The Daily Stoic - Danica Patrick - Trailblazing Pro Racer On Pushing Limits Everywhere
Episode Date: October 21, 2020Ryan speaks with groundbreaking pro racer Danica Patrick about performing under pressure, life as an athlete before and after retirement, and how to take risks in the face of mortality D...anica Patrick is a former professional race car driver. As a driver, she set a number of milestones for women in professional racing: first to win an IndyCar series, first to earn pole position in a NASCAR Cup Series, and one of only 14 drivers to have led both the Indianapolis 500 and the Daytona 500. She currently hosts the Pretty Intense podcast.***If you enjoyed this week’s podcast, we’d love for you to leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It helps with our visibility, and the more people listen to the podcast, the more we can invest into it and make it even better.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: http://DailyStoic.com/signupFollow @DailyStoic:Twitter: https://twitter.com/dailystoicInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoic/Facebook: http://facebook.com/dailystoicYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dailystoicFollow Danica Patrick: Homepage: http://www.danicapatrick.com/Podcast: http://www.danicapatrick.com/podcastsTwitter: https://twitter.com/DANICAPATRICKInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/danicapatrick/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DanicaPatrickYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/DanicaPatrickSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke Podcast early and add free on Amazon Music.
Download the app today.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars.
And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target.
The new discounter that's both savvy and fashion forward.
Listen to business wars on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
music or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to the Daily Stoic. For each day we read a short passage designed to help you cultivate the strength,
insight, wisdom necessary for living good life.
Each one of these passages is based on the 2000 year old philosophy that has
guided some of history's greatest men and women.
For more, you can visit us at dailystowach.com.
Hey, it's Ryan Holiday.
Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stowach Podcast.
My guest this week is someone I'm really excited to talk to you about because actually about two
weeks ago she and I had a really long conversation on her podcast, pretty
intense and I would say it was a pretty intense conversation and I would say I'm
a pretty intense person as I'm sure you've picked up from my writing and
podcasts over the years. So it was it was awesome to chat. Danica Patrick is one of the all-time greats,
one of the pioneers of women in professional racing.
She is the most successful woman in the history of American open-wheel racing.
Personally, I know next to nothing about
a NASCAR or IndyCar racing or F1 or any of that.
But there are these figures when someone is so good that they transcend their sport.
Danica is one of those people. Obviously Lance Armstrong with biking was one of those people.
Paul Raeble is one of those people who I had on the podcast recently.
Sometimes, even if you don't know anything
about the sport, you recognize greatness
or you recognize a mad brick
or you recognize someone who just sort of is breaking
new ground in a sport.
And certainly, Danica is that.
I've seen her stuff everywhere as have you.
But I was really fascinated with her sort of philosophical
inclinations.
And I think you'll see in this conversation.
Not only do we go really deep,
it's very clear that she's gone very deep
and done a lot of work on herself,
which of course is the purpose of philosophy,
whether it's stoicism or Buddhism or Christianity,
the purpose of the work is internal.
As Senka says, the purpose of philosophy
is to be a brush that scrubs off our own faults,
not the faults of other people.
And so it's very clear that she has spent the time
sort of post-racing.
And I've got to imagine this has been a lifelong journey
of sort of looking inwards, working on herself.
And I think that comes through.
There's one thing I wanted to add,
a little background in the interview that I think is interesting.
I'm always, I always like when something gets to me
like a quick bit of perspective opens my eyes,
makes me get something, you know, Plutarch talks about,
I think I quote this in ego, he talks about how sometimes
it's not words that teach you something,
it's experience suddenly matching with the words.
We live in times where this concept of privilege is talked about all the time, about the intersection
of different identities and experiences and how not everyone's going through the world
as you are.
We don't need to get into any of that and I promise you what I'm about to say is not political
in any way.
But anyways, I record most of these podcasts using a software called ZenCaster.
We don't do video on most of them just because it's sort of a pain and there's always bandwidth issues here in Texas.
So it's just an audio only and then you sort of log in and it records their track and you record your track.
It's just sort of how it works. And so anyways, I had my assistants and the link over to Danica's people and then she pulled it up and then she said,
Hey, I'm here and I said, hey great to see you. And she said, so are we doing video or is this just audio? And I said, oh, it's just audio. that had been of me,
and just how different the expectations of men and women
are as far as media goes, as far as walking through the world.
And of course, I know this intellectually,
but sometimes something just hits you and you're like,
oh man, right, like I was assuming everyone was going
through the world as my experience.
And by that, I don't just mean as a man, I just mean as a writer, which no one really cares Right, like I was assuming everyone was going through the world as my experience.
And by that, I don't just mean as a man, I just mean as a writer,
which no one really cares what you look like.
And, you know, I sort of, I get up, I take a shower in the morning and I go to work.
And if I have to record a podcast, I have to record a podcast.
That's not really, you know, appearances don't matter because no one's gonna criticize my appearance
and I don't have to worry about people
reading into my appearance
or making snarky comments online about my appearance
and go through this with my wife sometimes
where it's like, oh, we're going
and so I'm ready to go
and then it doesn't, you know, as a man you forget
that different people have different obligations,
self-imposed or societally imposed
that we're all carrying
different loads, I guess is what I'm saying.
And this struck me even more so because immediately after finishing the interview, I then had
to do a video interview with a local news station.
And so I went downstairs, got my hair wet from the sink, slightly brushed my hair and went
back up. It took me one minute to get ready for an on camera thing.
