The Daily Stoic - Arthur Brooks on the Keys to Finding Happiness | How To Own Things
Episode Date: February 23, 2022Ryan reads today’s daily meditation and talks to Author and Professor Arthur Brooks about his new book From Strength to Strength, how to manage your wants to increase your happiness, why go...od habits and systems are the actual keys to a happy life, and more.Arthur Brooks is the William Henry Bloomberg Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership at the Harvard Kennedy School and Professor of Management Practice at the Harvard Business School. Brooks is the author of 12 books, including the national bestsellers “Love Your Enemies” (2019) and “The Conservative Heart” (2015). He is also a columnist for The Atlantic, host of the podcast “How to Build a Happy Life with Arthur Brooks,” and subject of the 2019 documentary film “The Pursuit,” which Variety named as one of the “Best Documentaries on Netflix” in August 2019. He gives more than 100 speeches per year around the U.S., Europe, and Asia.For a limited time, UCAN is offering you 30% off on your first order when you use code STOIC at checkout Just go to UCAN.CO/STOICGo to shopify.com/stoic, all lowercase, for a FREE fourteen-day trial and get full access to Shopify’s entire suite of features. Grow your business with Shopify today - go to shopify.com/stoic right now.Right now, when you purchase a 3-month Babbel subscription, you’ll get an additional 3 months for FREE. That’s 6 months, for the price of 3! Just go to Babbel.com and use promo code DAILYSTOIC.LinkedIn Jobs helps you find the candidates you want to talk to, faster. Every week, nearly 40 million job seekers visit LinkedIn, Post your job for free at LinkedIn.com/STOIC.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemailCheck out the Daily Stoic Store for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more.Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, FacebookFollow Arthur Brooks: Homepage, Instagram, Twitter, Facebook 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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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each weekday we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoics,
a short passage of ancient wisdom designed to help you find strength and insight here in everyday life.
And on Wednesdays, we talk to some of our fellow students of ancient philosophy,
well-known and obscure, fascinating, and powerful. With them, we discuss the strategies and
habits that have helped them become who they are and also to find peace in wisdom in their actual
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How to own things.
Epic Titus kept an expensive iron lamp in the front hallway of his home.
He was up in his bedroom when he heard some noise downstairs and when he went down,
the lamp was gone.
I reasoned that the thief who took it must have had an impulse he couldn't resist.
Epic Titus recalled, so I said to myself,
"'You'll go and get a cheaper and less attractive lamp made of clay tomorrow.
A man only loses what he has.' Is the lesson here that we should just let thieves come into our
homes and take our stuff or that we should only possess cheap stuff? Not really. The stokes would
say that we should enjoy what we own, but that our happiness cannot be tied to what we own.
Accept prosperity with appreciation and moderation, Seniko would write, but persuade yourself
that you can live happily without it as well.
The comedian and car collector Jerry Seinfeld was asked if he thought about what would happen
all his expensive cars after he dies.
Sure, he said, my wife's going to liquidate it.
That's fine with me.
I want people like me to enjoy them.
She'd be like blowing on a dandelion.
And this is how we must treat our possessions.
Enjoy them, but be able to live just as happily without them.
Hold them with appreciation and let them go
without attachment.
Like blowing on a dandelion.
Hey, it's Ryan Holiday. Welcome to another episode. I've told you about the event I went to a
while back that I met Barry Weissat, but it was at that same event I was standing there and I
heard someone talking and I recognized to it was Ah! it was Arthur Brooks, who I had on the podcast, who had me on his wonderful podcast
and whom I am a very big fan of. I was just having lunch with a retired football player
the other day and I was telling them about this very book, which I just finished his new
book from strength to strength, finding success, Happiness, and Deep Purpose in the second half of life.
You may have read Arthur's Fantastic Article about the Professional Decline.
What happens when you reach the peak of what you do for an athlete that's earlier, for
a writer that might be later, for a CEO that might be in their 50s, for a tech entrepreneur
that might be in your mid 40s. I don't know, it depends. But the idea is that you don't just always get better
and better and better because at some point your energy levels sag or your physical fitness
declines a little bit or your taste making abilities get lessened a little bit with age.
That's just one of the themes in the book, but it was a huge article,
great piece, which I really enjoyed.
And I read Arthur's pieces in the Atlantic.
They are absolutely fantastic.
And his podcast, How to Build a Happy Life,
is also worth listening to.
He was nice enough to have Neon.
I won't belabor this introduction
because I want you to get into this interview.
He and I nerd out about philosophy.
He is so rooted in the Stokes.
You can cite them from memory almost as quickly as I can.
And we really get into some important stuff in this interview.
Arthur Brooks is a professor at the Harvard Kennedy School and a professor of management
at the Harvard Kennedy School and a professor of management at the Harvard Business School.
You serve for 10 years as the president of the American Enterprise Institute.
And it's just a great guy who I've enjoyed talking to.
You can go to his website, Arthur Brooks.com.
You can follow him on Twitter at Arthur Brooks, follow him on Instagram at Arthur C. Brooks.
It was wonderful to meet him.
I hope I can see him again here in Austin.
I hope you enjoy this interview.
I'm sure it was more surprising to you,
but the note that hit me the hardest in your book
was your question about how many things
giveings you have left.
I mean, that's a powerful question,
but then you were like, I may only have eight.
Yeah, and I'm actually not 80. Right. I was like, he can't be, he's young, he's young, but I imagine that number as you get older hits you harder each time.
Yeah, and for the more, there's actually a little bit of research that shows that you tend to kind
of measure yourself in terms of the cognitive bias that you tend to kind of measure yourself.
In terms of the cognitive bias
that you have about the number of years you have left,
based on your parents.
And my dad died at 66, and I'm 59.
Or I'm, sure, I'm 57, how old am I?
I'm 57, so I got not, well, I mean, I'm not gonna,
I mean, I mean, good physical shape and all that.
But the bottom line is you don't know,
and that's the point of this.
Look, if you're gonna, as you'd say,
if you're gonna live like a stoic,
if you're gonna go from strength to strength,
if you're gonna be a happier person,
you have to use the time that you have left to the max.
You have to live according to nature
that I'll live in a sense of future regret
about what actually might happen
and you have to be fully alive right now.
And that's kind of the purpose.
And it's a really good exercise.
How many Christmas's, how many thanks-givings, how many new-years-eaves do you probably have left?
Act accordingly.
Yeah, yeah.
I think about this when I put my kids to bed.
There's this stoic exercise of like you say they might not survive to the morning.
You don't say this to them.
That's morbid.
But you say it to yourself, right? And
the reminder that to me, what I take from that, because when people go, oh, eight left,
that's not very many, or whatever it is, is just nothing matter. Is life meaningless.
What I take from it is like, slow down. Like, why am I rushing through bedtime? Like,
you know, because at some point,
it's the last bedtime, either because it's the last time they live in your house or something
much, much worse. And I'm rushing through that so I can go check my email. That's insanity.
It is. And actually what it is is the distorted view of times. You can imagine Marcus
Arele is tucking in little comin' us. Yeah. Saying comin' us, you might not live till the
morning. It's like fun now.
If only that would have been better for history.
