We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode #888 - David Sutcliffe - How To Stop Betraying Yourself & Be More Authentic

#888 - David Sutcliffe - How To Stop Betraying Yourself & Be More Authentic

2025/1/11
logo of podcast Modern Wisdom

Modern Wisdom

AI Deep Dive AI Insights AI Chapters Transcript
People
D
David Sutcliffe
Topics
David Sutcliffe: 我认为在生活中,真实地做自己非常重要,但这需要辨别在哪些方面需要真实。我们不可能总是完美地做到这一点,在工作中,我们常常戴着面具,但如果我们这样做是有意识的,那么我们仍然可以保持内心的真实性。对我来说,真实性就是诚实,能够诚实地面对自己是谁。这需要付出很多努力,因为我们并不总是了解自己,我们有习惯性的思维模式和对生活的反应,这些模式让我们变得真实,但要对真实的自己负责,去追求我们真正想要的东西,需要付出很多努力。 真实性的一部分是活在当下,诚实地面对自己。有很多方法让我们逃避现实,比如分心、毒品、酒精、色情,或者沉迷于自己的思绪中。所以,对我来说,真实性的一部分就是活在当下,诚实地面对自己。我认为这会带来更有力量的生活,这也是我努力教导人们的东西。我们都在渴望找到真实的自我,与自己保持一致,这会让我们感觉良好。即使事情进展不顺利,至少我们对得起真实的自己,我们犯的是自己的错误,而不是被某种应该成为谁或应该做什么的想法所引导。在我的生活中,我犯过很多这样的错误,我早早就做出了承诺,如果我要犯错,我希望那是我的错误,我希望从中学习。 在演艺生涯中,我最终选择按照自己的方式去做,承担后果。起初,在好莱坞,我认为每个人都知道自己在做什么,比我聪明,所以我听从了很多导演的指导,但后来我发现,有些选择并不正确。最终,我决定对一切负责,即使这偶尔会与导演发生冲突。我会倾听别人的意见,但最终,我必须按照自己的方式去做,成败自负。 真实性和自信之间存在有趣的反馈循环,越真实,自信越强;反之亦然。长期缺乏真实会导致自信下降,难以辨别什么是真实。要遵循内心的直觉和冲动,不要忘记它们的存在。成功人士通常依靠自己的直觉和勇气,敢于冒险。列举生活中那些遵循直觉并获得成功的事情,可以帮助你重新建立对直觉的信任。相信直觉和同步性,并寻求迹象来确认。冥想等练习可以帮助你与潜意识沟通,并信任你所看到的。寻求迹象来确认直觉是一种成熟的做法。随着年龄增长和经历积累,你会学会顺其自然,并最终发现其中存在逻辑。对自我或项目的信念会带来能量,吸引他人,并最终实现目标。绝对的信念是运动员最强大的品质,绝对的信念比能力更重要。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

What is the role of authenticity in a good life according to David Sutcliffe?

Authenticity is about being truthful to oneself and making conscious choices about when and where to be authentic. It involves being present, embodied, and aligned with one's true self, even if it requires effort to break habitual thought patterns and responses.

Why is it difficult to be present all the time?

Being present is challenging because people often get lost in distractions, addictions, or their own thoughts. It requires constant effort to stay embodied and in the moment, which is a key aspect of authenticity.

What is the relationship between authenticity and confidence?

Authenticity and confidence are intertwined. Standing up for one's intuition and instincts builds confidence, while living out of authenticity diminishes it. The more one acts authentically, the more confidence they gain, creating a positive feedback loop.

How can someone reconnect with their authenticity after losing touch with it?

To reconnect with authenticity, one can reflect on past instances where following their intuition led to positive outcomes. This exercise helps build faith in one's inner impulses, which is essential for rediscovering authenticity.

What is the cost of betraying oneself?

Betraying oneself leads to feelings of anger, resentment, and disempowerment. It often stems from childhood patterns of self-betrayal to maintain connection with caregivers. Breaking this pattern requires self-awareness and the willingness to tolerate feelings of disconnection.

Why is self-compassion difficult for many people?

Self-compassion is hard because many people have an internalized belief that they are inherently bad, often rooted in childhood experiences. This belief creates a conflict with self-compassion, making it challenging to accept and love oneself fully.

How does fear influence our behavior and decision-making?

Fear, often rooted in childhood vulnerability, shapes behavior by creating a sense of unsafety. People project this fear onto the world, and cultural influences like media amplify it. Confronting fear requires taking risks and understanding that fear-based thoughts are not always rational.

What is the importance of presence in relationships?

Presence in relationships is crucial because it fosters connection and trust. When one is not present, their partner may feel agitated or disconnected. Being present involves sharing enough to allow the partner to feel connected without betraying oneself.

How does David Sutcliffe define presence?

Presence, for Sutcliffe, is an embodied experience where one is willing to feel all emotions without repression. It involves confronting unconscious feelings and being truthful about what is happening internally, even if it feels irrational or scary.

Why is vulnerability important for personal growth?

Vulnerability is essential for personal growth because it allows individuals to confront and process their emotions. Being open and truthful about one's feelings builds strength and leads to greater self-awareness and authenticity.

Chapters
This chapter explores the concept of authenticity, its role in a fulfilling life, and the challenges of aligning with one's true self. It emphasizes the importance of listening to inner impulses and taking ownership of one's choices, even if it leads to conflict.
  • Authenticity is about living truthfully, which requires self-awareness and overcoming habitual patterns.
  • Following inner intuition, even when risky, leads to greater confidence and success.
  • Overcoming self-doubt requires faith in one's inner impulses and seeking signs of confirmation.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

How do you come to think about the role of authenticity in a good life? Well, I guess I try to be as authentic as I can. I don't know if that's a thing that we can ever do perfectly. And we have to be discerning about where we want to be authentic. But as long as we're making choices, meaning I'm not going to show up at work and always be my authentic self. There's always a mask that we're wearing. But if I'm doing that consciously...

then uh then i can still maintain my authenticity for me authenticity is really just truth can i be in the truth of who i am which takes a lot of work because we don't always know who we are and we have habitual thought patterns and responses to life that cause us i mean we're authentic to those but to be authentic to ourselves to go after exactly what it is we want

To be present all the way. Maybe that's another way to define it. Being present in the moment, which is a really hard thing to do. Always being present. There's so many ways that we leave, whether it's through distraction or drugs or alcohol or pornography, or we get lost in our mind. So part of authenticity for me is just being embodied, being here, being present, being in the moment, telling the truth as best we can.

And I think that's empowering. I think that leads to an empowering life. And, you know, it's really what I try to teach people. You know, how do we find our authentic self? I know it's an overused word, but I think that's what we're all longing for because we're aligned in some way within ourselves. We're true to ourself and that feels good.

So even if things go badly, at least we're true to who we are. We're making our own mistakes, not being guided by some idea of who we're supposed to be or what we're supposed to be doing. And I've certainly done plenty of that in my life. I made a commitment early on. If I'm going to make mistakes, I want them to be my own mistakes. I want to learn from- Oh, that's such a cool idea. The idea of making a mistake and it not even being yours. Painful, painful. Well, I learned this as an actor because-

When I first started out in Hollywood, you know, you get there and you think that everybody is, knows what they're doing and they're smarter than you. At least that's what I thought.

And, you know, so you listen to a lot of directors, you know, tell you how to play scenes. And it got to a point where, you know, I would see the scene and I thought, yeah, I don't think that was the right choice. Now it's my face on the screen, right? So if it's not resonating, people aren't thinking about the director, they're thinking about me. So there's a certain point I just decided to take ownership of everything. And occasionally you'd get into conflict with directors, but the choice was I got to do it my way.

I want to listen, of course, to what people are saying and take that information in. But ultimately, I have to do it my way and live or die by it. Is there an interesting feedback loop between authenticity and confidence? It seems like in order to be able to sort of stand up for yourself and to have faith that your intuition or your instinct is right, you need to be confident in it. And then presumably, the more that you do that, the more it feeds back into confidence. Yeah.

But as with most things that kind of spiral, they also spiral in the opposite direction, which is the longer that you live out of authenticity, the less confidence you have in being authentic and the less you know what authenticity is, which makes it harder to become so on and so forth. It seems to me like that's the kind of dynamic that goes on. Yeah, I think that's absolutely right. I might use the word faith, having faith in your inner impulses, you know, to stay in the

the television and movie acting references. When I was growing up, I was a big fan of John Cassavetes. And he was kind of the original independent filmmaker. And his films were wild and raw and crazy. And he had a great career as a mainstream Hollywood actor. But his films were just something else entirely. And he had this quote about all these people, they go to Hollywood and they start getting into commercial projects. And they say one day...

that they're going to do something creative. They're going to do something artistic, do something true to themselves, but they never do. Because once you buy into that and exactly what you're saying, once you stop listening to those innermost impulses, you start to forget that they're there. And so that had a huge impact on me. And I've done my best, not perfectly. I don't think any of us do it perfectly to live by that, to live by that inner intuition, those inner impulses, like that thing that is inside me. There's a knowingness

that we all have and only we know it. And if we start asking everybody, you know, is this okay? Is that okay? They're going to be, maybe they'll be able to give you some legitimate reflection. But at the end of the day, I think anybody who's successful at a certain point, they stood alone. They just went on their own intuition, their own gut, and they took a risk. And, and that's how they became successful. You have to, you have to follow it. The more you do, the more confidence you have.

