Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 573: Scott Galloway on: The Impact of Work on Mental Health, the Role of Luck in Success, and How Much is Enough
Episode Date: March 20, 2023This is the first of a four part series on work that we’re calling, “Work Life.” Work can play a huge role in our sanity and happiness, or lack thereof. So today we're going to tac...kle some common and thorny questions with a guy who has been extremely successful at work and now teaches other people how to do so. We talk about questions such as how much work life balance should we really strive for? Is hustle culture really dead? What's the role of luck in success? How much is enough and should you bring your whole self to the office? Scott Galloway is a professor of marketing at NYU's Stern School of Business. He's also a serial entrepreneur. He's founded nine companies, including Profit, Red Envelope, and Section Four.He's served on the boards of directors of the New York Times Company, Urban Outfitters and Panera Bread. He's the best-selling author of many books, including, The Algebra of Happiness, Post Corona, and his latest book, which is called Adrift: America in 100 Charts. He's also the host of two podcasts, Prof. G. and Pivot. The latter, Pivot, which he co-hosts with the legendary tech reporter Kara Swisher. In this episode we talk about:Why work is such a big factor in determining our mental healthWhat’s the number one retention factor at workHow capitalism pushes us towards living to work rather than the other way around Why Galloway believes men’s sense of self-worth is so often (maybe too often) based on their ability to earn Where he stands on the idea of “bringing your whole self to work”How to get over being firedHis thoughts on side hustles, work/life balance and whether remote work will stick around post COVID Why he says being in the office is important for young workers if they want to get ahead, especially young menWhy, despite making a great living, he still has economic anxietyThe rare moments when he is able to enjoy himself and say, “this is enough”His addiction to the approval of others How Galloway handles his critics, while retaining his willingness to go out on a limb and be controversialFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/scott-galloway-573 See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the 10% happier podcast. I'm Dan Harris.
Hey gang, work can play a huge role in our sanity and happiness or lack thereof.
So today we're going to tackle some common and thorny questions with a guy who has been
extremely successful at work and now teaches other people how to do so.
We're going to talk about questions such as how much work life balance should we really
strive for?
Is hustle culture really dead?
What's the role of luck in success? How
much is enough and should you bring your whole self to the office as some believe? Scott
Galloway is a professor of marketing at NYU's Stern School of Business. He's also a serial
entrepreneur. He's founded nine companies, including Profit, Red Envelope, and Section
4. He's served on the boards of directors of the New York Times Company, Urban Outfitters, and Panera Bread. He's the best-selling author of many books,
including The Four, The Algebra of Happiness, Post-Corona, and his latest book, which is called
Adrift America in a Hundred Charts. He's also the host of two podcasts, Prof. G. and Pivot.
The latter, Pivot, which he co-hosts with the legendary tech reporter
Cara Swisher, is a must listen for me. I'm a regular pivot head. So it was cool to meet
Scott. I'll be it virtually. In this conversation, we talked about why work is such a big factor
in determining our mental health. What the number one retention factor at work is, how
capitalism pushes us toward living to work
rather than the other way around.
Why he believes men's self-worth is so often
and maybe too often based on their ability to earn,
where he stands on the idea of bringing your whole self
to work, how to get over getting fired.
His thoughts on side hustles, work-life balance,
and whether remote work will stick around post COVID.
Why he says being in the office is very important for younger workers if they want to get
ahead, especially younger men.
Why, despite the fact that he has made a great living, he still has economic anxiety,
the rare moments when he's able to relax and tell himself this is enough.
His self-described addiction to the approval of other people.
And we talk about the fact that Galloway has some critics,
how he handles that while retaining his willingness
to go out on a limb and say some pretty controversial stuff
sometimes.
I should say before we dive in here
that this is the first in a four-part work series
we are launching.
From the next two weeks, I'm gonna be talking to guests about issues such as imposter syndrome,
I actually jointly interviewed an expert in imposter syndrome with my wife.
So that's coming up.
We also will be doing episodes on managing conflict at work and whether it's actually possible
to be mindful at work.
We are reviving the title Work Life, which we used the last time we did a work series
here on the show.
There's also a Work Life challenge available, complete with videos and guided meditations
over on the 10% happier app.
Just a quick note here that if you're listening with children, there are a couple of curse
words included in this episode.
Before we jump into today's show,
many of us wanna live healthier lives,
but keep bumping our heads up against the same obstacles
over and over again.
But what if there was a different way to relate
to this gap between what you wanna do
and what you actually do?
What if you could find intrinsic motivation
for habit change that will make you happier
instead of sending you into a shame spiral?
Learn how to form healthy habits
without kicking your own ass unnecessarily by taking
our healthy habits course over on the 10% happier app.
It's taught by the Stanford psychologist, Kelly McGonical and the great meditation
teacher, Alexis Santos to access the course.
Just download the 10% happier app wherever you get your apps or by visiting 10%
.com. All one word spelled out.
Okay. On with the show.
Hey y'all, it's your girl, Kiki Palmer.
I'm an actress, singer, and entrepreneur.
On my new podcast, Baby This is Kiki Palmer.
I'm asking friends, family, and experts,
the questions that are in my head.
Like, it's only fans only bad.
Where did memes come from?
And where's Tom from MySpace?
Listen to Baby, this is Kiki Palmer
on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcast.
Scott Galloway, welcome to the show.
Great to be here.
I am sure you're here this all the time,
but I feel like I know you because I listen to Pivot
all the time, so of course I don't know you,
but I have a parasocial relationship with you.