I know.
It would have been better for the Roman Empire for sure.
But the key thing is that we don't live, we're not actually alive right now.
And the great Buddhist master, Tick Not Han, who just recently died, he talked about the
fact that we're not actually alive right now, because to be a live requires
sentience, and that requires attention to the present moment.
And he said what we're doing is we're living in the future, making plans to enjoy the
past.
I think about that for a second.
And this is a perfect example of this is what we do when we're on vacation.
So I'm going to take a bunch of pictures so that I can later on enjoy those pictures
when the vacation is in the past.
What if I missed?
I missed my vacation because I wasn't here in the present.
And the same thing is true when you're rushing through putting your kids in bed, you're
trying to get to something that you want to do in the future.
And by the time you get to then, to that future, the current present will be some sort
of an obscured present that you're looking for to the next future.
And people, it's very funny. I mean, there's a tendency to do what we call, what we call,
prospection. Marty's selling me the great social psychologist. He said that we shouldn't be
called homo sapiens. We should be called homo prospectus because we have this tendency to live in
the future all the time. And that's a great miracle. It's really amazing. But unmotorated, you can just miss your life.
Yeah, there's an exchange that Seneca tells us it's with one of the terrible emperors.
So it probably has a darker connotation in reality. But there was some person who'd been
sentenced to death. I think they're on a crucifix and they're traveling by and the person is begging
to be put to death, like to be put out of their misery.
They say, kill me, kill me.
And the emperor looks at him and says, oh, you're alive, are you?
And I think about that, the idea that a lot of people are afraid of death or they want
to live forever.
And their life, you could barely describe that as living,
or as being sentient.
In fact, they're fleeing from thing to thing,
experience to experience, trip to trip,
drug to drug, a drink to drink, anxiety to anxiety,
and yet they somehow want to continue this indefinitely.
Yeah, I know.
Most of the people that I know who are not most of the people, so the people
I know who are in the longevity movement, the one question they can answer any question
about how much protein are you going to get to live to 180? What's your exercise routine
to get to 180? How much metformin are you taking to get to 180? But the one question they
can't answer is why are you going to live to 180? The why question is really critical.
Be alive right now. The stoic, the great story of truth,
is that you're not gonna live forever,
and that's not a tragedy.
The only tragedy is not being alive
in the years and the moments to which you're allotted.
Yeah, what proof do you have for the years
that you end up logging on paper,
what actual evidence do you have that you were alive?
Yeah, absolutely.
For sure.
And the interesting thing about this is I think that the healthier, it's not exactly
a stoic, it effectively is a stoic way of looking at it, but it's what the Theravada Buddhist
monks do.
And one of the things that I talk about in my new book is called the Mernusotte meditation
about your success in life.
So the Mernosotte meditation among Theravada Buddhist monks is the nine-step meditation on
your own death.
It's imagining your own death so that it becomes incredibly familiar such that you will not
be chained to it as something you're trying to avoid and as such, you can be fully alive
right now.
But one of the things that we do, even if we're not technically afraid of death,
is that we're afraid of not being great,
of not being admired, of not having prestige,
which is just another form of death
because your life is your work,
or your life is your reputation,
or whatever it happens to be.
And so contemplating the death of that
makes you ironically,
and kind of it's counterintuitive,
it makes you fully alive right now.
Yeah, you say that in the book.
I forget what lie was, but that everything that can
and eventually will.
So it's not just meditating on the death of yourself,
but the death of the miniature deaths of everything.
Your career, a relationship, the vacation that you're on,
the streak of good luck that you're on, the streak of good luck that you're on, maybe
it's just thinking about all that stuff going away, because that's really death itself.
Most people aren't scared of dying a painful death.
They're really, I think, they're scared of things ending and their career, their life relationships,
all of that gets put on to death itself.
For sure.
And, you know, anybody who says to me,
my work is my life,
is somebody who's afraid of death,
but the form of their fear of death
is the fear of their career ending,
the fear of their greatness ending,
the fear of their competence ending.
And so each of us needs to look at the thing
that represents death to us the most.
Maybe that's a divorce.
Maybe that's having to give up alcohol. If alcohol is your special little friend, whatever it happens to be, I mean addicts actually have a particular form of death that comes from the end of using the substance.
But whatever it is, if you want to beat that, if you want to beat that fear, if you want to be fully alive, you need to look full on in the face of that fear by contemplating that eventuality, which by the way is not an eventuality, it's an inevitability. Right. So, in a later, this thing is going to come. And if you're like,
yeah, all I can say is I like life, but bring it on. I like my career, but bring it on. I can face
this. Then you are worthy of the mantle of of Senaco or Epictetus or Marcus Alraeus or,
you know, Phil in the blank, Cicero even. Cicero, by the way, Cicero. You know, this is a guy who, you know,
three quarters of the Latin literature
from his time was written by him.
At least that's an extant today.
And you know, this guy was,
he was the quintessential person of facing this thing down.
You know, he's being chased by Robin Legionaries
to be put to death because of his political opinions.
Talk about cancel culture, holy moly.
And, you know, he's caught by a centurion and he says his final words are centurion.
There's nothing proper about what you're about to do.
The guy's going to cut his throat.
He says, but his last words are, but try to do it properly.
Yeah, it's, Cicero, I love.
I talked about it in my book, Lodge of the Stokes a bit.
Cicero is one of those people that I think he really articulated and understood the philosophy
very well, but he didn't actually live it.
Is that true for so many of us, Ryan?
Of course, that's the journey that we're all on.
Yeah, I mean, look, it's kind of an ideal. Stoicism is an ideal. It's not a, it's not something that we're all on. Yeah, look, it's kind of an ideal.
Stoicism is an ideal.
It's not something that you arrive to.
It's an orientation.
It's something that you're driving toward.
I mean, even Marcus Aurelius, very clearly in his meditations,
is not attaining these ideals.
He writes them down because these are the direction
that he wants to drive his own life.
And we have to forgive ourselves a little bit for not being perfectly stoic.
Well, Sister was kind of a good example of what you're talking about in the book or that type of
personality, that type of person we all know or that personality treat we all have inside us,
which is like he knew it all, he thought it all, but he always wanted to be a little bit more
famous or a little bit richer or a little bit more powerful more than he wanted to live those ideals.
So there was that tension in him between being sort of Cicero, the public figure and Cicero,
the private philosopher.
Yeah, there's actually a reason, in my world, which is the world of happiness science,
academic happiness science,
that the people who everybody who does work in this area
that I know is a seeker of happiness.
It's all knee search.
And Cicero was doing his own version of knee search
as was Marcus Aurelius.
I mean, we're all just on a path.
So to go back to a momento more,
I walked me through the reverse bucket list
because this wasn't something I'd heard of before.
Yeah, one of the interesting things that I find
is that I believe one of the stupidest things
in modern society is the bucket list.
And the reason for this is that we live
in an environment of constant dissatisfaction
and we make it worse.
And there's a lot of biological reasons for this.
So satisfaction is the joy you get for attaining a goal.