You haven't, and exactly the less you do it, the more I think lost you become. What would you say to somebody that feels like they haven't tapped into that authenticity in a while? Is there anything, have you got any prescriptions or advice for how someone can begin to start listening to that little voice that maybe has been drowned out for a long time? Well, this happens with my clients all the time and I give them an exercise and I have them list like things in their life where they had an intuition and they did it and it worked out.

And you'd be surprised how long a list everybody has. Right. So you're trying to encourage that kind of thinking, but it requires faith. It requires a deep faith. And, you know, I'm a big believer in, in synchronicity. I mean, it just, I don't know how it works.

But it seems to be real on some level. I don't know if it's just a trick of my mind or, you know, back in the day, they used to look in the fire. Right. And you look in the fire for a sign. But what are you really looking for? You're looking for your own unconscious to be reflected back in the fire so you can trust what you see.

that it's not it's not a an image necessarily in the fire that you're seeing that's separate from you you look at the fire long enough you can get into a meditative state and suddenly your own unconscious is going to be projected onto that fire and the thing that you see is something that's actually you and so practices like that like meditation i think are very valuable or the thing that i do it's like with mexico you know i'm going to move down to mexico why am i moving to mexico that's crazy i don't speak spanish my wife speaks spanish but

It just seemed like such a big leap. But I asked for signs. I do this every time. I asked for signs. And I got them. The week after I asked for signs, the three people that I know in Mexico all came up in conversation with strangers.

It's like we ended up knowing. I'm like, you know that guy? I know that guy. Yeah, he's a friend of mine lives in Mexico like that in the same week. That kind of shit happens to me all the fucking time. I can't explain it, Chris. I don't know what it is. I'm sure there's a lot of doubters out there, but that's how I do it. When I have a strong intuition, I ask for signs and almost always I get them. Is that for want of a better term? Is that a mature man's game? Not a young man's game?

Well, I think so. I mean, I've been around, I'm 55, I've lived a life, ups and downs, success and failure, rich and poor. And you start to learn how to just go with it all, go with the flow. And then when you look back, you see that there was a logic to all of it. Like it was all working in your favor somehow, even the tragedies, even the failures. And

I think ultimately, you know, you go back to authenticity and confidence. And I said the word faith, it really is about faith. Like that's what I've learned at this point in my life. Like your faith will make it so. And the faith in something like a faith in yourself or, or a project that you're engaged with, like there's a, there's a vibration, there's an energy in that, that I think makes things manifest. And it's also very attractive. Somebody who has faith,

And so you end up attracting people to you because I think when, when you're in that state, everybody wants that. Who doesn't want to have absolute faith, right? Like, which is trust, right? Which is the absence of fear. And I, you know, to use a sports analogy, I was, used to be a hockey player and, you know, I was okay. But the worst thing was coming up against a guy who had absolute faith in their ability to,

Or that they were going to win. Like you just realized I can't knock this guy off his game. There's nothing I'm going to do to this guy. Kind of regardless of their ability, the faith was kind of more important. Exactly. And that I realized was the strongest quality in a player. You don't want to come up against a guy who has absolute faith.

There's a Bill Burr quote that says, you're going to be fine. And even if you're not going to be fine, isn't it better to just exist thinking you're going to be fine until it's not fine? And then when it's not fine, you can just deal with it then. But it makes no sense to ruin right now. Yeah, Bill Burr is a very wise man. That's how I am with the belief in God. I mean, belief in God makes me feel more powerful. So why not believe in God?

It's really that simple for me. I mean, there's other things for me I've had experience. It's like the productivity bro Pascal's wager. Right. Exactly. Exactly. Exactly. God is on my side. Just sort of thinking about the opposite side, you used the word fear there. It's something I've been kind of obsessed with this year. Why is it that...

fear is so sort of prevalent in that way? Why do we see threats where there are none? Why is it that we're so concerned with that? And what's a way to get us to sort of move out of that fear-based perspective? Well, that's a big question. I mean, it goes back probably to childhood. I mean, we all have fear. We come into the world, we're vulnerable, totally helpless, totally dependent. That's a scary thing.

And, um, if we don't get the attunement, we need the love, we need the comfort, we need the needs that we need. Um, there's going to be fear there. And so, um, I think it's built in, in some way, like this, this feeling of like, I'm not entirely safe and I, and I, I, you could have the best parents in the world, but, um, I don't think there's anybody walking around who doesn't have some kind of issues or, or fear around unconscious fear around their own safety that they then project.

on to the world. And then of course we live in a culture, particularly with the media that, um, weaponizes fear to keep you watching, to keep you under control. And so, you know, I'm, I'm reading, uh, the screw tape letters right now. And it's, it's, uh, you know, all about the devil essentially. And it's all about fear. If you can keep a person in fear, you can control them. So fear is really the biggest battle that we're all facing. And, um,

We don't want to feel it. That's really what it is. Like, if you're not afraid to feel, what are you actually afraid of? Right. And so we, we, we do so much to avoid feeling our fear. And so one of the practices that I've done and is, is,

and I encourage other people to do, is to constantly put yourself in situations where you're confronting your fear and then go through it and feel the panic, feel everything that comes up. And then on the other side of that, you realize very quickly, it was all an illusion. It was all in your head. It wasn't real in the way that you thought it was. So how do you confront it? You have to take risks. You have to be willing to move towards your fear. There's really no

other way to do it and to understand that there's a very strong force within you, you know, which I call the lower self. You might call it the shadow that is afraid and is doing everything that it can to what it thinks is protecting you. So it's going to convince you. It's going to tell you stories, right?

all kinds of stories about why you shouldn't do that or why that's scary or why that woman that you want to ask out is probably a bitch. So what's the point? Or it's never going to work out. This is the voice of fear. So you have to start to understand that your negative thoughts are actually just the voice of your fear and then understand that the culture is trying to keep you afraid. And so it takes a lot of work. I mean, I think you have to work every day in some way to mitigate against all of that fear.

Is that a top-down solution? Is that a bottom-up solution? Is it something else? Because I think there's a tendency for perhaps the sort of people that listen to shows like this one to think that they can think their way out of an overthinking problem or think their way out of a feeling problem. And I'm not sure whether that's possible. No, you can't solve a problem of the mind with the mind. It has to be through action.

You have to be willing to take action. You have to do something different. The mind is tricky. The mind is not a reliable narrator of your experience. That's one thing that I've come to understand. I don't necessarily trust my mind, particularly when I'm in a state of anxiety or fear or confusion. That's when it's the least reliable. It's most reliable when I'm feeling good, when I'm feeling aligned, when I'm feeling connected, let's say.

And so, um, you know, I think, yeah, you ha you have to be willing to do things, right. Take risks, take action, um, move your body in, in some way. Um, I mean, you, you probably know this cause you know, Huberman talked about a lot, this, this, um, when we're in a fear state, um, we're agitated or frustrated or whatever it is. If you go for a walk, um,

It solves the problem instantly because what are you doing? You're walking forward in space. So that's telling your brain there's no fear there. So you can be lost in something that's overtaking you, that's consuming you, negative thoughts. And you can go for a walk and literally five minutes later, it's clear. So that tells you just a walk can solve most of your problems.

This episode is brought to you by Function. If you haven't been feeling as sharp or as energized as you'd like, getting your blood work done is the best place to start, which is why I partnered with Function. They run lab tests twice a year that monitor over 100 biomarkers. They've got a team of expert physicians that then take that data and put it into a simple dashboard and give you insights and actionable recommendations to improve your health and lifespan. They track everything

everything from your heart health and hormone levels to your thyroid function and nutrient deficiencies. They even screen for 50 types of cancer at stage one, which is five times more data than you would get from an annual physical. Best of all, Dr. Andrew Cuban is their scientific advisor and Dr. Mark Hyman is their chief medical officer. So you can trust that the data and insights you receive are as scientifically sound as they are practical. Getting your blood work drawn and analyzed like this would usually cost thousands, but with function,

It's $500. Right now, you can get the exact same blood panels that I get and bypass their waitlist by going to the link in the description below or heading to functionhealth.com slash modernwisdom. That's functionhealth.com slash modernwisdom. Talk to me about the cost of betraying yourself, about not being fully honest, about allowing that lower self to take over more.

