The Daily Stoic - Troy Baker, Molly Bloom, Alexander Ludwig, And Camila Cabello Share How They Were Introduced To Stoicism
Episode Date: August 12, 2023Ryan presents a compilation of highlights from interviews with some of his most high-profile, influential, and interesting guests about how they found Stoicism and what it has done to improve... their lives.✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more.📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, FacebookSee 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 weekend edition of the Daily Stoic. Each weekday we bring you a meditation
inspired by the ancient Stoics, something to help you live up to those four Stoic virtues
of courage, justice, temperance, and wisdom. And then here on the weekend we take a deeper
dive into those same topics. We interview stoic philosophers.
We explore at length how these stoic ideas can be applied
to our actual lives and the challenging issues of our time.
Here on the weekend, when you have a little bit more space
when things have slowed down, be sure to take some time
to think, to go for a walk, to sit with your journal,
and most importantly, to prepare for what the week ahead may bring.
Hey, it's Ryan Holiday.
Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic podcast.
I have this, I sort of have this dual experience, right?
I hear from lots of random people, I'll get recognized
and go, oh, total strangers will come up to me
on the street and say that they read my books
or they watch the YouTube videos.
And then every once in a while,
I'll get like an Instagram DM or a tweet
or I'll read it in a news article or something like some very
well-known person is talking about one of the books.
And it's always really cool.
And whether it's a regular person or some artist that sold millions of records or some
billionaire, I usually go like, how did you find stosism?
That's like, how did you hear about it?
And usually what happened is someone was, they were going through something and someone told them to read Marx's Relius and they, maybe they struggled and so they ended up starting with
the obstacles the way. They were going through something and somebody gave them the daily stoke.
Usually it's just like how I found Stoicism. I have told this story before but I was in college and
I was at this event in Los Angeles and went up to the speaker and I said, hey, do you have any
book recommendations for a kid like me?
They recommended Epic Titus.
I ended up reading Marcus Realis,
and my life was really never the same.
So we all kind of have our little origin story,
our introduction story to the Stelix, right?
And that's why we're all here together listening to this.
But I'm always fascinated in the specifics of people's stories.
How did they find Stelix?
And what was going on in their life?
Why did it speak to them?
Who did they start with?
Part of the reason I wrote the Daily Stoke
is having those conversations, people go,
oh, I tried to read Epic Titus like 30 years ago
and it didn't work for me.
Or I got this bad translation of meditations for free,
or it was the cheapest one,
and I just couldn't make my way through it.
Like, I'm just curious about people's introduction
to stoicism, what it means to them,
what they took from it, why it hit them.
That's just something that's always gotten me really excited.
And I think these stories are illustrated,
and they can tell us, I think by hearing other people's stories,
it helps me understand my own.
And then it also helps me refer to and talk about Stoicism and other people.
So, anyways, I had an idea for an episode today.
It's just a question you've maybe heard me ask on the podcast before.
You've been curious about Gastwine.
I didn't ask it.
I wanted to put together kind of a compilation of interesting origin stories with stoicism.
And that's what we're gonna do in today's episode.
You'll hear from Molly Bloom.
If you haven't seen the movie Molly's game,
fascinating life story, Alexander Ludwig,
an actor, Troy Baker, interesting guy
in the video game space, Camila Cabello,
who's sold millions and millions of albums,
one of the most popular musicians in
the world.
You'll hear from a bunch of interesting folks, interesting ways they came to stoicism,
I think you like it.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wonderree's podcast business wars.
And in our new season, two of the world's leading hotel
brands, Hilton and Marriott,
stare down family drama and financial disasters.
Listen to Business Wars on Amazon Music
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I think almost every review that I read of the movie
talked about Jessica Chastain's stoicism,
like using it in the lower case sense,
but like multiple reviews that I read
all commented on that aspect of her personality.
And so I was curious, because we've never met,
how much of that you found rang true in you or was that what you aspired to be?
Well, it's interesting because I think I started out life
Incredibly sensitive and emotional
and
then sort of formulated through
Through sports through the type of father I was raised by, through
watching poker and understanding the value of game theory and other rational.
Then I was a philosophy minor in school, so I developed stoicism to survive myself and to, because I saw that it was, um, you know,
both important for success in the world, but also for surviving your life.
Yeah. Um, when, when you're going to wire that way, yeah, it must be interesting.
As an athlete, like, you, you have to be super passionate about what you do and you have to be
sort of deeply emotionally invested in what you're doing. And yet at the same time, figure out a way
to strip emotion out of what you're doing as you're doing it because I'm rarely make good decisions
out of emotion. No question. So it's like be all in on training, be all in on, you know,
being as committed as you can and then learn how to surrender and detach. Yeah. And you have to feel
the outcomes very intensely, but then also immediately move on from them
and wipe the slate clean victory or defeat.
And it's mostly defeat, right?
Especially, I mean, especially when you are ascending.
Sure.
Anytime you're aspiring to do something,
you start out at the bottom and you suck forever.
No, and then you don't one day, hopefully, but.
Yeah, there's a, there's a great quote from Ira Glasser, who's, he was talking to someone
who wanted to be in radio or something and he said, when you're starting out, there's
a gap between talent and taste.
So like you had, you had, you're early on your taste,
or I guess in sports it'd be like your standards
for like what is good or not good,
is almost always gonna be much higher
than you're physically capable of achieving,
especially on at least on any consistent basis.
So you have to be able to be comfortable with that,
that like it feels like what you're doing
is shit compared to your heroes,
but that's because they're way way better than you.
And yet you can't let that discourage you
or you'll never actually get to where they are.
Right, yeah.
And I think that that's where most people,
because you have to stay in that suckiness
and that sort of like it feels so far away
and just the effort without return phase for so long. And I think that's where most people give up.
Yeah, I'm going through that right now because I'm doing this series of four books in four years.
So like usually like when you do a big project, there's like the beginning part, it's insane.
I don't know what I was thinking. But
a project, there's like the beginning part, it's insane. I don't know what I was thinking. It's insane. Usually you start out of the thing and then there's the curve and it gets
better and better and better. And then it gets to whatever the final product is, which
is never perfect, but you're proud of it. And then there's usually a big gap, sorry about
gaps, there's a gap between starting the next one. But on these projects, the gap between finished,
like after I finished the first book,
and then was at page zero of the second one,
was only a few months.
So it was disorienting and really discouraging
because you were like three months ago,
you were editing almost, I don't wanna say perfect,
but almost publishable pros.
And then, you know, three months later, you're in, as Hemingway said, the first chapter
of everything is shit.
You're deep in the shit of it.
And if you can't, if you feel that, if you're like, this is shit, so I'm shit, I quit,
right?
You won't get where you want to go.
I have to imagine, because you came back
from a number of injuries too, that must be that hard for an athlete in that sense where
you're like, I was so good at this, I could do this in my sleep. And now, now I suck.
For sure. I mean, I, you know, I was, uh, my brothers and I were competing in
mobile skiing. I was winning all the time. I was, you know, 10, 11 years old.
Everyone was super excited about the future. And then I got diagnosed with
really severe scoliosis. My spine was curved at like a 63 degree curve. And
they had to essentially fuse my top 11 vertebrae together.
Well, first they had to try to straighten my spine, fuse the vertebrae together, put two
metal rods down the side and so, you know, getting back on the mountain, which was my doctor
said, no, everyone said no. But I just knew I had to try it. But yeah, to try to learn
how to use your body again.
And especially at 12 years old when everyone's telling you this is not going to be possible.
To feel also that your body is not responding in that way, but then to just have this sort
of, it was so in me, the fire was so in me that I just, I had to do it.
And that was such a profound lesson in my life that, you know, the odds can be stacked
against you.
The experts can be telling you that it's not possible.