That's what satisfaction is. And it's jubilant. I know, I teach it Harvard at the Harvard Business School. And,
you know, my students will talk about the day they get their letter, their email saying
that they were admitted to the Harvard Business School. It's like, I made it. I'm going
to be happy forever. And then a week later, they're like, Oh, no, now I have to go to the
Harvard Business School. And I have to perform. And then it's like getting out is the big
achievement. They get the job is the big achievement. And the reason that you think that it's going to bring you constant satisfaction is because
you're driven biologically toward attaining goals. And the reason that it can't last is because
something we call homeostasis, which puts you back into equilibrium with blinding speed.
You get a bunch of joy, a bunch of momentary satisfaction, and then you don't have it. So
Mick Jagger saying, I can't get no satisfaction. The real title of the song
should be, I can't keep no satisfaction because that's the essence of the problem that we have.
And we make it worse with the bucket list. Now, here's the math of the problem of satisfaction.
We think that our satisfaction is a function of what we have. It's actually a function of what we
have divided by what we want.
So our listeners now, or our viewers,
if we're watching on YouTube,
is to take a little piece of paper and write satisfaction
equals, have divided by wants.
And remember your high school fractions.
If you increase the denominator of a fraction,
the number goes down.
The best possible way for you to decrease
your satisfaction in life is to let your wants sprawl.
And you do that with a bucket list
by taking a list of all the stuff that you want
and talking about, you should desire it,
and you crave it, and it's like sticky stuff all over you.
I understand why people do it
because they want to line up their ambitions
and they'll know how they're being successful.
But that is the secret to dissatisfaction, to lowering your satisfaction in life.
What you need to do is put together a wants management strategy where you're chipping away
those wants in your denominator, and that's the reverse bucket list.
Where you actually make a list of all your sticky cravings on your birthday and you put your hand
into the bucket and say, I'd attach myself from you and you and you and you and you and you put your hand into the bucket and say, I'd attach myself from you and you and you and you
and you and you and you,
and knowledge is power about this.
When you say, I don't care if I'm never
going to hot air balloon.
I don't care if I don't go bungee jumping
in the me-con delta or whatever stupid thing floats your boat.
Maybe I will and maybe I won't.
And that, my friend's power.
When I heard the reverse bucket list,
I was actually thinking of another stoic quote
that I love. Mark really says,
you're afraid of death because you won't be able to do this
anymore, this being a sort of fill in the blank.
And I thought I was like,
you know what, a good reverse bucket list would be,
like what is stuff you're doing in your life
that you're eliminating?
They're just getting, like what are the things
that make you the most unhappy, that you like doing the least, that you find eliminating. They're just getting, like, like what are the, like, what are the things that make you the most unhappy
that you like doing the least,
that you find yourself doing?
I also feel like happiness and success
should be steadily removing those things
because life is also too short.
You know, if you hate meetings,
why did you agree to have a job that is nothing but meetings?
Or if you hate where you live, like you should move.
So I also thought maybe reverse bucket list
was sort of eliminating some of those this is
that we hang on to out of entropy or fear or whatever it is.
Yeah, no, that's actually a slightly different thing.
The reverse bucket list for me is simply pairing down your worldly wants. Now, there are some really, really good things,
such as the bucket list of actual satisfaction of actual life, which is your faith or philosophy,
your friendships, your family life, your work that serves other people. Those are really,
really good ambitions, but money, power, pleasure, fame, those are the things to start throwing out of your bucket.
It doesn't mean they're bad.
I mean, money is great if you can use it to, you know, leaven the burdens of life a little
bit, but if you're actually going for it as your intrinsic goal, that kind of thing in
your bucket list is going to bring you down, and that's going to lower your life satisfaction.
Now this interesting point that you just made, Ryan, a really interesting point that is
a very stoic point that I think that we often miss when I'm talking to people,
you know, and all day long people ask me about happiness in their wake of the coronavirus
epidemic because I'm a, you know, a happiness specialist and God knows people have not been
very happy during coronavirus. We're in historic rates of depressive symptoms, anxiety, and
low levels of self-evaluated happiness. So the one thing I ask people to do is, you know, they're always talking about the things
they miss from before the epidemic, the disappointments, you know, things that they've missed, and
the things that they've looked to go back to, and the things they hate about the epidemic.
And I say, well, you're missing two quadrants, the things that you don't miss from before
the epidemic, and the things that you like from the epidemic, and everybody's got things
in those quadrants, in those boxes.
And so that, for example, when I dig down to it,
I hear a lot of people say, you know,
I don't miss my commute.
I don't miss going to work in a city I didn't like.
I don't miss a bunch of relationships that were toxic
that brought out the worst in me.
Maybe that belittled me or maybe gossipy
or maybe the kind of person that I don't like.
Make a strategic plan to not go back to them.
That's really, really critical.
Your gift of COVID, the gift of the coronavirus epidemic
is not going back to things that you didn't like
and making permanent some of the things that you did like.
And that's a really important kind of other take
on this reverse bucket list idea.
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Yeah, it's like when you remove a bunch of stuff from your diet and then hey the Amazon Music app today.
Yeah, it's like when you remove a bunch of stuff from your diet and then, hey, certainly you don't have headaches anymore.
Suddenly, you know, you're losing weight or what like now you have the opportunity to
isolate some of those ingredients or some of those elements of your life that
were artificially removed, you don't have to put them back in.
I mean, of course, there are some things,
you know, hey, you used to be,
for a couple of months, you could go to the DMV online
and you didn't have to go in person,
but maybe that's gonna come back.
But there are things that were removed
that you don't have to let go back to normal
if you don't want to.
Totally, totally, and that's the kind of strategic plan
that you need.
Don't let your life work on its own.
Don't let circumstances dictate actually
what you're doing in your life.
I mean, do you want to be a leader to yourself?
Do you want to manage your own life or not?
And this is one of the key things.
When control was taken away from you,
you'll learn to whole lot of things about yourself.
And so when control is resumed,
when you're actually able to manage these things,
manage it wisely.
Because here's the interesting thing
about this too, Ryan.
The empirical regularity, this is how we talk
in social sciences, and things that happen over and over
and over again, in other words, every 10 years,
there's something as big as the coronavirus epidemic,
but we're never ready for it.
And we're always caught flat-footed
because we hate transitions and changes,
and so we try to avoid them.
This is another big stoic idea that change is the essence of life itself, and we have
to accommodate ourselves to changing circumstances.
Ten years ago it was the financial crisis.
Ten years before that it was 9-11.
Ten years before that it was the, or about a decade before that it was the meltdown of
this whole entire Soviet empire in the end of the Cold War.
Ten years from now it's going to be something as big as the coronavirus epidemic. And we're going to be talking about viruses
and financial meltdowns still,
because we're always stuck in the past.
What we need to do is to accommodate ourselves
to the truth that change is the state of nature
and to manage ourselves correctly
we should be ready for an ever-changing state.
Yeah, people go, this isn't normal.
And it's like, why don't you talk to a 20-year-old and ask them, you know, what the major events
of their life have been over the last two decades.
This is the abnormal, is normal.
It's always been this way.
And it's just, in fact, you've just been blind to how much this has been happening the
whole time you've been alive.
Yeah, sure.
This is the first time we've had a major pandemic since 1918 and 1919.