So this is really, I'm going to say this a lot. This is the heart of my work. I said, my clients make fun of me. I'm like, this is the most important thing you have to understand. But we all had to betray ourselves as children in order to stay in connection and in favor with our caregivers. There were certain things that they wanted from us.

And so we gave them that. And there were certain things we intuited or were told directly that they didn't like about the way that we were. And so that betrayal process starts at a very young age. The primary survival strategy for any child is to stay in connection and favor with their caregivers. So they have no choice but to betray themselves. So that self-betrayal becomes a pattern.

Right. It becomes a way of being. And so we believe that we have to have to betray ourselves in some way in order to stay in connection with other people. So the the unconscious belief when when we do betray ourself or abandon ourself or don't speak our truth or give ourselves away, whatever happens.

phrase you want to use is what we're actually afraid of is the disconnection from from the other person which on a primal level is is a threat of course because we want to stay connected to the to the tribe we need to stay connected to other people to survive and so the illusion that we have to shatter is that you can actually stand on your own that you can tolerate the feelings of disconnection you can tolerate

saying something or doing something and feeling the disapproval from your friend or from the world or from your spouse and that you're going to be okay. It's not going to kill you the way the unconscious mind thinks it would when you were a child. And so that's not an easy thing to do. First, you have to understand that you are betraying yourself.

And because it's so habitual, very often we don't, we're just left with a feeling of we're angry, resentful. We don't feel empowered in our life. Some, you know, the, the world out there is somehow controlling us and we're at effect to our environment. Those are all signs of,

that we are betraying ourselves. And so once you start to understand that, then you can take some self-responsibility. And the question I ask in all these situations with betrayal, let's say, oh, I have a client show up. It's like, you know, I was betrayed. My girlfriend, my board, whatever, said this, did this. And the question I always ask is, was there a moment before the betrayal where you betrayed yourself?

Like, was there some intuition, some instinct, something you want to wanted to say, but you didn't say. And every time there's always a yes. And so why do you say it? Because I was afraid, afraid of what? Well, afraid of how they're going to react. And so we all have that. Right. And so it's just, it's just a practice. It's an awareness first and then a practice because it's the only way we really can be free.

Right. If otherwise we're, we're modulating our behavior based on the external world, based on, you know, how other people are going to react. We're, you know, we're caring what other people think, but it's really deeper than that. Is that why the fact that,

The self-betrayal begins in childhood in relationship with your caregiver typically. Is that why relationships are such a breeding ground for this to come up? Exactly. It's now mirroring the first time that this happened. Yeah. I mean, you're going to heal all your childhood wounds in your relationship. I'm finding that out.

And it's tricky. It always comes up. I'm projecting my issues with my mother, all the issues from my childhood onto my partner all the time. And she was doing the same to me. And it creates this confusion. It creates this resentment. We get at each other.

And fortunately, you know, she's a pretty aware, evolved person. So we're able to get to the heart of what's actually going on for both of us and then come back into unity. But it's really about self-responsibility. It's like, how am I co-creating this? There's something that I'm doing. There's some distortion I have. Like, I believe this thing. Is it actually true? Like, I didn't, I grew up, my mom left my father, left my stepfather.

And then, and didn't really attend to my needs during that process. I mean, she was overwhelmed. She was very young and I felt like, Hey, you know, is anybody wanting to check in with me? See how I feel about this. So my conception of women was, I don't trust them and they don't care what I feel. And so I walk into a relationship and that's, I'm looking for evidence of that everywhere. And I'm building a case against her and any little thing that she does, um,

That confirms my belief. I point to it and then I stack it up until I blow up and I'm like, you're doing this, you're doing this, you're doing this.

And maybe she is doing some of those things, but my reaction to it is completely out of proportion because of my history. And because of that, I'm not actually seeing the good things that she's doing. I'm not seeing the ways in which she is, in fact, very trustable. And so we all come into relationship with those kind of distortions.

Just going back to that authenticity point, sort of folding that into relationships, how much room do you think there is for self-editing in a relationship? I think discernment is the key. I don't think you have to share everything in a relationship. That's my feeling. But you have to be careful that you're not hiding anything.

Because if you're hiding something, it's going to be felt, right? And if you're hiding it out of shame, that's going to be felt. And ultimately, it's going to come up. So I think, you know, and we can dilute ourselves. We can rationalize. Oh, I don't need to share everything with my partner. I don't need to share this. It's not really important. Right.

But oftentimes, that kind of vulnerability is terrifying, right? To really reveal who we actually are to our partners. And I think for men, particularly, it's like to reveal that sometimes you're just afraid.

you know, that, that you, um, have fear about whatever, you know, and, uh, there's something maybe shameful about that. And, and the reframe for me is that if you can take ownership of your fear, um, and, uh, sort of be with it, you know, um, and not put it on her, not, it's not, you're not asking that she take care of it or do something about it.

But what it does is it brings you into presence, right? Because she can feel that something's going on.

And so if you can name it for yourself and contain it within yourself, it actually creates safety, right? That kind of vulnerability is really important. The difference is if you're afraid and you're looking for her to be your mother and take care of you, or she has the instinct to want to take care of you because you're afraid, which as a man, you, you, you want to resist that because you don't want her to be your mother. But I think that kind of vulnerability is, is really important. I don't think you have to share all your, you know, troubles, uh,

with them, all the details of the thing. But if I'm having a bad day, I want to make sure that my wife knows that it's not about her. So I want to give her some kind of indication, like what's going on for me, be present with her because that's what she's longing for. She's longing for me to be present. And if I don't reveal myself in those moments, I'm not present. And if I'm not present, she's going to be agitated.

she's going to create a story in her head that she's done something wrong or she's going to be upset or angry and something's going to happen. So that's 10. And it's not exactly an answer to your question, but that's how I think about all that stuff. I guess we've got this sort of strange balance between betraying yourself to maintain a connection with someone or to not have to open yourself up or whatever. But then if you do do that,

this person isn't in connection with you. They're in connection with this projection that you've just put forward. But then there's also the sense of, well, you need to be discerning. Like, you don't need to tell them about your new athlete's foot protocol or, you know, whatever it is that you've got that's going on. I had chronic flatulence in the office today, honey. Like...

Some things perhaps are best kept for the boys. But as soon as you open that door, the discernment, it becomes a decision, right? You need to make this sort of editorial choice about what is it that I'm going to do. And that can become a very slippery slope. A lot of guys can use that to excuse ever having to open up

uh and then you end up hiding things that you probably shouldn't really be hiding and then you start having expectations that are unspoken resentments because you wanted this thing but you never said it and yeah that balance between uh betraying yourself and then ending up with somebody connecting to a person that you're not is a very dangerous slippery slope i think for a

the kind of red pill community, like never share your feelings with your woman. And I mean, I understand, uh, they're reacting to, uh, the opposite pole of that, which is there's this movement, um, to sharing everything with your wife, like that she's your best friend and you want to open up, you want to be vulnerable. And it's, it's important that she sees you feel, and that creates connection and intimacy. And, and, and, and, and, you know, I'm a therapy guy.

So I, I, I can relate to that to a degree. And I did that, you know, when I first, when I started therapy and especially into my training and that's all you're doing is revealing yourself over and over and over again. And then I would do that in my relationships. And it took me some time to realize like, no, that's too much. Like I don't need to be sharing all of that with her.

So I have to be discerning. I have to be able to contain things within myself. I think that's a real practice, learning containment, which is not suppression or repression. There's a difference, obviously. There's certain things, yeah, I need to take to the boys. And there's risks I have to take with my wife that are going to be vulnerable, right? There's things that maybe I need to

that I need to express to her or the example I just gave that there's places where I feel afraid right now. The whole game for me, as I said, is presence. If you are not present with her, then she's not going to be happy. She's not going to feel safe. And so you have to find a way to be discerning, but share enough so that you're present so that she can feel you. She has to be able to feel you. If she can't feel you, she doesn't trust you because you're actually not trustable.

If you're not in touch in some way with what you're actually feeling, you're not trustable. And the reason why is if you suppress your emotions or you rationalize them in some way, you're going to act in compensation to those feelings in a way that's not authentic to you, right? And that's going to create problems for you. So it's really, really important.

that you understand, know without shame what it is that you're feeling and how and when you choose to share that with her is ultimately is up to you. Why is self-compassion so hard? We want to have our own back, if nothing else. If we're going to do containment, we need to be both a firm, supportive school teacher and also a pretty sort of ruthless prison guard at the same time, I suppose. Yeah.

But we need that self-compassion. Why is that often quite difficult to access? Because it comes into conflict with a lower self aspect of us that believes that we are bad.

And what do I mean by that? Well, going back to what I was saying earlier about we have to repress or deny or disassociate from certain aspects of ourself in order to stay connected and in favor with our caregivers. Well, the child has no discernment, no consciousness, right? The parents are God.