Your own body and mind can be telling you that it's not possible. But if you if you can tap it to
that sort of fury
it can overcome all that stuff.
It's a
you know, it's a tough way to go
Against the grain like that, but
I must have been weird because I remember being checked for scoliosis like they would line us all up in school and they would check you
But nobody ever had it, but you apparently actually got
And I would always get checked in those things and like you look great
These aren't qualified medical professionals
It's your second grade math teacher
Exactly
So yeah, so that was a trip, you know, but but I think that that informed me and and you know taught me from a young age that life is more malleable than they then they tell you
it is, you know. But it's not it's not infinitely malleable, right? Because at some point that road for you as a skier ends, right?
And that must be so hard, especially for athletes, but I think for any, it's like you got where
you were by defying the odds, by not listening to pronouncements, by rejecting the certainty
that this or that was impossible or over or whatever.
But you're on borrowed time, like it doesn't last forever. Eventually that becomes,
like eventually they're right, right? And so knowing when to listen and not to listen is
everything. Yeah.
Yeah. And so was it, if you have been the person
who was like, fuck you, you're wrong, your whole life.
And then, how do you come to terms with the dream ending?
That was another incredibly difficult, but then the lesson that came from it, I've used
my whole life.
And so I was at the University of Colorado.
I made it all the way to, I made it to the USK team.
I was third overall on North America.
And I made it to Nationals that year, which was an Olympic qualifying event.
And then I fell and just knew that I didn't have four more years in me.
And I went back to school, I had just taken the LSATs.
And I say this all the time, because in the movie, my LSAT score was like perfect.
But that's not what it was in real life. Like, Sorkin inflated my LSAT score, but I did pretty well. And that was kind of the
next move, but I always thought that I would end up going to law school after
skiing World Cup or hopefully going to the Olympics. But that's not how it
happened. So I went back to the University of Colorado. I was applying to law
schools. And I was just heartbroken, Just couldn't have passed it.
I didn't know who I was.
I would stay up all night just trying to,
what if I had chosen a different line?
Like, you know, I couldn't get passed it.
And so finally I called my dad.
And my dad's a psychologist.
Another thing I always say is growing up with a psychologist
for a father
when you're a teenager is like the worst thing ever.
But it can be really great as an adult
because you have this therapist on call.
And he said, look,
this is a watershed moment for you. You have to start to be able to
establish some agency over what's going on in your head
because I was so stuck in this loop and I couldn't separate myself from
just this feeling that life was over and
So he and I had lots of talks about and this was I guess my first introduction
of mindfulness is being able to observe the thoughts, observe what's going on in your head,
and rise above it or move your focus to something else or surrender that.
And instead of just getting caught into that loop over and over and letting it just destroy you.
just getting caught into that loop over and over and letting it just destroy you.
And so he taught me to be, to kind of train in that.
You know, he was like, it's just like training and skiing
where you're gonna observe these thoughts,
these negative thoughts are gonna come into your mind.
And, you know, on your good days,
you're gonna be able to just detach from it
on your bad days.
Sometimes you gotta go to war with that voice.
You know, sometimes you gotta get inside and be war with that voice. You know, sometimes you've got to get inside and be like,
fuck this, effis, you know.
I'm not going to, I'm not going to, I'm 21 years old.
This is not the end of my life.
And he really taught me how to start kind of establishing
some agency over that.
Later down the line, I had to learn it in a much more significant way.
But so I learned how to kind of overcome it through mindfulness and through
sometimes going about it.
Well, it's acceptance, right?
It comes down to a certain point, you have to face facts, you have to accept things.
You can't always know amount of willpower can defy.
It's interesting, because the Stokes go,
there's stuff that's in our control
and the stuff that's out of our control,
which is true.
We're really bad at making that distinction,
but the reality is there's also stuff
that's kind of in the gray area in the middle.
And those are the things that you can kind of say,
fuck you too, there's the stuff that's kind of in the gray area in the middle. And those are the things that you can kind of say fuck you too.
Like, there's the stuff that's on the far end of the spectrum that looks at like it's outside your control.
But actually, it's 1% in your control.
And if you're super talented and skilled and lucky in all these other things,
you can flip what other people think is impossible.
But it's sort of knowing the limits of that ability
to influence that then puts you face to face
with the stuff that you have to accept.
Like, hey, this is the end of the road for me in this thing.
This is what my body can handle or I can't handle.
This is what my heart's not in it.
Or just like in poker, you know, my heart's not in it, or like just, just like,
you know, in poker, you got to know when to fold them.
Absolutely.
That's good.
Well, you know, I talked to Andy Duke recently and she was talking about this is like,
we think about like quitting, she was saying this sort of all or nothing thing.
When in fact, it's kind of like, I don't think she said this when I'm making that, but
it's kind of like a Russian nesting doll.
There's like, you know, there's quitting the hand,
there's quitting the game that you're in,
and then there's quitting playing altogether,
like period, right?
So it's like just because you're,
just because you're facing facts,
you're resigning in one aspect,
doesn't mean you have resigned yourself completely.
Do you know what I mean?
I think under understanding that accepting something doesn't mean you become instantly
passive and giving up all agency over your life. You just come to the end of
one specific road. Yeah and I think being able to have that ability to recognize
when it's the end of the road, to pivot. I mean, I think that that is incredibly powerful.
I think, you know, so many people get stuck and aren't able to let go,
aren't able to surrender something, aren't able to get into acceptance. To me, those are
incredibly powerful skills. It's powerful. That's not to say it's pleasant.
incredibly powerful skills. It's powerful. That's not to say it's pleasant.
It's unpleasant, that's how. When you don't get your way, when you have to walk away from something that you've become so identified with.
When you have your favorite Churchill quote in the book, the one about going from failure to failure,
you know, I'm sort of unbroken. But I also love his famous quote about,
you know, never, ever, ever, ever, ever give in. And then he gives the two conditions under
which you absolutely should give in. Yeah. Yeah. He's, he's, he's got a lot of great quotes.
Yes. Well, well, but we don't, we don't like that. We like the idea of you never ever quit.
But if you never quit, I mean, that's how you die. You know what I mean? Like that's how you get
yourself in serious trouble, or you just end up throwing yourself against a wall, or you
you pointlessly play a losing hand. Or you end up getting assaulted by the mob and arrested by 17 FBI. So I'm not sure I can stand behind.
You never, ever, ever quit anymore.
After that experience.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, what if you're doing the wrong thing, right?
Or what if it's the wrong thing for you,
or what if it's the wrong time?
I mean, there's a bunch of reasons.
That's not to say, again, you quit entirely, you quit working at all or even that you have to quit that thing, but you've
the idea that timing doesn't matter, place doesn't, all these factors matter about when you should
do something or continue doing something. Absolutely. And you know, my, what I learned, I learned so many things, but one of the things that,
one of the safety guards I have now in place is I have what I call like my panel of people
who I really believe in in their rationality, I believe in their ability to think things
through, I believe that they're not fear-based people, but they're rational people.
And so when I have these great ideas,
or I'm feeling like, maybe I'm a little over my head here,
I'd bring it to the town.
Because I, on my own, will chase it into hell.
Straight into hell.
Your board of advisors.
I have that group too, where mostly what I want from them. It's like
here's what I want to do. Here's why I think it's a good idea. Here's why I think it's going to work.
Like I it's like look a lot of people it's like they're like I'm thinking of starting my own
business and everyone's around them's like no you got you got to get a job, you got to do something. Say, most people, you have the people around you who convince you why you shouldn't
put yourself out there. But I think if you're entrepreneur driven or talented or elite and what you do,
you have the opposite problem. And you have to cultivate the people around you that can, you can go
to and go, tell me why this is a really bad idea. Like tell me what I'm not. I'm checking it.
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
But you have to hands-like those people very carefully
and sometimes you don't listen to them.
