Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 99: Gretchen Rubin, 'The Four Tendencies'
Episode Date: September 13, 2017In her new book, "The Four Tendencies," best-selling author and speaker Gretchen Rubin breaks down what she denotes as four different personality profiles -- Upholder, Questioner, Obligor and... Rebel. Rubin, who is also the host of the popular podcast, "Happier with Gretchen Rubin," and calls herself an "Upholder," says "The Four Tendencies" help explain how we form or break habits, how we respond to "inner" expectations of ourselves, such as keeping a New Year's resolution, and how we meet "outer" expectations from others, such as making a work deadline. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey y'all, it's your girl, Kiki Palmer.
I'm an actress, singer, and entrepreneur.
I'm a new podcast, baby, this is Kiki Palmer.
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We're breaking with format slightly this time because our guest is not here to talk
primarily about meditation. Her name is Gretchen Rubin. You may know her from her mega best-selling
book, The Happiness Project, after that she wrote a book called Better Than Before. A couple
things about Gretchen. One, she's just awesome and has been so helpful to me almost irrationally.
So way before my book came out, she gave me all this advice and was just really, really, really,
really helpful. And she, then when I was starting this podcast, I basically imitate her.
She wrote a book, I wrote a book, then she started a podcast, so I started a podcast,
and when I was trying to figure out how to do this thing, she actually came on as our first
guest, which actually can go back and listen to a few scroll through the feed on the podcast.
And at the time what we talked about was her then current book called Better Than Before,
which was all about how we make and break habits, which is just so central to our happiness
and our health.
And one of the things that she came up within that book was this framework that she called
the four tendencies that kind of breaks down how
different people respond to expectations, inner expectations, and outer expectations.
Obviously, that's a huge component of how we make or break habits. So why this is relevant
in germane when it comes to meditation is because that is a habit that a lot of people struggle
to establish. In fact, I'm writing a whole book about how
to overcome the major obstacles to establishing a meditation habit, which comes out in New
Years, by the way. But anyway, we're here to talk about Gretchen because she's got a new
book now that's dedicated entirely to these four tendencies and they're fascinating to
be able to hear sort of where do you fit within these tendencies and how can you use this understanding
of your own sort of tendencies when it comes to expectations so that you can set up a
framework that allows you to do the things you need to do to take care of yourself.
Really fascinating stuff and she's as you're going to hear just a lot of fun.
So here she is, Gretchen Rubin.
From ABC, this is the 10% happier podcast.
Dan Harris.
Welcome, congratulations on the new book. Oh, thank you.
It's sort of cool to have you back here
since you were the first ever guest.
I know. I feel very special.
I was like the inaugural, inaugural guest appearance.
Experimental, very patient, doing it in my living room
with cats and you don't even like cats.
Well, I'm allergic to cats, I like them.
Cats sense if you're allergic and they come
bounding toward you and your mouth against you.
Yes, no, but it was fun.
I can't remember, do we make you take clarin
or something like that?
No, I've not that bad.
If I don't pet them, I'm okay.
Gotcha, gotcha.
Or if you just divert your gaze.
Yeah, yes.
But that was fun.
It was fun, it was fun.
So the four tendencies, new book.
Yes.
Give me the load, I actually have to say,
because I've been so tied up in writing my next book,
I've read only parts of this new book.
I really like it.
And I really like, listening to the writing of this new book. I really like it. And I really like it.
This is a bit of writing in this one that I just really enjoy. I've always enjoyed your writing, but this one there's a real confidence, there's a real light spirit to it, even though you're
talking about big ideas. Oh, well that's nice to hear because I really did work hard to make it
like fun and accessible because I'm really just laying out of framework and that can get pretty dry
and abstract.
So I really tried to pump it up with like lots of examples
from real life or you know, funny anecdotes about
how it would have come up in my own life
and try to make it more lively
so that people could really imagine these four tendencies
out in the world, not just sort of,
you know, I started my career as a lawyer
and I always have to be aware of when that
lawyerly training comes creeping back into my writing.
I have to fight it off.
Well, I think you did so successfully.
And this one, just by way of background,
this emerged from your last book better than before,
and which was about habit formation.
Am I saying that correctly, all of that?
Yeah, absolutely right.
So in better than before, I identified the 21 strategies
that we can use to make or break our habits.
And as I was identifying the 21 strategies, I was very struck by certain patterns that I saw, which was like,
some strategies seem to work really well for some people, but then really didn't work for other people.
Well, why or why not? Or why were certain people facing certain kinds of frustrations?
There was a big group of people who would say something like, well, I can always make time for other But I can't make time for myself and that's why I can't keep my habit and I was like that's interesting because I don't I don't feel that
Problem that's not a frustration that I face so what do all these people have in common or just hearing how people approached it
I really started to sense these big patterns and that's what turned in the four tendencies
But once my book better than before came out it was was day-loved with people who wanted to know
really like sophisticated advanced questions
about the four tendencies.
So I'm a doctor, I wanna use it with my patients,
or I'm trying to use it in couples counseling,
or yeah, and asking me for more information.
And so I really just decided I needed to think it through
all the different aspects of the
tendencies and write a whole book that would be sort of the guide to how to think about
them.
We're going to walk through the tendencies systematically.
But do you, is your vision that this will be something that will be adapted in a kind
of a grand scale in doctor's offices, et cetera, et cetera?
Well, that's my, you know, that's my hope, of course.
Because I really do feel like one of the things that's striking about the Four Tennis Teases,
once I say this framework, it's not subtle.
It's really obvious.
You will see it around you everywhere.
You will see it in yourself and other people.
And it really does offer you clues
about how to work with other people more effectively.
And so, like, there's starting to be research done in the healthcare field to try to validate
this or to see how it works in practice.
Different people are using it in different ways to see if they can change the way they
set up certain programs in order to increase people's adherence to medication or how much
they'll stick to a program.
And so, yeah, I mean, if nothing but to help people take their medication, that would save
billions of dollars and thousands of lives.
So, you know, I hope that people do find it useful.
You make a kind of a, and I apologize if I'm misremembering that, but because it was a
bit a few weeks since I looked at your book when I was out at the beach.
I'm basically asking, you make a kind of audacious claim
that you feel like almost that you stumbled upon
a law of nature.
It feels that way.
It does feel that way.
Or maybe it's a muggle sorting hat.
I don't divide people into four houses,
but it really feels like when I finally came up,
when I saw the pattern and how it
fits together, it has sort of the elegance of nature.
Everything is included, nothing's left out, nothing's left hanging, but it counts for
a lot.
It's a very narrow framework, but it seems to really be durable, you know, the more I,
because I think about it constantly, like,
well, what about this and what about that?
And somebody could argue this.
And it feels like it's holding up to that.
That's exciting.
It is exciting.
It is exciting.
So let's walk through it,
because I think this is the good stuff
that people are gonna hear.
What are you?
Yeah, we want to know, where do you fit in the dynancy.
So you usually start with a blind,
no, no, a holder, because you are an upholder.
I am an upholder.
Yes, okay.
So the four tendencies are upholder,
questioner, a bliger, and rebel.
And it has to do with how you respond to expectations,
which sounds very dry,
but it ends up being very, very juicy to think about.
So we all face outer expectations like a work deadline or
requests from a friend.
And then we all face inner expectations, which is our own
desire to start meditating, our own desire to keep
a New Year's resolution.
So a poll does readily meet outer and inner expectations.
They meet the work deadline, they keep the New Year's
resolution without much fuss.
They want to know what other people expect from them, but their expectations for themselves
are just as important.