Sure enough, but-
But not really, I mean, in 1968, we had an influenza epidemic to kill like a half a
million people and there were race riots.
That sounds a lot like 2020 to me.
No, I know, I know, I know.
It's amazing.
Ken Burns told me this one time.
He said, you know, how many, how many violent politically organized terrorist events occurred?
Bomings, domestic bombings because of politics in 1968 and 1969.
I'm like, I don't know.
700.
700.
Yeah.
I mean, it's like, when is the last one in the United States?
You're thinking, like that thing in New Jersey, I don't think that went off.
You know, it's amazing.
And part of the reason is because we have
a really strong status quo bias.
And not falling prey to that is an important part
of having a disciplined mind and a good memory.
Yeah, no, no, and this is also one of the things
I love in meditations.
Marcus, it really is just like repeating history.
He's just like, this is what happened in this court.
This is what happened to this emperor.
He's just reminding himself that history
is basically the same thing happening over and over
and over and over again.
And it's gonna happen to you and it's gonna happen
after you and it's gonna go on in finitom.
This is what life is.
Yeah, I know.
I know it's interesting.
And the fact that we distract ourselves from that is both a pity, but it's also
intensely human and trying to get beyond that is important. So that's actually
the whole point. So I wrote this book is basically for people to look
introspectively at at the truth and actually get joy from it as opposed to
simply trying as they get older as their skills change as certain things get
harder to do to not try to deny the reality,
to rage against the dying of the light on the contrary. You've got to be fully alive
no matter where you are in your life. So you open the book with the story of a famous,
successful, beloved human being who you don't name, who I'm fascinated to hear, who it actually was.
I'll turn it into my grave right now.
But basically, you're revealing a thing that I think a lot of people who have had access
to power and fame and powerful people sort of know, and it's sort of an open secret,
which is that if people really knew what these people were like, they would not be nearly
so envious
of everything that they have.
Yeah, and the other regularity about this
that people don't really realize is that strivers,
and I know many people with money,
or even people with fame,
people who are really trying to do a lot with their lives
and living on a accordance with their goals,
which everybody tells you to do.
And people are consumers of the daily stoic, are self-improvement people.
Sure.
So I'm talking about, totally.
I'm talking about all of us in your community, by the way.
These are people who have a tendency to struggle more unless they, when, as they get older,
unless they manage themselves well.
So this is a book, basically, that asks, is there something that you can do at 25 or 35 or even 65?
That gives you a much better shot at being happier when you're 75 and it gives the strategies according to the science that you can do.
So a lot of the people listening to you every week as they should are or every day even are our 25 year olds.
And what can you do? What can you put in the bank? So as you get older, you will be happier.
What's the true set of investments in you based on the science so that you don't wind up being, you know,
working on yourself your whole life and then being really, really
disappointed when things aren't going as well as they used to?
Yeah, and the idea that like getting everything you want
is actually something you want.
I feel like is the biggest myth that there is.
There's the Oscar Wilde quote about how the two tragedies in life are getting everything
you want and not getting everything you want or the reverse of that.
But it's not the allisium that you think it's going to be to get everything that you want.
Yeah, for sure. I mean, that's your dreams or liars. Is the key thing. And part of it is because
we have a natural tendency to A, believe that we will finally be satisfied, and that's a lie.
That's a biological falsehood. You can't do that. Your brain can't accommodate itself to permanent
satisfaction or you die. You know 500,000 years ago, finally finding the endless supply of tasty
berries on a bush that gives you endless satisfaction would distract you from the tiger that's
sneaking up behind you. You must be ready for the next set of circumstances. There is no other way
and the same thing is true for us today. So that's a big lie. The second big lie is that your dream,
if you get it, is going to be as great as you thought. So it won't big lie. The second big lie is that your dream, if you get it,
is going to be as great as you thought. So it won't last, and also it's not as good. That's
the reason that everybody who studies the neurobiology of, or the neurobiology and social
science of happiness knows that the real secret of happiness is good habits and good processes,
not hitting goals. You need goals to put you in the right direction.
You need goals for directionality,
but you need processes and you need habits,
which is to say virtue, you dimonia,
you need to live a good life well-lived from day to day
if you actually wanna be happy.
Yeah, and think about it from an evolutionary standpoint.
If everyone actually understood what we're talking about, progress
in many ways would grind to a halt.
If Elon Musk could really get that, hey, doing the next thing isn't going to make it any
better for him, or if Tom Brady just retired, but if Tom Brady really grasps that winning
won't feel that much better than the winning he's already done,
you know, that's the end of it.
So there's a certain reason, I think,
evolutionarily, we have it.
That doesn't mean we have to stick with it, though.
Yeah, well, that's the reason that,
you know, evolution gives us the hedonic treadmill,
which is the metaphor that most of the listeners know about.
The hedonic treadmill is that thing you run and run and run and run and run on.
Thinking that sooner or later, I'm going to get there. But there's a little evil guy in the corner
turning up the speed and it never turns off. And after 10 or 15 years you realize that you're
really running because if you stop you're going to wipe out. And so to begin with you realize
you're not getting there. Then you realize that it's going faster. And finally you start
realizing that you're only running because you don't want to wipe out. And that's the tyranny
of actually living under the illusion that you haven't traveled
anywhere.
You haven't gone anywhere.
And that's Marcus Aurelis's point.
Again and again and again.
What you have to do is accommodate yourself to these realities, to enjoy your life as
you understand it.
It's weird.
You know, one of the things that people have criticized the Stoics for is that they don't
quite get enough enjoyment out of life, but that's actually not true.
This is not true that you have to read Epicurists to understand enjoyment on the contrary. There's a certain strength and equanimity.
There's a certain joy that comes from actually facing the truth.
It's clear that Marcus Aurelis got lots of joy, the love that he had for his kids.
Marcus Aurelis loved his kids, and if he were just an ambitious emperor trying to win war after war, never paying attention to his kids. Marcus Aurelis loved his kids. And if you were just an ambitious emperor trying to win
war after war and never paying attention to his kids, he would not have gotten that intense satisfaction.
You probably wouldn't have had 12 of them either. That's because every time he came home from
campaign anyway. No, I think I think about this like I would urge people to think like what's the
biggest accomplishment you've had in your life?
Like, what have you done?
And like, how did that actually feel?
Not like, like, how did you feel when you got the news that you hit the New York Times
bestseller list or that you, you finally got, you know, the exact figure in your bank
account that you'd always dreamed of, or whatever that thing was.
And it's like the truth is, it felt like nothing.
That's what it feels like nothing, right?
Like even sometimes it does feel overwhelmingly awesome, but most of the time it just feels
like, oh, that's what it feels like.
It feels like, oh, and that's a pretty bad feeling to orient your entire life and being
around.
That sort of anti-climactic, oh, what next?
I know, I know. Again, somebody's going to be rolling their eyes out there in
podcast line going, yeah, it's great. Thanks, Ryan. Easy for you to say.
But again, I guarantee you, folks, Ryan Holiday said, oh, yeah, but it's not number one
of the New York Times best soloist, right? It's always something more. Ryan Holiday said, oh, yeah, but it's not number one of the New York
Times best soloist, right?