So anyways, I'm not trying to shoehorn in stoses into a contemporary debate.
But but my point is the purpose of the philosophy and the work is not to make you,
not to harden your heart, but to open your heart, to open your eyes and help you
understand other people's experience.
And I feel proud of the fact that as I've studied philosophy, as I've gotten older, as I've done this work,
one of the things that has opened me up to is some of these insights.
And so thank you to today's guest for helping make that possible, even though I'm sure that wasn't what she thought
she would teach me in the podcast.
Here we go.
So anyways, here's my interview with Danica Patrick.
It's a long one, almost an hour.
Great conversation, you're gonna love it.
And I promise there's a bunch of good stuff in there,
especially towards the end.
And please check out Danica's stuff on her podcast,
Pretty Intense.
You can listen to her interview with me.
It's a great one. And you can
follow her on social media at Danica Patrick on both Twitter and Instagram. She's had a bunch of
great guests. Is a fascinating person. And I think you're going to like this one.
When we were talking last time you you you use the word philosophize, which I love because it's not a word you hear very often, and
it is a word that is central to stoic philosophy that they say, you know, to philosophize is
to learn how to die, meaning essentially that the central question of philosophy is about
our mortality, struggling with this scary thing. We touched on it a little bit when you and I were talking but I wanted to maybe start there, maybe even do the whole
episode on mortality because it is, it's a thing you don't get to talk about very
much, you know what I mean? Yeah, I think that it's something that is so, I just
not talked about that much. Mortality is something we all fear a lot,
and I remember reading something recently
that was talking about how, you know,
if we didn't die, we would not have any purpose or reason
for anything.
Like, nothing would be of value.
Nothing would be important.
Nothing would have urgency, nothing,
because you have all the time in the world.
So it's actually what gives you life.
And it strikes me too that in your profession,
there's obviously an element of danger in all sports.
But every time you got in the car
and raced around a track it,
you know, hundreds of miles
an hour, there was real danger there.
I mean, that's definitely part of it, for sure.
I mean, yeah, I can say you're driving 200 miles an hour with concrete walls around
you.
So it wasn't something that I thought a lot about.
It wasn't something that I thought about it much more after I was done.
And in fact, when I went and did the Indy 500 broadcast the year after I was done in 2019,
I remember feeling like, thank God, I'm not out there.
I can't remember feeling like this is really crazy and dangerous and anything can happen.
And I sort of was able to sort of let the gravity
and the danger of it sort of be felt at a deeper level
than I was allowing myself while I was doing it
because it's not productive, not smart, not, you know,
it's not going to make me feel better, but it kind of, you know, after I was done, I
think there was an ability to let it really sink in. And I could feel that, I could sure
feel that.
Yeah, there's a, there's a, like a Hebrew prayer that says, the world is a narrow bridge.
The important thing is to not be afraid.
I've got to imagine that you can't drive a car
200 miles an hour if you're simultaneously afraid
of driving a car at 200 miles an hour.
I love visuals, so that's such a great visual to me.
And what I'm seeing is that if it's a narrow bridge,
when you accept the full gravity of the situation,
the bridge gets higher.
I probably, I tried to keep my bridge
as close to the ground as possible
so that I crash instead of die.
Which is funny little analogy.
No, because I was watching it, I was watching a YouTube video and it's just titled
Danica Patrick crashes. And it's like 13 minutes of you crashing your car. So you, I mean,
crashing happens a lot in your sport. Yeah. Yeah, it does.
It really does.
And I was very grateful at the end of my career
to be able to say that I was able to walk away
from just about every accident, pretty good.
Was that scary?
What do you feel like in one of those moments where,
I mean, I've been in a few different car crashes,
none of them super serious,
but I've never gone into a spin on a turn at 200 miles an hour
What are you you're asking what goes through my mind? Yeah, what does that feel like well?
usually you get
An indication of something, you know a lot of times especially if there's it's a big rack
You can kind of see stuff start to unfold and come and you can almost
feel like a concern come over you a little bit. I mean you know not not every single time especially
if you're alone when it happens but you know as you you can almost it's actually if you if there
are other people involved this is it's almost like I can feel the energy of the people around me and the anxiety
or the concern or the anxiousness or aggression or whatever it is. You can kind of feel that
coming. But the actual accident itself aside from maybe a little bit of preemptive, quantum energy I'm feeling is that you know it starts and you think to yourself oh shit and then
it goes kind of slow and you can kind of the whole spin or the whole crashing or the whole thing
unfolds in a way that allows you time to think to navigate to maybe navigate, to maybe turn away, to maybe, you know,
like a steering wheel, time slows down.
So, you know, I don't know what, I mean, the whole,
the whole theory of time and time and space are irrelevant.
I think really applies in the situation of crashing because you,
when you watch it in real time, it didn't feel like the
duration was the experience inside the car.
It's weird.
Our bodies are pretty good at intuitively knowing what to do.
Even in your situation, it's not like evolutionarily, we'd have some reason to survive a car crash,
but your training kicks in,
but then also your self-preservation instincts kick in.
So it's weird too that we feel so much fear and anxiety
about stuff when really our body kind of in those moments
takes over, and your opinion is kind of irrelevant
at that point.
Yeah.
That meaning your opinion of what's going on or your opinion,
what do you mean by your opinion?
I mean, like we worry, like, what am I going to do?
Is it going to hurt?
I'm afraid.
And like really, then when you actually get in those moments,
it's like, you know, people are like, what would I do in a fight?
And it's like your body takes over.