But I think it's a great exercise.
Yes, for sure.
No, I try, and one of the things I found with those people
is I try to go, like, I try and one of the things I found with those people is I try to go like, I want to make sure
that I frame it in such a way that I'm not tipping my hand. Like, what do you think of this?
Or like, or if I think it's a really good idea, I'll go to them explaining why I think it's a
bad idea. Like actually trying to make my own
case.
So they'll either be like, yeah, I think you're right.
Like thinking that they're telling me what I want to hear, but they're actually giving
me, you know, the honest take on it.
Because I think so often the reason we don't get that feedback is that people don't want
to hurt our feelings.
Yeah.
And my panel doesn't care about hurting my feelings.
I have people, I'm like, you know,
there's very few people in life
that will be super honest with you.
Yeah.
And if you can find those people,
I think you keep them and you don't discourage them
from, because it's a gift, you know?
And understanding the incentives
or the bias operating on the people around you,
like I was just talking to my agent about something
and my agent's great and we have a long relationship.
I trust him, et cetera.
And but I have to be aware of the fact that, you know,
this way involves a large commission for him
and this way involves nothing for him.
As a human being, that is going to influence how he sees things.
Of course.
Yeah, you have to figure all that
and make sure that the people that are sitting on your panel
aren't going to be, I mean, for that one, maybe he's off.
Yeah.
Maybe.
Or you just get someone else's opinion to counterbalance that. And if they
agree great, if they don't, then there's something more you have to explore there.
Right. Right.
No, and so if they were only financial biases, it would be so much easier. The problem in
life is that it's more often like someone's identity is tied up in something. And so you're not even totally sure
why they're reacting so strongly to this or that,
or steering you this way or that way.
And you know, it has nothing to do with you
and everything to do with something
that happened to them 20 years ago or whatever.
Yeah, I mean, their human psychology is endlessly fascinating and it is also sometimes a bit
sneaky, you know?
It's very sneaky.
Even to them.
Yeah, because so much of what's going on is subconscious.
Yeah, we like to think we're these super rational, super controlled people and we're the opposite of that.
Opposite, super emotional. Yeah. Well, that's what I thought was so fascinating about the games in
the book, which is that like you have these super talented, super powerful, super well-off people
and they kind of have this like secret addiction basically. They're like totally
powerless over this like habit or you know activity that they're hooked on. Most of them yes. And
I didn't recognize that in the beginning. Yeah. Because I came into it, you know, I basically was
just going to take a year off and go to LA
because I wanted to be warm for a year.
I had been chasing winter, my whole life.
I mean, even during the summers, we go trained places where there was snow.
So before I had to, before I had to law school, before I went into another very serious regimented
life career, I just wanted to be young and be a kid and be warm for a year.
And so I ended up, you know, just being a cocktail
atress in the beginning for these games.
And I was in my early 20s and from a small town.
And I thought people that had made it to the places
that these people had made it.
Had it all under control. Yeah, I thought their money was endless.
I thought their self control and their agency over them, self in the world was rock solid.
You know, you're just you, you have these people in a pedestal and really quickly
it became apparent that that was not the truth. So I heard stoicism helped you quit drinking, is that true?
Stoicism has been, first off, not to pump your tires, you are my favorite author.
Well, thank you.
Hands down.
Okay.
Stoicism to me changed my life.
And I'm not the kind of guy, and this is something I need to continue to work on, that can
just sit on a couch and read for hours.
Sure.
So a lot of the books that I read, I read with my ears.
Of course.
Whatever works.
But no, stoicism has had a huge impact in my life.
Do you remember how you found it?
There was always like nuggets in other books that I read.
Like I loved like a lot of different self improvement books or whatever.
And you find nuggets of it.
And I love history.
Yeah.
So every once in a while, I'd hear these things like a quote from Aristotle, like freedom
is obedience to self-formulator rules, right?
Or something like that.
And you're just like, huh?
And then you hear other things.
And then it was really your books that introduced me on a whole
another level to it.
And of course, Duncan and myself and Duncan Penn
who I think you had on this podcast, yeah.
It is somebody who I talk about it with all the time as well.
Really, yeah, interesting.
All right, so walk me through how to stoses
and help you get sober.
So people think that rehab, people who haven't been, is like, I think they have
this preconceived notion that there's like this pill they give you. And suddenly it just
all goes away. You know, and you have to rehab and you come out and things are just fine. And what I realized it was for me when I was there is it's a deep dive into why we make
the choices we make and why we're so self-destructive as human beings.
And after you do, after you start understanding more about what is kind of triggering you on
this journey, the answer to these kind of insecurities is disciplined.
And it is a structure.
And people, it's funny, as I've read more, as I get older and the more things, I've taught
myself, I've realized that a lot of a lot of the
spiritual practices or a lot of books that I've read are almost saying the same thing in
different ways. Like the theme that I found most important to me is that for lack of a
better word, discipline is destiny. And that has been my way out of the turbulence in my life back in the
day.
I think like if anyone's ever been to physical therapy or rehab from an injury, you get
the sense that it's like, oh, I'm going to be worked on. I'm going to go and I'm going
to get massages or just kind of treatment or this medicine. But really, they're like,
no, here's the work that you have to do, right?
And it's the same for I think the other forms of rehab.
Like it's they don't you don't go there and then they're like here are all the secrets to not
drinking or doing this or that anymore
What they're like is here are the things that you have to do every single day of your life
And the second you stop like as they say they say it works if you work it, right?
Like if you do that work, then you'll stay sober. If you don't do that work, you won't.
And it's really, really hard work. It's like the hardest work because it's on yourself and it's
against habits or practices or assumptions you've had your whole life. Yeah, 100%.
It's, I mean, and some people refer that as,
refer to that as the program.
Yes.
Really, it's just your program.
It's what you need to do every day to center yourself.
Yeah.
And to feel grounded.
And admittedly, there's days where I'm not as good.
Yeah, sure.
And there's days that I am.
And I think one of the things I'm really trying to fine-tune right now is,
is it how to do this when things that are out of my control
are taking me out of my element like I'm not going to be on my farm in Bastrop,
you know, or you know, I'm not going to be in my element.
I'm going to be traveling and overseas.
And I think that is an art in itself is how to do those basic things
that will center you for the rest of the day.
Cause that's really all the program is.
Once you've understood what is kind of fueling
those self-destructive behaviors.
Isn't there an acronym for like Halt?
Halt.
Yeah, I'm walking through that.
Hungry, angry, lonely, tired.
And then I add thirsty. because I don't know why
they don't bring that into it.
I'm like, I'm like, there's times.
And basically all that saying is,
this is something I realize.
I think whenever you're sitting there and you're going,
like, man, like, I just, I need a vacation.
Yeah.
Like, I just, I need to be in Mexico right now.
Or, damn, like, I wish my house was bigger.
I just wish I was in a bigger house
I find it so funny because I'm like do you actually want to be in
Mexico right now or do you like the person you think you're gonna be sure in Mexico right now?
Yes, and it's same with that house, right like like or do you like the person you've become to be in that?
Mm-hmm, you know and I think
You know it's it's it's kind of the same theme from your book
is just like you get what you are. Yes. So just be the best version of yourself as possible.
It's funny in meditations, there's a passage where Marcus realizes like doing exactly that. He's like,
I know you think you want to get away from it all, like in the country or the beach or whatever. And he's like, but actually whatever you need is inside of you right now.
I said, it's like you can retreat and go on vacation inside your own soul right now. And I think
it's true. We think, okay, if I can just get away from all these external things, then I won't
feel what I'm feeling. And obviously sometimes that's what we do.
And then sometimes we do like a substance
or a thought pattern or whatever
as the other version of escape.
But what we really just have to deal with
is whatever that feeling is.
If you can deal with that feeling and process
and work on it, that's actually a more sustainable
and permanent solution to that thing.
