just went through this incredibly intense,
exciting, fearful experience.
They come home and a couple things happen.
They haven't dealt with the emotions
from the horrific experience that they had.
And they're also bored out of their fucking minds, right?
Because they don't have fear in their lives anymore.
But the only fear that they have in their lives
is that recirculating PTSD fear,
because they're not dealing with it.
And so, you know, even that can be really hard to move past
because they're getting a payoff for having their PTSD.
And the payoffs may be like, oh, well, I'm not bored, right? Or I don't have to now
be vulnerable in my relationship or deal with my wife, or I don't have to work. Like,
there's always some sort of payoff that prevents them from really wanting to seek help.
And they take the MDMA or the Iowaska and then they realize all this. It's like, oh,
my gosh, I haven't been dealing with all my shit's dorm that's going on in my unconscious mind helps them deal with it
And then that might or might not set them on course towards healing depends on if the payoff is
Greater than the cost or if the cost is greater than the payoff like that's kind of a simplification
You know everybody's different, but that's kind's a general rule with PTSD that I see in
soldiers. What is your role with the Maps Association? Do you consult with them or how do you do with
them? I'm a volunteer at Burning Man. Very interesting. That's a real stuff. Yeah.
I'm also a big believer in
ayahuasca journeys like I've done nine journeys myself and I
think that maps is really onto something and also
you know getting soldiers to take ayahuasca. But if you don't want to go that route, if you don't want to take drugs to kind of
have an honest relationship with the negative side of life,
I'm an alternative resource.
Mm-hmm.
I have a question for you then,
taking you back,
because we kind of just glazed over your childhood part
that I'm very interested in.
And I have a question for you going back
to your kind of rough childhood.
You know, can you give me something that you have received from your parents that you think has been a gift for you as an adult now?
And then also something that you feel is not so much a gift that you've received from them.
When I was six years old, I ran away from home.
And what that looks like to a six-year-old is I ran to the
vacant lot next door and sat down on the steps and just refused to move for about five hours.
And then that was such a poignant moment in my life because that was the moment that I realized
like I'm I'm just going to have to raise myself. I'm going to have to be tough and fearless and
you know, was I really aware of what was going on?
No, but that was the transition for me.
And that's where I learned how to just be stoic
and arrogant and tough and strong and all of that
and not need anybody.
And so then when I, and it was based in my father
and I really hated my father in that moment too,
so cut to my ski career.
I was this independent, strong, stoic, tough person
who hated men.
And happened to be skiing.
It's a man's sport with a lot of men
and I wanted to kick the men's asses.
People would come up to me and say,
oh, you're the best woman skier I've ever seen.
I'd be like, fuck you.
I want you to be the best skier.
Yeah. I want to compare myself've ever seen. I'd be like, fuck you. I would be the best gear. Yeah.
I want to compare myself against the men.
You know?
I love it.
And so I gave them the run for the money, the men.
And that's why I got so good, so fast,
and why I was so ahead of my time.
And but just picture what kind of effort it takes
to be that person that I've just outlined.
Like it made me a really hard person,
like very masculine. And I've spent the whole second half of my life since retiring as an athlete
to kind of do a radical pendulum swing to find my femininity to kind of get past that kind of
rigid stoic approach to life.
And a lot of what it took for me to get to this place
is to make friends with my emotions.
And you know, it's funny, I used to cry a lot.
And if you cry a lot and it's a deeply painful experience,
that's a sign of repressed sadness and probably repressed anger
and probably repressed fear.
I used to get really, really angry and that's a sign of, you know, the repression of emotions.
Like if you have explosive, overwhelming emotions, that is a sign of repressed emotions.
So just making friends with my emotions and having a more intimate relationship with them
has made me a much softer person.
And so for that, I'm grateful.
Did you have a lot of animosity towards your father?
I did, but when I was a professional skier,
I didn't feel like anger.
It just felt like,
ferocity and passion.
And it didn't...
Which feel good.
Yeah, yeah, I didn't, I didn't have any cognitive awareness
that it was at my father.
But the day that I fell in love with men
and realized, oh, you know, they're not so bad after all, right?
They're actually here to just kind of, you know,
love on women.
Like, that was a big healing moment for me. But, you know, love on women. Like that was a big healing moment for me.
But, you know, when I work with athletes,
it's important not to heal their demons and their wounds
because all of a sudden they won't have any motivation
to be the best in the world at something anymore.
You know, that, that resolves.
So when I work with athletes,
I'm very careful what I work with them on.
That's interesting.
Yeah, I don't want to resolve their pathology
because that will take away their magic.
Yes, it's a very well for a long time.