It's really, and I don't know if you find the stand.
I'm actually pretty sure you find it, but the way people greet you, you can sort of 70
or 80% of the time guess what it is the medium that they know you through.
If they high-five you and they just kind of yell at you, it's a video or from TV.
If they come out to you and want to have a really long, thoughtful conversation
or they write, I open an email, it's two pages and really thoughtful, it's from something
you've written.
But if someone comes up to you and just starts speaking to you, as if they're your friend
and you're not even entirely sure you should introduce yourself because you think, maybe
I just forgot who this person is, it's from the podcast because there's something about
physically being in someone's ears and speaking to them, especially if they listen to you a couple of times a week, they feel as if they know you.
They feel as if you have a relationship. And it's really nice. People are really friendly,
and it's almost like you start the conversation at letter C. They start talking about something
that is important to you, but definitely the medium is the message.
I completely agree. I've seen that play out in my own life in powerful ways.
You've written about, and spoken about, a whole range of subjects, but I'm in particular
interested in what you've said about the relationship between work and happiness.
And so let me just start with a broad question.
What role do you think work plays when it comes to our overall mental health? Well, just on a pure logistical basis, we live in a competitive economy.
So you're going to spend, and this is an aspirational, but most of the, and there's some proximity bias
here, because most of the people I hang out with are young MBA students who are very ambitious,
but the majority of people aspire to some level of economic security. And then you couple that with constantly bigger, better deal,
or how you're feeling economically or physically being thrown in your face through social media,
people have pretty ambitious goals for themselves economically.
When I survey my class at NYU, I'm not exaggerating.
I think 95% expect to be in the top 1%
by the time they're 35.
And I've never met anybody who's been able to do that
without being smart enough to inherit wealth
without full stop, just pretty much working
all the goddamn time for a while.
And so just logistically, the tone, the approach,
the reward, the things that make up those
hours are just going to have a huge impact on your mental health.
I've heard you the fact that if you are ambitious and you want to have relevance professionally,
you're going to have to have a period in your life that better part of probably 20 years
where you're spending the majority of your waking hours at this thing called work.
So it's going to have a huge impact on your mental health. Just logistically, then you go to do a purpose. You're also
constantly being measured against your peers. When a capitalist society, we
believe in winners and losers. Some people get promoted. Some people don't. Some
people get recognized economically or psychologically at work. There's a lot
of non-economic compensation. So your mental well-being and also your success at work, especially if you're a man,
men are pretty much judged kind of one dimensionally in our society. And I would argue that it's
the extent that they've been able to garner influence and power based on their professional
achievements. I think that's loosely speaking
how we are evaluated as men.
And so if you are not doing well at work,
also I think a lot of men feel correctly
a need to be providers.
And I'm not saying women don't feel that same need,
but I think it manifests itself in different ways.
But men feel in our society that if they are not,
and I relate to this when I've had professional trouble, the worst thing about the stress, the most stressful times I've had in my life
was when I felt like I was failing professionally and as a result failing as a father.
That's where I thought, okay, you know, before I add kids, when I screwed up professionally
I can go, if I need to, sleep on a friend's couch, I don't need that much money.
If I have enough money to occasionally go drinking or whatever it is or buy my banana republic clothes
or whatever I was wearing at the time,
I was gonna be okay.
Once you have a kid, if you're failing professionally
or not living up to what you think is your potential,
you've let down a family.
You've kind of cosmically screwed up, right?
And in addition, you're around a group of people,
your social networks sometimes as a young person is work.
The best thing you can do to increase someone's retention
is if they have a friend at work.
It's where you establish a lot of friendships.
We don't talk about this because there's been a lot of abuse,
but one in three marriages,
one in three relationships begin at work.
So what are you talking about?
You're talking about how a capitalist society judges you.
When your man, it kind of comes down to, all right, this is full stop.
Your worth is a man in our society, correctly or incorrectly.
It's your social network as a young person.
And it's kind of evaluating or saying, this is your worth or lack thereof.
And I think some people have the presence to say, I'm going to work to live, not live to
work. And I think some people have the presence to say, I'm going to work to live, not live to work,
but capitalism is largely trying to nudge you to say,
no, you're going to live to work.
And the evaluation or the scorecard you get every day
from work is, you know, it's impossible to ignore.
And whether those relationships are healthy
or unhealthy, the environment, you know, huge impact.
I don't know, I mean, I'm blathering on here,
but you think about divorce.
70 to 80% of divorces are initiated by the female
in the relationship to wife.
And a lot of that is initiated by economic stress.
People think the number one source of divorce
is infidelity, it's not.
It's money, or something related to money.
So in a capitalist society, a lot of mental health begins and ends at work.
It's hugely impactful on our sense of self and well-being.
And Dan, I'm not a social psychologist.
Where do I have this wrong?
I'm open to push back here.
I'm not hearing anything.
I personally disagree with, although I will just call out at the
risk of virtue signaling here that, you know, you and I are having this discussion as to
straight white wealthy older men.
And so there are obviously going to be things that we will miss.
I think that's right.
And it's interesting to say that because it's about perspective.
And I think one of the ways I'd like to think
of maturing game perspective is that my kind of self-worth comes from, I'd like to think
now it's that I'm raising two reasonable men that are 12 and 15 and I'm hoping that they'll
be good citizens, good dads, good partners. But the majority of my identity comes from work.
Full stop. It's just where I've always gotten my reward, my self-worth, for better for worse.