It's always something more.
And you say, great, great, but there could be something better.
And there will be something better.
So it's off to the races run, run, run, run, run.
Again, unless you manage yourself appropriately.
No, I remember the first time I hit number one.
I never hit number one.
It's not right, man.
Well, I hit number one on Wall Street Journal, but not New York Times.
And then I did do New York Times later.
But I remember I was mowing my lawn.
And then I had to finish mowing my lawn.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like life just, it's not like the clouds parted and somebody threw me a parade and I never
felt worry or fear ever again.
It was like, all right, I gotta finish this side
of the lawn now.
You know what I mean?
And when you say, oh, it's easy for you to say,
there's some truth in that too, right?
It's like, yes, you can only say it once you've experienced it.
Once you've experienced it, it's immediately obvious
that it was never going to be what
you thought it was going to be, because no external thing has the ability to change who
you are inside or how you feel.
And yet, no amount of witness testimony can get us to accept that it's not going to do
it for us.
Yeah, and that's part of the trick,
the biological trick of the wiring inside us
that gives us this phony math,
that success means having more, failure means having less.
Success means continuously having more than others
because of this tyranny of social comparison, all that.
And that's basically all the different elements in the book.
This is a, interestingly, the book was something
that I wrote for myself.
It was kind of my own meditations to improve my life.
Using the science of satisfaction that I studied
as a social scientist over the past two and a half decades,
I put together a strategic plan for myself
to move through my 40s, 50s, and 60s,
such that if I get the year, 70s and 80s, often in the future,
I can actually be happy and enjoy them. That was my objective. And once I wrote it, I thought,
well, you know, I'm not going to wait until I'm dead. I might as well publish this now and see if
it actually helps somebody else's life. And the truth is that, you know, as I write about it in my
colony Atlantic, little by little by little, I'm getting boatloads of feedback. We're saying,
oh, that is a myth. Oh, it's true. Now, a lot of it's timeless wisdom that the Stoics gave us,
or that Lord Buddha gave us, or that Jesus Christ gave us, or whatever happens to be,
but putting it in these scientific terms, it turns out it can be quite consumable.
Well, in a way, I was thinking about it almost as a more impressive mountain, right? So it's like
there's almost whatever it is
that you're trying to do, the chances that you will be
the most successful ever in the world
at that thing is very unlikely.
If you're a playwright, you're not gonna be better
than Shakespeare, right?
If you're, if you get drafted into the NFL,
you're probably not gonna be better than Tom Brady,
you're not gonna be better than Michael Jordan,
you're not gonna make more money than Jeff Bezos, right? Chances are very good that you're not going to surpass those achievements.
Of course, inevitably, someone will, but it's probably not going to be you, and it's probably not
going to be any time soon. So to me, and even if you did, yes, of course. And even if you did,
no, it's interesting because a friend of mine, he really honestly believed, and this is one of the
other fallacies that I talk about in the book, but everybody knows it's true.
One of the great fallacies that people think is that they become worldly successful.
Beyond a certain point, I mean an impressive point, it will solve all their real problems.
The problem is that they're not thinking about it.
So a friend of mine, he became very rich in private equity.
And he's like, you get super rich, like hundreds
of millions of dollars, and your wife still doesn't love you. And for some reason, you
thought that if I get 800 million dollars or something, that my wife is going to be like,
wow, I really do love you. And honestly love you. And your kids are really going to respect
you and want to hang out with you. You know, it doesn't actually solve any of the things
that really trouble you.
Yeah, no, that's exactly right.
And so the way I've started to think about it is like,
okay, so that race is probably unwindable,
but there are lots of happy people
who are also pretty successful, right?
Like, there are plenty of people
who played in the NFL
and they have a loving family
and they've been good in their community
and they die happily in bed at a reasonable age.
You know, whatever it is, right?
And so, I've started to think about it as like,
hey, trying to be the most at this thing,
the most and the unbalanced that's required to get there
is not only probably impossible, it's also that bargain.
I'm gonna try to do this other thing that's,
as the Stokes say, much more in my control,
which is I'm gonna try to be decent and balanced
and happy and good at what I do.
But that's gonna be a, not a tension,
that's gonna be a more holistic thing that I'm
trying to do, as opposed to just loading up in one domain.
And as you said, expecting it to magically address all the other domains.
Yeah.
The big lie that your brain tells you, and again, this is one of the big punchlines for
the book, is that your brain is telling you that you'll be happy if you get money, power, pleasure, and prestige.
Those are the worldly idols that attract you, and that's a lie. You have to migrate from the
four idols to the truly, the four goals that really are the investments, the deposits in which
you have to put into your account of your happiness, which is your faith and your family and your
friendships and work that serves other people.
When I say faith, I don't mean religious faith necessarily.
I mean, that is basically a sense of the transcendent.
You're doing something that is a sense of the transcendent, which is to say,
it's transcendent to your ordinary work-a-day life, and it puts your life into perspective.
You know, studying the Stoics will absolutely do that.
So think about life and faith and philosophy, friendship, real friends, not deal friends. Different.
As you say in the book, I love that.
I love that a lot.
And family life and work where you earn your success
and serve other people.
Those are the four big ambitions.
If you continue following the false idols
of money, power, pleasure, and prestige, or fame,
or admiration, or whatever happens to be,
you will wind up less satisfied than you started.
Yes, and at the end, you can't take those things
with you when you die, so you might as well enjoy.
I think part of what's so interesting
about the conditional happiness that we chase
is the unhappiness that we're willing to bear to get it, right?
And so why not just focus on those things now, the good things now, the things that are
in trends like family, for instance, obviously at the end of your life, you'll be glad that
you had a family or whatever.
But they also bring you pleasure now, right?
They also bring you pleasure now, as opposed to, you know, I starved myself for 15 years
to make it as, you know, America's top supermodel, right?
You were deeply unhappy while you had it, and you're not going to be that proud of it.
It's not going to bring me that much
joy or satisfaction when you're looking back on it at the end of your life.
Yeah, and there's, you know, your brain basically lies to you about these things and mastering
that is really critically important. You know, that's the service that you're trying to bring
by having helping people learn the Stoics, for example, because the Stoics are the masters
of making sure that the homeostatic lies of our brains and our culture and our entertainment industry and the media
that says, do this and you'll be happy, do this and you'll be fulfilled, get this and
everything will be all right.
And it actually won't be all right.
But there's another thing too, it's interesting.
I interviewed a lot of people for this book who were making a lot of wrong decisions with
their ambition and with their work.
And there's one lady I interviewed for this work who's just a titan of Wall Street.
I mean, she's just wealthy and she's pretty famous and she's really well respected.
And she was telling me about her life because I write about this stuff so people will
reach out to me and talk to me as if I psychiatrist, at which I'm definitely, most definitely not.
It's like, don't hire me.
But, and she said, I'm unhappy.
I don't have a good relationship with my adult kids.
My marriage is not that great.
I drink a little bit too much.
And I'm starting to miss a beat in my work
as I'm getting older and it's freaking me out.
And I said, it's kind of simple.
It's said, you just told me the solution to your problems.