Right, but I will say that of all the athletes I've worked with,
and I was a mindset sports coach for 15 years,
so I've worked with a lot.
100% of the time, if somebody was underperforming,
it was because they were repressing fear.
And in many ways, that's the reason why I wrote
this book about fear,
because I could have written this book about a lot of things,
but I just realized that fear is the big one.
Yeah.
Did you find a difference between men and women
in terms of the reception of this book?
Because I know men are,
we are taught to repress fear quite a bit.
We can't be scared, right?
We're never supposed to be scared.
Do you find it being different between men and women?
Is there more of a better reception among men?
I know you said you worked with a lot of male clients.
I would say about 75% of my clients are men because they have a harder time with their
emotions than women do.
And the secondary question was, do I
see a different approach towards emotions
between men versus women?
And the answer is, well, yes.
I mean, we all know that women are allowed
to feel emotions.
And we kind of outsource fear, though.
Women outsource fear to the men.
It's the men's job to deal with the fear.
There's a bump in the night.
The man gets up to investigate.
But women are becoming more willing to be their own, like they're willing to go and investigate
the bump in the night.
They're willing to feel fear.
They're willing to have a more inclusive relationship with fear rather than outsourcing it to their men folk.
And so that is the reason why women are becoming more powerful
because that combination of being willing to kind of feel
their fear and plus they also have an innate nature
where they're more willing to feel their emotions period
is why women are starting to become more powerful than men.
That's true.
Right?
Like men, you know, the best thing they can do women are starting to become more powerful than men. That's true. Right?
Like men, you know, the best thing they can do to be more powerful at work or in their
relationships is to have a emotion practice or in particular, it's like, okay, joy,
great, sexuality, great, but fear, anger, sadness, like how can I have a more healthy
relationship with these emotions?
And it taps men into their essential vulnerability, which is kind of the heart of what it means
to be human being.
And men are just really seeking to have a vulnerability practice right now, too.
And a large part of what will get them there is to make friends with their fear, anger,
and sadness.
I was having this conversation maybe a couple of weeks ago with my girlfriend and we were talking about
how typically and of course there's individual variances that are that can be quite wide but
typically women have a much better time-feeling things or at least they're more
in tune to how they feel and we're having this discussion debate and you know you could talk about
how society
allows women to feel and men not so much.
But the other thing is also that, you know,
men don't experience a drastic change in hormones
like women do on a regular basis since puberty.
So since puberty, women have had to feel more
and practice more feeling.
Whereas men were kind of like, you know, hormones
kind of stay relatively baseline, you know, for a whole life. So we don't have a lot of
practice necessarily with feeling so much. And that was just a theory that I came up with
that, I think makes sense.
Well, hormones are like a steroid injection to your emotions.
Yeah. Well, I want to, I want to take Christian. I want to take you again back to, South keeps taking you back to the softball questions. I want to take, Christian, I want to take you again.
Sam keeps taking you back to the softball questions.
I want to stay in the hard, the hardball stuff with you because I like to know more about
what makes you tick.
I mean, I already like you as a person.
I already think you got a great bloke and I'm excited to read it.
But I want to know more about what makes you tick and going back to your parents and you
kind of gave me something that has something that served you really well is that the you know facing fear early on at six years old.
But what about something that still rears its head on you or services from childhood that you still have to deal with today? Is there anything that comes to mind that challenges you to this day that goes all the way back to your relationship with your parents.
Before I answer that, this is a really good opportunity to, you know, I keep going back
to PTSD and soldiers and going through a horrific experience.
Like we have this impression that we have to go back in time and start dissecting why
we repress fear, like how our parents raised us, relive the trauma that caused the PTSD.
It's just really not only unnecessary, but cruel.
And so for me, I look at your question,
and while interesting,
what matters more to me right now
is what is my relationship with myself today?
Because the past is in the past.
Can't that be a way of repressing that emotion
that's buried deep in there from childhood, though, too?
Well, it's a way of not wasting time on things
that don't matter anymore because they're in the past.
It's like, yes, who I am today was shaped by how I was raised.
And there's this thing called false self that's like a huge whole subject that influences
me every day.
False self is, you know, we call it the terrible twos for a reason.
It's when you separate and become an individual.
It's like you become a separate egoic being.
And I'm not you, you're not me.
I'm not mommy and daddy anymore.
I'm in you, you're not me. I'm not mommy and daddy anymore. I'm in my own self. And between age two and I say 12,
you can take on a single sentence from somebody at school,
like you're ugly and then you may think,
oh, I'm ugly, your whole life.
That if we heard that as an adult,
you'd be like, screw you, right?