And you know, whatever the reason that's where I get my worth.
And my rap up until the age of 40 was check my shit out.
I was raised by a single mother that lived and died
an immigrant who was a secretary,
upper lower middle class households,
got into a good school, started businesses,
economically, can you believe me? How incredible am I? That was my rap and I believed it.
And then about the age of 40, I started realizing, okay, let's kind of break it down.
I was born a white heterosexual male in California in the mid-60s. What did that mean? I mean, I got to go to UCLA
and Berkeley because the admissions rate of UCLA was 76 percent when I applied and by the way,
it was $400 a semester. So I got free college at one of the greatest universities in the world.
One of the greatest credentials in the world. I came up professional age in the 90s, we're processing power on the internet, we're coming online.
Then I got an MBA Berkeley with a 2.27 undergraduate GPA
from UCLA Berkeley, let me into graduate school.
And then I came out of graduate school in the 90s
with the greatest Gail Force wind and history called the internet
and processing power.
I mean, it's like I couldn't have had more advantage
and it never dawned on me.
Never dawned on me to ask the following questions.
Why aren't women raising venture capital?
Right?
We just didn't even ask these questions.
We thought, oh, they don't want to
or we fell into this Jordan Peterson bullshit
of like, oh, they just don't want to
or they've made other decisions.
No, it's because 40% to 60% of all VCs went to one of two schools,'t want to or they've made other decisions. No. It's because
40 to 60% of all VCs went to one of two schools. Harvard and Stanford and they were all white males and they just saw other white males as the people they'd want to back. Never stopped a bother and ask
why aren't people of color raising money? Oh, well, maybe they don't want to. No, it's because it's
harder for them. And so my entire perspective has changed. So I'm proud of my accomplishments.
It's very easy to credit your grit and your character for your achievements, and it's easy
to blame the markets for your failures. But the real shift in my outlook has been a function
of recognizing that no, I didn't overcome anything. I was born on third base.
Do you think, I mean, I feel the same way about my own life, I think it's hard to argue
with that conclusion.
Do you think if you had had that kind of perspective earlier on in your life and career
that it would have been helpful or would it have led to some sort of complacency?
It would have been helpful in that one of my big regret.
I think I'm at the top of one of my life.
I'm a naturally like glass half empty kind of guy.
I struggle with depression and anger.
So I have trouble matching my mood to my blessings.
And I'm very cognizant of it.
And one of the things that I regret is I should have been
kinder as a young man and as a young leader.
I was in a position where I was able to raise a lot of money,
start companies, none of them were big, but hundreds of employees, not thousands.
But I was in a position where I had some economic success, a position of influence, and I was
never a mean person. But we just a little bit of effort, I could have made a lot of people's lives
much nicer on a daily basis, taken employee into a room and said, you're doing an amazing job.
Throne some money, it's some people that I knew
needed some money.
Express to people in my life how much I cared about them.
You know, as you get older, you recognize,
like when you're in a position of fortune or privilege,
it's just not that guy that I'm hard to really move the needle
and make a lot of people's lives nicer.
And I didn't do that.
I was all about, you know, just totally focused on me
and how awesome I could be. And I think I would have been happier. I was all about, you know, just totally focused on me and how awesome I could be.
And I think I would have been happier.
I think it would have been more rewarding for me
and I just would have been a better citizen
if I'd had more perspective on just how fortunate I am
earlier in life.
I don't think I would have changed my motivation.
My motivation comes from some pretty base things.
I didn't grow up with a lot of money
and my mom got very sick when I was in graduate school.
She called me and said,
I am really not doing well.
My mom had cancer and I came home.
And quite frankly, just walked into the worst week
in my life.
I couldn't take care of my mom.
Started calling, trying to get her a nurse.
Nurses were 55 bucks an hour.
Couldn't find a hospital that would take her
because we had shitty insurance and just felt like just a masculated.
Like, okay, I'm a guy who's been given everything.
I knew that at that point and I came to take care of my mom.
It was just so humiliating.
And what I realized was that I need more money and it sounds very crass. But that's really when I got my shit together.
I'm like, okay, I didn't decide to be wealthy. I don't think you can make that decision. I think
a lot of it is luck, a lot of it is out of your control. But I decided I'm going to try really hard.
And that was exceptionally motivating. The humiliation of not being able to take care of my mom
motivating. The humiliation of not being able to take care of my mom was incredibly motivating.
And I would say that if I had what my kids have now, I wouldn't have what I have.
My motivation is, and I want to change the world for the better, where I'm so talented that it just happens, my motivation came from like failure and humiliation and a recognition that if I wanted to take care of someone
who had taken care of me in my whole life,
in a capitalist society, I needed to get my shit together.
And it was very motivating.
And then the second real motive here came just kind of 10,
15 years later when my first son came marching out
of my girlfriend.
And I'm like, okay, you want to live in New York with
kids? You got to make a lot of money. I think people hear this and it's pretty crass, but
I think people can relate to it. Your ability to take care of people in your life, whether
it's your parents, your kids, comes down. A lot of it comes down to economics and you can
make decisions to move to a lower cost neighborhood and have a decent life. But I was told, you know, I was vain enough or self-absorbing enough to think,
no, I should be able to have it all.
I've been told my whole life, I'm talented.
And that's the reason my kids of immigrants are more successful.
If you look statistically, it makes sense that I have a certain amount of success.
Kids of immigrants see the risks their parents took.
They say, oh, hard, they work.
They see what money can provide or what an absence of it means.