Actually, get some treatment for your drinking
and restablish your relationship with your husband
and your kids and start working less
and do all the things that will make you happy.
Why don't you do that?
And she's got really quiet.
She said, you know, I think I'd prefer to be special
than happy.
And I'd let them myself.
Oh, that's so sad.
Macro, except that that's so common, Ryan, this is how addiction works.
You know, I had a roommate, a guy who was just all, he was just hopelessly
addicted to alcohol and drugs.
And I said, you know, you got to stop sooner or later.
Sooner or later, you're going to have to stop.
He said, yeah, I know.
I said, why isn't it today?
He said, because today I would prefer to be high than happy.
And this is what a lot of people are doing,
administering themselves the drug of success,
the drug of outward prestige.
And in so doing, they prefer to be special than happy.
They have a success addiction,
is what it comes down to.
Well, no, work addiction is in some ways,
and it's something I struggle with a bit myself.
It's so insidious because it's one of the few socially acceptable,
if not socially rewarded addictions.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure.
I mean, workaholism is actually a derivative addiction
of success addiction, which is the form of sort of self-objectification,
where you see yourself as not entirely human.
So fitness influencers on Instagram
sort of see themselves as bodies.
And people who work really hard and are rewarded for it
with a lot of money or prestige,
like you could be easily turn into a self-objectifier.
So Ryan Holiday, Homo Economicus,
or Homo Istoicus, or something like that.
That's, by the way, that's not a word.
So, but you get the idea of how we actually can do it.
We can strip away our own humanity because of our addiction.
This is what all addicts do.
You made a drug addict, you made an alcoholic.
It substitutes for all of their key relationships.
That last drink is more important than the first few minutes with their kids. And for the workaholic, the 14th hour of work provides more reward in the short term
than the first hour with their children.
And all that's doing is that work is taking a place of fatherhood or motherhood.
Well, what I find is that, you know, people are frustrating.
Life is complicated.
Things are unpredictable, but work because I'm good at it, I control.
Do you know what I mean?
It's, I am able to make it do what I want to do
in a way that nobody has control over the rest of their life.
And that's the same, you know, look,
it doesn't matter what's happening in the world.
It doesn't matter that you're living under a bridge,
heroin feels good when it goes in your body, right?
And that's what addiction is really about.
It's about control and yeah, it's about control.
It's substituting for the relationships
that give you less satisfaction in the moment
and that you don't actually understand
and can't manage very well.
It's the one relationship that you can manage
really, really well and you're good at it.
So you actually manage your own pleasure from that activity very narrowly.
And this is important for all of us, another thing for listeners and viewers of this to
understand, because drivers suffer from this and off a lot, all addicts, one of the things
that they have in common is they're self-administering a substance or a behavior with response to a perceived remediation need.
So for example, one of the things that we find is that people get addicted to cigarettes
really early.
I started smoking when I was 13 years old.
I started using nicotine administering it to myself when I was 13 years old.
Almost everybody who does that, you know, tries it and is like, I need this.
I don't know why.
Probably you have a lack of dopamine in your prefrontal cortex,
because you have attention issues.
And what happens is you get more,
I mean, nicanoids, particularly in the form of nicotine,
when you administer dopamine to the prefrontal cortex,
you can focus for the first time you feel actually normal.
People who have a lot of anxiety problems,
just naturally or because of their circumstances,
alcohol turns anxiety
off like a switch, but very temporarily.
And so people who administer themselves disordered amounts of alcohol.
Typically, they have something that are trying to remedy.
And those who are success addicts and workaholics, they're self-objectifiers who measure their
own self-worth with respect to their achievements.
That's why they become success addicts.
It's the same thing as in the other addiction.
You need something.
You gotta solve your problem.
And this isn't gonna do it.
Yeah, and still this is the key.
I was writing a little bit about Philip Roth
who turned out to be a complete monster, obviously.
But there was this quote he gave in an interview.
He was saying that the reason he lives by himself ways, not in relationships anymore, he said that he meant that he could always be on call
for his work.
He never had to wait on anyone or anything but himself.
He said, I'm like a doctor and it's an emergency room and I'm the emergency.
And I remember just thinking that's about the saddest thing I've ever heard in my life.
And he understands that it articulates it.
You know, it's the most amazing thing.
And yet, there have been times when all of us, you know, you work really hard, I work really
hard.
I don't think I've ever worked more less than a 60 hour week in my whole career.
You know, I was, when I was a college professor, I was like 60 hour week and I was a CEO,
I was a 60 hour week.
You know, now I'm, it's like, it's awesome because I get to write and speak and teach and I
do all this stuff and that gives me an excuse to work really, really hard.
Sure.
But you have to moderate the things that you're doing to blot out the mundanity, the outside
world.
I mean, it's not right to do that because that means that the problem's not the world,
the problem's inside.
Well, the problem is, if you want to be the emergent, if you want to treat yourself like
the emergency room, I guess it's your life, you can do what you want, but the problem is
also when you have made other commitments, or if you believe that a human being has obligations
to society, to their community, to their children, etc.
And so, as you are making yourself
the center of the universe, I guess that's well and good,
except for you also brought other people
into this universe, your children,
or you have a spouse, or you have a community
that's falling to pieces, but you're good
because you're really good at whatever your work is.
Yeah, for sure, and the world does valorize that.
It's interesting.
I can't remember who it was.
Well, I can't remember exactly what this site was.
You're gonna remember this, I think.
But who was it who said nobody is going to ask
about Rousseau's children?
You know, 200 years from now, people are not gonna be like,
yeah, yeah, the stuff he wrote was really awesome.
But what about his kids?
But we should ask that, because he was a monster.
I think it was terrible.
He was terrible family, man.
He abandoned his family.
Didn't he put all his children in an orphanage?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure.
I mean, there's, and you know,
and then you wrote a book about time, Ryan.
And then he wrote a book about childhood education, right?
No, no, it's the, you know, the, the colonies that guy had, for sure, you know, like church bells,
unbelievable. But, you know, this is, but this is endemic among strivers. This is endemic
among people that will, that will say, you know, what, what really matters is how people
remember me, you know, is what the legacy actually says. They will forget the non-special things that bring happiness.
They'll remember the special things even if I'm miserable.
And it's almost as cognitive as it is, almost as if I'll remember.
Epicurus actually has the greatest maximum on this.
We're not Epicurus, we're more stomach than Epicurus, but Epicurus said basically, remember.
When I am alive, death is not here and when death is here,
I'm not here. So this was his way of saying that you shouldn't be afraid of death, right? When
death is here, I am not, when I am here, death is not. Okay, that's a good reason to not,
that's a philosophical reason to not fear death, but it's also a reason to remember that you need
to be alive right now for the sake of the happiness that you can bring yourself and others.
Yeah, and again, to go to the point about
like what's the more impressive mountain?
I'd like to be a great writer who also,
you know, was a good father.
Like to me, one of the things that I always say
who remembers who's so as children,
whenever I read about one of these authors
or athletes or someone that I admire, and then I go, oh, and they were also a super absent father, or they were also
a wife, Peter, or they were also, you know, a closet Nazi or whatever, I go, oh, this changes
everything for me, you know what I mean? And I would rather them have been less good
at what they did, and a little bit more decent
as a human being.