And so they're going to make the assumption, they're going to draw the conclusion that those parts of them are bad. Like that part of me is bad. And so most of us, I would say all of us, but I'll say most of us have some place inside us that doesn't trust our own inherent goodness.

Right. That there's some part of us that's bad and it's usually, you know, deep in the unconscious and it can be masked by a kind of confidence or bravado. But most people have some degree of shame. And so that that part of us that thinks it's bad, it wants to continue to tell ourselves the story that we are bad. Why? Because that's what creates safety for us.

And meaning that this part of me, right? Let's say for a guy, it's my aggression. Okay. A lot of guys think their aggression is bad. They've been told their aggression is bad. So if I show my aggression, I'm going to get in trouble. Like mom's not going to be happy or the world is not going to be happy or my girlfriend's not going to be happy. So we make that part of us bad. So whenever it comes up, we're going to tell ourselves a story that

that there's something wrong with us. I'm out of control. I need to work on this, something that it's not okay. And so it takes a lot of work to sort of override that, to accept, and maybe this is why on a deeper level, it's hard to accept the depth of our shadow. It's hard to accept how cruel we can be. It's hard to accept that all of the insanity that we see out in the world that's horrifying to us also exists in us.

And maybe we don't act it out in overt ways, but sometimes we act it out in subtle ways. All of us are capable of cruelty. And, you know, given a certain set of circumstances, like, would I have been a Nazi? Maybe.

Probably. I mean, I don't know. So that lives in me. And I think it's very hard for people to come to terms with that and accept themselves there. Generally, what we do is we suppress it because we want to create an idealized self-image that we're good. We don't want to know that part of ourself. And so it's in the place where it's hard to be compassionate for ourself. It's really hard to be compassionate from that place where there's this deep root of belief that there's something about us that's not okay. Yeah, something...

wrong or broken it is odd that i don't know i i can't think of a much a much less functional belief than that it's it's not really going to contribute to having a flourishing life or thriving and yet it's so endemic to most people especially uh people that are high performers

Yeah, well, there's, and I understand it. You know, there's a belief that if I'm hard on myself, like I'm going to achieve more, right? Having that, that militant general in your head. And I think that's useful. I mean, I want a tough coach. I loved tough coaches. I love coaches that pushed me.

and who were clear. And if I wasn't meeting the standard, they'd let me know. I liked that. And if they were disappointed in me, they also let me know. This episode is brought to you by Whoop. I've worn Whoop for over five years now, since way before they were a partner on the show. And it's the only wearable I've ever stuck with because it is the best. I've actually tracked over 1,600 days of my life with it, according to the app, which is pretty crazy. Whoop is super innocuous. You don't even remember that you've got it on. And yet it tracks everything

everything 24-7 via a little device on your wrist. It tracks your heart rate, your sleep, your recovery, all of your workouts, your resting heart rate, heart rate variability, how much you're breathing throughout the night, and now can even track your steps. Puts all of this into an app and spits out very simple to understand and fantastically usable data. It's phenomenal. I'm a massive, massive fan of them. And best of all, you can join for free

Pay nothing for the brand new Whoop 4.0 strap, plus you get your first month for free, and there's a 30-day money-back guarantee, so you can buy it for free.

Try it for free. If you don't like it after 29 days, I'll just give you your money back. You can get the brand new Whoop 4.0 and that 30-day free trial by going to the link in the description below or heading to join.whoop.com slash modern wisdom. That's join.whoop.com slash modern wisdom. But at the same time, if that coach doesn't have the capacity to love me, to be there for me, to see me as human,

Right. And to, to transcend the performance of the goal and go underneath that, I don't really trust him. And ultimately it's going to unravel. And you see these coaches, those hard apps coaches, they don't last long. They move from team to team, you know, it's like a little bit of medicine that maybe that team needs for a couple of years, but then they move on. Right. So I think we need, we need both, both things. We need, we need we need to push ourselves and,

Um, but we also need compassion for ourselves. And again, you know, it's easy to rationalize. Like, again, the mind is very, very tricky. And so it's like, oh, I could take the day off today, things like that. And so we want to mitigate against that. So it's, it's a really, really tricky balance. And I, you know, I struggle with it all the time, right? Like, where is the balance between pushing myself and self-compassion? Yeah. Uh, it's strange that

By continuing to whip yourself into submission and push yourself harder, you become successful in the only way that other people can judge you, which is outwardly. But nobody really sees the personal price that you've had to pay to get to the position that you're in. And that means that a lot of the time the trade-off is,

One of the metrics is observable and another one of the metrics is hidden. And you will almost always trade a hidden metric for an observable metric because people will happily spend an extra hour and a half daily commute going to and from a job that's

one rung up the ladder higher and another 15 grand a year in terms of annual revenue but what have they lost in terms of sanity and sleep and time with their kids or the relationship quality well those are all hidden metrics the observable metric is what's your job title how much do you earn per year where did you go on holiday last year and uh

Yeah, there's this cool insight I learned from an evolutionary psychologist about how ancestrally there's two ways primarily that leaders ascended within tribes. So one was through dominance and the other was through prestige. So dominance being more tyrannical, more top-down, more authoritarian, and prestige being more egalitarian, sort of voted by the group, one that's come maybe from the bottom up.

Now, what's interesting is that you need different kinds of leaders at different periods. So it seems like the more domineering leader that's top-down, you want that person in times of war and conflict because they're decisive, they're ruthless, they'll garner everybody together. Everybody needs to get on the same fucking page or else we're all going to die, okay? Like, stop dicking about, Johnny. But then...

The other side, the problem that you have with that, and I think that I'm certain that there's a parallel when it comes to sort of the way that we treat ourselves. The problem with having a tyrant is that when the war's over, you've still got a fucking tyrant. And the prestigious leader, the one that's risen from the bottom up, he's raising everyone else along, he's able to play the game, he knows what's going on.

he's not going to get a look in because this fucking tyrannical top-down authoritarian bastard has now surrounded himself with sycophants. He's fortified himself. And I really think there's something to this about how we sort of treat ourselves. And I think that the most obvious place is when you begin doing anything and you're on the launch pad of...

self-growth or understanding, discovering who you really are, getting a business off the ground, leaving the city or the country that you don't want to be in anymore, leaving that relationship, getting out of the family that you don't want to be in, whatever it is. You need to use whatever fuel you can get a hold of. And it's kind of like you're in war. If you're going to make something happen from zero, you're at total, the RPMs are at zero, the miles per hour are at zero, there is nothing, there's no inertia or momentum to carry you off. And you need to rip this motherfucker off the launchpad one inch at a time.

You could probably do with someone that's good at going to war. The problem is after you get out into orbit and you're just floating around, you go, I know that that was a really useful mindset. I know that that tyrannical leader was one that I needed to domineer over me, but I really wish he would fuck off now. But unfortunately, he's still there. Yeah, I think that's exactly right. Different...

different qualities at different times in our life. But I agree with you. If I was going from zero trying to get into shape, I'd want a hard-ass motherfucker driving me all the time. I don't know if I'd want- Get David Goggins screaming in my face. Exactly. That's going to get me there as quick as possible. I'm going to learn something about myself.

Um, but then once I arrive and I'm satisfied with where I'm at, maybe, maybe that energy wants to shift. So it might be also like, I mean, while you were talking, I was thinking about the balance of the masculine and the feminine. It's not exactly what you're saying, but you know, there's something about that too. And, and both are necessary at different, at different times, you know, you need that strong masculine force.

And sometimes you need that comforting feminine force. You said earlier on, the reason I asked about the mature man versus the young man strategy is I'm 36 now. So I guess I'm kind of straddling both of them. And, um,

I get the sense that when you're starting out with something, you really need to be a bit more prescriptive and you probably do need more of a drill sergeant than an Eckhart Tolle. But as you start to accumulate a little bit of instinct and experience, that is precisely the thing that's hard to replicate. So not only are you allowing yourself to sort of aggregate all of your life experiences, you're finding more ease, you're finding more play, you're...

you're competitive in a manner that other people simply can't do because unless they've had all of the experiences that you've had in precisely the same sequence with the reflections that you've got for the amount of duration of time that you've done it for, they can't be you. There is no blueprint that can work that back because frankly, kind of like YouTube's algorithm, open the black box. They don't even know how it works. You don't even know how your own instinct works. That's right. And I'm,

I'm just fascinated at the moment. I spent a lot of time when I first started this show seven years ago, very much productivity bro, the five daily step routine that I need to do to ensure that I get my sort of three-month sprints and my one-year goals and my five-year vision and all the rest of this stuff. It was very prescriptive. It was very rigid. It was very compartmentalized, and it was very useful. And fuck, it worked. But I'm really interested now in what a more sort of fluid approach

easeful version of that looks like one that does allow me to use instinct and aggregate all of this experience a lot more. And I kind of get the sense that that is moving from the tyrant across into the sort of benevolent leader. Yeah, that's kind of how I've got it in my head. Yeah, no, that's that's beautiful.