And they work hard.
You know, there's a reason why the getties and the carnies
no longer rule the world.
Because when you grow up with a lot of money,
you just don't have that fire.
So for me, it was, if I'd recognized my privilege,
I think I would have been a nicer,
kinder person, a better citizen.
But my motivation around success
came from a lack of economics.
Coming up, Scott Galloway talks about why,
despite making a great living,
he still has economic anxiety.
Why he believes we're hardwired for a competitive instinct.
His addiction to the approval of others,
the rare moments when he's able to enjoy himself
and say this is enough,
where he stands on the idea of bringing your whole self to work,
and how to get over getting fired.
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I find your honesty refreshing and I relate to pretty much all of the things you said, specifically
the stuff about kindness that was a huge deficit for me and something I'm still working
on and you're right, it doesn't take much work.
I also relate to the stuff about motivation.
And I'm curious, has your motivation shifted over time, or are you still driven by this
kind of primordial fear and anxiety, insufficiency of your youth?
That's a thoughtful question.
So it's shifted a bit.
I got lucky.
I started a bunch of businesses most failed,
but I live in a society that doesn't embrace failure,
but it tolerates it.
If I started a business that didn't work,
I was always able to raise money, find good people,
and try again.
And that's one of the amazing things about
American society is that it gives you
another shot of the plate.
And I got lucky a couple times and connected with a ball,
and so I have economic security.
So I don't have that same fear, but I still have economic anxiety. I still just wake up every morning,
a little bit worried about money. I can tell you how much money I have in my checking account right
now. This has never left me. This fear of being broke, fear of not being able to take care of people.
So I still have that. What's changed for me as I get older is, I believe there's gonna be a moment in my life
where I look into my son's eyes
and I know that our relationships come into an end.
And I just cannot get over how fast that end is coming.
I got out of graduate school yesterday
and 31 years later, it's literally a blank decade
to become years, years have become seasons.
And I think Jesus, like, I've got so much I want to do
I want to get more secure with myself. I want to love more people. I want to raise like responsible sons
I want to experience shit. I want to do new things
You know, I want to be admired and relevant used to be a desire for economic security so I could do amazing things
Now it's like a desire to have important meaningful relationships before it all ends.
But I hear a couple of things in there. For sure, I think it's quite healthy to be aware of
mortality, especially in the right way, if it's going to put you more in the present moment and
increase the degree to which you value your relationships. But there's another thing I heard in there as well,
which I say without any judgment,
because all of the words that issued forth
from your face could have come out of mind,
this desire for relevance.
I wonder about that in myself,
and I'd be interested to hear more from you.
Like, what is that all about?
Is it just death and wanting to make a mark before we leave, or is it filling some unfilable
hole?
Yeah, I think a lot of it isn't stingsual.
We're born with a competitive instinct, such that we'll attempt to run faster, jump higher,
be stronger, such that we can attract mates and have relevance with
our peers in the tribe.
So competition or competitive nature is just hardward into us.
And it's healthy and it's the reason why the next generation is going to be smartest
stronger, faster.
As Betges naturally comes out of us, we want to be the best, we want to be better, we
want to be better than the person next to us.
So some of it is natural.
I think everyone has a certain amount of addiction in their
life, which is how manifest or what the substance is. Some people are addicted to trans fats,
THC, alcohol, money, sex, whatever it might be. I'm addicted to the affirmation of strangers.
In that, as I care way too much, You know, when this podcast is released,
I'll read every comment.
And I will care, would dog lady 3013 thanks.
And I get huge reward out of strangers validating me.
And there's nothing wrong with that to a certain point,
but I'm addicted to it.
And that kind of validation from strangers.
I write books.
The day my book comes out, I'll check the Amazon rank 30 times.
Whenever I'm on media, I immediately go on, and there's so many different metrics now
for approval or not approval.
And these are strangers.
None of them are concerned with the condition of my soul.
None of them are going to take care of me when I'm older. I'm not going to meet 99.9% of them. I don't need them for anything. They don't really need me. And yet I'm addicted to
infill reward and depression based on their view of me. Some of that is good, but I've never been
able to break the wheel of that cycle. I'm blessed with the people around me.
I kind of love me unconditionally.
At least I like the things so.
And I feel the same way about them.
But the thing that is the addiction,
and I don't know what it is.
I don't know if it's instinctual.
I want to press other man.
I want to be attracted to women.
I don't know what it is.
But it has not eased as I've gotten older. And I'm smart
enough to know how pathetic it is, but I'm not smart enough to figure out how to obey
it, how to diminish it. I care way too much about what other people think of my work and
of me.
Yeah, well, yet again, you're saying stuff that I really relate to. This is in a new condition. Say in Augustine, talked about panting after honors. And there was another writer from Wayback One, whose name
I can't remember who talked about the desire for fame being like drinking seawater. It'll
never quench your thirst. You just can't fill that hole. And so a big part of life is figuring
out what actually scratches the itch for you.
What really does it for you in a fulfilling, abiding way?
And fame can do this desire for fame, as you said, can be useful, can provoke you to do
good things.
But if it's all that's there, it's hard.
Yeah, it's, you know, older, you start to appreciate that life is fine, which is, I think,
the blessing.