Like you're not really even consciously doing anything.
And, you know, people are afraid of crashing on a bike, but it's like the thing happens
so fast, but then your body kind of just takes over and handles what needs to do.
You're not consciously doing anything in those moments.
And I also think that there's a disconnection from the physical pain or physical anything that happens to you physically, which is this weird sort of like
Mind space I get into I remember talking to someone who was a
Deologist and the idea of not having to numb someone before you do surgery and
I don't understand why is this make this?
you do surgery and then I don't understand why. Is this make this a?
Yes.
So it really makes you think, makes you wonder about what
is truly going on between the body and the mind.
And if pain is a real thing, or if it's just a learned
sort of subconscious programming that says we crash
it hurts.
You know, I got cut open, I'm sore, right? As opposed to what's really going on, which is, I don't know, not, I don't know, there's,
do you see, I just get it.
I do. Going around this idea of like, what is really happening?
What is reality?
No, it's a great point because, you know, yeah, people are afraid that something's gonna hurt, right?
Like, they're afraid that getting dumped will hurt.
They're afraid that, you know, getting punched in the face
will hurt, that hearing that someone you love died.
And all those things do hurt, but when you tend to ask people
what they felt in that moment, the answer is like,
I didn't feel anything, I felt very calm, I felt nothing.
Like, I remember I was a kid, we had this drive when it was really steep and it was riding down
the driveway, no helmet, of course, on my bike.
And the front wheel just literally fell off my bike.
And so I hit, you know, the entire pavement, like really fast right on the right side of
my face.
And I remember getting up and going like, I'm fine.
And I was not fine. You know,
like I think I'd broken my eye socket and my lips were all caught on my braces. It was like one
of the worst accidents I've ever been in. And it didn't hurt until somebody showed me a mirror.
And they said, look at your face. That's actually my younger sister did this. And at that point,
it started to become excruciatingly painful. But until I was like fully
aware of what happened, my body was doing a pretty good job protecting me from the pain I was in.
Is it the body protecting you or is it just a different reality than we comprehend?
That could be true. I mean, is that what you believe? You believe there's sort of these different realities
that we inhibit?
I do.
I think that I think that so many things
that we experience and the way that we take in an experience
or something happening to us is learn.
And so we're often just following a pattern
of how we think we should respond
as opposed to how we need to respond?
Uh-huh, yeah, I think that can be,
I think that can be very true.
I do think that the body sends you messages
through feeling at times,
but much more energetic quantum level.
You know, like when someone walks into the room and you're like,
oh, I get a weird vibe from that guy, you know?
Yeah.
That kind of stuff, I think, is sending us information.
But I think a response is maybe something that's more programmed,
as opposed to, I don't know, it's a tricky thing.
I suppose I think about the nature of reality
a lot in my life and what's real and what's not and how much we create our reality, but
yeah, it's an interesting thing to swirl around about.
You've lived a very surreal reality, right? Like you're one of the youngest, most successful
race car drivers in history.
You broke all these barriers, you're known all over the world.
Do you think I wonder part of it too?
And I think you see this with artists is because they live such a sort of untraditional life,
it helps them see, you know, like the quirks in the matrix, so to speak, like because your
reality is so weird, you kind of, it helps you question reality everywhere.
Yes, that's actually really insightful. I think that's true. And my example of that,
in a really silly example, as most of the time
breaking series open comes and really silly ways to me.
But the one that comes to mind for that is that
doing, like let's say you get popular,
you go on a TV show, you go do an interview,
you're in a magazine, you're on the cover,
whatever it may be, you realize that it's driven by either a sponsor that is perhaps buying ads.
Sure.
Or it is that you're being featured.
Or you're promoting something.
You're promoting a race that you're doing, or actors and actresses,
or promoting a movie that's coming out,
a musician's promoting an album.
So you realize that there's so much more business behind,
I realize that there's so much more business behind things
and celebrities are kind of created a lot of times
as opposed to just, yes, they naturally happen for sure,
but sort of the promotion and how much you see them
is very much driven by lots of other factors.
And it made me realize that the stuff that we see,
the magazines we pick up and whatever,
we just think, oh, they're famous.
It's like another being made famous,
like somebody's paying for that, you know?
Somebody's making that happen.
And so I think so early on, I realized,
because I just realized that there was a lot of bullshit in there
and that there's an agenda behind everything.
And so that was kind of the first crack
and sort of the matrix of what's real
and what's not as far as media goes,
because I knew that I was being featured
or put in certain positions because of things beyond me.
This is, I think, a very, very stoic idea.
And what I, as I've become successful in my career,
I think I've appreciated it more in meditations.
Like, Marcus really is, when he's writing meditations,
is the most famous man in the world.
There's literally a cult of the emperor
that's worshipping him as a god.
There's statues all over him, wherever it goes.
There's parades.
And he writes in meditations all the time,
you can tell he's trying the sort of sober himself.
And like, one of my favorite scenes,
he's like clearly at this banquet being thrown in
his honor.
And he sort of breaks it down.
He's like, you know, this is a, this is a dead pig.
And you know, this is a dead bird.
And this wine is fermented grapes.
And like only the emperor was supposed to wear a purple cloak.
And so he's talking about how his purple cloak is exactly the same as everyone else's
cloak. It's just dyed with shellfish blood and then he goes through and talks about how
the purple dye is created. And I think he's doing what you're talking about, which is
if you don't, if you peek behind the curtain that can have two, it should have the
effect of making you realize that what's going on back there is not as special as you think it is. And if you don't have that reaction, then being on the cover of the magazine
is going to fuel your ego and your self-importance probably in an unhealthy way.
