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Simon Sinek: The Advice Young People NEED To Hear | E176

September 08, 2022 / 01:45:04

This episode features Simon Sinek discussing human connection, resilience in Gen Z, and the importance of honest communication. Sinek emphasizes the need for empathy and understanding in both personal and professional relationships.

Sinek shares his perspective on the evolving nature of work and relationships, highlighting how traditional views on leadership and success are changing. He points out that many people, especially younger generations, struggle with stress and resilience due to societal shifts.

He addresses the importance of having difficult conversations and being honest with oneself and others. Sinek stresses that vulnerability should not be confused with broadcasting emotions on social media, advocating for deeper, more meaningful connections.

The conversation also touches on gender differences in leadership and the need for a balance of qualities in effective leaders. Sinek shares personal anecdotes and insights from his experiences, emphasizing the value of listening and understanding in fostering strong relationships.

Overall, Sinek encourages listeners to prioritize human skills, such as empathy and communication, to navigate the complexities of modern life and work.

TL;DR

Simon Sinek discusses resilience, honest communication, and the need for empathy in personal and professional relationships.

Video

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the single greatest lesson i ever learned in my career that profoundly changed the course of my life was multiple time best selling author third
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most watched ted talk of all time the return of simon sinek thank you very much plus 30 40 years we've doubled down
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at how do i find love how do i find happiness we've doubled down on selfishness but now in a complicated
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messy world we haven't been practicing and developing the skills of taking care of each other and that's what we need now more than ever do you ever give up
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on someone um [Music] i have a fear i've never expressed this openly gen z are the least resilient
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generation they're really good at presenting a confidence that they don't have this young
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generation seems less capable to deal with stress than previous generations that is true going from relationship to
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relationship to relationship from job to job to job there's no stigma to quitting flash forward five years and what's
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going to happen is an employer is going to look at them be like i can't take the risk everything we're
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talking about today comes right back to those human skills that we are lacking
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how to listen how to give and receive feedback how to have a difficult conversation and the thing we have to deal with more than anything is fear
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fear that is the underlying thing why we don't have honest conversations let me give you some honesty then
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what is the greatest fear you have about how you're currently living your life i was very insecure about admitting that
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i was crying you know as we were talking about it that was that was hard
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without further ado i'm stephen bartlett and this is the diary of a ceo i hope nobody's listening but if you are then
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please keep this to yourself [Music]
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simon good to see you again yeah good to be here um i i have to thank you first and foremost and i many reasons you know
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i'm a huge fan of all your work but the conversation we had when we're over in l.a was received so unbelievably well by
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the listeners on this podcast it did millions and millions and millions of downloads in such a short space of time that i had to argue to get you to come
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back again when you're here in the uk so well it's nice to be back and it's nice to do it on your home turf yeah
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literally in my home literally in your home um there's so many things i want to talk to you about but one of the things that i
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was curious about because i've been thinking a lot about this in my life is this idea of our whys evolving
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what is your why and has it evolved over the last decade at all uh so my why
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[Music] is to inspire people to do the things that inspire them so together each of us can change our
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world for the better and it's why i wake up every morning every day it is the
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greatest compliment someone can pay me when they say to me that was inspiring or you were inspiring like that feeds me
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you know um and the interesting thing about hawaii is because it is not it is
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objective a y is the sum total of how we were raised
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it's born out of the patterns and the lessons we learned from our parents from our teachers when we're young and our
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why is fully formed by the time we're in our mid to late teens and you only have one wife for the rest of your life it doesn't change
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you ha you are who you are based on how you were raised now you may not be acting
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as your true self you know people say that to us all the time you know it's like i don't know who you are anymore you know but when you are at your
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natural best you're wise front and center but we're not always acting at our natural best and sometimes we make decisions out of selfishness we shake we
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take the job that pays us that offers us the most money and turn down the one to work for somebody who would probably be a better mentor you know we do these
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things all the time and so you know can you tweak the words of your why of course you know but that's that's
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semantics um can we find better ways to to bring a why to life yes that's the
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evolution but the why itself is fixed when you talk about the why being influenced by the things that happened
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in our life our experiences our upbringing does that mean that our trauma can influence our wife for better or for
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worse always for better always for better yeah a why is always positive um
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uh and i'll give you a real life example of somebody's why discovery that i did and you know one of the things i do when
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i do somebody's my discovery i asked them about you know happy experiences when they were kids and this person said