Then questioners, questioners, question all expectations.
They'll do something if it meets their inner standards.
So they meet inner expectations.
If something feels like something's arbitrary or unjustified or irrational, they won't do
it.
They will reject it.
So if something meets their standard, they will meet that expectation.
If they reject it as unjustified, they won't.
Then a blighters, a blighters readily meet
outer expectations, but they struggle to meet
inner expectations.
So I got my glimpse into this when a friend said to me,
because I am kind of this happiness bully that's always
asking people how they could be happier.
My friend was like, well, I know I would be happier if I went running.
And when I was in high school, I was on the track team and I never missed track practice.
So why can't I go running now?
Well, why not?
I would say now having figured this out, she's an obliter.
When she had a team and a coach waiting for her expecting her, she had no trouble showing
up.
But when she's just trying to go on her own, she struggles.
And then finally, Rebels.
Rebels resist all expectation, outer and inner alike. They want to do what they
want to do in their own way, in their own time. And if you ask or tell them to do something,
they're very likely to resist. Typically, they don't even want to tell themselves what
to do. Like, typically, they wouldn't sign up for a 10 a.m. woodworking class. Because they're
like, I don't know what I'm going to want to do on Saturday. I don't know what I'm
going to want to do in the morning. I don't want to, like, I don't know what I'm gonna wanna do on Saturday, I don't know what I'm gonna wanna do in the morning,
I don't wanna, like, why would I wanna clog up my calendar?
You know, I just wanna feel free
and do what I feel like doing.
And rebels and we'll get into this day off
and get frustrated at themselves.
Well, everybody gets frustrated.
A lot of us get frustrated with ourselves in different ways.
I think it's a particular issue for rebels
because a lot of things that work for the other tendencies
don't work for rebels.
So if you know you're a rebel,
you know someone else is a rebel, it's kind of points you in a direction that might be very
different from something that you would try with somebody from the other tendencies. Their perspective
is quite different. So let's go through these from the beginning. Upholder. What are the
characteristics of an upholder? How does habit formation or breaking bad habits work
in your life?
Is it all easy for you if you're an upholder?
Well, you know, it's funny.
It is easier.
It is easier for me.
And I remember Dan, you have been trying to lead me
to the path of meditation for a long time.
You're the one of the people that got me to really try it.
And I said to you, I was meditating
and I got nothing out of it.
And it was actually hard for me to stop meditating
because it's like once I started to have it,
I couldn't stop.
And you were like, that's funny because that's not
usually the problem.
People don't usually find it easy to form
the habit of meditation, but then not.
You're literally the only person I've ever heard this from.
Right, so I know, one day we will try again.
You and I.
No, no, no, no.
I, with the only one bully in this room.
Yes, I know.
You're the lightest touch of anybody, which is probably why I was willing to try it again.
I have a light touch, but I want to just say in defense of you and you're bullying actually,
it's really fun.
Okay.
And actually, one of the things I want to do at the end of this is let you bully me on
a brief score.
Oh, good.
Okay.
Well, I look forward to that.
So, yeah, for all of us, it's easier to form habits.
It's easier to meet expectations.
And like, what the happiness project people would say to me,
oh, how did you get yourself to do all that stuff
that made you happier?
And I said, well, I knew it would make me happier,
so I just decided to do it.
And I would say, like, but how did you get yourself to do it?
And I was like, I don't really understand what your issue is.
Now I understand that I'm in a pull, or, by the way,
a pull is a very small tendency.
Rebel is the smallest tendency.
A folder is only slightly larger.
These are very, these are extreme personality types,
pretty rare.
The biggest one is a blighter.
That's, you either are in a blighter,
you have many blighters in your life,
a lot of a blighters,
and also lots of questioners.
So most people are questioners or blighters.
So one of the things I learned about in a folder
is like things do come more easily for me,
like in habit formation, and they do for other people.
A folder's 10 to be sort of self-starters.
They don't need a lot of supervision.
They don't usually need a lot of accountability,
but they can also seem judgmental
because they don't understand why other people are struggling
with things that are coming easy to them.
They can seem rigid because they really want to stick to,
they want to meet out in interact expectations
and so they can sometimes like, you know,
like my sister made fun of me because I was visiting
her in Los Angeles and I stayed on East Coast time.
So I just went to bed every night at seven.
She's like, you're kind of a kill to life.
And I was like, well, yeah, but for me it made sense
and was, you know, made perfect sense.
She did that thing.
She thought that was ludicrous, but.
I think it's ludicrous to just for the work.
Okay, but I was like,
but why would I like kind of make myself sick staying up late
for like three nights and just when I'm back on West,
what, just to West Coast time,
did I have to go back to the East Coast?
I know, I know.
You know, I had all these,
it's just, if you people have different perspectives,
it's not that one of us is right and one of us is wrong,
but it's just like, we have to review it.
So that's very upholding.
Anyway, there is sort of a...
That's such a crazy story.
I'm just, I mean, I see the logic.
Okay, I see the logic.
I want your listeners to write you and say,
are they on team Danielisoth or team Gretchen?
I'm sure.
It was three nights.
I'm sure I have lots of crazy listeners
who will be on your team.
No, I mean, I get it.
Your logic actually is solid,
but it's still a bit of an unusual thing to do.
Okay, we see this is a thing.
To me, it seemed perfectly logical.
I was just like, you're crazy.
But yeah, okay.
So that's a folder.
There you go, it's from a folder.
Because they do seem that's sort of like extreme like that to other people
And then you know, I didn't question her hold on hold on one second. Let me just stay on a folder. Okay, because I think I
Maybe in a folder. Do you think so maybe because I've been able to just based on my own inner expectations
Do some crazy habit formation stuff like I meditate two hours a day. I did two years ago
I was gonna do that and I do it. I
Exercise six days a week and actually recently I was at a birthday party for guy
You may have heard of this name Strauss Zelnik. He's a a six-year-old guy
He's super successful and incredibly fit and he's actually has a book coming out next year about how to stay fit into your
later years. And I was just really inspired by how fit he is and how happy he
is and how great, you know, how close his friends were at age 60. And I just told myself,
all right, I'm going to my game. I need to do more exercise, not crazy amounts, but just
like instead of just doing 30 minutes of cardio, I'm going to need to really get back
to going to a spin class or running the Central Park Loop or you're working with my trainer in a harder way.
And I've just done it.
However, however, I know, and you and I have discussed this before right here on this show,
that I know I need to quit sugar.
And I've done it off and on.
And in fact, I'm an off sugar right now, but haven't been able to make that stick.
So I don't know.
Food is a little tricky.
I feel like you can't sort of always judge by food
because there's a lot of things going on
with eating habits that are complicated.
Well, do you feel like when you're changing that habit,
is it because you're like, I understand now why?
I would do that.
I've been convinced by the reasoning of it
and why this is the efficient way to do it,
or is it more like, this is just what I want to do for myself. You know and maybe that I'm a questioner in that sense
because for example with sugar as you know I've quit many times about eight days ago I texted my
wife after a night where we had had a bunch of sugar and I was feeling awful. Yeah. And I said when
am I going to admit that I'm poisoning myself? Which you said you just did.
Let's quit together.
And actually the fact that we're doing it together,
I actually have some hope that this will be able to stick.
And I always talk about you.
I say, as Gretchen says, that you just decided one day,
I'm a person who doesn't need sugar,
you can make me a birthday cake, but I won't eat it. And that has had such a powerful resonance for me.
And I know that I'm so addictive to me.