That is the next question that I was going to ask, what are the repercussions of that?
Yeah, I mean, so my favorite thing is he talks about posthumous fame, which is kind of the thing
that I think, like a lot of people who are successful and ambitious, you're like, I want, he took, so my favorite thing is he talks about posthumous fame, which is kind of the thing that I think,
like a lot of people who are successful and ambitious,
you're like, I want to be known, I want to have this or that.
And you want to be on a magazine cover,
you want to sell books or something.
And then there's this, you go, but what would really,
like are people going to remember this?
And so we're kind of driven by like,
it's not just cool to be famous.
You have to be like famous for all of eternity. Like that's really impressive.
And his point he just talks about, he's like, you're going to be dead. So what do you care?
And his point is like, also the people who are going to be alive in the future are going
to be just as annoying as the people who are alive right now. It's not really any more special to be famous 200 years after your death as it is to be
famous right now.
That leads me.
It's like taking a turn a little bit, but it's something that I was going to ask you about
when I interviewed you, but we didn't get to.
And that's that, you know, you're obviously, you know, wise beyond your ears.
We're talking to your referencing people that were seemingly wise beyond their years.
So I have this idea that
civilization or culture is
progressing in a linear way towards an expanding consciousness and awareness.
But in the whole span of time, there have been people that have come in,
that have spiked to a very high level beyond where we're even are now,
that are here to show us the way.
And I wonder if you think that's true, whether it be Marcus Aurelius
or Jesus or yourself or Alan Watts or someone like that, you know, Terence McKenna. Are these
people like, do you feel like in all of time, we're getting, we get delivered these really
ancient souls that come here to teach us things?
I do believe that.
Certainly, I don't believe that I'm in that company, but I believe that there, I believe
in energy, you're talking about it.
It seems like there are every several generations
there seems to be someone who's kind of tapped into an energy
or reached into a place of sort of deeper consciousness
that allows them to do something really magical.
And what I am fascinated with is the Stoics is that Jesus
and Seneca are born in the same year and the same Roman Empire and are talking about
a lot of the same things. So I don't think it only has to be from a religious context.
I just think there's, yeah, we do have the ability to sort of have kind of a fleeting impact like that. And I'm like, you know, there's this,
it's sort of not trendy to believe now
in what they call the great man of history theory,
which is that like an individual can change history,
but I actually like sort of profoundly believe in that.
And I think it's kind of a self-fulfilling prophecy.
If you don't think that a person can make a difference
like that, then you're not going to be that person.
So true.
I want to go back to the death thing.
I'm curious.
So obviously, it makes sense why when you're getting in the car,
you can't be thinking about, I'm going to crash.
This is so scary.
I could get hurt.
But did doing such a dangerous sport
in which I'm sure you knew racers who lost their liser,
you were at races where that happened.
Did how did that shape your life off the track?
Like did it make you more present
or did it make you more reckless?
Like how did you think about like,
I gotta imagine like if you're a police officer or you're in the army knowing that there is
a pit...
Every day there's a risk that you can get shot or hurt or firemen knowing that risk
probably changes, I don't know, like how you are over breakfast in the morning.
No, that's Sam.
Didn't.
I didn't. I mean, I...
And yes, I was at the track when people died.
A couple times.
And knew them, obviously, because I was driving the same race.
Or, you know, I remember the most vivid one was,
it was the beginning of the 2006 season.
And we were at home, said Miami Speedway.
And back then, we used to do a morning warm-up
before the race and so we were all out in the morning warm-up and somebody had an issue
and a car came around and hit him and anyway this was my teammate and he died and We no longer didn't party more much after that, but I remember that
What I felt was that I was sorry for my family and loved ones that I would have absolutely gone out that day and
Raced like I had no problem with that and I felt sort of of guilty to I felt selfish in a way that I
didn't feel it on a level that made me concerned for other people. I thought that I
was selfish enough to say, you know, I could still go out there and drive. We as a
team, our team owner sat my other, there was three of us and the other two drivers,
myself and another, we didn't race that day as a sort of respect to him of course. And I just
remember feeling like I would have gone out that day. And so even if I track all the way back to my
probably, I think it was the first time I flipped a go-cart. I was racing a Charlotte Motor Speedway inside of the big track. So there was a
little go-cart track in there. So I was racing go-cart and I was probably, I was
probably like 14 and I, it was one lap to go and I was leading and I went into the first corner of the last lap and it was a
road course. So I went left and right and everything didn't just go in a circle. So I got bumped out of
the way and two guys got by me and I followed them all, you know, caught back up and came around to the very last corner of that lap.
And we all spread out wide and went into the last corner and the carts in front of me
lifted and I didn't.
So I drove over the back of the go cart.
In fact, the person that I drove over ended up, I mean, he drove Indy Carse, he won the
Indy 500.
His name is Sam Hornish, and I drove over him and there's pictures of it and everything. And then landed
on my head, flipped over, and my dad came running out and I think he barrelled himself.
He's like, my legs were not working as fast as my brain. So he got out there, but I remember
after that whole accident happened,
aside from the fact that I never wore blue-raise shoes again after that day, because I know
it was the first week, I'm with blue-raise shoes. Oh, the superstitions. I remember my dad
telling me, you're not invincible. Like, you can get hurt. This is your, this is, you're
not bulletproof. And obviously, I don't really remember how I was acting,
but I was obviously acting in some kind of a way
that I was somewhat unaffected,
or even angry or motivated by it.