Um, well, you're 36 years old. You're at the height of your powers. You're, you know, you're, it's not your time to be self-reflective. It's, you know, you're attacking, you know, and that's what you should be doing. You're just following your energy. You're following what you want to do. Right. Later in life, you can look back and, and, and, and maybe make sense of it all. So, and I was that right. Um, and right around your age, I started to

think, eh, there's something else, right? Because I went to Hollywood and I was hungry for it and I went after it and it was thrilling and it was exciting and I was making money and meeting all these people and having success. And then there got a point where I just like, there's more. And I didn't know exactly what that meant, but that's when I started on this journey that I've gone on.

But I can tell you now at 55, my approach to life is completely different. And it goes back to what I was saying earlier. It's just instead of like, make it happen, I think, let it happen. It's going to come to me. I want to be in the flow. I don't want to force anything.

And that was very hard for my ego to come to terms with, you know, my ego was driving seat anymore. Yeah. My ego was screaming like, what the fuck man? Impose your will on the world, bro. Yeah. And that's a very powerful feeling. And I did that. And it feels fucking great when you impose your will in the world and you get what you want. Um, but that is, uh, that is a diminishing supply. And it,

it, at a certain point you want to just experiment with doing something differently. Like what's another way to meet life? Like there's, there's more information out there and you know, um, like I'm in my wise man years apparently, uh, which is sort of weird cause you know, I, I have some wisdom I've accrued along the way, but there's another part of it that's still trying to figure it all out and making mistakes. Um,

But there is something about what I just said, like having faith, letting it happen, that life is going to unfold, that you're not really in control of things. And the more conscious and present that you can be, the more you're going to see the entirety of everything. And of course, as you get older into your paternal years, you've climbed the mountain, you know what that feels like, you have that satisfaction. You're in a different place in your life where you want to

you know, hold things, you know what I mean? Help other people and, uh, share what you've learned. And, uh, it's deeply gratifying. I mean, I'm just coming to this cause that, you know, I was pretty aggressive and, and, um, uh, ambitious in my youth and I still am, but I approach it now as an older man in a completely different way.

It's so interesting saying, getting what you want from the world, imposing your will on the world. Again, it's that sort of domineering energy. But one of the things that it assumes, a lot of things, the thing that's so funny that it assumes is that you know what's best for you to want. How fucking narcissistic are you to think that you know what's best for you? Yeah.

And that's something I'm very much sort of leaning into now. Again, a lot of parallels.

Being able to make things happen, agency, having a vision, bringing it into the world, breaking through it, smashing through whatever barrier it was that you thought. Even small, mundane, boring successes, thought patterns that you never thought that you could get past or belief structures that you thought that you were going to have or ways of seeing the world or ossified social networks that you were just adamant would kind of always be there. And breaking through those is very, very impressive. But yeah, yeah.

I get the sense that I am not necessarily always the best advisor for what I need in the world. And that maybe just having some faith and getting out of my own fucking way. And again, this is the only thing that you can do. I appreciate that this...

might sound like a sort of opulent position to be in. But after a while, after you've accumulated enough momentum and inertia with good habits and good routines, and you kind of have a sense of, you know, everything's moved from system two thinking where it's very deliberate into system one thinking where it's a little bit more sort of automated. Mm-hmm.

You have to assume that most of the things that are going well in your life aren't coming because of what you're doing consciously. You did all of the conscious stuff before. So it's like, right, okay, why are you gripping so tightly to it now? Why are you sort of holding? And why are you that adamant that you actually have that much control over the outcomes that are coming in any case? How much of it is intention and fear and rumination and concern and anxiety and worry? And how much of it is just that

You've accumulated some competence and over a long enough time horizon, people tend to get what they deserve because they roll the dice enough times. Well, I can only speak for myself, but I think a lot of us go through this time when we realize that what was motivating me was not what I thought. Yep. Yep. I thought I wanted it for this reason, but in fact, it was something else. And for me, I realized at about 37 that almost everything that I was doing was to win the love of my father.

And I didn't, I didn't, I, you know, I, I learned that in a, uh, uh, a process like, uh, you know, uh, I do this, you know, somatic therapy called, uh, core energetics and, you know, you, you get deep, deep into your feelings. And, um, this was not something that I was aware of at all, but in the, in this process, all of a sudden this awareness came and these thoughts came that, you know, I played hockey and it was like, I, I said these words, like I play hard for him. And, um, and then I thought, what else am I doing in my life to win his love?

My dad wasn't around. And I thought, well, if I'm doing it for that reason, I'm not actually free. And what is it that I want to do? And that was a real crisis point in my life. I don't think we can avoid it. I think we all want to win the love of our father. We want to please the father. I think that's built in. So I don't necessarily think it's wrong.

But once you've achieved, I did what I had to do. My dad was proud of me.

I'd achieved that. But then the rest of my life, what am I going to do with the rest of my life? Well, I want to do what I want to do. But what is that? Because I've been driven by this thing for so long. It's overtaken me. I've created stories around it for the reasons why. But what is it now? That's a very uncomfortable place to be because you're letting go of everything that you thought you know, everything you're attached to, your entire identity.

And you have to go on this hero's journey, let go of the known world, enter into the unknown.

and it's fucking scary. This episode is brought to you by AG1. Over the span of about a year, I tried pretty much every green screen that I could to see which one was best, and I came across AG1, and I've stuck with it for over three years because it's the best. It's the most comprehensive, highly tested, and rigorously formulated. They genuinely care about holistic health, which is why I've got my mum to take it, and my dad to take it, and tons of my friends to, and if I found anything better, I would switch, but I haven't,

which is why I still use it. One scoop of AG1 contains 75 vitamins, minerals, and whole food sourced ingredients, including a multivitamin, multimineral, pre- and probiotic, green superfood blend, and more that all work together to fill the nutritional gaps in your diet. It increases energy and focus, aids with digestion, and supports a healthy immune system, all without the need to take multiple products or pills.

And if you're still unsure, they've got a 90-day money-back guarantee so you can buy it and try it every single day for three months. And if you don't like it,

They'll give you your money back. You can get a year's free supply of vitamin D3, K2, and 5 free AG1 travel packs by going to the link in the description below or heading to drinkag1.com slash modern wisdom. That's drinkag1.com slash modern wisdom. And that's why, you know, going back to what you were saying, you know, I had this thought, this is, you know, this is why people need therapy. I think it's not even necessarily to solve a problem.

that you have, but just to reflect you back to you in the places where you may have distortions or blind spots. Because when somebody is talking to you and they're kind of full of shit, you can feel it, right? You can feel that they're off just a little bit. And a good therapist is going to be able to sort of name that for you and then lead you back to yourself. Like I don't give advice to my clients. I just try to reflect what I see back to them and lead them back to their own internal compass, their own internal wisdom. That's the best I can do.

I heard the other day, eventually you just get sick of yourself. Yeah. Yeah. It's so good. A lot of...

a lot sort of refers to a lot of things. I think first off, uh, that sort of selfish energy that you were talking about before the, that you can't really be in service. You can't really have that sort of paternal pay it forward thing because it's still all about you. Even the kids are about you. Even a little Timmy's performance isn't about Timmy. It's about how does this reflect on you? It's not about, it's not about being narcissism. Yeah. Yeah, it is. And, uh, you know, in many ways, uh,

that is a fucking powerful energy again and it will make you incredibly successful in the only way that we can all be judged which is outwardly but i think you know whether it's wilburian transcendent include or or you know alchemizing it into something else eventually i mean fuck you know you can get through your entire life uh and and sort of get to that stage perhaps we have a new president who has managed to do such um but

It'll carry you a very long way, but I'm not convinced that that's the energy that you want to be using for the entire time. I think it's a toxic fuel when used long-term. And I think that there's sort of more holistic and interesting ways to get there, especially after you've burned the first couple of rocket boosters filled with that, like me, energy. And then, okay, well, what's next? I had my most satisfying experiences when I played hockey, obviously.

when I didn't concern myself with my stats or,

or scoring goals, whatever it was, when I can serve myself with, how can I be useful for this team? Like when I made that switch, like, because sometimes I was playing with a lot of really good guys and I wasn't as good as them. And I was like, I have to figure out a way to be useful. And I always found that those experiences to be the most satisfying because I was part of something. And sometimes you're appreciated, sometimes you're not, but you have this own, you know,

internal appreciation. So I think you're right. I think real maturity is understanding that, particularly as a man, that spiritual fulfillment, psychological fulfillment comes from being of service, that you have to give your life to something bigger than yourself and serve that thing. And I think, unfortunately, the culture is, we're very much lost in being famous and being successful and all the outward things you were talking about.