You said this thing about how when you stopped eating sugar,
it ended this conversation that was so boring.
Right, and I'm having that conversation all the time.
Like, well, maybe I'll have it after dinner tonight.
I wonder if I'm gonna feel like more of this is so boring.
I was tiring. It's really tiring. Oh feel like it's so boring. Yeah, it's so boring.
It's really tiring.
Oh, and it's sort of the half self-control, like, ugh.
Yes.
You know, or like my favorite thing.
Some people can do moderation.
Oh, no, no.
Yes, absolutely.
And I talked about that in better than before.
Some people can do moderation.
But like my favorite example was I sat in a meeting
for two and a half hours with a plate of cookies
in the middle, and I didn't eat it a cookie the whole time,
and then on my way out the door, I ate three cookies.
Because it's like, it finally just run,
the clock had run out.
You know, and the whole time,
it had just been draining myself control.
You know, now it's just like,
oh, you can put a, this freshly baked
to the house cookies are right next to me,
and I just want to eat them.
And I think where I'm at now with,
well, if somebody put freshly baked cookies in front of me,
I would, I would be feeling a lot of, because I have a pronounced addictive tendency,
I'd be feeling a lot, but I think now I'm starting to see that if I ate them, I would be so miserable.
Yes.
And I, I just had to have my face shoved into the poop so many times, like a dog, you know,
who poop's in the rug and has to be taught over and over and over again.
And I, I wonder whether maybe I'm now at the point where like, okay, I get it now.
But see, this is a great example, even like taking your specific example out of it of like why
knowing your tendency can be helpful to you if you're trying to make a change. Because let's say
you're trying to quit sugar. If you know that you're a questioner, I would say go deep into
knowledge, read all the books, get the information, really get clarity on why this is what you want.
This is the thing that's going to work you. This is why it's justified. This is the research that's going to back it up.
This is why it's going to be customized for you. You're going to tweak it so it's just right for you.
This is, you really understand why you're doing something.
If you're an obligator, I would say go deep into outer accountability. That's what works for obligers.
Think about, let's do it together.
Think about your need to create a sugar-free environment
for your son.
Think about, I need to set a good example
for the people who work for me.
Think about, I need to be healthy into my older years.
And if I quit now, I know that, you know, as a 60, 70,
80 year old, I'm gonna have much better health.
And so the people who rely on me
are gonna have me for the long term. There's a million ways to build an outer accountability.
That's what a blighters need.
Rebel, what do you want?
What do you choose?
You wanna be free.
What kind of person do you wanna be?
So then I would say, say things to yourself like,
I'm not addicted to sugar.
They can't fool me with their big marketing campaigns
and their crinkly packages.
They can't addict me with their chemicals
and their bad sugar.
I'm free.
I can do whatever I want and I choose
to be a healthy, energetic person.
These are different, like they're all right.
These are all way approaches.
But when you know your tendency,
you can kind of go deep into the values of your tendency
and you can sort of push the buttons
that are gonna be probably most likely to resonate with you.
And if you're trying to help someone else, if I'm your doctor and you're saying to me,
doctor, I really want to do this.
If I knew your tendency, then I could start talking to you in a way that would probably
be the most likely.
If you're a rebel, I shouldn't tell you to join an accountability group.
If you're in a blighter, I shouldn't hand you a giant stack of studies.
You know, and if you're in a polter, I should just feel like, hey, let's just sit down
and talk about why the time is right for you to do this.
And you'd be like, okay.
This is why I think I'm probably in a folder
with shades of questioner and a blider in there,
which is what I like about your tendencies, actually,
because they start to have overlaps in the Venn diagram.
I did, did you take the quiz?
There is a quiz at happiercast.com slash quiz.
You can take a quiz.
Say that you are early in.
It's happiercast.com slash quiz.
I'm coming up on like a million people having taken this quiz.
And it's in the book too.
It's in the four tenancies.
How do you feel about New Year's resolutions?
I think they're arbitrary and stupid.
Okay, that's questioner right there.
Bing, bing, bing, bing, bing.
Yeah.
That is, that's a questioner answer.
I think you're a questioner.
Okay. I think you're a questioner. Okay.
I think you're a questioner who has like this,
the minute when you see that something makes sense
for you, you're able to execute.
That's a questioner.
Okay.
All right.
I'll buy that.
It makes sense to have a journalist.
Whenever somebody says the word arbitrary,
that's like, you know, all the bells go off.
Yeah.
Okay, so is that the next bucket we're diving into?
Yeah, questioner.
Okay.
So the value of questioners is that questioners are very focused on reasons and justifications.
So like if you have a questioner in your life or at work or something, they're the ones that are like, why are we doing this?
Is this a big waste of time? Is there a better way to do this?
Why are you know, the fact that we've always done something a certain way or because you're telling me to do it isn't convincing.
And so they really keep everybody on track to spend their time, their energy, their money most efficiently because they're the ones to do it isn't convincing. And so they really keep everybody on track
to spend their time, their energy,
their money most efficiently,
because they're the ones that are gonna protest.
On the other hand,
questioners sometimes drain and overwhelm
other people with their questions.
They ask a lot of questions,
and others may be like,
we've talked about this so long,
we don't need to talk about any more, you're a drag.
Sometimes they can seem like insubordinate or not team players,
or like if you're a question or child questioning a teacher, you could seem disrespectful.
If you're saying like, well, why should I memorize the multiplication tables? I can just
look on my phone or on a calculator and look it up. Like this makes no sense. And the
teachers like, because I say so, because all fourth graders have to learn their multiplication
tables, well, that question or child is like not convinced by that.
They need a robust explanation.
They could sometimes have analysis paralysis,
which is when they want perfect information
before they make a decision.
And so they just stall out because they're
getting more and more and more information.
That can also drain them and drain the people around them.
I mean, I'm married to a questioner,
so I'm very aware of the pros and cons
of being around questioners.
And they're great, because they're like,
why would we do this?
It doesn't make sense.
So they save you a lot of time and effort.
But they can, it can be tiring to be around somebody
who's just, like my husband will not do something
if he doesn't know why.
And like, I'm just like, just do it
because I tell you to.
It's like, no, he needs to know why so fair enough. I've learned
But one of the good things about knowing the tendencies is like he's like this all the time
It's not about me in our relationship
He's like this with everybody and there's a lot of people who are just like him
So I don't have to feel I can feel like it's a drag
But I don't have to take it personally right because it's just his nature actually this quit something quite Buddhist in that
actually that we have, that, that
to learn to take stuff about ourselves and others less personally.
Yes.
No, I think the fourth time is these really helps with that because you're like, it's not
a reflection on the way you think about me.
It's just the way you approach the world.
Right.
And that's, that's fine.
And a lot of times, it's not that there's a right way and a wrong way.
It's just that people are coming from different places.
But I mean, I think you're probably right
to know my questioner, but I do have a tendency
on some levels to actually kind of just go along sometimes.
So I don't know how that fits.
Well, maybe because it's more efficient to do that.
It tends to be when I'm overloaded
or when I just don't feel like thinking
hard about something, I'll rush and just say yes to something.
Well, this is the thing that a lot of questioners complain about.
It's exhausting to be a questioner.
It's really tiring.
And in fact, I've talked to people who like will have questioner, like their questioner,
they want a questioner partner in a business or they're married to a questioner because
they're like, it's so much work to be a questioner, but if I'm partnered with a questioner,
I can trust that they will have the same thoroughness
and I so I can trust their decisions
because most people I feel like don't really make
reason judgments.