And so, you know, it's kind of a couple of stories
of a long-winded answer of how do I do
when there's danger and death and all that around me.
And that's, that it, again,
it's probably keeping my, keeping my bridge low
and not being, not acknowledging the death of danger.
What's like, some horses have to be prodded
and then other horses have to be reigned in, right?
So some people probably have to work themselves
up to do a scary thing. And it may be that your in, right? So some people probably have to work themselves up to do a scary thing,
and it may be that your personality, your biology, your experiences, you have to like sort of keep
maybe that drive and check a little bit to get to the same middle ground, which is like not being too
afraid, but also not being too fearless. Yeah. I would definitely say that my personality is that of speed.
I know it sounds so cliche.
Or intensity.
But it's speed.
It's about, I do everything quickly,
so I kind of rush into things.
And so I'm used to working on instinct intuition and not on
processing and thinking. That's not really the place that I go. So now in my
older age I'm trying to pair feeling with thinking, right? Taking in a taking
enough time to slow down and think about things and then
acknowledging how that sits in my body as a feeling. So I feel like in my age I'm trying
to marry the two of them. Hey it's Ryan got a quick message from one of our sponsors and
then we'll get right back to the show. Stay tuned.
Celebrity feuds are high stakes. You never know if you're just going to end up on page six or Du Moir or in court. I'm Matt Bellasai. And I'm Sydney Battle. And we're the host of
Wundery's new podcast, Dis and Tell, where each episode we unpack a different iconic celebrity
feud from the build up, why it happened, and the repercussions.
What does our obsession with these feuds say about us?
The first season is packed with some pretty messy pop culture drama,
but none is drawn out in personal as Brittany and Jamie Lynn Spears.
When Brittany's fans form the free Brittany movement dedicated to fraying her
from the infamous conservatorship,
Jamie Lynn's lack of public support, it angered some fans, a lot of them.
It's a story of two young women
who had their choices taken away from them
by their controlling parents,
but took their anger out on each other.
And it's about a movement to save a superstar,
which set its sights upon anyone who failed
to fight for Britney.
Follow Dissentel wherever you get your podcast.
You can listen ad-free on Amazon Music
or the Wonderunder app.
No, I get that for sure.
I think, especially if you're really good at something,
one of the ways you can get away with not having to think
or deal with anything uncomfortable
or not in your control is just to go do your thing.
Like, for me, life is complicated, but writing is very simple. I mean, writing is hard, and it your thing. You know, like for me, life is complicated,
but writing is very simple.
I mean, writing is hard and it's complex in other ways,
but it's like, it exists, it's just me
and the computer screen, but calling customer service
to get something figured out is actually much harder
for me and more stressful than writing a book.
Do you know what I mean?
And so I got to imagine as racing goes away,
you're forced to feel and deal with more things.
Yeah, yeah.
Why do you think that is?
Why is it more difficult?
Yeah.
Well, I think you can get really lopsided, right?
It's like if you're only working out one arm
all the time, it's going to get really strong and then the other arm is going to atrophy. So I think,
you know, one of the blessings and curses of being good at something, particularly a thing that
makes other people money is that people kind of swoop in and take stuff off your plate. It's like
the NBA player that like fly has to go to the airport
after they retire and nobody is like escorting them
and booking their ticket.
And you know what I mean?
Like suddenly you're like back to reality.
So is it just about a familiarity then?
I mean, I think that's part of it.
But I also think it's like, you bet, it's basically like,
and I've struggled with this, I've written about it,
but work and activity are just as addictive as sex
or drugs or alcohol or any other, or eating,
we can cope with inner pain or anguish or feelings
of inadequacy or whatever your issue is,
you can cope with them by doing anything
that rewards you with endorphins.
And so, you know, like, if I'm not careful,
work and consume my life,
and then I don't have to deal with any of my shit.
So I've got to imagine that retiring,
forcing, like retiring, especially,
you know, like what's interesting for me about athletes
is how young, you know, like it's interesting for me about athletes is how young,
you know, like it's like you're you're done and you're you're good, you know, like and obviously
you're still going to do other stuff and you have your podcast and and you do TV and whatever,
but I just mean like it no longer is your life exclusively dedicated to one thing. I gotta imagine a bunch of stuff comes up.
Emotionally, you mean?
Yeah, emotionally, personally, just, yeah,
like all of a sudden, things that you've been putting off
are now there, and either you make yourself busy,
so you don't have to deal with them,
or you decide to deal with them.
I agree.
I mean, to me, it's just because I haven't practiced them.
Okay, I'm not, you know, you've probably practiced writing a lot, right?
You don't, we don't practice calling customer service. Nobody really loves doing that.
So, um, so we don't, you know, I think that what, so yeah, when I was racing, it was very automatic, very, and you know, dare I say, it wasn't easy, it was always very,
it was easy to do and hard to be really good at.
I don't know if that resonates, but there's a push that has to happen to keep on excelling.
But just doing the job itself was easy, like driving was easy.
But I practiced a lot. And so I guess, you know,
when you step away or have more time outside of whatever it is that you did a lot, you're
having to kind of go through the growing pains. And so, you know, I think that I mean, stuff that
pops up emotionally, I think it's really just, I think it's a side
from a new activity or a new discipline.
I think that's just a matter of wanting, growing as a human being and expanding and wanting
more for yourself.
And so again, just kind of like learning a new activity, you have to learn how to feel.