I like what Nietzsche said, find the moments in your life where you felt the most reward,
the most content, and then try and figure out the attributes, the context of people in those moments
and draw a line to them and try and recreate them. And I love affirmation and reward and doing good
work and making money, but it's never enough. It's never enough. It's fun for a moment and it creates a higher
bar. I would describe my 30s and 40s as my decade of more. I want more St. Bartz. I want
more money. I want more affirmation. I want more fabulous situations with more fabulous
people. I did more. And every time I got it, it was awesome for a minute. And then I was
like, oh, no, I have a new bar. Now I have to figure out even more interesting people and
more exclusive surroundings. And Anne Rice, she wrote about vampires, they could never
actually get any sort of real satisfaction. They were always hungry. Their hunger wasn't
satiable. And the only time, and this is a little bit of virtue, say, my minute's true, the only
moments where I thought, okay, this is kind of it.
There is these random moments with my boys, where we're watching, we're living in London
hour, obsessed with Premier League football, and they'll both come into the living room
or something.
And one will just sort of naturally
flop his legs over mine. You know, like not think of anything like I love and trust this person so much
and I just feel so comfortable being close to them and you'll throw his legs on mine. And then my
dogs come in, you know, dogs, they're just such wonderful creatures and they're so affectionate
and the dogs will come lie on us and it's basically like a pile on.
And it just feels very natural.
And that feeling, that's the only time I've ever thought, okay, this is enough.
Finally the box is checked and it's something resembling indelible ink.
I can't imagine how this moment would be more.
That's the only time I've ever felt that.
And I think a lot of it is because I know it's going away.
I don't know if you get those things on Apple
where they take photos from your photo roll
and they set music to it.
And they're so rewarding but so emotional
because as humans were drawn towards scarcity
and that is sugar, salt, fat,
we couldn't find these things.
And so we're just wildly drawn to sweets and meat
and fats because our instincts
haven't cut up to institutional production.
We aspire to have a Birkenberger Ferrari
because there's only a certain number of them made.
The ultimate scarcity is kids.
Because when I see this thing and it brings up, you know, trying to do a handstand or my 12-year-old
trying to do a handstand when we were on vacation together, I'm like, he's gone. Never going to have
that kid again. He's going through puberty now and it's totally different and rolls his eyes and
isn't as fast as me and doesn't want me to show him how to do anastyle.
I mean, that shit's just gone, he's gone.
And so those moments where you're like,
okay, this is it, this is it, it's going away.
I think that's part of the reason
that I get so much satisfaction from him now.
And I throw the question back to you,
like where is that moment, that
moment for me is in the company of my boys and my dogs.
The exact same thing for me. I have an eight year old and three cats and a happy marriage
and those moments, they're incredibly powerful. And one of the life skills part excellence
and you're modeling it here is to know how and when to
tune into that, savor it and keep coming back to it in your mind because this is a mental
skill. It's not a factory setting. It's a trainable skill. And this for me is a huge part
of the power of meditation and Buddhist practice, which is it wakes you up to these things you
might otherwise never notice. And that waking up, it's a double-edged sword
because there's a sadness of knowing it's all fleeting. But the positive edge of the sword
is you get to enjoy stuff before it evaporates. So what you're talking about, everyone talks about
being in a moment, right? And our whole life, at least growing up, we're trained not to be in the
moment. We're trained to put off the moment, or at least
sacrifice the moment for future better moments. Don't go out, don't be with friends, whatever it is,
don't shrink, don't play video games, sacrifice. Do I really want to get up at 7am, get on a train,
go to work, proof a document, whatever it is, right? But we're really focused on is trying to make better future moments.
Get to the next thing, deadlines.
I'm a very deadline-driven person.
Get the book done.
The deadline's coming.
As soon as I get off this podcast, I'm going to start writing and editing, planning for
future moments.
And then you get to a point where you can maybe enjoy stuff.
And you have a tough time slowing down and being in the moment.
I mean, I do.
I have a really tough time just saying, okay,
and that is one of the wonderful things about getting older.
When I was writing my book after the happiness,
there's so much conflicting data,
but the one piece of data that cuts across cultural
and geographic boundaries is that when you have
the level of happiness on the y-axis and age on the x-axis, it's a smile.
You know, kind of zero to 25 is Star Wars beer, college football game. Most people are generally
pretty happy until like the age of 25. If you live in America and you come from a decent amount
of privilege or you're smart and you have your act together, childhood and young adulthood,
it's just, it's fun. 25 to 45, or what I call the shit gets real years.
You find out the distinct of what your parents
or your high school teacher who took an interest
in you told you, you probably aren't gonna be Senator,
I have a fragrance named after you.
And you face tragedy for the first time.
Someone you know and love and who loves you immensely
gets sick and dies.
I mean, it's just like,
shit, you're just not ready for,
you can never be ready for.
And then you find out that work is hard.
You have some economic stress.
You find out that kids are stressful.
You know, it's not all a hallmark channel thing.
You find out that relationships are really hard.
Maybe you have a divorce.
I mean, it's almost impossible not to have serious,
serious stress and disappointment
between the pressures of work, managing relationship.
Jesus, kids.
Oh my God, no one tells you how awful babies are, right?
They all pretend that it's all just someone big,
lifetime channel thing.
No, it's not
it's ridiculously hard. And then what's weird is it rebounds dramatically. And your kids grow
up, they become less awful. You hopefully have some economic security, you have some friends and
relationships. But what you have is typically people start getting better at being in the moment.
I remember going out, I used to go to the same deli every Sunday night at a deli called
Juner's Deli in the valley and my mom would order the same thing.
She'd order kippers, eggs, and onions and it would come with a salad, like a little side
salad, nothing big.