I've often hear this from questioners.
They're like, why are other people like lemmings?
They just go along with everything.
They never ask questions.
It's tiring to be a questioner.
That's interesting.
So I've partnered with this guy Ben Rubin,
no relation to you, CEO of the 10% happier company.
He questions a lot.
And I find it deeply comforting to know,
I've outsourced a lot of my analysis to this guy.
Yeah, let him worry about it.
Yes, and that's one of the ways that the questioners
can manage analysis paralysis or question overwhelm. It's either by setting deadlines like I'm gonna make a decision by Friday
Like at some point any decisions better than no decision. So I'm gonna decide by Friday by setting limits
I'm gonna investigate 10 software program accounting software programs
But not 30 software programs or a trusted authority. This is a person who I trust I trust their judgment and their expertise.
If something's good enough for them, I can be very guided by their judgment.
And so by loud, but he's a questioner.
So you know that he's not going to just wave his hands to things without understanding the reason to lie.
So that's a great way for you to alleviate your kind of cognitive load
by delegating to him a lot of research
and decision making that you would otherwise have to do yourself.
I hope I'm categorizing him correctly in terms of the tendencies, but the very least we
can say he's really smart.
And I don't have to worry that he's going to make a dumb decision.
And actually, then I don't have to worry about doing the deciding myself.
Well, having mad him, rings true to me that he's a question.
Yeah, yeah, he kind of has that.
But what, so one of the things that's really interesting,
I mentioned this before, is that you set up the four tenets
as kind of overlapping, then diagrams, that you know,
you can be a questioner with who tips in one way.
Yes, because questioners in some ways are like a pollers,
because questioners and a pollers both readily
meet interact expectations.
But questioners also overlap with rebels,
because questioners and rebels both resist
outer expectations.
So my husband is a poller who is a questioner
who tips to a pollers.
So it's pretty easy to convince him to go along with things.
It's easy for him to see why you would do things.
Some questioners are very, very easy to convince him to go along with things. It's easy for him to see why you would do things.
Some questioners are very, very hard to convince.
They really, really, really resist anything that to them seems arbitrary and justified.
For instance, they might not drive 65 miles an hour because they're like, that's an arbitrary
limit.
I'm a really good driver.
I should be able to drive as fast as I can.
You're like, well, it doesn't work like that.
Or like, why five garments in a dressing room?
That makes my sense.
I'm going to take in 10.
You know, or somebody who wrote it, she's like, I go into, the playground near my house has
a sign saying that you're not supposed to go in if you're not accompanied by a minor.
But I do it all the time because I'm not going to do anything to hurt anybody.
And I was like, well, do you think everybody should be able to live their life that way?
And she was like, well, maybe not. Now that you mentioned it live their life that way? And she was like, well, maybe not.
Now that you mentioned it, I was just like, because she was a questioner who tipped to
rebel.
So, so what I like about this is there's a range.
There is a range.
I guess a questioner, but I would follow those rules.
Yes.
So I probably a questioner who tips upholder.
I think you are.
I think you are.
Because as part of me does, just, I'm a bit on some levels, I can be kind of in some contexts,
a bit of a rule follower.
Yeah, yeah.
Um, and that's the other thing about this is that there's variability and those variability,
the variability can depend in part on context.
Well, I, it's like you're different with your parents and their rules and you might be
with teachers and their rules.
I mean, I just took my kid yesterday for his first meeting at his school and they were telling us that
many kids are much better behaved at school than they are at home. Right. Right. Well, that probably
has to do with anxiety, I think. And that's one of the things that's really important to understand
about the tendencies. Is this is something that only describes a very narrow aspect of your nature,
which is how do you respond to expectations? So you're a questioner and we could line up 50 questioners.
And depending on how ambitious they were, how considered of other people's feelings they were,
how intellectual they were, how curious they were, how adventurous they were,
how extroverted or introverted they were, how neurotic they were,
all these things could mix up in all different ways.
And so you look very different from each other, but as to,
I'm going to ask you to do something,
you're going to say to me, why should I?
That's the what the question says.
Why should I?
You're all going to respond that way to an expectation.
But like a really smart questioner
is different from a pretty ignorant question.
Right, gotcha.
Very intellectual questioner.
And same thing like a rebel,
sometimes people are like, oh, rebels are selfish.
Not necessarily, some rebels are incredibly considerate
of other people have very high ideals,
high ambitions for themselves.
But then there are some rebels
who don't really care what other people think of them.
That's gonna look, being a rebel
is gonna look very different
depending on how it's mixed up
with these other characteristics.
But are you gonna say that there's no overlap
between a questioner and an obliger?
Right, they're sort of the opposite of each other.
Justice is about a rebel and upholders are offices.
But I do feel like I do better with sometimes with accountability. Like when I wanted to quit sugar, now as I want to quit sugar,
it's so important to me that my wife's in it with me. Like I probably go vegan if my wife was in it, you know, if she wanted to do it.
But is that partly just because of the way your life is set up?
Yeah, no, it's all about that.
Right, but what if your wife set up your life
so that you were quitting sugar,
but then, but you knew that when she went to work,
she was eating sugar, would that matter to you?
I don't care.
We'll see that's the thing.
It's just, you're trying to create a like situation
that is gonna support you.
I guess on the margins I do, it would be fun for us to really be in it together.
Well, I make it more fun. I get that.
And I think it might make it stickier, the habit, or the lack of habit, whatever.
Well, now we're getting back into my kind of stuff I talked about in better than before.
One of the things, the influence of other people, which no matter what your tendency,
you're very affected by what the people around you are doing.
Also, things like convenience or an inconvenience. It's more convenient to eat no sugar.
If no one's ringing sugar into your household and no one's ordering a dessert when you go to a restaurant
and nobody's saying like, hey, let's stop up. This is a cute little cafe and get a croissant
because you guys don't eat that stuff. It's just easier.
Right. So you're not saying that makes me an oblige. You're saying that doesn't necessarily
make me oblige. It's just kind of a different,
it's just different, this is very narrow,
this is how do you respond to expectation?
So like if you answer yes to the question,
promises to other people can be broken,
promises to other people cannot be broken,
promises to myself can be broken.
See, as an upholder, I don't agree with that.
Promises to myself are just as important
as promises to other people. Yeah, I would, I mean, inholder, I don't agree with that. Promises to myself or does this important as promises to other people?
Yeah, I would, I mean, in theory, I would say I could break both.
Under the right circumstances,
I would break a promise to somebody else.
So here's another thing about question.
This is making me think you're a questioner,
because questioners don't see themselves in the,
like the other three tendencies see how they're different
from other ones, and the questioners see themselves in the other tendencies more.
So they feel like they're more of a mix.
Like I was talking to a high school student and he was like, well, sometimes I know a
holder in ton of some rebel.
And I said, well, give me an example.
And he says, when I have a teacher, I respect who gives me an assignment.
I do it right away, like in a holder.
But when a teacher, I don't respect his new assignment.
I refuse.
So I'm a rebel.
And I'm like, no, you're a questioner because your first question is, why would I listen to you?
And so seeing yourself in all of the tendencies
is kind of a question or thing, because they're like,
well, under certain circumstances,
you know, it's very questioner,
be like, oh, I can think of this exception.
Or, you know, what about this?
Whereas, like, if you're an upholder, you get it.
You're like, oh, yeah, what is the deal with other people?
So for the last one.
And the slides are like, oh oh my gosh, now I understand.
Why can only get in my exercise class
when I went with my friend at that place
where the teacher was like so hardcore if we didn't show up.