And you have to learn how to cope with emotions.
And you have to learn how to communicate and learn how to not project and learn how to discover your triggers.
And there's a lot of learning that goes on because it's not something that you know it's you want more you want more
peace you want more joy you want more happiness and so you have to kind of
disarm some of those things that block you from it and so that's just like a separate learning but
I think that I think that it's it's similar and it's nature that it's hard because
and you kind of don't want to do it either because we just kind of tend to like to do things that are really good at and that are easy.
Because I have this theory that human nature is to do the minimum, but everyone's minimum is different.
So if you've come from a family that's like really hard and pushes you and like your minimum's pretty damn high. But if you come from a family that, you know, like, you know, there's no accountability
and you can do whatever you want now,
and you're, you know, maybe it's a wealthy family,
your minimum becomes kind of low.
So, but, you know, it's, it's, what is your minimum?
What do you require of yourself?
How good do you wanna be?
How involved do you wanna get?
And then that determines just how much challenge
there's going to be in getting there.
To me, that's that's the critical question because you said a couple times like you have to,
you have to, you have to. I think you can. I would argue most people don't, right? So like
there are plenty of athletes, for instance, that retire and then just immediately throw themselves into something else. So they never actually do have to do that.
And like I see every time I finish a book, I'm like,
I'm going to take a break, but I don't.
You know, like there's certainly a part of,
there's a tempting part to just, and this is what I was talking about my
stillness book, there's a part that just wants to keep going,
going, going so you don't have to do those uncomfortable things you're talking about.
What is it that you're avoiding?
I mean, I think at the end of the day, what most of us are avoiding is just having to be with
ourselves. There's a Blaze Pascal line that says, all of humanity's problems stem from our inability
to sit quietly in a room alone.
I think like at the core of it,
you know, there is pain or fear or uncertainty
or questions that we all have about life,
about meaning, about, you know, feelings that we have
or urges that we have or whatever it is.
And, you know, work, work, drugs are a fun way to not have to do with those things.
And if you can get away with them not being addictive, you know, it can be cool.
But work and activity is the most socially accepted way to run from your problems and the way that's rewarded the most.
What's the thing that you're the most proud of yourself for sitting through and getting quiet enough to really deal with?
I mean, I think over the, I think having kids forced me to do a lot of those things, like realizing I was like very closed off emotionally,
you know, realizing that I had sort of a lot of pain
from my childhood that I had, you know, sort of,
that maybe, you know, my relationship with my parents
wasn't the way that I thought it was, that there was.
You know, and one of the, I think, you know,
I'm fascinated by sort of some inner child work.
Like, how do you, how do you really go?
Because I feel like a lot of us are sort of stuck at a certain age.
And for some of us that age is five, and some of us that age is 15, or whatever it is.
But whatever, whenever something happened to you, you can kind of get stuck in that age.
Or that's like the maturity you get to.
And so I think one of the things that having kids does
is sort of this perpetual reminder of it is that
it's like, I don't really remember what it was like to be for,
but and I don't spend a lot of time with four year olds,
but now that I have a four year old, you're like,
oh, I was like this and knowing what I know about my parents
or knowing what I know about where I grew up
or whatever it is, you kind of a re-experience
in your childhood.
And so I think the last few years,
I've been trying to wrestle with just like all of those issues.
And it's been painful and hard,
but I think ultimately good.
And I think if you do the work,
it makes you better at what you do professionally.
There's a great Judd Apatowk who already talks about realizing that the movie studio was
not his parents and that he could just interact with them as like work partners.
He didn't have to like project all his childhood issues at the studio executive.
He was trying to tell him that the movie was too long. So I have a lot of that.
I agree.
This is stuff that I've been dealing with.
This is kind of, you're encompassing the last, like,
four months of my life.
Now, six months of my life, I'd say, unpacking
what happened to me in childhood.
And this sounds so aggressive as a parent and shit.
Like, I know I offended my parents
because I
addressed a lot of these things this summer with them and so when you say the
word trauma it's like such they feel so attacked and but it's it's more about
just like like you said being stuck at an age trauma is just recognizing that
there was an event that happened that was a big enough deal that you created
an emotional feeling as a result of it,
and you got stuck there.
So that sort of situation,
when it comes up in a new form, new people, new players,
when it happens, you go right back to the age
that it happened, the original feeling, and you're stuck there,
whatever age that is.
So I guess depending on how somebody acts in a situation,
how they respond, how they're triggered,
will probably give you some out of an indication
of their trauma age.
And of course, we have more than one trauma,
it's not like you just get one.
I mean, wouldn't that be great
if we only had one trauma to deal with?
Okay.
But you can definitely kind of identify
a little bit of like, wow, they acted like it's toddler.
And you're like, well, probably happened when they were four.
You know?
Totally, totally.
And I think it's also, I think a lot of people go,
like, well, I wasn't abused.
You know, I wasn't an of people go, like, well, I wasn't abused. I wasn't an orphan, nothing,
like, nothing, just because your life
wasn't an episode of the TV show intervention,
it doesn't mean that you got everything you needed
and you're perfectly well-adjusted, adult human being.
And in some ways, I think that it's, okay, now,
I wouldn't want this for myself.
I'm grateful for my life and I'm great parents,
but in some ways, I've thought about this
and that if you have an identifiable trauma,
like a really big one, not just like an emotional trauma,
meaning something happens that you remember
and get triggered from, but like a real like big one,
big, big one would be
abuse or rape or alcoholism or being adopted or it's like
it takes a lot longer to unpack it,
because you think everything's okay.