And she'd reach across the table and hold my hand and go,
look how beautiful this is.
And want a marvel at her kipper's eggs and onions.
Like it was some work of art.
And I remember thinking,
what the fuck is she talking about?
I just didn't get it.
And now you find yourself in the same moment.
I went into Hyde Park a few weeks ago in London and it was one of the rare sunny days and
they have this rose garden there.
And I made my boy stop and I'm like, oh my God, look at these rose.
You just start finding pleasure in things you never would have thought of before.
You just never would have appreciated.
I mean, I'm in Miami Beach and I'm like, I'm walking.
I'm like, I went out and I took my shoes off.
I'm like, I just can't get over the sand.
I never thought that way when I was a young woman.
So there's this wonderful thing
and the faster you can get there, the better.
And that is finding joy and reward and wonder
in stupid little things, or not even stupid, little things.
And I'm really trying to lean into that.
I'm trying to become my mom and marvel
at the salad people bring me.
And it's really wonderful,
as you get older, it gets easier.
You cannot explain this to young people.
I'm like, I don't get it.
I don't, and it looks like a salad to me,
but that is really rewarding.
And you see it across these studies, the cohort that should be the least happy old people because they're
the least healthy are the happiest.
They're the happiest because they have managed to slow down and admire the salad.
A dying Warren Zeevon said enjoy every sandwich.
Hey, man, you've been very patient with me peppering you with personal questions.
If you're okay, I'd love to put you in prof G mode and get more advice about certain
navigating the work world while maintaining some degree of sanity.
There is an expression, bring your whole self to work.
Yay or nay, good idea or bad one.
Bring a ton of grit and commitment, and when you're young, go all in on work, don't have a side hustle.
Work is about the last 10% trying to be their five or 10 minutes earlier than anyone,
really trying to act like an owner.
Think, okay, what if I own 10% of this company?
What would my decisions be?
My first job was at Morgan Stanley, right out of UCLA.
And I didn't deserve the job, but I rode crew in college and the guy who ran fixed income said,
Orzman get an automatic hire because they're willing to kill themselves.
And like from day one, I knew I wasn't as well educated,
not because UCLA is not a great school,
but I basically smoked a shit ton of pot and watch plan of the apes for five years.
And they were more skilled in me, they were better educated.
And I thought, okay, I know what I'm gonna do.
Every Tuesday morning, I know what I'm going to do.
Every Tuesday morning, I'm going to go into work and I'm going to stay until Wednesday
at 6 p.m.
I'm going to work the night through.
I have no dogs at home, I have no spouse, I was living with my mother, I was mentally
strong, physically fit, and I'm like, I'm going to send a signal.
I'm going to work 36 hours straight every week. And I kind of established a reputation as that crazy guy from UCLA who would come in Tuesday
morning and leave Wednesday night.
And it came at no cost to me because I was able to do that at the age of 23.
That's just not hard.
And the thing is the majority of people can do it.
They've just never tried it.
So they think it's impossible.
No, it's not.
It is amazing how strong you are when you're young.
And you don't realize how strong you were to your older and you're not that strong anymore.
But I think professional success is about for an extended period of time really going all in
and working really hard and showing everyone around you. You can sort of control how talented you are
through learning and going to graduate school. But for most part the one thing in your control is how hard you work and how much you commit to things
So the first is bring your whole self in terms of grit and energy
Assuming you're ambitious some people are like no, I want balance in my life. I get it
I think there's very little balance if you want to be economically successful
And I'm not saying that's the right way, but it's my way and the majority of balance if you want to be economically successful.
And I'm not saying that's the right way, but it's my way and the majority of people I know want to be influential.
In terms of politics, in terms of what it says about you, don't bring your whole self to work.
And what I mean by that is, we have trained young people to believe that we give a shit with their political views are at work.
And if they voice concerns or things that offend them,
they'll be called leaders and people will come up to them
and say, thank you for voicing that.
And then they'll be memo to self, fire this person slowly
but surely over the next three years
because they are paying to work with.
And that's not a nice thing to say, it's too bad.
And if you face injustice and work
or you see an opportunity to help people from underrepresented
communities by all means go at it, but we've trained a younger generation of people to bring
their full self, including their thoughts on the world, their thoughts on politics to work.
And that is not what work is about in my view.
Work is about an organization that creates economic value.
It should be a good citizen in the community, but I look at work as a platform to develop economic security for you and your family. And you can have friends there, you can make
a difference from a social standpoint, but young people are bringing their emotions, their political
views, their sensibilities around what offends them. And I find that generally speaking,
them. And I find that generally speaking, that's not going to pay off for you. If you get laid off,
realize it might be a little bit about you. Okay, let's be honest, they laid off 10% of the work for us. You were in that 10% with for whatever reason, you were unlucky in the wrong place the
wrong time, or they just decided you weren't very good, but it's mostly about things beyond your
control and mourn for a little bit and then forgive yourself and move on and realize it's mostly about things beyond your control and mourn for a little bit
and then forgive yourself and move on
and realize it wasn't about you.
I've been fired before, I think most people get fired.
Everyone's had disappointment and been fired.
And the key to success is your ability to mourn and move on.
It's not an evaluation on you
or your worth as a person or your character.
It's usually about the situation that you're in for whatever reason.
One of the things I say to key to success is your perseverance and your resilience.
Give yourself a few days, maybe in a couple of weeks to feel bad about yourself or be angry
or whatever.