But I think to me, one of the things that addiction is
is like a sort of a proven pattern
where whenever you get that feeling,
you do that bad thing.
I think you're not supposed to do.
And then the relief becomes associated with that feeling,
even if it's also destroying your life at the same time.
100% yeah. And it's your coping mechanism. It is your higher power. It's what you go to.
Yes. Right. It's like we, we fall on our habits. And if that's your habit, you're going to fall on
that, right? But I, you know, I'm so grateful, um, first oisism in my life. And I think that
I'm so grateful for stoicism in my life. And I think that so many young kids right now,
especially people growing up in this world
with social media and just being flooded
by the self-promoting people.
And I'm not saying that there's any,
like everybody has their own life.
And I'm not about to judge them,
but it's just, if I was a kid growing up
and like my idols were some of the things that I see now,
it's very scary because I think that it just kind of can...
You don't understand that it's not real, exactly, that it's a performance.
Yes.
And in some cases it's literally not real because it filters on top of it and there's editing on top of it.
And you don't understand that that is not actual life.
That is fake life, the highlight reel of people's life.
Or for some of these like business gurus,
this is their way of getting you to sign up for something, right?
Yes, yes.
Do you think Andrew Tater, whatever,
is successful, whatever?
But actually his only success is selling you stuff.
Exactly.
Well, you know, speaking of your show, heels, it's like watching professional wrestling
and not knowing that it's fake.
Like, yes, that it's all scripted, that it's designed to make you feel good about some
people, bad about some people, if I carelessly follow along, stimulate sort of very primal
urges, which when it is presented as entertainment,
there's absolutely no problem with it.
The problem is, it's not.
Like these are, you're following these parenting bloggers
and going like, why am I shitty?
Because my house isn't clean like theirs.
And you don't understand that they picked this location
that they're shooting from,
because you can't see what's on the other side of the couch,
which is the same mess that's in your house,
or that the house is a rental, or the car is a rental.
Yeah, exactly.
Or whatever.
And I just feel like it's this kind of teaching
for people that really is the way out.
Because if I could sum up everything that I've read
into a few words from you, it's, you're going
to be okay.
It's going to be okay, follow this.
Because I think that everyone is being made to feel like they're not good enough right
now in the world.
And through this, you realize that you can do that for yourself.
You know, through these small practices that this everyday routine, that you don't need validation
externally, that this all comes internally. And happiness isn't something to be gotten. It is
the way. You know, what I like about that hall acronym though is
that like I think we think people that are like sober or in great shape or
really successful like we think that they're just sort of gutting it out with
sheer superhuman strength all the time. Yeah right that like they just always do
the right thing that they are never tempted that it's never hard for them. And that's not only is that not true,
but the real secret is just trying to avoid
the scenarios or the environments
where you are vulnerable to not being who you wanna be.
You know what I mean?
So it's like, if you're like,
hey, I make bad decisions when I'm upset, right?
You just try not to make fewer decisions when you're upset.
It's not like you just magically don't have a temper, right?
Like everyone has a temper, but you try to be the person that goes, Hey, these are my processes.
These are the systems I have.
This is a little bit of self-discipline I have that says, Hey, when I'm pissed off, I write
the email, but I don't send it, right?
Or like my Twitter account is on somebody else's phone.
Yeah.
So I don't have the ability to angrily fire something off when I'm in the middle
of a contract, negotiate, or whatever, right?
Like, you think about how do you set up processes so you don't make bad
decisions when you're hungry, angry, lonely, tired.
You know, I think I read this study once that was saying
like most fights between couples happen when one
or more of them is hungry.
And you're like, oh yeah, right.
You're not actually fighting about like whose fault
it was that you're late.
You're fighting because you were trying to get to a restaurant
and you're not at the restaurant and you're both hungry.
And when you realize that, you're like, let's just table this discussion till after we eat.
And not only are we not actually going to have to have the discussion later,
but we're both going to apologize. We're both going to admit we're wrong.
Yeah. Because we'll be different people then.
Yeah. No, I completely agree with that. I also feel like it's,
I feel like so many people,
including myself, wanna follow this,
what's the right way?
What's the right way to do it, right?
And the right way is the way that works for you.
Yes, you know?
And I feel like that's something that I struggled
to figure out along the way as I was like,
oh, everyone has just what works for them.
Some people can survive on less sleep and be totally fine.
I'm not one of those people.
I never have been.
And chances are though, you're not one of those people.
If you think you're one of those people,
you're probably fooling yourself, right?
But like, yes, I get what you're saying.
But that's interesting to me because I saw that.
I actually read that book while we sleep.
That author, right?
And that's the percentage of people who can actually do that is staggeringly low.
You're the exception that proves the rule.
Yeah.
Well, how much sleep do you get a night?
I need at least eight.
I can function on seven and if it's less than seven, I'm trash.
And are you edgy?
Yes.
Like you moody?
Yes.
Okay, so me too.
Yeah, I need to sleep.
And obviously when you have kids or you're working, I was just like, just at this talk
and I had to get up at four in the morning and get to play. There's definitely like, I can do it.
Yeah, of course.
I just, I think what you realize is you're like,
what are the conditions that more often than not,
I do my best.
Yes, right?
Like the other day, we took our kids to this like water park
and so we spend the night and then we drove back
and I came here to the office,
we got back at like two in the afternoon.
There was something I had to write.
And so I get in the office,
normally my routine is I get up early,
I go on this walk,
I write in the morning that I'm done.
But for whatever reason,
this day it was flipped,
like I got in the office at two
and as I sat down to record,
or to write,
it was just garbage.
Like I wasn't feeling it,
and it was, it's actually, I'm actually really glad it happened because I was like,
oh yeah, this is why I have my routine because who I am at 2 p.m. is a fundamentally different
person than who I am at 7 a.m. as a writer.
I can do a phone call at 8 a.m. and be just as good on the phone at 2 p.m. or whatever, right? I can run at those
on, but as far as who I need to be to do my main thing, which is writing, that's the time
I have to do it at. And understanding that and then building around that is really important.
So it's like, if I'm trying to write it too and it's not happening, I don't like beat
myself up and go like, why am I not good? you know, wire, maybe I'm an imposter.
I don't think that I just understand
that I am not setting myself up for success
in that environment.
And ideally, you wanna make, you wanna build your life
and make your decisions when it's in your control
around the times and places and tools
that make you the person that you want to be.
And that's like a huge part of it. So it's like, I think sometimes people think it's about
discipline in the moment, which it is, but it's also about the discipline way before that.
A good example actually with sleep is like, people go like, I'm not a morning person or I have trouble
getting out of bed in the morning. And that's actually not a matter of discipline.
The discipline is, you should have gone to bed earlier, right?
That's the time I was my question being, when do you go to bed?
Yeah.
Yeah.
If it's at 10, 10, 30, then I'm like on top of it.
And if it's lingering and lagging, that's like that lapse of discipline doesn't feel like
a big lapse of discipline.
But the next day or the day after after that's the lagging indicator of whether
I made that right decision.
And I think this is true for lots of things.
It's like someone's sobriety is not just simply like in this moment, do you drink or not
drink, do you accept, you know, the past or not the past, but it's, did you decide to
go to a meeting six days ago or five days ago or four days ago or three days ago?
Right? Like when you, it's when you start blowing off the little things, the, the, the lagging,
or the, the, the, when you, it's when you start blowing off the little things leading up to it,
that you're setting yourselves up, you're setting yourself up for an inevitable failure or lapse of discipline when it really counts.
Yeah, and I think, I mean, literally that is the theme
of discipline is destiny, right?
The little things are the big things in life,
in your career, in your relationship, in everything.
And that's something that took me so long
to realize in my life.
And when it comes to drinking,
it's like if you're not on top of your sobriety,
your addict is doing push lots in the park,
push lots in the park, you know?