You don't think that there's a problem,
so there's the only blessing to the bigger things
that happen to someone in their life
is that they recognize very quickly, hopefully,
that you need to deal with it.
And I mean, you go, I had a really shitty childhood.
I wouldn't believe that.
I didn't have a shitty childhood.
I had a great childhood, but it doesn't mean
there weren't things that happened that are
not holding me back now.
And so I've thought about that a lot, and that the only little blessing and the big stuff
is that you know to address it a lot sooner, and perhaps becomes a proactive thing as opposed
to a reactive thing where maybe you have to have quite a pattern established for you to recognize.
Hmm. I think I might need to deal with this. I keep the common denominator.
No, I think that's right. When you have something that rises to the level of objective or externally, you know, recognizable. It becomes
clear, like, yeah, look, you, you should go to therapy because your dad was an alcoholic
or you should go to therapy because, you know, you lost your leg in an accident and that
was very traumatic. But if it can be almost more disorienting for everything to sort of seem normal and good on the surface.
And then there's actually these other things that are happening or that you don't understand.
And then you can kind of, your mind convinces you everything is normal and good.
And you don't realize that, hey, actually, you picked up some bad habits or bad patterns or you made, you know, some bad
assumptions about the world and then now as you get older or more successful,
these kind of scripts that you have aren't working. So I'm going to share what kind
of came through for me today between my meditation and sort of my active, physical, emotional, verbal,
like because there's a lot of,
you make a lot of noises and things like that
and get energy moving.
So what came through today is that,
you know, I've been trying to kind of break away
from being able to be able to be more detached and to be more of an observer
and to, you know, sort of find this middle ground for myself that isn't so aggressive or like I have
this sort of, I've consensed people's truth in a way and I can I don't know where it comes from so
sometimes I kind of stab them in the heart with truth even though it's what I love like
and but it comes in a really really a drum like an aggressive way and you know
being able to get to more of that softer balanced heart space of love, but yet still being able to hold truth.
And what came through was that, like, that I am this sort of, like, you know,
lovely, sort of wonderful being who has been wrapped in this purposeful,
as in its served a purpose package that's got me a lot in life.
Like, it's got me a lot in life to be so aggressive and so strong and so down the barrel.
And so the fact that I can do that means I can take that, you know, we don't usually deliver more
than we can accept. So I was like, today I
realize I'm like, oh my god, it's not that it, like, it's just that I'm evolving and it doesn't
serve me anymore. And so maybe we don't look at these traumas because look, like people have written
beautiful music from trauma, people have, you know, written great books from trauma. And so instead of looking
at maybe all the things that have happened and gone, oh, we need to get rid of that. And that's
horrible. And I just want to be healed. And maybe looking at it of like just like evolving.
And like, and just a growing and getting past, like just becoming a new version of yourself
that serves where you are now,
whether it be emotionally or frequency wise
or just something that you want,
because that's what I felt today is I was like,
I think that heart of me that was built that way
based on my family and based on my situation and based on my job and all
of those things that conditioned me in this way that I'm just not happy with anymore. And I'm grateful
for the things that it gave me. So I guess it's this idea that maybe, you know, instead of thinking
that we need to get, you know, we need to heal these traumas.
Yes, it's not really, yes, it's healed,
but it's acknowledging them and saying thank you
and understanding that they just don't serve anymore
and allowing a new phase to come in
that is just something that you want more.
There's a great book you might like called
Lincoln's Melon
Colley and it's all about Abraham Lincoln's sort of lifelong struggle with
depression and and how it's sort of along the lines of what you're talking about.
Depression isn't this thing that you win against. It's not like a fight. It just
he sort of realizes ultimately that this was giving him a perspective and
the pain of it and the struggle with it through his life was actually sort of shaping him
into being the person that he had to be at this very essential moment in world history.
And so I think, like, yeah, you can fight against all these things and be angry
and bitter that, you know, it's so-and-so's fault or that if this had happened otherwise,
but that doesn't give you anything to move forward with. I think you have to go like, hey,
this is like, you know, I therapist said this to me one time, and I'm like, look, this is
the hand you're a dealt. Like, you got to play it, you know, and you got to figure out
what you're going to do about it. That doesn't mean you have to be stuck that way forever, but you do have to sort of figure out how you're going to work with it.
My therapist told me the one, the thing that hit really hard because it, it proved to me account.
It, what I, let me say what she said first, she said said they don't hold any keys for you.
And so before she said that, I kept thinking like we need to work through this together. We're gonna talk about this.
They're gonna, they're gonna say sorry for things. They're gonna acknowledge. They're gonna inform me.
We're gonna, we're gonna do this together in a way.
And she goes, they don't hold any keys for you. And I was like, whoa, I got kind of emotional.
And I was like, that's a lot to handle
because that means that I am accountable, fully accountable.
Yeah.
And that, say, I think the biggest, I would say,
probably the biggest reason why we tend to not be able to let go of things is because we can't
recognize our true and complete accountability to get past them because it's really hard.
It's like really hard to understand how to unpack and like acknowledge even the nuances of it and how it shows up in your life.
And so accountability is to me what it's screamed
and I was like, whoa.
And again, that goes back to almost where we started
with this whole diatribe of thoughts
is that with that accountability is like,
you know, it's what we start talking about in the beginning.
Just.