And then immediately put together that list, I'm going to hit LinkedIn, I'm going to call
my friends, get out there, get up, dust up, and do whatever you need to do, whatever you have to do,
to essentially look in the mirror physically and metaphorically and say, I am the answer
to affirms problems.
I'm going to add a shit ton of value to this company before you go into an interview and
prepare, but make sure you understand and believe that.
I can make someone else's life wonderful. Right? Think
of all the wonderful things about you that you can bring to a relationship. Are you strong?
Are you affectionate? Are you someone who can make someone laugh when they're down?
Can you partner with someone really well? Are you handy? Do you give great advice? You
can make someone else's life wonderful. But
don't think that disappointment is just like the end game indictment on you, especially
at work. So much of the shit is out of your control. Somebody you may not even meet has figured
out that, oh, we should lay off 10% of anyone with this title. We no longer need a social
media group.
So yeah, bring your full self in terms of grit and commitment, but don't bring your full
self.
This isn't a value.
And for God's sakes, don't think that if something bad happens to you at work, it's
an assessment of your full self.
No, it's not.
No, it's not.
Coming up Scott talks about his thoughts on side hustles, work-life balance, and whether remote work will stick around post-COVID, why being in the office is important for younger
workers if they want to get ahead, especially younger men.
And what is at the heart of his willingness to go out on a limb and risk blowback when
he gets something wrong? Where's the line between the grit that you're calling for and hustle culture and you know,
Gary Vaynerchuk calling for us to crush it or Elon Musk saying we have to be extremely
hard core.
Where's the line there or is there a line?
So I don't like hustle porn, especially the notion that quit your job and move to Seattle
and offer to get coffee for Jeff Bezos.
I'm like, well, okay, boss, if you're a single mother, you can't quit and go get.
I mean, some of it is so unrealistic.
And people have commitments, people have kids, people have issues around health or taking
care of parents.
So I also hate the idea of side hustles.
I think if you want to be economically secure,
take every ounce of energy professionally,
figure out the right arrow, and put wood behind that arrow.
If you have a side hustle,
it means your main hustle isn't working out,
and as quickly as possible,
you should get out of that main hustle,
and make the side hustle your main hustle.
And there's probably exceptions to that,
but successful people I know are just kind of all in
on the one,
the one thing.
And in my 20s and 30s, I did very little the work.
And it came at a cost.
I lost my hair, my first marriage ended in divorce.
And to be blown, it was worth it.
And my economic security now and my sacrifice then, my lack of balance in my 20s and 30s, means
I have an extraordinary amount of balance now.
And I'm hugely grateful for it.
And one of the things I think is a bit of a myth is balance is a young person if you're
professionally ambitious.
I just think that's sort of ridiculous.
Everybody knows of someone who is great at what they do, makes a lot of money, has good
relationships with their parents, has a good relationship with their spouse, donates time at the ASPCA
and has a food blog.
Assume you are not that person.
And the time to go all in, if you are ambitious, on your career, is when you're young.
Because things like kids and spouses and aging parents will demand time as you get older.
You also just aren't as physically capable.
So that's the time I think to really go all in.
But where you don't want to be is in your 40s with kids and economically strained because
it'll really impact relationships.
It'll be really hard or feel like, oh God, I'm just getting going professionally.
I don't get any time to spend with my kids.
I don't get any time to enjoy raising kids with a partner that I care about.
I don't get any time to do interesting things.
So I think 20s and 30s is all about pretty much going all in and establishing that relevance.
And I get a lot of pushback from your under people and we have a new generation of kids
who value balance more.
That's fine.
You need to adjust your expectations
in your lifestyle then.
That's fine.
Move to a lower cost city, you know,
work to live, not live to work.
That's one way.
If you're ambitious and almost every young person
when you really start asking them questions
around what their expectations are economically,
where they wanna live, how many kids they want to have.
It is really competitive out there.
And so I don't like this idea of side gigs.
I think it's unrealistic to tell people to quit their job and move across the country.
But yeah, in your 20s and 30s, it's about work.
Remote work.
Thumbs up or down.
It's situational.
It's probably the most enduring feature of COVID.
We're just not going back to the before times. That is, show me a guy who's demanding everyone
or tried to demand six months ago that everyone would turn to office.
I'll show you a guy that has someone who takes care of his kids, is wealthy enough to
live close to work.
What's successful in the before times, they just assume, oh, that's how we're going to work moving forward.
So I think it's an enormous unlock and opportunity.
And I'd like to think it'll be an informal or formal classification
of a new type of worker.
And that is the care worker.
Someone who's taking care of parents,
someone who's taking care of kids, someone who's maybe managing their own health
or mental wellness, someone who lives an hour and a half away from work.
And I think that corporations should make an accommodation to try and ensure a certain
amount of people in their organization qualified to be, quote unquote, care workers.
You make special accommodations for them.
I think that's an enormous unlock and I think it'll add a lot of benefit to our society.
You're a single mom, you're raising two kids, can we establish this person as a care worker
and we make additional accommodations and try and invest in making sure their career has
trajectory, a similar trajectory, even if they're only able to get into the office two or three
days away.
Having said that, I think remote work is a real negative for young people.
I think when you're establishing relationships,
mentors, colleagues,
a third of relationships begin at work.
I mean, we don't like to talk about it
because there's been some very well-publicized instances
of abuse as a power,
but one in three relationships started at work.
It's where you meet people.
Where do you meet friends?
When you're not bumping off people in person
and there's a certain loss or creativity.
The office is a feature, not a bug for a young person.