To me, it's more impressive.
Yeah, no excellence.
Excellence really starts at home, doesn't it, Ryan?
Excellence starts with who you are as a person,
moral excellence.
And this is one of the reasons that I often say,
I realize that I'm a real square for it,
but I'm not gonna vote for somebody who's just loyal
to his wife. I'm just not gonna do, but I'm not gonna vote for somebody who's just loyal to his wife.
I'm just not gonna do it.
I'm not gonna vote for somebody for president
who has betrayed his spouse or her spouse.
I'm not gonna do it.
And maybe I don't know.
I mean, maybe, and they say,
all politicians do it.
No, they don't.
I know George W. Bush personally.
Zero percent chance.
He's a like him or hate him.
He's a person of decency and honor.
And he wouldn't do that.
And, you know, I just can't respect anybody or trust anybody who violates the most personal relationships
that they have, because that's the essence of integrity.
Being good at your job is not the essence of integrity.
And we've gotten to this culture where it's like, yeah, it doesn't merge, it doesn't matter.
All the matters is how good you are at your job.
How well are you going to be able to negotiate with the Russians?
How are you going to be able to get inflation in hand?
Well, we're people.
We're people with actual integrity, and that's maybe I'm just like crazy in square, but
I'm telling you, that really matters to me a lot.
No, I mean, it's tricky, right?
Because when you look at history, there have been good leaders who were not the most loyal
of husbands, mostly husbands, of course.
But I think, you know, and then of course, sometimes
it's a cultural issue more than a personal character issue
as it would be today.
But I do think we sports are a great example of this.
You know, Antonio Brown being a great example. A team goes, uh, he might be this, this or
that, but he can really catch a football. It's worth the risk. It's almost never worth
the risk because as the as the ancient saint character is fate, um, you know, who who we
are is who we are. Uh, and when someone shows you who they are, you should probably
believe them. Absolutely. You know, this is when people ask me, when my students ask me, where does
excellence start? What they're asking is, how do I be really excellent at what I do? The answer is
your excellence starts with your character, with the person that you want to be, with the way that
you treat other people, the way that you actually treat yourself.
There is no victimless crime.
And integrity actually starts with what you're doing when nobody is looking, which is, by
the way, a pure, full, on-steroic principle.
As, you know, that kind of integrity, you know, living according to your own integrity
with zero excuses and no loopholes.
And then, then, then, we'll talk about how good you are with your job.
Only then.
Yeah, and look, no one's saying that it can't work
for a time, right?
It probably will work, especially if the person
is super talented and good at their job.
But on a long enough timeline, it tends to not work out.
Yeah, well, you know, that's a biblical principle
that somebody who's rotten and little things
tends to be rotten and big things.
Somebody who's dishonest and little things
tends to be dishonest and big things too.
And so that's, you know,
there's a little bit of smoke here.
There's a little bit of fire elsewhere.
It's kind of what it comes down to.
And you know, we like to separate,
we like to put things in boxes,
but the good stomach says there are no boxes
when it comes to integrity.
Well, you talked about sort of one of the things being critical to happiness is some sort of a spouse or relationships or whatever.
I do feel like generationally, like I've been with my wife pointed out to me this morning, it's not technically our anniversary,
but that we base because we don't know exactly when it was, but we've been together for 15 years.
Right.
So almost half my life at this point. And that is way more
the exception than the norm in my generation. Like a lot of my friends are just now starting
to get serious about relationships. And I just wonder what the cost of all of that will
be. I'm not saying everyone should get married enough kids, because obviously there's a certain oppressiveness in that expectation or societal norm as well,
but it does seem like there is a lot lost in this sort of
transactional, a femoral set of unending relationships that dating apps and sort of hookup culture,
and all these things have made possible for people,
especially in my age.
Yeah, for sure.
And look, this is an absolute pattern
that we see in the happiness data,
is that happiness is love, full stop.
And that's not necessarily romantic love.
You can get that with deep and intimate friendships.
You can get that with family relationships
that go on and on and on.
But the point is, if you're not taking
your love relationship seriously,
you're simply not gonna be a happy person.
That's the truth.
And for most people, it's a good marriage.
For most people, it's a good romantic partnership
that can survive through thick and thin.
And where you have the discipline
to actually live with another person
and to not give up.
The main thing that I actually see,
because I study this a lot in,
people millennials and Gen Z, and I'm older, I'm sort of on the cusp of the
baby wars in Gen X, there was about a 30 percentage point difference in the likelihood of saying
you're in love in your 20s now compared to when I was in my 20s in the 1980s. And then
the real question is not because they're kind of going from, you know, relationship to
relationship with the apps, a much better explanation for that is that there's a lot
of fear in the truly entrepreneurial act
of giving your heart away.
The people are willing to raise to risk $10 million
on a startup, but they're not willing to risk
their own heart on a relationship and get it stomped on.
Because you have a lot of emotional bankruptcies
when you're in the marriage market,
is kind of what it comes down to. And so that fear, that fear of social rejection,
which has a huge neurological basis to it, we know that social rejection stimulates the same
regions of the brain, the anterior, single it, and the anterior insula as physical pain. And when
we're not used to it, we're really afraid of that pain.
And so doing it, it makes us resistant
to these types of relationships.
So one of the key things that I tell
is one of the key things I've talked about with my own kids
based on my research is that it's very, very important
that they take lots of risks in their relationships.
I don't mean like unprotected sex.
I'm talking about emotional risk.
And it's paid off.
My oldest son is 23 and he's engaged.
He's getting married in July.
And so he's like, yeah, I took your device out.
I'm like, wow.
This is the son who's a Marine?
No, my son is a Marine.
But he's taking risks in other ways.
He's shooting borders and he's a machine gunner.
He's a forward deployed combat marine.
So suffice it to say that I have risk taking kids
in my little baby, my little baby girl.
She, after COVID, she made a run for the border
and she went to college in Spain.
Wow.
And for her, she's living, I mean, she's half my wife's Spanish.
So she's half Spanish to speak Spanish,
but she moved to Spain alone at age 18.
And part of the reason is because I say,
look, you're not fully alive unless your life is your start-up
and you're taking risks that show that you believe it is such.
Yeah, I think it's the emotional risk.
I think people are also afraid to sacrifice
or give up things, right?
So in my 20s, I was, you know, I've worked at cool companies. I was doing cool stuff.
But by having someone to come home to, there was definitely stuff I was not participating in,
right, that I was not experiencing. And there was a certain amount of, you know, sort of
phono in that. But I was willing to give it up for the relationship and as a result get the relationship.
I think I find a lot of people are afraid.
They like their life, they like the control
they have over their life, they like that they get to do
whatever they want, whenever they want to do it.
And so they're afraid to risk that
and as a result get nothing but sort of superficial
or relationships
with expiration dates on them.
Yeah, for sure.
And that's obviously that has a lot of diminishing marginal
returns emotionally.
The other thing that's pretty interesting to me
in the current environment where people are jumping around
from thing to thing is that we have an over-reliance on
technology that matches us like, like, basically like siblings.