It's getting ready for you.
For that moment where it jumps you.
And I think I always have to be careful with myself
about when I am feeling good, when I do feel like I have an utter control. Because it's always gonna be there. I'm always have to be careful with myself about when I am feeling good,
when I do feel like I have an under control.
It's always gonna be there.
I'm always going to be an addict.
It's just where I used to put my ant time and energy
into things that were self-destructive.
I now put them into things that are creative
and going to help me move my life and my family's life forward.
And that can be a huge asset.
So what was kind of destroying my life is now changed my life for the better in ways I
could never have imagined.
You know, five years ago, I was in rehab in Arizona.
I had no idea what my life was going to hold. And
it's actually insane when they talk about the promises and about, you know, all these
things that will happen if you just love yourself, if you just follow this program, if
you just do the hard work. And even me, it's like, I hope so. I mean, I guess I mean,
everything else isn't working. So I guess I'll try this.
It's insane.
I look back and I just go, how was that five years?
Yeah.
Like, the things that have changed in my life
is just, it's just magical.
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You can listen to Sports Explains the World early and ad-free on Wondery Plus. So how did you come to Stoas, is it all, man?
I, have you ever broken up with a friend?
I suppose, yeah.
I have broken up.
I've had relationships go south, and I was a serial monogamous
as a friend of mine told me.
So I would jump from one relationship to another.
With friends?
Or, no, like, romantic relationships.
But I'd never broken up with a friend and
This is 2016 you don't just ghost you actually have a break up. There was a breakup and
Which I'm weird man. I I
Went into this is a separate thing
But like I was the guy who called my agent was like hey, can we have a meeting?
They're like, yeah, so I went to the new office and then I was like hey
So I'm out.
And we need to find an exit strategy
that is-
Oh, to change the media with both.
And they're like, wait a minute,
nobody, you email us.
Am I gonna, you hire me too?
I have to work all through it for you.
I'm gonna do it to your face.
But this was a relationship that,
there was so much anger there.
And I realized, it's like, oh, here's what's happening.
I am preventing you from being the person that you are trying to be and you are preventing
to, I'm allowing you to prevent me from being the person that I want to be.
So instead of us getting frustrated at each other, this relationship is no longer, it's
run its course and I'm out.
When I did that, I didn't realize that I had made this person the lynch pin in my entire
social network.
So once I removed that linchpin,
I'm now untethered to that social network.
Right, they got all the friends in the friend of ours?
Yes.
And so all of a sudden I find myself lost.
And I had rock bottom, man.
It was the darkest that I've ever been in my life. And there are pools of thought
that one that I began swimming in that I was like, I might need to reach out for some help.
So I found myself in Glasgow, Scotland. I do a lot of Comic-Con conventions and it's really cool.
Scotland. I do a lot of Comic Con conventions and it's really cool. It's a great interaction. I get to hear like things that I've been a part of what it means to people and I get to share
in that community. But then also you get like the hotel bar conversations to where it's like people
that you never would have thought you would have been across or just kind of ran a people come
into your life, come into my life and I get to come in with them for a little bit, and then we're on to our own thing. And I ended up opening up to this guy named Egor.
In the hotel bar? Yeah, he's with a friend of mine, but he's like the plus one. He's just the
guy that tags along. And I hope he listens to this. We're talking about different stuff. And he goes,
have you ever read meditations? I was like, yeah, I've meditated before and he goes, no, no, no, meditation's by Marcus Aurelius
and I shit you not.
I was like, are you talking about the guy from Gladiator?
He was like, you know that was a real emperor.
I'm like, I'm gonna allow myself to be the stupidest person
in this conversation openly.
So please teach me, he's like, here's a book,
he showed it to me on Amazon and he goes,
it's 499, it's the Blue Dover Thrift Edition. He was like, this is the Georgia Sloan translations. The one that'll retain
kind of the King Jamesness of it, which you will vibe with. But you need to get this.
It's like 99 pages. I'm like, okay, I get this by get home. The book's waiting for me
because we live in a magical world where things can get to us in 24 hours.
See, when I bought meditations, I had to buy two other books to get free shipping.
That's cool. It was sweet. Amazon Prime did not exist yet.
Mmm. Otherwise, you had to pay, and I'm going to like to get it.
Yes. So, I get this book, and I made this, I don't know why, but I always had struggled with
telling people, if they said, have you ever read this? Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, yeah.
Have you ever seen this?
Tuck, absolutely.
And a few years before then, I had been
we're in my apartment and some friends of ours.
We had just all auditioned for this alien's game.
And it was three of my closest friends
and we're like, man, I really feel like
I want to rewatch aliens.
I'm like, yeah, let's rewatch that classic movie.
And so we walked, and from my apartment,
you could walk outside, go across the street.
And on the other side of the street was a blockbuster.
And so we get aliens, we come back home,
and we sit down, and we pop it in,
and title screen comes up, and I press pause,
like, I just want you guys to know
I've never seen this movie before.
And it came out like I blurred it out.
And what I realized in that moment was that the joy
that people get to be there for the first time
is one of the greatest, it's like,
oh, I can't, I don't wanna watch this,
I wanna watch you watch this.
And so I found this new joy in humbling myself.
Getting pretending.
Instead of pretending and saying,
I wanna watch this.
So I decided to make this commitment
that I wasn't going to just burn through this book.
And I was like, I'm going to take time.
And there's this old far side cartoon
where Gary Larson drew this kid with this really, really small head.
And he has his hand up, he goes,
teacher can I be excused, my brain is full. And I said, I will either stop when
this book stops me, or I will only read an entry a day. And so it took me 18
months to get through. Meditations. And there's only two books that I've read, sorry, three, including a graphic novel.
Why the last man, believe it or not, didn't cry in the road, the book or the movie?
We don't talk about the movie.
We'll talk about the book.
But one of the best opening lines in a book, if the child was not the word of God,
then God never spoke,
because one of the best lines
that Kormel Carpsey's ever written.
City of thieves.
City, if you've never had city of thieves,
David Benioff, it's a wonderful story
about his grandfather, half fiction, half not,
you don't know which is which,
but I got to the end of that and I cried,
and I got to the end of meditations and I cried.
Partially because the aspiri you talk about, the beauty of it.
He dies.
He dies.
He talks about that though.
And talk about departing this life satisfied.
And I was like, that's the goal.
Depart this life satisfied.
And he talks about being an actor, which I thought was pretty cool too.
And says, don't react.
Yeah, curtain.
And don't get upset because your time is done.
You did your thing, get off stage.
It's done, it's okay.
I was just talking to someone about this the other day,
like the more you read meditation
and the more experiences you have,
the different, you pick up different things.
So like what I took me till the pandemic to pick up on
this fact that
as he's wrapping up meditations, he is, he gets probably the plague, like he knows that he's dying.
And he has to send his son away because they can't be near each other, because you can't let
his son get the plague. And so you just think about like the period on the
sentence of all of the things that Marcus goes through. However flawed
comedic is and comedic seems to be about as bad as fucking Phoenix's character
presents him as.
He's the only son that was still alive.
Yeah.
He's so he he buries all these children and then in his last moments because of
the job and then because of as it
was in COVID, it was during the Antonin plague.
You dialed him.
Yeah, you dialed him.
And still, he manages to pull out this kind of beautiful, hopeful passage that's full of gratitude and appreciation and almost like a fearlessness
for whatever's happening.
Do you know that's practicing what you preach, I guess.
Are you familiar like what's attributed to be his last words?
Yeah, go to the rising sun for I am setting. What I've heard was, and now if you'll grant me,
I will take my leave and pass on ahead of you,
which is the other one was,
don't weep for me, or why do we get almost like,
it's like, yeah.
Yeah, why are you weeping for me?