Yeah, no, if you can be angry that you're mortal
and you could be angry that you,
that life is shorter, you know, that people die
and that you lose people and all of that,
but it doesn't change it.
And so, yeah, you, there's a great Cheryl Stradeline,
which is like, it's not your fault, but it is your problem.
And I try to think about a lot of these things that way too.
Like it is indifferent to your opinion about it.
So you better figure out a good way to come to terms with it.
Exactly. That's so true. It's not your fault, but it is your responsibility.
Yeah. No. And the only way you get through life is by taking responsibility for stuff.
What's the hardest thing that you feel like you've had to take responsibility for?
Oh, man, that's a good one. I don't know. I feel fortunate that I don't have like, you know,
it's like, oh, I'm taking responsibility for that person. I killed in a drunk driving accident
or something, right? Like, I don't have any like don't have any like horrible truth that I have to accept, but I think I think you're
constantly, I think I'm constantly trying to look back at who I am and decisions I've
made and things that I've written and paths that I've gone down and sort of going, like,
why did I, why did I do that?
What was motivating me, you know,
and is that, I think you can't change the stuff
that you've done, but you do, you know, provided,
you know, provided it's not sort of like criminally illegal
or something, you can decide to not do it anymore
and you can decide to not be that person anymore.
And I think that's's to me, that's
the, that's, that's where self-improvement comes from.
What is your perspective on regret?
You know, I get that a lot because my first book was this sort of controversial media book
and I, you know, I did a bunch of stuff that maybe at the time I thought was hilarious
and in retrospect, you know, not super proud of, but people would sort of go like, do you regret it?
And it's like, I don't regret it.
I just disagree with it.
Do you know what I mean?
I don't sit there and like, weep for what I've done because it wasn't really at that level
either.
But I also, you know, don't see that as a particularly productive emotion.
So I'm more, I'm more just, I just grow, you know what don't see that as a particularly productive emotion. So I'm more, I'm more just,
I just grow, you know what I mean? I think you just grow from it. And I'm sure you have
decisions in your career where like if you were doing it again, you'd absolutely do it otherwise.
And you now make that decision differently going forward. But like, I would hope you're not like
crippled by what ifs and what could have beens. Well, I feel very, very much like you feel about that.
Are you a, just backing up,
or whatever I'm gonna say, I'm gonna carry this first.
Are you someone, I just,
I have a theory that people tend to either live
in the future or live in the past.
Like the presence, what we want,
but we either tend to be someone that sort of future forecasts
and you know, thinks about everything that they want to happen and gets attached to the
outcomes or you're somebody who's pulled back by the past and you know, sort of the memories,
paralyze you at times to things because of what you learned from what you were taught by
an old memory. And so are you future or past?
I would, it's weird. I feel like I love the past, like in that love history. So I'm like
obsessed with the past, but I'm not that interested in my past. So I feel like I am much more a living in the future,
but I do feel like I do a pretty good job
like being very tied to what's happening right now.
That's very good.
What about you?
I'm a future person.
I'm a future thinker.
I don't believe in, I don't have regrets.
Like there are things that I like you said,
I wish I've maybe done differently or like,
oh man, that was a bummer.
But I also recognize like, you know, sliding doors
and the butterfly effect.
Like everything that's happened in my life
has led me to here.
So if I changed one little thing,
I might not be here right now.
And I'm happy to be here right now.
And so I, and I think too that, that we've got to learn lessons along the way.
And so we tend to not learn things the easy way.
We tend to learn a lot of things the hard way.
Maybe even everything, because everybody at the beginning
kind of sucks at something, right?
You're not that great at it when you start
no matter what it is.
So I don't really believe in So I don't really believe,
and I don't really have, I don't wish I could go back in time and change anything. So to
me, that means that I don't have regrets. Doesn't mean I don't have disappointments or
things like that. But yeah, I'm very much a future forecaster, future thinker,
which is kind of where I get, you know, a little bit more attached to outcomes
and, you know, tend to force things because I'm still gripping, like I'm still like reaching
for the future. So I don't want those dreams to die. And I'm a very hard worker and I'm
very determined and I have a lot of endurance. So I tend to do things, stick with something
or someone or a job or anything like that
a little longer maybe than I need to
or I'm not as honest about it as early as I need to be
because I am sort of determined to make it right.
No, I totally relate to that.
And I think that that's probably a good place to wrap, right?
Which is that the point of being present
is that it really is all you have, right?
So the past is done, but then the future is inherently uncertain
and whether you're racing cars or is walking down the street
or living in the middle of a pandemic,
like something could get you at any moment.
And the Stoics talk about that, I think,
not to scare you, but to give you the gift
of the present moment and the understanding, like,
do not waste this regretting or dreaming
because like now is now.
And what gives it meaning is mortality.
Of course, yes, right.
No, it would be, I mean, like the curse of Cicifus
is that he has to roll this boulder up and down a hill
and forever.
Oh, that sounds awful.
Well, thank you so much.
It was amazing to talk to you
and I'm really excited that we met. You're welcome. It was really, really you so much. It was amazing to talk to you and I'm really excited that we met.
You're welcome. I was really, really nice to chat. I very much enjoy talking to you and hearing your perspective.
And thank you for all the philosophizing that you showed.
And I love to read it and do it with you. So, thank you for the chance.
If you like the podcast that we do here and you want to get it via email every
morning, you can sign up at dailystoic.com slash email.
Hey, prime members, you can listen to the daily Stoic early and ad-free on Amazon Music,
download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and ad-free with Wondery
Plus in Apple Podcasts.