Sure.
And what people want, what people think they want in a romantic partner is somebody who's
just like them.
But they don't want somebody who's just like them.
It's not attractive.
It's like, you know what I want?
I want a 57 year old bald guy with a beard.
Actually, that's not what I want.
I don't want somebody who thinks like I do.
I actually need complementarity.
And so the key thing that we miss in the way that we match up,
the big mistake that we've made in using technology
in the way that we match people up,
is we need way, way, way more blind dates
that are set up by people who know us
and think that we're gonna be a complement to somebody else
as opposed to making the,
this very interesting is research on perfumes, for example.
Never choose your own fragrance. Because what you do is you like, that's something that
you like will smell like your beloved sister, which is really, really gross because of the
way that we match up.
And there's a whole lot of biological research on this, but suffice it to say that we need
to have other people find our mates for us a lot more so that we can be complimentary
and not just clones. No people sometimes go is your wife or
writer and I go I don't want to be with a writer. I'm horrible. Like you know I
wouldn't want to be with me. You know and I think there is something about what
you think you want and what you actually need. Maybe you're the worst person to
ask for that. Yeah you know there's a reason that there's a lot of success in arranged marriages.
And I'm not advocating for that, but I do think that we need people who make suggestions for us
and stop trying to choose perfectly curated mates in the basis of, you know, overlapping similarity.
Well, and perhaps what's working in the arranged marriage is what I was talking about also where
it's like, once you're in it, you're in it, right?
And you're having to commit to that.
I think the big thing I see in young people and relationships is that it's the fear of
committing, right?
Because of the opportunity cost of committing, because as you said, the risk or the vulnerability
inherently in committing the lack of options
you get when you commit, but at the core of it,
a relationship that lasts is about committing,
about going, I'm not going anywhere.
And so because I'm not going anywhere
and you're not going anywhere, we have to fix
whatever it is that's causing the unhappiness or the difficulty that we're currently experiencing,
we can't just like, you know, if you think, oh, I'm unhappy even though I just won an Olympic gold medal,
I'm just going to go get another gold medal and that I'll be happy.
Imagine if the gold medal said, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, we're going to get to the bottom of this
and figure out why you bought this lie.
Yeah.
No, that's right.
And it's the same thing over and over again.
If you're looking for your satisfaction in new achievements, even if those new achievements
are new relationships, their new sexual partners, whatever it happens to be, is an interesting
study, Ryan, that you've probably seen before, that actually looks based on survey data
at the greatest amount of satisfaction
with respect to the number of sexual partners that people have.
The number is one.
It turns out to be the number one.
I know people are going to be like, no way, the data don't lie when it comes to this.
That's one per year, by the way, because that's actually the only unit that they had available
to measure.
I can't tell you how many in a lifetime, but I can tell you that actually committing
to one particular person winds up for most people being more satisfactory because they
actually explore the nature of their own commitment, which is an expression of virtue.
So the last question I had for you, someone I know who knows you was pointing out that
even as you're talking about professional decline, which I think is probably one of your most red articles and I just love that piece so much in it.
It's in the new book. It's in the new book. They said one of the things that I noticed about Arthur
though is that as he's gotten older, he's gotten in better and better shape. So how did you pull that
off?
Exerciseing more and not trying not to eat. Trying to get 200 grams of protein
and keeping my calories under 2,500 a day
while lifting four times a week
is basically what it comes down to.
It's not rocket science, but you know,
it's interesting that you have,
there's a lot of things that are under your control
that you can actually make better.
The problem is that people actually do in fitness
is thinking that they're going to get to one particular state
and finally be happy.
So if I get to 7% body fat, then all will be well.
And this is the key thing is remembering that fitness
or eating right or doing your work
or whatever happens to be,
this is all about habits, it's all about processes.
And you have to love the process.
You actually have to enjoy the process per se.
And I got to the point in my life where I said,
you know, I actually like, I'm lifting.
I like, I like, it took a long time
for me to get to that particular point.
But yeah, and maybe there's a little bit of insecurity
in it too.
I mean, as your hair starts falling out,
which yours probably never will.
I mean, it's like, may the Lord bless you
and being hairy your whole life, hair suit your whole life.
You gotta make it up in some other area.
So maybe I'm trying to do that in muscle mass.
I'm so weak.
I'm so weak.
That is one thing you do control though.
We don't control what we look like.
We don't control how tall we are.
We don't control a bunch of stuff.
But you do more or less control
whether you're in shape or not.
Right? If in a pretty or less control whether you're in shape or not, right? Yeah.
Within a pretty, you control whether you're more bibliobecer or not, right?
You control whether you're, you know, you can run a mile or not.
You control whether you're, you're going to be in, in reasonable shape.
And that is a huge impact on whether you're happy and also whether you can do a lot of
the other stuff that we're talking about.
For sure. I mean, the key thing is also, why are you taking care of your body? Are you taking
care of your body so you can live to 180? Then the question is, why do you want to live to 180?
It's back to our earlier budget. But if you're actually taking care of your body because you want to be
well right now, you want to be well on Wednesday because Wednesday you're going to be with your
family and it's a lot better to be
able to pick up your kid than without worrying about throwing at your back. For example, I can't
pick up my kids because they're bigger than I am, but you get my point that you have to be,
you're taking care of yourself, you're trying to be strong and well and healthy because you want
to be fully alive right now. That's very different than trying to get into a natural bodybuilding
contest for the over 50 crowd or something like that, which doesn't seem to be the most
meritorious of goals.
It's also a way to have a win every day.
I think about two, right?
It's like, hey, the world can be falling apart.
You can be in the middle of a pandemic.
The book you're working on could be kicking your ass.
But if I decide to go for a run,
I'm gonna come back from the run,
you know, and I'm gonna feel good
that I did it afterwards.
And so to me, it's also just a nice way
to ratchet up a win every single day.
Yeah, this is the key thing also about your spiritual practice.
If you're a meditator or if you have a life of prayer,
I mean, I pray every day,
I'm a practicing Roman Catholic.
And I don't,
people often think that
that people who have a serious meditation practice
or religious practice is because they wanna get
to a particular state.
I wanna get to the point of final enlightenment.
No, no, no, no.
That's not the point.
My life is actually better.
I'm fully alive right now because of the spiritual life,
which is my spiritual workout for all intents and purposes. Right. It's the ongoing spiritual state that is the heaven or the hell, not the...
Yeah. It's all now. It's all about now. It's all about now the continuous experience
of the ongoing now. Well, I love that and I love the new book and I love all your writing and
it's a complete honor as always to talk with you
Thank you Ryan. It's so good to talk to you. I mean me and half the country were your fans
So and you're the guy who resurrected the Stoics, you know
They're saying look we're gonna be dead everybody's gonna forget us turns out Ryan Hollard is gonna bring you back
2000 years later so we can all hope that somebody does that to the rest of us
But we won't be alive to enjoy it.
So it's a somewhat muted accomplishment at the show.
That's right.
It's a it's a periodic victory for sure.
Yeah.
All right, you're the best.
I appreciate it.
Let's do this again.
Right on, man.
Thank you.
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