And you're like, yes, it's the accountability
or the rebel who's like, ah, now I understand why
I can't use to do lists, you know, yes.
Life is short and it's full of a lot of interesting questions.
What does happiness really mean?
How do I get the most out of my time, you honor, and then what really is the best cereal? These are the questions I seek to resolve
on my weekly podcast, Life is Short, with Justin Long. If you're looking for the answer to deep
philosophical questions like, what is the meaning of life? I can't really help you, but I do believe
that we really enrich our experience here by learning from others. And that's why in each episode, I like to talk with actors, musicians, artists, scientists,
and many more types of people about how they get the most out of life.
We explore how they felt during the highs, and sometimes more importantly, the lows of
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We discuss how they've been able to stay happy during some of the harder times.
But if I'm being honest, it's mostly just fun chats between friends about the important stuff like if you had a sandwich named after you what would be on it.
Follow life is short wherever you get your podcasts. You can also listen ad free on the Amazon music or wonder yeah.
So for the last 20 minutes everything I've said is basically just confirmed your things.
I think so. I think so. I don't know if I'm happy to do that. So let's go to a blind.
Okay, so blighter is the largest tendency.
So it's important for everybody to think about a blighter
because you either are one or you've got a lot in your life.
They're the rock of the world.
They're type O, meaning that they partner up the best
with all the other tendencies.
They're great at meeting outer expectations,
but they often get frustrated with themselves
because they're not meeting their inner expectations. Now, the solution, the answer for this is so simple,
and it is an obligatory must create systems
of outer accountability in order to meet an inner expectation.
So if you want to exercise, you would sign up for a class,
you would go with a friend who's annoyed
if you don't show up, you're gonna work out with a trainer, you're gonna join an accountability group, you a friend who's annoyed if you don't show up. You're going to work out with a trainer.
You're going to join an accountability group.
You're going to focus on if you don't go running,
your dog doesn't get his daily run.
And he's going to be so disappointed.
You're going to think about, oh, I'm going to raise money
by doing this 5K.
So this charity that's really important to me
is going to make more money.
I'm in a model good behavior for the people in my household.
I'm going to think about my future self.
Oh, well, Dan right now doesn't want to go, but future Dan is going to feel bad if he
doesn't exercise.
I owe it to future Dan.
There's a million ways to build an outer accountability, but that is what is necessary.
Obliteers sometimes don't want that.
They're like, I want to develop, you know, intermotivation.
I'm like, yeah, that doesn't really work.
Don't bother with that.
That takes, that's really hard.
It's not you.
Yeah, just, you know, and it's a huge tendency. So just build in these forms of outer account. If you want to read more,
join a book group, you know, it's like very straightforward once you realize that that is what is missing.
We talked about this a little bit, this tendency on the last podcast and my wife,
somebody listened to it and said to my wife, oh, I hear you're in a bladger with a rebel
Somebody listened to it and said to my wife, oh, I hear you're in a blider with a rebel leaning
because we have diagnosed it that way.
And she now has thought about it for a year or so
since the podcast and really agrees.
Oh, yeah.
Well, so here's something that everyone who is in a blider
or particularly is married to a blider
or where a Southern blider should be aware of,
which is this phenomenon of a blider rebellion.
Yeah, so I've seen it.
Okay, well, let me explain it, and then you give your example,
because it's fascinating.
So a blighter rebellion is when a blighter meets, meets, meets, meets,
meets an expectation, and then suddenly they snap,
and they're like, this I will not do.
And it can be small, sort of a little symbolic thing,
or it can be huge, like, ending a relationship,
blowing up a friendship of many years, quitting a job,
or just like having sort of a, like, a relationship, blowing up a friendship of many years, quitting a job,
or just like having sort of a shouting fit
where everybody around you was sort of like,
where is this coming from?
It seems very uncharacteristic.
Nobody had any sense that it was coming.
A bliger's themselves often say that it feels out of character
or it feels like an explosion.
It's not a controlled burn, it's big.
And the thing about obligatory rebellion,
which it took me a while to understand,
is that it's meant to be helpful.
It's meant to save obligators from places
where they're being exploited or taken advantage of
or where expectations are just too high or unrealistic.
It's like pulling the emergency record.
It gets them out.
It ends the situation,
but it can be very destructive as it's unfolding. And so it's much better for everybody if you try
to get in front of the feelings of deep resentment and burnout that lead to a blighter rebellion and
try to stop it from actually working its way to the surface by dealing with those feelings before
they come to a boil. So how have you seen this in your life?
Well, definitely see the blider part
and she just describes who she is in many ways.
Her whole life is just doctors,
she's really lived with this ethos of service to other people.
But she lets herself down a lot.
No, I see it.
It's painful for her.
Yeah, and as a questioning, you're probably like,
if you say this is important to you,
like why aren't you doing that?
I don't, I don't get it.
You know, like she lives with somebody who's so disciplined
on some things, I'm obviously not disciplined about sugar.
But the exercise in the meditation,
I mean, like nobody has to get on me about it. I'm just doing it.
But see, and this is why obliterates, they often, this is a really unfortunate thing, but
obliterates, they often blame themselves.
They're like, I'm lazy, I lack willpower.
Why can't I do?
I'm close to somebody who's doing something so easily.
Why do I struggle?
It's like, hey, there's nothing wrong with you.
There are a ton of people exactly like you.
This is easy to fix.
Building that outer accountability and you can get what you want. Well, so be able to do that. I'm going to be able to do that. I'm going to be able to do that.
I'm going to be able to do that.
I'm going to be able to do that.
I'm going to be able to do that.
I'm going to be able to do that.
I'm going to be able to do that.
I'm going to be able to do that.
I'm going to be able to do that.
I'm going to be able to do that.
I'm going to be able to do that.
I'm going to be able to do that as I was going to,
I was doing something that I normally don't do,
which is I was going to soul cycle.
I mean, I like spin and but soul cycle.
Sometimes I feel like it's a little much,
but anyway, there was one right nearby,
so I was going a lot and I was enjoying it.
And I kind of half-heartedly said to my wife,
you knew you should come.
And I just kind of surprised me by saying,
yes, but I knew she regretted it immediately,
but she had said yes, and so I knew she would come.
And as soon as we walked in there,
she was like, oh my God, I hate this.
You know, just because there was so many people in there,
she's a little bit, she's a shy.
And so during the-
It's intense.
You haven't been this old cycle.
I've never been, but I've seen it.
It's like-
It's pretty intense.
It's a lot happening.
Yes, loud music.
Yeah.
Well, all spin classes are loud music.
And your close proximity.
People are sweating.
Absolutely.
It's a lot going on.
And in Soul Cycle, there's a whole, I've been spinning for a long time just because it's
a good workout, even though I kind of hate it when I'm doing it.
But Soul Cycle in particular has this whole rar-rah soul aspect to it, which I've built
a whole career of rebelling against.
So I'm sure if any, like people who like my book
would probably surprise that it would go to social,
but anyway, it was convenient.
And so I'm in the soul cycle this time with my wife.
And the whole time I'm thinking how I'm sure
she's going through the stages of grief right now.
Like, yeah, yeah, we're glad.
We walk out, she's on, she loved it. gonna hit me. We walk out, she loved it.
She loved it.
She loved it.
Absolutely loved it.
And has been going back.
We've been going as a couple.
And we've got, so I think there's something
about the class structure that's really important to her.
Well, and you really feel like you're recognized
in part of it.
It's like, you're not just in the back doing your thing.
It's like, we're part of this together. It's like a team feeling.