It's like, this is not my first death, this is my last.
As I understand, he said something like,
why are you crying for me?
Think of your own death.
And think of the death of all the people
that have what I have.
Right.
What I have.
But yeah, and you know what Antoninus' last words were?
So Marx's stepfather.
So basically, they think that you have these last words,
and then there's sort of this last word,
either it's made up or it's some sort of part of the transition from power. The Emperor kind of says,
so this is what you say when you die. Yeah, yeah. They think Marcus's was go to the rising sun for
I am setting meaning like I'm not the Emperor anymore. Go the rising sun. Yes. But
Yes, but but um and tonight's his last words was equanimitas or what? Equanimity or stillness sort of poise or peace and say yeah there's some kind of like with your last breath kind of a how do
you sum it all upness to it? There is that notion with me that I hope by the way I have to say it's
incredibly intimidating and I the conversation about, it is incredibly intimidating to try to quote or even remember
in front of you. So I'm acknowledging that. Yeah, well, I'll play video games.
I'll school you. Yeah. The, there is that romantic notion within me and maybe there's something
that I need to surrender where it's, when I, when I come to that point. By the way, the first copy that I have
meditations is in my safe. I love first editions. I'm a book collector. It's my
it's been my souvenir wherever I go in the world I go and buy a book and I've got some really cool ones that I'm proud of
one is a first edition of F. Scott Fitzgerald's
Play the vegetable and in the card
It says that it was received so poorly but not only the audience and the critics but including the director himself Who left before the end of the first production. And I'm like, I have to buy that because to know that you can go right the great American novel and then
write a piece of shit. There's both of those, the capacity isn't within both of us for
goodness and just utter shit. But that first copy is the cover is worn, the pages are,
it's been used and it's all marked up and
there's something that I hope that when traveler, whenever, whether he's 40 or
14 or whatever, decides that's not his copy. And it sits on our safe and I've
done the dedication to him, which is a message just between he and I, but it's
also like, I want you to know, just like I have these tattoos,
this was my first underlying.
Yeah, sure.
So if I were to go back through and read it now,
there's all sorts of stuff that would stand out to me,
but this is the thing that hit you,
and I did it in one color,
it's like, I want yours to be a different color.
No, it's beautiful.
What is it, what's gonna hit you when you read this?
Well, I have a leather edition that I'll give you
that might stand up a little bit better.
Yeah, I do. Cause yeah, mine, I have the paperback of the Gregory Hayes translation, which is the one I love.
And just the more modern translation is that right?
Yeah, it's for the modern library, but I think he, it's not King's James,
it's very sort of poetic.
And there's some people they dispute, you know, certain things they don't like it, but
And there's some people they dispute, you know, certain things they don't like it, but I think it's it's whatever it's like
You got into whatever music you got into right so I love that one, but I mine was really starting to
be worse for the where and and so I have decided I would start fresh and so this leather one is great. I'll give you that but
You can think about this like, where's Marcus' copy of Epic Teedis, right? Does he have the exact same discussion with comedists and then
comedists probably doesn't listen at all, but maybe he gets to one of the other sounds that
don't make it. But yeah, the idea of like this thing changed to me and every time I come back to it,
I'm different because I was changed by reading it the first
time, and then I'm also different because of the things I went through.
And you kind of never come back to the same book.
You know what I mean?
I agree.
Because you're not the same.
The book is not the same.
The world is not the same.
And there's this kind of really cool process of returning to the same ideas over and over and over again, because they're not really the same. And there's this kind of really cool process of returning to the same ideas
over and over and over again, because they're not really the same.
I think there's this misnomer. I've had this conversation with my brother and I was,
he's a blue collar scholar, he's an incredibly intelligent person, and where he's decided
to devote his study practice, whatever is with them or the fundamental beliefs of the Bible.
And I'm ravit asleep, devouring content from all sides of different things because I do love discourse,
I love debate. But I think there's this misnomer that anything that ends in an ism is somehow a religion.
And the thing that I found for me that was revealed to me through this is that this is as much of a religion as a diet. It is a practice. It's a protocol.
Yes. It's a way of thinking. It's a way of operating. But it is not a religion that is
venerating. We, I have a tendency to venerate these people like I beteges in in Seneca and like my rock stars would be going all the way back to
Xenon and it's like how cool is that.
And there's these stories that I've helped propagate and learn
and have loved discovering about.
And maybe I do fall into the same pattern I did when I was reading
about the disciples and everybody else who was in the Bible.
The difference though is that it doesn't replace anything
of that.
It builds upon or it goes alongside.
I was going, my first reading, I started reading
meditations and then I would go over to Alan Watts.
And so I was like doing this East and West thing
and seeing the crossover between there.
It was similar to five.
There it is.
It's a completely different approach to the same thing.
I can see how the thing that Al Awat's did was that he would talk about it.
First thing you don't understand, the history of this.
The very first part of the way of Zen is just kind of the same way of book one of meditations
is like, I'm going to go through and acknowledge all these people.
If you want to understand why the importance of this is critical to the and foundational to understanding the rest of these chapters,
know who these people were in my life, why he thinks his stepfather, why he thinks all of the people,
some of the people that even tried to hurt him, what he learned from that. That's an incredible
forward. I have a tendency to want to skip past that. But sometimes I wonder because we don't
actually know that he wrote it that way. So it was compiled that way.
Yes. Well, I mean, maybe he wrote it that way, maybe, or maybe that one was the way it was,
and then everything else is compiled differently. But it's also, it's interesting, like, what if
that was just, he just woke up one day and he's like, oh, what did I learn from sex to? So what
did I learn from Antonidas? Do you know what I mean? Or maybe it was, I don't know.
It's also, it's fascinating to think we don't really know
when he wrote it, how he wrote it, why he wrote it,
how he ordered it, what it looked like.
That wasn't done until it did.
19th century, so it does that right?
It's like, yeah, I mean, we have copies that go way back,
but it's like, we don't have the copy, right?
And he certainly didn't publish it.
He'd probably be mortified.
Wasn't it, it's to himself, right?
It was supposed to be, it was never supposed to be,
this is where it gets, there's something that I've been,
I don't wanna say dreading,
because that sounds way too dramatic, even for an actor,
but I, I have been avoiding journaling.
I'm interested.
And the reason why is because,
I understand the power of journaling now,
even writing down my thoughts,
there is ownership in them.
And so there is this incontrovertible reflection of my thoughts that if I keep them just
up in my head, not even myself has to recognize them.
And there is this, again, this weird comparison with Marcus never wanted people to read this.
Well, what if you wrote 500 more entries?
And these are the only saw the ones that we saw.
Yeah, yeah, maybe they got rid of all the back.
But even still, that's not the point.
Yeah.
And it's something that obviously you talk about exhaustively,
about the practice of doing this.
And I was like, yeah, I should do that journaling.
And there's a lot of people that's like,
I'm gonna do my daily devotional.
And even daily data is very much of like,
here's a bite-sized thing.
Read this, take it in.
But the, I love vinyl because there's a relationship
that the listener has with the material
that it's finite.
You know, after 22 minutes, you're going to have
to get up. And if you want to continue the experience, you have to flip that record over,
put the needle down and begin side B. There's a whole, I never listened to side B of
Joshua Tree for like years because I just love where the streets have no name, with or
without you. All of that, that's all that I wanted to listen to so before we flip over
You just I would rewind or I would just you know drop
Sure drive the needle over to the very outside edge and then I was driving and I had a tape and like an old tape
Players for you young kids who don't know it would you didn't have to tape turn the tape over into this auto flip
Yeah, and so all of a sudden I I didn't press Stop, Rewinder,
whatever fast enough, and I start hearing,
Oh wait, there's other good songs.
Red Hill Mining Town.
And that became one of my favorite U2 songs.