Who it's especially important for is young men.
Young men need guardrails.
They're prefrontal cortex, literally doesn't evolve or mature
as quickly as young women.
I needed my boss at the age of 22 to
pull me into room and go, don't be a fucking idiot, don't say things like that. I needed
the discipline of having to get to 515 figure out Avenue in downtown LA or to 1251 Avenue
in America's by 8 a.m. I needed that discipline. It stopped me from smoking pot and drinking
every night. I needed mentors.
I needed to learn how to read a room.
And I wasn't going to get that over Zoom.
And I think young men especially need that.
So in terms of growing up, getting professional skills,
finding friends and potential romantic partners,
the office is a feature, not a bug.
So what I tell young people is, find a job that offers you an opportunity
to go be around a lot of people.
All studies lean to the same place.
Your happiness is a function
of the number of deep and meaningful relationships you have.
An economics and professional success,
facilitate relationships
and make those relationships easier
and give me more time to really enjoy those relationships.
But the place you really establish a ton of relationships
at a young age is this weird thing called an office.
So for God's sake, when you interview with a company,
when your question should be, do you have an office?
Because and also just economically, and this is situational.
If you decide you want to snowboard the rest of your life, you don't need that much money. Fine, find a remote work job. But if your
job can be moved to Boulder, be clear, it can be moved to Bangalore. You are going to make less money.
If you want to remote work job, you are going to make less money, and you're going to have less
professional trajectory. And you know what, it might be worth it for you. But I think the majority
of the people who probably listen to your podcast or that we know who are young
want
to get better what they do. They want it great income trajectory. And I would say that actually being in the office is a feature not about
you made a reference saying stupid shit when you were younger. And it just reminded me of one of the many things that I like about you is that
it when you were younger. And it just reminded me of one of the many things that I like about you is that you try stuff. You will try a joke that may be on the bubble in terms of
appropriateness. You will make predictions pretty fearlessly. And you get, you know, sometimes
you get stuff wrong and you get criticized. And one of the things I see in your public
utterances over and over is the willingness to say, yeah, I made a mistake.
And that seems like an important thing to model.
That's generous of you.
You know, I say with my media, my goal is to provoke a conversation not to be right.
I have a newsletter called No Mercy No Malice.
I got 350,000 subscribers.
I wrote a post last weekend called More Babies.
I'm fascinated by the fact that 50% of Western nations are about to go into population decline.
And since I was a kid, I'm a youth.
The standard narrative was population was a bad thing.
And we were going to have the world was going to collapse
under population explosion and more emissions,
more climate change, not enough food to go around.
The population bomb was coming.
The majority of the data I've seen
is it's in fact the exact opposite.
And we're not only gonna have population decline,
we're gonna have population degradation.
And that is by the turn of the century with current trends,
we're gonna have six times as many people
over the age of 90, it's the fastest growing cohort.
And we're gonna have as many kids under the age of five.
So we're gonna literally gonna end up with nursery schools,
they're gonna be like zoos or the bunch of seniors
peering inside looking at this creature they don't see
in the wild.
The majority of Nobel prizes, the majority of amazing
companies we talk about have one thing in common.
The companies were all started by people in their 20s.
Look at great art, look at great rock and roll.
The young brain is more risk aggressive and more creative.
And if we end up with a nation where we have one worker
for every retired person,
our economy's going into structural decline.
Name a Western economy that's experienced population decline,
Japan, Italy.
I'll show you a place that's gone into a permanent recession
and doesn't have the money to make the transition
to climate change.
So, I believe that we have to figure out a way
to provide more economic security,
whether it's childcare, whether it's lower cost schooling,
help around housing costs for young people
to encourage more people to have children.
And anyways, I wrote this out.
I thought it was very data-driven.
Oh my god, Dan, the blowback I received. And I felt a little bit attacked. And you're
saying women are just baby machines. Did you produce the handmaid's tail? Let's start
referring to you as a climatarist. And you want more young people to support your mythology
of cap. But I mean, just people came after me. And I didn't mind it as much as I would have minded it
because I thought we're catalyzing a conversation.
That's what we're here for.
It's got such a pleasure to meet you after all this time
listening to you.
Really appreciate you taking the time to do this.
Dan, thanks.
You have a face for TV and a voice for podcasting.
You can't bring it all.
I appreciate that. There you go. Thanks for youring. You can't bring it all. I appreciate that.
There you go.
Thanks for your time, Dan.
Congrats on your success.
Appreciate it right back at you.
Thanks again to Scott Galloway.
It was cool to meet him.
Thank you as well to everybody who worked so hard on this show.
10% happier is produced by Gabrielle Zuckerman,
DJ Kashmir, Justine Davy Lauren Smith and Tara Anderson.
Our supervising producer is Marissa Schneiderman and Kimy Lauren Smith, and Tara Anderson. Our supervising producer
is Marissa Schneiderman, and Kimmy Regler is our managing producer. We get our scoring
in mixing by Peter Bonnaventure over at Ultraviolet Audio and Nick Thorburn of the band Islands
delivered our theme. We'll see you all on Wednesday for the second installment of our
work-life series. We're going to talk about Imposter syndrome, which I think more accurately is called the imposter phenomenon.
And I interviewed this expert jointly with my wife, Dr. Bianca Harris, who has a pretty
bad case of imposter phenomenon.
So you'll hear that on Wednesday. Hey, hey, prime members.
You can listen to 10% happier early and ad-free on Amazon Music.
Download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and add free with Wondery
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