Which he doesn't like. If you go to some spin classes or group exercise classes, the instructor
will come around to kind of get in your face or critique you in some way. I actually like
that. But she hates that and will quit. And there's the rebel. So she doesn't want to feel
judged. She doesn't want to like you, you, like, getting in her face and, like, pushing her too hard.
She wants to be kind of left alone to do this thing.
She likes to be feeling part of the group.
And she, we have a trainer we have worked with too,
who she likes that accountability.
Right, right.
But she doesn't want to be judged.
So that is a very, very important point, which
is when it comes to add our accountability,
there's tremendous variation among what works for blighters.
So one of the variations is exactly the thing you just pointed out.
Some of blighters only like sort of positive reinforcement.
So they want somebody to be like, it's so great.
I can, you know, like you come home and you're like, I can't believe it.
You've exercised four times in a row.
That is great.
Like you must feel so good.
And you're like, yes, somebody's noticing that I'm doing it.
I feel like there's accountability there,
but it's positive accountability.
And so if you're that kind of person,
you want to make sure that you set up
your accountability structure in a way
that it doesn't feel judgey, it doesn't feel negative,
because that might just make you drop it all together.
Other obligators, like some obligators,
feel very obligated if they pay for something.
Like if they pay for an exercise class, they're going to go,
because they're like, I have to go, because I paid.
Some of the obligators almost feel off the hook if they paid. Kind
of like, well I paid for it, that's like as good as going. I'm like, well that's not working
for you. Somebody said to me in all seriousness, she's like, well I was good, I made all these
appointments with a trainer, but then I realized if I don't go, he still gets paid and he gets
the time back. So she felt obligated not to go. And I was like, this is not working for you.
So you know what I mean? What did you advise her to And I was like, this is not working for you. You know what I mean?
What did you advise her to?
I was like, you need to get another accountability structure.
But here's, so I belong to a high intensity strength training gym.
And so you have an appointment with a trainer.
And it works really well for people who need accountability.
But I said to them, and I really
want to try to get them to do this, you
should give people the option that if they don't come, you will charge them triple.
Just don't require that.
Say you offer it as an option because I bet some people would take it because they know
they might skip it if they're just paying for the session.
But if they're paying triple for the session, that raises the stakes and they might opt
into that in order to have the accountability.
Absolutely. You know an accountability group. This is something a lot of people use, like you're trying to write your PhD thesis, you're trying to lose weight, whatever it is, you have a group and the group is going to hold you accountable.
But one thing is for people who are very introverted, maybe they don't like to go to a group and have a conversation. That makes it sort of less appealing. I have this app, the better app, where people can join and talk about the four tendencies, and one of the things they can do is form
an accountability group. And I think it's something that's very attractive to people
who are really busy and want the convenience of using an app, but also people who don't
really necessarily want to be face-to-face for accountability. They want to have a little
bit, they want to do it in a way where it's a little, more of a remove, that feels more comfortable to them.
So, rebels.
So, rebels, tremendous upside,
and also some frustrations on their own part,
and of others.
So, rebels are extremely in touch with what they want
and what they choose.
They're very eager to be authentic to themselves.
They're very, it's easy for them to think unconventionally.
They might delight in breaking convention
and going out, you know, thinking outside the box.
But the fact that you're gonna resist
as somebody asks her tells you to do something,
even yourself can cause issues.
So if you are a rebel or you're dealing with a rebel,
the two things that kind of work
if you're trying to get that rebel to do something.
One is to think about identity because rebels can do anything they want to do.
And so if they choose, if they think, I choose to be a responsible leader.
I choose to be a loving, consistent parent.
I choose to be a considerate member of this team.
Then they can do the things, even the things that feel uncomfortable to them because it's
part of expressing their nature.
The other thing they can do is think about, and this works if you're communicating with
the rebel, is information consequences choice.
The information the rebel needs tell them the consequences of their action or inaction and
then let them choose how to act.
So you might say, well, you know,
at the weekly staff meeting, which, you know,
you haven't been coming for a while,
but what we do at that staff meeting typically
is we decide the projects,
how we're gonna divide up the upcoming projects
for the next, you know, a couple months.
If you go to the meeting, you get to, you know,
argue for what you want.
If you don't go to the meeting,
everybody else takes the interesting projects
and you're left with the boring dregs.
The meeting's at 10 a.m. on Wednesdays.
So, a calm if you want.
You know what I mean? And then it's just like, okay, well, you can calm or not if you want.
But I'm not going to check on you, I'm not going to remind you. It's up to you.
But you can't protect or insulate a rubble from the negative consequences of a choice or a failure to choose.
And that can be painful. It's like painful to let a rebel child the negative consequences of a choice or a failure to choose. And that can be painful.
It's like painful to let a rebel child suffer consequences.
Sometimes if you're like married to a rebel, those consequences could fall on you.
But that's what works.
And rebels over and over.
And don't nag and don't remind.
The more you nag and remind, rebels, the more you ignite the spirit of resistance.
Because they might want to do something, but if you tell them to do it, then they're
like, well, I'm not going to because you're not the boss of me.
So I'm trying to figure out if my two-year-old
is a rebel because he's a rebel or because he's two.
Well, two is pretty young.
Rebel does, many rebels, interestingly,
have just spontaneously emailed me to say
that they remember the moment in early childhood
where they realized that no one could make them do something.
So I think you can kick in, your tendency can kick in very early.
Two is probably, you're not really, I don't think you have fully evolved consciousness
at that point.
Probably, yep.
And it's even hard, you know, all through high school because they're just not autonomous
in the way that adults are.
They're not making decisions the way adults are.
So it could be hard to tell.
Sometimes it's very easy to tell, but sometimes it's hard to tell.
There's no way in which my son is believable.
Yeah, well, he's too.
Right, right.
Let's hope.
Yeah.
I keep telling him he can have more agency
when he stops pooping his pants.
Oh, right.
Okay.
That's the key thing.
Okay.
That's the milestone.
Yeah, also, but what it does work with him, though,
is giving him a choice.
Yeah. That really, it's like the magic thing.
If we say, all right, do you want to go to bed right now with the consequences?
You can either go to bed right now and you'll get five stories or you can not listen to
us and you're not going to get any stories nor will you get your milk.
Well, I think that for a lot of children that works because they do feel
such a lack of agency and so it gives them a sense of control. So that might not
be related to tendency. But certainly with rebels, like older
rebels, or children that you know are rebels, it's very helpful to say, like
something like, well, you know, if you go outside on a bright sunny day, you can
get a really bad sunburn, which is going to really hurt.
Your skin can even blister and peel.
And then your second side all day while your friends are outside playing because you've
got to recover from your sunburn.
So do you feel like wearing a long sleeve t-shirt and a baseball cap or do you prefer to wear
sunscreen lotion?
Information consequences choice.
And then if the kids like, I don't want to do it.
It's like, okay, see how that goes for you. You know what I mean? Because I think sometimes people are like,
well you can't go outside without sunscreen. Yes, you can. You can. You can. And a rubble
knows that. You can go outside without sunscreen. It can happen. It is possible. This is what
I learned as an upholder from the rubble. So I'm like, we're way more free than we think.
There's a lot of things you feel like you have to do that actually you don't have to do. This is what I learned as an upholder from the rebels. I'm like, we're way more free than we think.
There's a lot of things you'd feel like you have to do
that actually you don't have to do.
Right.
So we talked about this a little bit at the beginning,
but just talk again about what you think,
the consequences and potential use are of this framework
that you've said out.