And when they came back through LA,
they did this World Tour, I'd seen them
on every tour of Bud Joshua Tree.
And so they did this 40th anniversary of Joshua Tree.
And I came back and they played this one song on Sunday,
and I'd start hearing those guitar tones
of those delay tones of the Edge playing Red Hill Mining Town.
And I was like, oh my gosh, I can't believe I get to hear this song.
They get done and I shit you not.
Bono goes, he looks at the edge and he's kind of nods you as
we've never played that song live before. That was the first time. And Buddy and I was at the show the night before and I was
like, did they play Red Hill Minington? I was like, no, they played this song as like they just
played Red Hill Minington and they never did that. So I got that moment. And so I think about all the
other things where because I won't allow myself to have a relationship with that, what am I missing
out on? What's the Red Hill Mining Town moment
with journaling that I have that maybe I do want to preserve that
to be able to look at my tattoos and go,
man, I don't like necessarily this,
but now I can appreciate it because that has grown into this.
I don't like the colors of this.
I would never do that again,
but how grateful I am that I have that written down as a marker to remind
myself of the person that I was if for no other reason than to measure the growth of where
I'm currently at.
What I've noticed is that like as you turn down the outside world, so you're not doing
this much stuff,
you're not as busy,
you don't have as much going on,
it sort of reveals to you,
like my anxiety became more apparent to me,
it became much more obvious that I have anxiety
because it wasn't drowned out in other things,
do you know what I mean?
And so I'm just curious,
have you started to get in touch with energy in your own life?
I mean, I was kind of fucked before the pandemic started. I feel like my anxiety was like
at an all-time high before COVID happened. And I was kind of working through it.
Like I was filming a movie. My album had just come out. I was doing promo, but I was like at the same time.
It was just like, I think that's why I really took
in the last year like my own healing and meditation
and like all of these, and exercise and nutrition,
all these things super seriously,
because I was doing these things.
I was like doing promo and filming,
but I was just suffering so much
because of my state of mind.
And I think I had suffered from anxiety
like from years before.
Like I think like it, but it really hit its climax
because I don't think I paid enough attention to it.
And I was just working through it, working through it,
working through it.
And I think when over the last seven months that I was able to stop in the beginning,
it was my anxiety, specifically because I had time to be aware of my thoughts and what
I was thinking and my thought process is, as opposed to, I got to go perform, fuck everything
I'm feeling because I got to do a good job, which is kind of what I did
before, I was just kind of like override all of my,
you know, just my internal struggles
because I was like, I gotta go on stage in 10 minutes,
I can't be thinking about this, you know?
And it just really gave me time to be able to be in the awareness
of what thoughts were causing me suffering and anxiety and feel it and go through it because honestly because I had the time and I hadn't really had the time to really look at what was going on inside myself for like seven years, you know, I was just constantly I felt like my life was revolving around how to do a good job in my next performance, how
to do a good job in my next writing session, whatever.
And it's like, it feels like that's the short-term solution, but it's not the long-term solution
because you're actually sacrificing your authenticity and your truth to just like do a good job as opposed to like be who you are,
how you are. Well what I found too is that because you're good at what you do, so in your case it's
singing for me it's writing, is that the writing or the work is always as difficult as it is and
unpredictable as it is, you have way more control over that than other things.
So you can kind of channel all those energy,
all that energy towards whatever you're supposed
to be doing, like putting on a show,
or for me, it's like, I know I can go sit at my computer
and stuff that's valuable will come out of it,
but like dealing with my feelings
or dealing with, you know, the more complicated stuff is much less predictable.
And so you kind of end up sort of focusing on work at the expense of everything else.
Totally. And it's, it's scary. It can feel scary to be with your thoughts and feelings because it is
like, that's also why, I mean, I feel like, honestly,
stoicism and meditation have helped me the most
in the past year, like both of those things.
Like the kind of, I feel like stoicism is kind of like
the cognitive reframing of stuff, which is so important
because when I, the tools that I get from meditation,
not even meditation really, mindfulness is the awareness of what my thought processes are.
And I'm like, no wonder I have fucking anxiety
because look how I'm thinking about this situation.
And then, stoicism gives me the tools to be like,
well, there's no use in thinking and obsessing about that
because I can't control what's gonna happen in the future.
I can't control when the performance is tomorrow.
There's no amount of thinking today that's gonna happen in the future. I can't control when the performance is tomorrow. There's no amount of thinking today
that's gonna, if anything, it's not useful.
But I found that the most important thing
and the thing that really has given me
more peace most importantly,
because I think as I'm getting older,
I'm like, I feel like peace is even better
than moments of joy sometimes.
It's just so much better.
What's giving me more and more peace and more authenticity
when I do my work and when I write and when I do go to work
on my craft is that mental training.
I think it's so huge.
And I'm honestly pissed that I didn't get taught those tools
in school because I'm like, what
the fuck?
Like I feel like I had to search and search and search and go through so much suffering.
Like, I don't know what's been your experience with anxiety, but like, it was fucked.
Like it sucks, like feeling anxious.
Like it sucks.
And I feel like I was feeling anxious more than
not eight months ago. And it's so invaluable to have tools. You're not your thoughts. You're
the observer of your thoughts. Oh, how can I reframe this situation so I don't stress
about it or whatever or breathing? All of of these things, like I feel like have are changing my experience of life.
And it's like, that's your mind is your life.
Do you feel like you can sort of gut it out?
Like you can perform well, anxious, you know,
you can write anxious, but then it's sort of realizing,
like, oh, actually when you're doing it
from a place of stillness or peace, or you know, when you're doing it from a place of stillness or peace,
or when you're not being driven by your thoughts,
it's just at a whole other level.
Definitely, I mean, I think like there's been so many times
where I remember specifically a couple times,
which is it was last year really.
It was really a span of like seven months
where I feel like I was really struggling with anxiety and like, I've
talked about this openly before like six months. It was just like at a peak and I had two performances
that I specifically remember. AMA is an SNL and like I finished SNL and my team was like my
manager was like, that's the best performance you've ever done because it does feel like in performance, I can channel, we were talking about energy.
It's like anxious energy or suffering or pain
is a lot of energy.
And so it felt like I could really channel it
and almost like put all of that energy into every word
or every movement.
And it almost like, it's like one Beyonce I said before,
nerves are actually a good thing because it's energy.
And it suddenly, if you were hitting a move like this,
that energy makes you hit it like this
because there's so much kind of coming out.
But I do think that it's not a good trade off
because especially for example, in something like writing,
when it is coming from a place of stillness and peace,
like I've seen in the past few months,
even like writing from my next project now,
it's like, it's so much more authentic,
it's so much more truthful,
and I'm so much more proud of it
because it's not coming from a place of that day trying to get a certain
outcome or trying to impress the other person that's in the room or really thinking about
anything in the future.
Like what's come from me kind of training myself to be present and just be truthful and
it coming from a place of stillness.
I think is so much better, so much more rewarding.
And honestly, fuck the result of the performance.
It's like you actually end up, your life changes.
Like you're able to make connections with people
because your mind isn't, you're not being like,
your life isn't being drowned out by the noise of your mind isn't, you're not being like, your life isn't being drowned out by the
noise of your mind. Like there's just, it's, it's, it's so worth it to, I feel like, invest
in that mental training, because I think a lot of times people are like, look at it, it's
almost like, I don't have time to do that, because I have to go do my work and I have to do all
of these things. But it's like investing in yourself and in kind of like training your mind to work for
you as opposed to be the thing that actually stops you from being your best self and
like blocking you.
It's like it's so, so worth it.
And it makes everything else better, you know?
I know exactly what you mean.
It's weird to me talking to you because,
like I think you're the first guest
that I've had that I'm older than.
I'm so used to being the young person
because that's sort of like you,
my career started very early.
So all the authors that I've known
or managers and agents, everyone's older.