And it doesn't kind of go into our bone marrow.
Well, except for the child that heard that, right?
Right.
The child that heard that, you or I,
maybe we didn't hear that as a kid when we were,
during those most formative years for our brain,
didn't hear that, but a child who did hear that,
may hear it as an adult, and it's still be an issue for them.
But you and I, that's not a big deal.
We don't look at it like that,
which is why I think it is important to visit
where that may be rooted from.
No.
Well, one of, when I work with a client, I work with them for only six hours to get them
through the other side of a problem.
This is super fast.
It's not therapy.
You don't have to pound on pillows or go back and dissect your childhood.
I mean, it's just a lot of processing and a lot of work, and you will never get to the
bottom of your well of shit to things of things to process.
So I work with people in a really simplistic way. What is your relationship with fear right now?
Are you trying to control it? Do you ignore it? Do you fight it?
Can you make friends with it? Let's see what's possible here.
But I also spend some time helping people understand that there's this false self-persona that we create between two and twelve that we kind of take on at our core, you know, that becomes the story of our lives and how we walk and talk and it's really profound. And just being able to see that you're not it and it's not you is all it takes.
It's like, I do a 90 minute session on this and it's kind of makes 20 years of therapy no longer necessary.
And so just to answer your question because you have a fascination with my particular story, I would say that if I'm fighting with my
husband, that's false self. It's his false self fighting with my false self. My 10-year-old
child is fighting with his 10-year-old child. His doesn't make any sense to me and mine
doesn't make any sense to him. So that's there, but really dissecting it doesn't help.
It's like understanding the universe.
You're trying to understand the universe.
Like there's three great mysteries in this world.
There's outer space, there's under the sea,
and our own minds.
And if you go to therapy to try and understand your own mind,
it's like trying to understand the universe.
It's just, the second you've got a grasp of something,
it just changes anyway. And it's just, you know, the second you get a grasp of something, it just changes anyway, you know, and it's just gone.
And so, I think therapy is great for some things, but when it comes to kind of having a better relationship with your emotions,
it's definitely talk therapy in particular, not the right course of action, because you're going to get lost in that process forever. And so back to today, me,
like I've done a huge pendulum swing
since my ski career.
Like I used to sell the sexy wild side of skiing.
I was sponsored by Red Bull.
I was outrageous, you know, I set out outrageous things.
And now I'm more feminine.
I was very masculine than two.
I'm now more feminine.
Now I'm devoting my life to helping people.
I'm of service. This book was just such a... I was a lady of leisure before I wrote this book.
Now I'm working 80-hour work weeks. It's just crazy. The sacrifice that I'm making just to help people.
I was so hedonistic and narcissistic
back during my ski career.
And so now I'm just, it's like I'm balancing that out.
And somewhere I'll land in the middle, you know?
It's also an ego trip to write a book, you know?
I'm always down for a good ego trip.
But, we love those.
So that's where I am right now.
Yeah, okay, I'll let you off the hook a little bit without him.
I just, I love, I mean, obviously you're a high performer.
And, you know, I think that it's really, really neat
to unpack what makes these high performers go.
And I think everyone's uniquely different.
I think the way you handle fear,
even though you and I probably have a lot in common
because maybe of our childhood and so that,
it could be completely different or you view it completely different than I
view it.
So I'm very intrigued by your story, not just your outlook on fear, but like what makes
you tick because I think that in itself tells so much.
I think people just may be interested because you're the author, you know what I mean?
So people want to know.
But I think it's fascinating.
What you're saying is absolutely fascinating to me
because I know some of the statistics on the success rate
of traditional therapies and means for dealing
with these things.
And in Western societies, it's not good.
We don't have a good track record.
We have got to try something new.
This is something new.
This is so out of the box.
This is the radical
opposite of everything we've been taught about, what to do about fear. And I've found it works.
It works and it's a lot easier. And not only that, you then get the fear hack too, where
the fear is actually the thing that helps you be magnificent.
That's what I want. Well, thanks for coming on. Yes.
That was awesome conversation.
Really appreciated it.
Yeah.
You're awesome.
Period.
Oh, well, thank you.
Yeah.
We even say it on the show.
I mean, Sal and I got a chance to have dinner with you
at the Spartan race and both of us when we walked out.
Like, we were around, I don't know.
There's probably a few hundred people
maybe in that place.
Yeah.
You were the only person that we were really
interested to talk to afterwards.
You made that much of an impression on both of us.
So there's that ego trip again.
You guys are gonna keep me trapped in
He did some forever.
You're talking like that.
Anyway, thanks again.
Yep.
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