Thank you.
I was having a finger. I think it comes into play in two ways. One is with
yourself. You want to manage yourself. So, you know, you want a
quit sugar. What's the best way for you to quit sugar? Or I
want to write a novel in my free time. And yet, I never miss a
deadline at work. And yet, why am I not working on my novel?
Okay. How might I address that? Why? How could I understand
what's stopping me or frustrating me?
But then it's also other people.
So there's managing yourself and then there's also dealing with other people.
So I have a conflict with my coworker who keeps questioning every decision I make and I'm
like, why doesn't he trust my authority?
Why doesn't he defer to my, this is my area?
Like why do I have to keep like, fielding these phone calls and emails?
I feel like he's attacking me.
Oh, maybe he's not attacking me.
Maybe this is just his way.
Maybe he's the questioner.
Maybe he thinks he's adding value to the process.
You know, I don't have to be angry about it.
I could say to him, you know what, I feel like I'm spending too much time answering your
questions.
Like, we need to come up with a better way to deal with this, but I don't have to be
as unsettled by it.
Or let's say you're a doctor and you're trying to get people
to take their medication.
It's like, why aren't they taking their medication, right?
Why don't people take their medication?
Some research suggests that up to 50% of American adults
don't take prescription medication
for a chronic health condition.
And it's not like they're like,
I'm convinced that this medicine is worthless.
It's like, no, they probably like,
yeah, I probably should take that medicine.
So why don't they?
I think that the four tendencies gives you a lot of strategies
for how you might communicate with such a person more effectively.
So how do you see this going?
How do you see greater adoption playing out
if it does happen?
You know, I think I don't know.
I mean, I'm just trying to get the word out as much as I can
and I've already started, ever since better than before came out.
I have started hearing from people who are using it in different ways
and that's super fascinating to me,
of course, and how they communicate with people.
So I don't really have a grand plan
for how to launch this into the world of ideas
other than to write a book and help that a lot of people.
I mean, I kind of feel like it's the sort of thing
where the proof is in the pudding,
where if people read this or hear about it,
and it resonates with them,
and they're able to make an important change or have an important insight into themselves
or other people, you know, that's what's going to make people think, like, yeah, there's
really something here.
Final couple minutes, totally selfish request, but like the idea that you're a happiness
bully, like, I just want to take advantage of it.
Yeah, let me.
What is that?
Like, how could I be happier and how would you bully me into doing that?
Well, what do you feel like
is getting in your way?
You seem like a pretty happy guy.
No, I am pretty happy guy.
Sugar was a, it was, and it's big.
So, tell me, take me through your strategies
for how you're gonna approach this.
I'm not gonna put anything with sugar
in my mouth.
Okay.
That's what I'm gonna do.
Okay, so let me give you some
liminal situations.
Yes.
What about bread?
So, I actually, my secret plan is no sugar and no flour.
Okay, well, we need clarity here, you're a questioner, so we need absolute clarity on what
is being, what is being demanded of you?
Well, because Bianca has not signed on to flour.
Oh, I see, okay.
So you need to have a consultation.
Yes, yes. But what you would ideally do is say, no, now is that wheat flour? because Bianca has not signed on to that. Oh, I see. Okay. So you need to have a consultation. Yes.
But what you would ideally do is say, now is that wheat flour, does that include pasta?
Yes.
Okay.
So no flour, no sugar.
Yes.
Okay.
What about honey, which many people feel like it's a magical elixir of life?
No, it's sugar.
No, it's sugar.
Yes.
Maple sugar is sugar.
Yes.
Catch up is sugar.
I don't really catch up. Okay. Catch up is maple syrup for hamburgers. Okay. So you're going to is sugar. Ketchup is sugar. I don't really. Okay. Ketchup is maple syrup for hamburgers.
Okay.
So you're going to quit sugar.
And you hope that you're going to do it together.
Yeah.
And so you're not going to buy anything for your household.
Well, we have a kid who eats a little, you know, we let him have a little bit of sugar.
So there's that.
That makes things difficult.
Ooh.
Okay.
But I think, I think really the key for me in this one was, I think,
we may talk in two weeks and this is all obliterated,
but I think the key really is about seeing
is being able to finally get that if I do this thing,
it's like when I quit doing drugs,
you're like, I just got, I didn't want to have more panic attacks.
Like, I just got it.
I got it.
I had two panic attacks on the air.
It was horrible.
I get it.
I'm not doing that again.
I like drugs a lot.
I mean, I have an addictive tendency, but I'm not doing it again because there was very
compelling reason not to.
And every time I have sugar, the entire next day is a waste.
So, and I am just beckoning you
from the far shore saying,
if you never have it, you don't want it.
You will not care.
It will not bother you.
You will not be filled with regret.
It's, it's the, the more you don't have it,
the easier it is.
I think sometimes people feel like,
well, if I don't have something,
my desire for it is gonna build and build people feel like, well, if I don't have something, my desire for it
is gonna build and build and build
and it's gonna overwhelm me
and I'm just gonna have this kind of crash.
Now, this gets into the whole
of Stainer moderator thing, which I've talked about
and better than before,
because some people are better off having a little bit,
they're better off having something sometimes.
If you're an abstainer, if you feel like it's easier
to have none, and clearly you're somebody
who feels like it's easier to have none,
you're not gonna have one square of fine chocolate a day. It's like a whole sleeve of Oreos
or not, which is exactly the way I am. The longer you go without it, the less you want it.
It gets easier and not harder. That's really has been my experience.
I believe that, again, I'm just going to revert to my Buddhist thing again, but it's about
kind of feeding patterns of thought.
So I can see how somebody who's a moderator, like actually the way to tamp down on the
voice in your head talking about trigger all the time would be to just give yourself
that one thing, that one square of chocolate a day, it like shuts everything down.
But for me, knowing that the squares and options ramps everything up.
Oh, yes.
Oh, they could've bought it.
Two squares, three squares.
It's raining.
It's my birthday.
After the day I've had, I have more.
You only live once.
Let's do short enough to have a bar of chocolate.
I mean, oh, gosh, yeah.
Well, so one of the things I would say
is go deep into your question or side, which is,
I'm sure you've read all the stuff about sugar
and how it's bad for you.
Have you read the case against sugar by Gary Thompson?
I'm aware of it.
I don't need, I've heard enough.
No, no, no, I think you should read it
because I think as a questioner,
it's really going to clarify.
Interesting.
It's going to give you those justifications
that are going to strengthen you,
that are going to make you all feel more purposeful about it.
Right.
And also, and you could say to your wife,
I need you to help me do this.
Because if you need her.
Dapping into her with a blider just like this.
Yes, okay.
I need you to set me the good example.
If I see you indulging, I'm gonna feel like I can indulge.
I need you to do this with me.
I need you to be my example.
That's gonna help her.
One of the models for blighters is you can count on me and I'm counting on you to count on me
So she's counting on you to count on her. Yeah, and by seeing her example, you're gonna be like well
Like this is clearly something we can do. What are the when you're
Bullying people about happiness. What are the other things that you hone in on just like at a cocktail party?
Oh my gosh, I can really sort of be a jerk. I mean I
I would talk to this woman. Oh my gosh. I'm haunted by it and she was like my dream one day is to open a
Puffa flower shop and she was in dental school. Dental school is a very specific thing
So I'm like, well, why are you in dental school? And she's explaining me well. She likes the hour
She's always been good at science. she likes working with people, all this.
But then one day, she was gonna open up the Photoshop.
This was her dream.
This was something that was totally with it.