But I remember when I was,
I had this sort of epiphany when I was about your age,
it was realizing like, okay, so it's working for me like the anxiety, the intensity, the
energy. I'm getting good results out of it, but it's not sustainable. Like I don't want
to do, I don't want to be in that sort of adrenalized state for the next like 30 years. Like
you're not going to survive that way. And so it's sort of realizing like,
you're not having any fun doing it.
And if it's not coming from a place of stillness
and contentment, like you're gonna burn out or die
if you keep going this way.
100%.
Well, I think what happened to me right before
pandemic was I did burn out.
Like that's what it felt like for me.
Like, I felt burnt out.
I felt honestly, like, I was like,
I don't know if I want to do this anymore,
but it wasn't doing this.
It was the way that I was doing it.
Right.
It was like, I was like, I don't know if I want to do this anymore.
It's so much anxiety, so much stress.
I feel unhappy.
I feel like my mental health,
therefore, my physical health is suffering.
Like I wasn't sleeping well.
Like all of these, you know,
I wasn't sleeping well.
I felt like my nervous system was out of whack
because I feel like it was just a habit for me
to be in this kind of fight or flight state.
And what were you just saying before that?
Well, just like how you can sustain this,
because I think what's interesting is
that most singers in your position,
it seems like they have a meltdown in their mid-30s, right?
Like it doesn't seem to last.
You know that.
100%.
Well, I think that I would have.
I would have at some point,
it would have been unsustainable,
and I would have been like,
I actually have to stop.
I don't know when I'm going
to come back and do this, but at this point, my health is suffering and I have to stop.
And I was kind of forced to stop by everything that happened. And it was like, it was really necessary
time. Like, it was necessary for me to kind of go through really just like, I wrote this article
about like for mental health awareness month about OCD and about anxiety and it's like with
anything it's like with your physical health if you break a leg like you got to heal the leg and
nobody's like judging you for it. You just like take some time and you, you know,
you get a cast and you can't walk for five days
because you got to recover.
And I think like with mental health,
it's like, it's different.
It's, you know, nothing's gonna happen if you just do nothing,
but it is worth taking time to be, to treat it, you know?
Even if it's like 10 minutes a day of like doing exercise
or doing something that
you know that is good for your mental health or, you know, like really there's there's
so many different things. But in the past eight months, I feel like I've like literally
my life has changed. So like I'm like so thankful for it because I think that I would have
spent a lot of years being unhappy and at the
same time this weird thing of just like not like just keeping going because you think
that's what you're supposed to do. And yeah, I'm just like, I'm so thankful for this time
because I feel like I'm like more and more just the boss of my own mind and the boss of my own life, as opposed
to feeling kind of like victimized by anxiety and mental health struggles.
Like I feel like that was like constantly something that I had to overcome to do things.
And now I kind of like did it the other way where I'm like, I'm going to get to the root
of this fucker so that I can, you know, so I can just like be free of it.
And it's totally possible.
That's something Listoke's talk about,
which is like, what good is success
if the result is that you don't feel like you're in charge
of your own mind or your own life?
Like, how is that success?
Exactly.
And that's like not what this society,
we as a society are taught. And actually so much of,
I feel like healing is being like, what of this is like
what I actually want and what of this is just like
what everybody else is doing and I'm doing it,
because everybody else is doing it.
Like that, you know, in stillness is the key,
like that really resonated with me.
Like, what's your definite, and ego is enemy too,
when it's like all of these questions about,
like, what is success to you?
Like, is success being famous and having these awards?
And I feel like it's especially a necessary teaching nowadays,
because I have like, you know, my little cousin
who's like eight years old, and I'm like,
what do you want to be when you grow up? And she's like, I want to be
TikTok famous. And I'm like, it's like these values of like, no, what's important is, you
know, how content you are with your life, like the level of, of gratitude that you experienced.
The most, most importantly for me right now, like the connections that you have with your,
your family and your friendships and your community and your purpose. Like, I genuinely do feel like my purpose is in art,
you know? I don't think I actually, even though it's always been my passion, my favorite
thing to do, like, I feel like in the past eight months, I really was like, oh no, this
is like what I want to do, you know? like this is like what I feel like my, my purposes.
And it's like not doing it for any outcome
of like being famous or success
or what people think of you, which it can subconsciously.
Like I know, I mean, I can only speak for myself,
but like even when you don't say that to yourself,
I've never been like, I want to be the most famous, I want to be number one, I've never said that.
But I remember reading ego is an enemy and being like, but then at the same time,
I go to do a writing session and I care so much about what these people in the room think of me.
I'm like, so insecure and afraid. And like, that's ego too,
because I'm still not doing it for the right reasons.
Like the right reason is to tell my truth.
That's it, period.
There's a great Marx-Realist quote.
He says, we care about ourselves more than other people.
He says, but we care about other people's opinion
more than our own. And- Right, I love that club. It's so true. Like you pour yourself into this thing,
doing it the way that only you want to do it, you know, and then, and then all of a sudden,
it comes out and then what you're thinking is like, did other people say it's good or not?
And sometimes you need a project. I did a book a few years ago, this book called Conspiracy,
which I think is my best book, but it sold the least well out of all of them.
It didn't fail, it just didn't do maybe what it could have done.
And what was really freeing about that experience
was it totally decoupled,
like critical success and sales for me
from what I know is good.
And that's like, it was such a huge breakthrough.
It was such a huge breakthrough for me when I saw
like a couple months ago, I was like, you know, I read it.
I read Opsicles the way like I think like two years ago.
And I, that was actually my, for my second album,
I read it a friend of mine gave me that book.
And so I read it and I remember reading it
and then for the next two months while I was reading it,
like my writing sessions were like amazing
because everything, even my own insecurity
and my own fear, I was kind of using it to fuel.
I was doing that stoic teaching that I love so much,
the more faulty, the taking everything,
and even the bad stuff and loving that it happened,
not just accepting it, but being like,
oh, I'm gonna use this now.
And that's the first time I read that book,
then like two years later, I read Stillness is the key.
And that was actually when I was,
when I was, that was like a year ago, actually.
That's when I was going through the height of my mental health
crisis.
And that really impacted me.
And then during quarantine, I read ego is the enemy.
And I started really getting into stoicism
and I got like the daily stoic journal and I was reading the daily
stoic videos and one video that really resonated with me was the one where you're talking about how
Stoics defines success and the internal scoreboard and how it's like there's success that's like,
okay, how many views did this get, how many likes did this get? How successful is this song or this album going to be?
And that's all the things that you can't control.
So if you measure success like that
or what other people in the room think of me,
then you're going to be unhappy your whole life.
But if you change your definition of success,
which I've really been practicing when I've been writing
for this album, if I change my definition of success to how honest was I today, how vulnerable was I today,
how, did I show up completely as myself, was I kind to people, did I see people, did
I make this a fun experience for everybody in the room, like if I just keep it in terms
of, if I just focus on
what I can control in this moment, then at the end of every day, I was like it was a successful day.
Even if I did feel anxious or nervous, I was like my metric of success was, hey guys, I feel a little
nervous, you know, and I was truthful. And therefore I met with my like standard of success.
And it's like, that's so much more important.
Like it's so much more important to be the person
that you want to be and lead with that
than like how other people perceive you
or what people perceive you.
Like that's like what I love about soicism
and like what I feel like is going to be my philosophy of life forever is like which it wasn't before.
Like I feel like I was leading with what I was doing instead of who I was being, you know.
It's like, you know, I was, I just like now I'm so conscious of like me being brave and courageous and kind and truthful.
And, you know, me, my character comes before any of the things that I do.
Thanks so much for listening. If you could rate this podcast and leave a review on iTunes,
that would mean so much to us and it would really help the show. We appreciate it, and I'll
see you next episode.
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