But, um, that's, that's the switch that I'm trying to make. Again, my ego gets involved. It's like, what about you, bro? What about, what about what you want? Um, but you also are less neurotic that way. When you're not thinking about yourself, you have less anxiety because you're just focused on, on giving now, not in a way that you're betraying yourself. As we talked about earlier, you have to be discerning. You have to take care of yourself. But if you're oriented in that way, I think it's, I think it's ultimately a lot more satisfying.

Do you think that there'll ever be a way to communicate to people that becoming rich and successful is not going to fix your problems? No, I think you got to find out on your own. I did. You are. It's fucking wild. I've been fortunate enough to be around some of the highest status, richest people on the planet over the last few years since moving to America.

All of them have got problems. All of them are fucked up. I was thinking, right, okay, well, if that's the trajectory that everybody wants to be on, and you know for a fact that the people that are there have still got maybe even more of the problems. They've got layers of expectation and resentment and uncertainty and pressure and scrutiny and all of this stuff piled on top of them. And all of the shit that they had when they were still poor. Yeah.

And there's just no, I am yet, I'm yet to find an effective way to communicate that external validation will not fill an internal void. Yeah, that's how most of us are oriented. That's what we see.

you know, because they look so happy, you know, that we get this curated version of celebrities or influencers. But I, you know, I know the truth because I was there in Hollywood. I saw what's going on. I was like, these fucking people are crazy. I couldn't believe it. It was shocking to me how incredibly neurotic, uh, and they were, and, and, and wonderful people and, and brilliant and all of that, you know, as you're experiencing, uh,

but, um, you know, it doesn't take away your problems. It's the one thing I appreciate about Ben Affleck. I mean, he talks about this wide out in the open. He's just like, I hate being fucking famous. I can't do anything. I have to live in this fucking box and none of my problems went away. Like I still am, have to live with all my problems and maybe in some way it actually makes it harder to

It certainly gives you less sympathy. At the very least, the people at the bottom that are miserable will get sympathy from everybody. But the people at the top that are miserable just feel like, how bourgeois, how luxurious of a position to be in to have all of this. Do you not know how many people would kill to have that? If I was you, I wouldn't. It would be all of my problems. And you go, I think if they could get rid of their problems, they would too.

Yeah. Well, yeah, nobody gives a shit about the problems of the rich and successful. And that's, that's a burden that, you know, you have to bear. I feel fortunate that, um, I got a level of fame that wasn't crippling. Um, you know, I had one TV show and, you know, people knew me from it, but it was, it was a very popular show, but it was small audience. So I, you know, I, I,

I can walk down the street and all of that. I mean, I'm still going to get recognized on the regular, but it allowed me to continue to engage in life and it allowed me to make a career transition, you know, because I went back and talked to a lot of my friends who are very famous and, you know, and I told them what it was that I was doing. They're like, you got out?

And I was so surprised. But what do you mean I got out? They're like, man, good for you. You got out. With a treatment like Alcatraz. Well, it is a kind of prison, what you're famous, because you can't really go anywhere and you can't make a transition. Like you're stuck there. You can't go get a regular job because of the amount of transference that's placed on you. And so I was really surprised by their reaction. It was the first time that I realized that they did in fact feel

trapped and I felt fortunate that, um, that I still had the kind of freedom to be able to, to be able to walk away. Yeah. It's fascinating. I remember, so I did a, a TV show. I did a few TV shows in my twenties. One of them was love Island, the first season in the UK popular sort of reality TV dating thing. And, uh, I always remember thinking at the time,

like a little bit wistful i was i half had the perspective that i knew that this was the right thing the first season was 10 times smaller than the second which was 10 times smaller than the third which was 10 times smaller than the fourth and then it kind of peaked and has now maybe flattened out but i always i always thought i wonder what it would have been like to have done one of the you know better known seasons we've come in at season two or season three or season four i could have pretty much picked any of them the casting directors would friend and um you

In retrospect, I'm so fucking glad that it was the smallest one. It was basically a full-cost broadcast dress rehearsal for the rest of the series, not even the seasons. And I'm so glad because it meant, like you say, I was beholden to nothing. I came off, nothing had changed. No one cared. They maybe accumulated a thousand followers on Instagram. So basically nothing had altered. So it meant that I was...

uh unencumbered uh by but you're pretty you're pretty famous now i mean you must get recognized everywhere and i mean i remember when i saw you kuya like because i'd seen you uh you know on youtube and you know there's a i have a projection onto you like i there's something that happens in relationship when you meet somebody who you've seen on the screen and so that that that must be happening for you all the time it is but the difference is it feels like people know me uh you know on on

a reality TV show where 24 hours is curated into 45 minutes nightly for seven weeks or something. And you're 27, 26, 27. And you're still an adult infant. I mean, I still largely still am, but at least it feels like when people come up to me, they know me, you know, they come up and they ask stuff about my life. They, they, they understand what I genuinely care about. Right. And I've not, you know, with at least with the show, I,

This isn't that normie of a show. If you're going to sit and listen to two blokes prattle on for an hour about the inner machinations of emotions and do we really need to be... What's the difference between discernment and containment? It selects for a very particular type of person. And I'm very glad they're the kinds of people that I would want to go for a coffee with. And what it basically has done, if I'm being honest, is it has...

outsourced friend finding for me on a sort of global scale and the only people that come up are the ones that have been through the fire and brimstone of putting up with us talking about this like kind of niche weird psychology bullshit yeah uh i'm sure you know as it continues to go there'll be challenges and i was having this conversation only a couple of days ago like

how do you know when enough exposure is enough and how do you then stop it from being too much? And it's not really a train that you can sort of stop slowing down the rocket ship. You can't just like pull some ejector button and be like, right. Okay. We'll stop it there. Like this is the perfect amount. So I don't know. And also you're like, what again, what an opulent problem to have. It's like a rich guy complaining about how hard it is to file his taxes. But it'll be an interesting challenge at the moment.

It's the perfect level. People say hello once every 15 minutes when I'm on the street or a bit more often if I'm in a gym. And sometimes I get free coffee. People have always got nice things to say. It's brilliant. But again, the roller coaster continues to roll. So we'll see where I end up in a few years' time. Yeah. Well, I guess any kind of an anonymous life is essentially over for you. Yeah, that's not something that I'd considered before.

Yeah. But you're right. I mean, you want everybody to know your face. You want everybody to know your name and no one to know your face. And I've managed to do probably close to the opposite. Like, you look like that guy, that guy that does that thing. I'm like, right. Okay. Yeah. You know the face and I have no idea of the name. So yeah. It's the burden that comes with the gift.

It's the shadow. There's always a shadow. There's always a price that we have to pay when we bring our gift fully to the world. There's no way around it. What was the moment for you when you kind of got to the, I'm not sure that this is all it thing when you were in Hollywood? I...

I had this great year where I had this television show. I had two movies. I was dating this very beautiful movie star. I had just bought this house. I was redoing it. I mean, I had everything. And it was upside everywhere that I looked. And I just had this deep feeling of dissatisfaction.

I wasn't really happy. I mean, I was, I was gratified in a way and proud, but the, I wasn't satisfied. Um, and I didn't know what that was. I didn't have the consciousness at the time to realize this wasn't where I was supposed to be. Although, you know, that had moments where it's, you know, I was on the set of friends, I remember.

and doing a guest spot and sitting on the couch in the coffee shop. And there are all the friends. And it's kind of a surreal moment. It was early in my career. And at the time, they were making $750,000 an episode. And I'm just looking at them taking all of that in. And I had this feeling. It's like, I don't want this.

And I didn't know what that was. I mean, it was a very clear thought. And I was like, is that real or is that just some fear of success that I'm having? And it didn't really play out for another six or seven years. And then it wasn't until I found something that really lit me up and I realized that

The thing that I was searching for in acting, I found in this somatic psychotherapy. Everything that I wanted was in that and the game that that was. The container that it existed in was so exciting for me and creative. At that point, it was really simple. I just started to move in the direction of what I was most interested in.

Isn't it crazy when people have an inkling, the sort of earliest murmurings of a realization, and you say, and about six or seven years later, I actually was able to commit to that thing. Yeah, man. Part of me thinks, oh, wouldn't it be great if we sort of had the courage of our convictions and we were able to pull the pin and things would happen more quickly. But then another part of me just thinks,

You can't realize things before you're ready to realize them in that way. No, I had to go through it. I had to go through the process of letting go. I mean, my ego was incredibly attached. I mean, I came up, you know, you're an actor, you're trying to make it. You don't think you're going to make it or, you know, maybe you have an intuition, but you don't know. And then you make it and you're working on television. You're getting lots of money and people are recognizing you. I mean, you're just in this other world that so many people dream about.