I mean, I'm not gonna get into the whole details
of her life, but that's something
that she could have done right now.
And I was just like, why are you not opening up
your Photoshop right now?
Like, why is that the impossible dream?
You could do that.
Why are you in dental school?
I mean, that's hard.
That's a lot of time, That's a lot of money.
I'm just picturing this guy. Yeah, and I mean, I was like really like to the point where I wanted to jump.
I was like, I got a lady's lunch and I wanted to leap over the table, knock over the water glasses
with my heels and shaker. I'd be like, you've got to start the flower shop. You know what I mean? It's
just like, why why why would you not? I don't know. It just seemed like she didn't have a vision
of why she was doing, I mean,
and it wasn't like one thing was easy
and one thing was hard.
They were both hard.
They're both very, very hard.
And the dental school thing was like,
that's like a 15 year plan.
You know, she was really locking herself in.
And then once you've got a dental school and you're a dentist,
it's like, how can you be like,
oh, two years, I mean, I went, did this with law school, right?
Went to law school, clerked for two years and then quit and became a writer. For a lot
of people, that would be really hard because they're like, after all the time and energy
and money that I've poured into this, how can I turn my back on? It's the problem of sunk
costs. It's hard to do that, you know? And the more you go into something where you're sinking a lot of investment into a certain
fate, it becomes harder and harder to switch.
Okay, last question.
This is one area where I actually do think maybe you could bully me in some positive
ways about having this time management.
I would guess what I would say, if there was one thing that is kind of a drag on my happiness
is like figuring, I have so much to do and then figuring out how to do it all
in a way that doesn't drive me absolutely bonkers.
And it can make me irritable.
I know I was a little irritable with my wife this morning.
Not words were not exchanged, right?
I just wasn't in the woods talk to her
because I had so much weighing on me.
Well, I mean, from what I know about you,
is I just think you have a lot in your day.
Like your day is really planned for you to be at top efficiency at every moment.
So I think part of the problem, it's not that you're not efficient.
It's just that you have extremely high expectations of what you can do with your time.
Like you meditate for two hours a day.
Well, that's two hours a day of awake time right off the table.
You know, and you have a lot, you have a many, many responsibilities.
So I'm not sure your problem is efficiency. It's more like you have a lot, you have a many, many responsibilities. So, I'm not sure your problem is efficiency.
It's more like you have a problem of ambition.
You really want to do a lot of things.
So, you could sit down and say, well, something not important to me that I'm doing
and so I could light my load that way, or maybe just sort of say,
look, I don't want to let anything go.
I want to do everything and sometimes it's just going to make me feel like I'm sort of
Maybe barely hanging on or like I guess your periods were I'm like only preparing for the next day
Like there's nothing that I'm doing that isn't like for tomorrow. I'm doing this blog post for tomorrow
I'm preparing this podcast episode for tomorrow
You know everything I just looking at my schedule for tomorrow because I don't have the flexibility
to look outward.
I couldn't live like that all the time,
but you just have a lot of things you want
to fit into your day.
It's really interesting.
My wife and I did a thing when I was freaking out
about this, I don't know, like 18 months ago,
where we kind of put everything on,
everything that I was working on in dance cards
and threw them down the table.
And there was nothing, there was like literally nothing,
either of us could agree that.
Wasn't valuable.
We had to do them all.
And I think I didn't actually say this to myself,
but what you just articulated is probably exactly right,
which is I think I have to just come to terms
of the fact that I'm gonna do all these things.
Sometimes I'm gonna be unhappy.
Sometimes it's gonna make you feel like
you're just trying to cram too much.
But also you're in the rush hour of life.
You know, you're like kind of right in your career.
You've got a family, you've got a J job, you've got a side hustle, you've got a lot going on.
And that's just where you are. It's the season of life.
And so I don't think that there's an efficiency trick that would help.
It's just that you want to cram a lot into your day. And there's a't think that there's an efficiency trick that would help, it's just that you want
to cram a lot into your day.
And there's a satisfaction of that too.
That's what you want, that's what you choose.
And so I think there's a comfort that comes from just saying,
there's no waste there.
There's nothing that you're doing out of just sheer obligation
or out of inertia or habit.
It's all valuable to you.
Yes, that's true.
So that's very fortunate.
There's something to be
grateful for that. High class problem. Yeah. No question about it. I'm very grateful for it. Absolutely.
And that's probably why you're meditating to ours today is like what is it? If you're feeling
what is like if you're feeling calm, meditate for X time, if you're feeling rushed,
meditine for what's the saying? Expression is if everybody should meditate for 20 minutes a day, and if you don't have 20 minutes,
you should do 40 minutes.
Yes, exactly, right?
Yeah.
So if you're meditating for two hours,
I'd that suggestion a pretty heavy load.
Yeah, no one I need it.
You know, like I need plus also the whole two hour day thing.
It's also kind of an experiment and something I'll write about.
And it's a whole, anyway, we don't have time for this.
But it's not two hours at once.
No, definitely not.
Right.
No.
Before you go, just give us a whole rundown
of where people can find assets and information
and all this stuff if they want to learn more about you.
Okay, so I have a website called gretchenreuben.com,
spoiler alert.
And I post there almost every day about my adventures Okay, so I have a website called gretchenrubin.com, you know spoiler alert.
And there's, I post there almost every day about my adventures and happiness and good habits on the four tendencies
and there's tons of resources there too if you want like one pagers on how to use the four tendencies or discussion guides for the book and all sorts of things.
Then I also have a podcast that I do with my sister called Happier with Gretchen Rubin and we talk about the four tendencies there's a lot,
but also just everything related to Happier. You were one of
our, I think you were our first guest. I was definitely not the first guest but I was there
once and your mom was in it. We were in a little shipping computer recording. Yes, we now have
much nicer studios. Okay. Yeah, you were in the old black hole studio. Yes. I got a little
claustrophobic in there. Yeah, I remember that because it was, it has like a very low ceiling.
But your mother coming, yeah, just, yeah, she that just, she was so calm, I was like,
all right.
Yeah, she's a calm person.
So that's happier with Gretchen Rubin.
And then I have that app that I mentioned,
which is a place where you can go.
If you want to have conversations with people
or like your parent who's struggling with an issue
with a child or you're in healthcare
and you want to talk about how,
with other healthcare people, how to use it,
and you can have the accountability groups.
So there's all kinds of accountability groups
for anything you can think of,
or you can start your own.
And that's the better app, and it's betterapp.us,
if you're on a desktop, or if you're in the app store,
you just search for better Gretchen Rubin,
and you'll find it.
And then of course, the book is like,
where I lay at this whole thing out,
very systematically, about how you think about the four tendencies.
Oh, and I'm on Instagram and YouTube and Facebook
and Twitter under the name Gretchen Rubin.
You know, I was looking at Instagram today
and I was realizing, I don't follow you.
I need to start following you.
You should, I'll follow you.
Okay, awesome.
Thank you, great job.
Thank you.
It's so fun to talk to you.
Thank you for having me again.
Always.
Okay, that does it for another edition of the 10% Happier Podcast.
If you liked it, please take a minute to subscribe,
rate us.
Also, if you want to suggest topics,
you think we should cover or guests
that we should bring in.
Hit me up on Twitter at Dan B. Harris.
Importantly, I want to thank the people
who produced this podcast, Lauren Efron, Josh Tohan,
and the rest of the folks here at ABC
who helped make this thing possible.
We have tons of other podcasts.
You can check them out at abcnewspodcasts.com.
I'll talk to you next Wednesday.
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