And your ego is just so elated. So then to have a thought like, I don't really want this. It's like, what? No. Hey, hey, whoa, whoa, whoa. This is like a dream come true. So it took, yeah, it took a long time for me to detach my ego, detach my identity and all the, all the, you know, the validation that I was getting constantly. It just, you know, it fuels you. And I saw it, I saw it with other people, like, yeah,

that i i saw that they were as we talked about earlier they were trapped there was no way out for them the amount of money that they were making the fame they had this is this was whether they liked it or not that was their life well i think a question a good question to ask and one that i think everybody can kind of no matter what stage of success that i can think to themselves is okay how much would be enough like what would it be would it be one gold medal

well, how many gold medalists get one and then they get gold medalist syndrome and they think that they need two? Or would it be one Super Bowl? Because there's guys that have got pretty much enough to fit on every finger on their hands. Would it be... Interesting psychological study. If you ask people what their ideal level of earning is, and actually we can do this, I guess the people that are listening can do this now. So if you think to yourself, what level of earning would you get to, annual earning,

where you would think, yeah, that's it. Like that's, I mean, that's really it for me. That number.

is almost definitely around about three times your annual income, regardless of what your annual income is. And it scales all the way up. So if you're making a hundred grand a year, it's almost always about 300 grand a year. If you're making a million a year, it's almost always about 3 million. If you're making 5 million a year, it's always, always about 15 million a year. Just keeps on going. It's around about three times what you earn at the moment, but it doesn't stop. It just keeps going. So ask yourself the question, what, okay, so what would be enough? Because

We're not designed to be happy. We're designed to try as hard as we can. Right. And that's the game. The game is you will try harder. You are a donkey with a stick on your back with a carrot attached at the front. And every step that you take toward the carrot, the carrot is going to move one step further away. Well, the satisfaction is in the quest.

You know, it's the climbing of the mountain that's most exciting. You get to the top and how long do you spend at the top? A couple of minutes before you start climbing down and thinking about the next mountain you want to climb. So I think it's hard to orient that way because we're so goal-oriented. But if you can stay present in the moment and realize it's like, I mean, that's how it is for me. When I look back at Hollywood, the fond memories, yes, I have fond memories about Hollywood.

shooting scenes and meeting certain actors and really nailing something and then seeing it on the screen and feeling proud. But actually it was the early years in LA when I was driving around to auditions, three auditions a day. And, you know, all the, the, the kind of craziness of all of that, like that part of the movie is my favorite.

looking back on it. So it was, it was the journey, the moment before I made it was the most exciting. The thing that's wild is I want to get onto talking about presence, but even in the nostalgia of thinking about that time, your nostalgic memories will almost always be more enjoyable than the actual time themselves. Morgan Housel tells this really brilliant. He's got an awesome, awesome article about nostalgia. Everyone can look at it. It's collaborative fund. Um,

And I think it's called Nostalgia or Memories. It came up a couple of weeks ago. And he is talking to his wife now about the golden years, what he called the golden years. I think they got together when they were maybe 23 or something. And they're living in Seattle or somewhere. And they've just got their first apartment. They're living together. And they had no obligations, no kids.

And he's reminiscing. He's talking to her about this now in the, you know, like 40s. And he says, you remember that? That was the golden years. We didn't have to wake up. We could lie in whenever we wanted. We could eat whatever we wanted. We were able to do, you know, what a brilliant time that was. Apparently his wife turned to him and said, you were miserable. Do you not remember? You hated it. You were constantly terrified you were going to lose your job. We were living paycheck to paycheck. And he went a little bit deeper and realized, oh, yeah.

That was what was happening. I was terrified, but my memory of that young kid...

was that all of the things he needed to be worried about or that he thought he should be worried about didn't come to pass. So I have the wisdom, I have the perspective that he never needed to worry. So all of the worries are forgotten and all of the highlights are retained. But the felt experience day to day of that particular individual was concern and rumination and anxiety and threat display. It was all of that stuff. Well, he maybe felt alive. Yeah.

you know, and maybe that's what he's remembering. I'm, I don't know if you saw that Peter Jackson movie, forget the name of it, but he, he took all this world war one footage and, and, and remastered it. So he put it in color and smoothed it out. Really interesting. But the, the film starts with this, all these voiceovers from British soldiers. And they're obviously recording this when they were very old in their eighties, probably and,

And, you know, we all know that World War I is considered the most brutal war in history. Every single soldier essentially said, oh, that was the time of my life. That was the great adventure. They loved it, you know, and you think, okay, maybe it's a lot of what you're saying, but

You know, they were alive and they were up against death. And yeah, in the moment, there's all this horror. But there is something about I mean, I don't know how you feel, but there was a part of me when I was a younger man that felt sad that I never got to experience war. Me too. It's like, I want to know what that feels like. And I'm never going to get to know that. And there's something that I think is lost and, you know, certainly play it out in our life.

lives in all kinds of different ways but it's not the same and my life is not at stake i'm not walking into a situation where i i could be killed or i have to kill and have to feel what that is yeah there's some insane percentage i saw this stat the other day about the percentage of silent generation that had been in military service of boomers of gen x of millennials gen z and it's just you know

All the way down. It just gets precipitously lower. Another thing that I was thinking about when you're talking about the wartime mode, especially early on, I only realized this recently. One of my friends said this to me. I always sort of lament how busy things are and we've got all of this stuff to do and so on and so forth.

And we were walking into a gig, having just finished recording a ton of episodes in a ton of days. And I traveled to Australia and I come back and I was in the UK and just doing all this stuff. And I was filming a vlog. I was like, dude, it's going to be a tough week. It's going to be tough going. And he sort of fact-checked me. And he was like, what the fuck are you talking about, man? Like, you love this chaos. And it was the first time, you know, how were you saying before, a therapist is somebody that reflects you back to you. I remember thinking that.

Yeah, I do. Actually, I do fucking love this chaos. I do. I love spinning 10, 15 plates at once and seeing if I can keep them all going. But we have this story. We kind of, especially around peace, at least for me, peace being something that I try to, I'm a big fan of, uh, that any diversion from that is an aberration or it's something that should be fixed or it's wrong or it's broken. Um, and,

But there's certain things that are going to come along for the ride. If you want to do things, some nights you're not going to get perfect sleep, right? Some nights you're going to have to stay up late. Some nights certain things are going to keep you awake. You're going to have to miss social engagements. You're going to have to make sacrifices in the gym, et cetera, et cetera. And I don't know. I feel like just accepting some of those things, not railing against them so much, not saying that these are personal curses bestowed just on you, right?

unique problem that you have to deal with unfair uh you know a bug not a feature and you go hey what what if kind of like gravity you go i wish that gravity was just a bit lighter and he goes well guess what gravity is the exact weight that gravity is it's a precise force that gravity is so

You're just going to have to put up with it. Yeah. Yeah. Well, there's no, you know, light without dark. There's no peace without war. So it's part of it. I personally love the chaos as well. I mean, it's, I like it because it takes you out of control.

And you find out things about yourself when you go out of control. And it can be exciting. It can be scary. We can get addicted to it. I think that can be an issue. I've certainly suffered from that, and I have to find the balance of it. But there's a lot of life involved.

And, um, and I, I think it's, I don't know. My feeling is, I think it's important to go a little insane sometimes, right? We have to lose our mind. We have to lose ourselves. There's a lot of different ways that we could do that. It can be in our work or through some kind of, you know, spiritual practice or, you know, running a marathon, these kinds of things. But I think it's, it's really important, particularly for men, um, to put yourself in situations where you, you're, you face overwhelm, you know, you're at, you're at your edge and to not judge it. Um,

um as you said to accept everything that's happening in the moment i mean that's really that's what peace is i think it's just the acceptance of what is and being okay with it you've mentioned the word presence a number of times uh sam harris been on this show a number of different meditation teachers they have a conception of presence um what is it that you mean when you talk about being present

Well, I guess I'd talk about it through the framework of my work. And it goes back a little bit of what I was saying earlier about we repress, you know, deny, shame, disassociate from certain aspects of ourself, feelings, impulses, desires, needs. When we're children, we all do it.

Um, and so in that place, we, we form a defense or maybe an idealized self-image or a mask. And that's sort of our operating system for the world. And we become identified with it and it feels like who we are, but very often there's, um, we hit a certain point in our life where things aren't working or, or, you know, we, we experienced some frustration or dissatisfaction. We see patterns, um,

that are happening and they happen over and over again. At a certain point you realize, well, this, this must be me. There must be something going on in my unconscious that I have to confront because this, you know, I'm creating this. And so what you know that you're in that moment that you're not, you're not present, right? You're not present with some aspect of yourself. There's something in your unconscious that's guiding you. And so the work for, for me is to help people, um,

Feel what they had to repress, right? Feel the pain, feel the rage, feel the fear, like feel it like literally in their body, like liberate all those feelings.

emotions that we hold on to that are stuck there and creating the cognitive distortions. And so it's, for me, presence is an embodied experience. It's the willingness to feel everything inside of us. Like life happens and we have feelings and there's a certain tendency to want to

control those feelings or manage those feelings. And I think that there's a wisdom in that. But if you do that from a state of repression or fear, it doesn't work. And so in the place where I'm not present, let's say with my wife,

It's because there's something inside me that I don't want to face or feel. That's it. So that's the frame that I put on it. And the question I ask is, well, what is it that you're unwilling to feel? Because it means that there's something in the present moment that scares you. Now, it might be irrational.

might not make sense to your conscious mind because you're a grown man, but it might be the fear of the child that's coming up in that moment. And so I work with presence through people's emotions, through people's feelings, and all the distortions that get created. Does that make sense, what I'm saying? Yeah, it does. It does. It does. Do we need to become stronger then, in a way, in order to be more present?

More resilient, more powerful? Stronger, more vulnerable, I think is really the work. Because feeling feelings that scare us, we're forced to be vulnerable. What does vulnerable mean? To me, it just means openness and truth.

Right. And so there's a strength that it requires in order to be vulnerable. And that was a reframe that I had to make for myself because I had all of those typical masculine images about what strength meant. And then I realized the, um, the strongest thing that I can do is to tell the truth and to reveal myself, like to, to be honest about what's actually going on inside me without shame. And, um,

Again, that creates all kinds of images. I can hear the men in your audience say, well, what are you supposed to feel all your feelings? Well, it's not exactly that, but to be with them, to learn to be with, to learn to build a container for them, to not be ashamed of anything, really, your light and your dark. I think there's so many ways that we avoid

vulnerability we avoid and and you know showing our shadow we avoid showing our pain we avoid acknowledging our fear and and and probably the deepest one for most people is we avoid feeling how much we love because there's nothing more vulnerable than letting your your love your passion your light right like shine through like most people's major problem is they protect it

right? Because once you're all the way here with all of who you are, you're not in control anymore, right? Like you're, you're completely exposed. That's the only way to be fully present in the world is to be completely exposed. And most people are unwilling to tolerate that level of vulnerability, myself included. That's all I'm working on, you know, like, because that restriction I can see fractal out into all of the

the things in my life, right? It fractals out into my career, fractals out into, you know, the work and how I'm approaching it. It fractals out into my relationship. So it really, for me, becomes about one thing. It's like, can I risk exposing, revealing, maybe is a better word, all of who I am, the good, the bad, the ugly. I like the reframe around strength to show your vulnerabilities. I think

I don't know, acknowledging your weaknesses is not the same to, it's not the same as surrendering to them. And the only way to overcome your limitations is to actually know what they are. That's right. So I don't think, I don't know, I still haven't been able to sort of fully thread the needle with the whole men's distaste for showing vulnerability and openness and stuff like that, because I don't think it's massively...

aspirational for really the guys, even the guys that do it. I think there's still a sense of like fear and ick and concern and shame around it. And I get the sense that in order for you to say something that a guy will want to go and do it, it needs to be two things at once. It needs to both understand the fact that they have difficulties and challenges, but also not

patronize them at the same time or make them feel weak. And that's a really difficult line to balance. Yeah. Unbelievably difficult. Yeah. Things are hard for you.

And you can get through them. And I understand. And I can support you, but you don't need the support, but it's there in case you need it. You know, it's like, you know, you're permanently having to fucking caveat your way around the fragile masculine ego. Yeah. Well, you know, it's, it's, it's great. All you really, all people need is for their feelings to be validated. I understand why you'd be scared.

That's usually enough. I understand why your heart is broken. Not get over it, motherfucker. There's another girl out there for you. That's how I approach all of my sessions with people. They have a story about what happened to them. I'm not necessarily validating their interpretation of events, but I'm validating their feeling, their experience of that event.

And because that's real for them. I mean, you can't argue with somebody's feelings. And so once they're, once they feel seen and acknowledged in their feelings, I think that creates a kind of a safety and a resonance that then they can meet, go meet the challenge or take responsibility. But until that happens for a lot of people there, they get stuck in the feeling.

Right. And they don't they can't move past it and they attach it to a story. So, I mean, that's it. And it's as simple as that. Just acknowledge your feelings within yourself. That's all you have to do. I'm sad. That's it. You're good, bro. You know, this girl broke up with me. My heart is broken. It's like, that's fine. You know, just just acknowledge it within yourself and be with that for a second. Don't don't romanticize it. Don't succumb to it.

Uh, don't indulge it, but be with it. Like, of course your heart's going to break. I mean, are you human? If your heart's not going to break? I mean, it's a beautiful thing to have a broken heart. Like let yourself be in that experience of it. Right. And eventually you're going to, you're going to move on from it or, or, or whatever. I'm filled with rage right now. I want to fucking kill the world. Just be wherever you are with what it is you're feeling. And if you let, if you presence that, if you let yourself be with that, what you'll find is that you'll move very quickly out of that into the next thing.

Chris Bumstead's body

bodybuilder man uh he talks about how if you don't feel the bad you don't feel the good so i kind of sort of think about emotions doing what people want to do is to be able to sort of slide them up and down a scale so i want i want this particular window of emotions but i just want them at the top end i want like all of these good ones here but i i don't think that that's the way that it works i had actually for the first time ever at the start of this year uh uh like really really sort of

bad couple of days, a really sad few days, went through a breakup and it sucked. And then found myself randomly laughing hysterically in the Uber on the way to therapy, like three days later. I was like, what the fuck am I doing? And that was the first time that I'd ever thought, oh, emotions really are a roller coaster. They actually are a roller coaster. And after this huge emotional release,

another one comes on the kind of the what's what's the opposite end of this scale it's sort of the it's swung one way and then it swings back the other well the illusion is we're stuck in it forever

And because that, that, that was not to bring it back to the, the, the therapy model, but that was the child's experience. Like when you're a little child with your parents, you are stuck in that situation. You're stuck there forever. So the feelings you have, you have there feel like they're, they're forever. They're eternal that you can never get out of that situation. And because that's, that actually is in fact reality. It's not true anymore as an adult, but that fear that I'm going to be stuck in this, that

Is forever. Like when I'm working with people very often, it's, you know, if I'm encouraging them to, to go into their, their rage or their, their sadness, whatever it is, very often the reaction is like, I feel if I go into this, it's never going to end. Like it's a bottomless pit and it's going to, it's going to completely consume me.

And that's the illusion that they're living in. It's not that way at all. Once they allow themselves to go there and express it and feel it and let it move through them, usually what happens is they...

they feel lighter obviously, but they come into more connection with, with themselves and then with other people because they're not carrying this around, you know, they're not weighed down with this, with this burden and, and, and using all of this energy, you know, physical and psychic energy. They're not using that to, to repress it anymore. So they're, they're lighter, they're more here. And I think, you know, that's, that's,

Again, the work that I do is so unique in that way because of the tools that we use. I mean, breathwork is becoming really popular now, and I think that's great. But there's not really many places where you can go to really get it all out, to really fucking express it unbridled, whatever it is. I mean, that's always the invitation at my workshops.

don't hold anything back and and people are like what do you mean i'm like you don't have to hold anything back anything at all in any moment you can just like let it come through and obviously we there's certain rules and a container that we could create but that is um

you know, terror it's, it's liberating on one sense. It's like, oh, that sounds exciting, but it's also terrifying because, and I'm there to challenge you when I feel like you're holding back, like, what is it you're holding back and why? Well, I know why, because you're afraid, you know, and if you didn't hold back what, and they have all kinds of images about what's going to happen, but you know, on the other side of it, they're just, it's, it's yeah, they're free.

I love it. David Sutcliffe, ladies and gentlemen. David, where should people go? Do you want to keep up to date with all of this stuff that you're doing? Go to my website, davidsutcliffe.com. It's all there.

Dude, you're sick. I really appreciate the energy that you bring to this. And we've got lots more to talk about. So let's bring you back on soon. Appreciate you, man. Thank you for having me. If you want more focus in your life, or if you find yourself dealing with an energy slump in the middle of the day where you just don't have the motivation to stay productive, fear not, because I do too, which is why I spent more than a year creating the world's first productivity energy drink, Newtonic. On

Honestly, I'm so proud of this. I was involved in the design stage from the very beginning, and we made sure to only include the most heavily researched and evidence-based ingredients in the world at efficacious doses to create the most potent fuel for your focus ever made. It uses a science-backed formula of nootropic ingredients, including cognosin for focus, panax ginseng to reduce distractions, and L-theanine to remove any jitters and keep you feeling great. We've got...

thousands of five-star reviews and you can see exactly why by trying it for yourself right now with free next day delivery on Amazon Prime in the UK and the USA. Simply head to newtonic.com slash modern wisdom. That's n-e-u-t-o-n-i-c dot com slash modern wisdom.