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i didn't have a very happy childhood i had a really bad childhood and i said okay so tell me tell me a bad
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memory then you know and she talked about a lot of abuse in the
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household and a very abusive alcoholic father who would beat her mother and the kids
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and she told a story of a repeated pattern of when the father would be drunk and come looking for the kids that
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she'd be hiding in the cupboard protecting her brother with her arms wrapped around him so to shield her
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brother and she goes through this whole story and at the end i pointed out to her that she's a
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protector that in the in these traumatic experiences it was her instinct
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to to protect her baby brother and she's lived her life if you look at all of the times that she's really thrived and
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where she's her her best self she's usually in a in a position of protection
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of other of other people and that's where she finds joy in taking care of other people and so the the experiences
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mold us into who we are um and the effects you know the impact will be positive
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regardless of where it comes from so yeah i mean a horrible childhood that made her a
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wonderful human being i was going to use me as an example there to try and rebuttal that somewhat
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but i remember having a very similar conversation with a very good friend of mine a week ago
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upstairs who talked to me about their childhood there they've talked about this publicly as well so i'm not letting
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the cat out of the bag but their their father used to beat their mother up really really severely and she was
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telling me literally just a few days ago upstairs that she her memories of trying to hold
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on to her dad's arm as it swung for her mother when she was five years old and when you look at the pattern of what
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those early experiences have caused and a few other experiences she's obsessed with
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with with helping others and she's you know building these amazing businesses she's unbelievably
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successful it's like frighteningly successful at a very very young age however
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that forcing her to help others has meant that she's compromised sometimes helping herself
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and of everyone i know in my life she is the most successful woman i know
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but she's also the woman that is most unsuccessful in all of the personal aspects relationships boyfriend
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uh mental health all of these things so when we say you know i understand the positive side of it but
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the negative side of it seems to be um of this unbelievable i guess why
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she's got seems to just honestly for me not be worth it [Music] because this is not this is not someone
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that is that would say they're happy this is someone that is in therapy and is every day
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in tears and upset while serving the world in an unbelievable way so is that a positive is that a positive
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why so so the
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the rub about the why you know a y is basically the thing we give to the world
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it's the value we have in other people's lives her friends would say of her that she is our protector
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um you know uh that is the role we fill in their lives which is why they love us because we're
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br we're giving them our why it is our value the rub the most difficult thing about the why to understand is the the thing that we
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give to to the world is also the thing that we need the most it's it's always balanced
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and so i would argue that you know she it's not that she's unable to take care
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of herself it's that she needs to find friends colleagues whatever it is who are
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committed to taking care of her and that's where the change happens
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and you know we were talking about this you know before the show started you know there's
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an entire section of the bookshop called self-help and there's no section in the bookshop called help others and i believe what we need is the help
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of this industry um i'll tell you uh something uh something that happened to me a friend
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of mine was going through a really rough patch in her life um her marriage was
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struggling her career was struggling she was unhappy like just none of the boxes were getting checked
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you know and she knows what i do i mean we've been friends for forever and she asked a favor can you help me
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you know of course of course i said and every week we had a standing 90-minute meeting
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where she'd come over and she would tell me what's going on and i would give her some advice and i'd
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point out some patterns and she'd feel fantastic she would leave on a high and she'd feel amazing for like two days and
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then it'll go right back again and she'd come back the following week and this went on for months two days three days
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and then back down again right and then it occurred to me like i remember my own work in leaders eat last i talk about
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alcoholics anonymous where they have 12 steps to help an alcoholic beat this disease
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and alcoholics anonymous knows that if you master 11 of the 12 steps
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you're going to probably slide back and succumb to the disease but if you can master the 12th step as well
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you will more likely beat the disease the 12th step is to help another alcoholic it's service
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and so i remembered my own work and i decided to do a little i decided to change things up right and so i said to
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her look i love that you come and see me every week and i love helping you every week but you know i struggle with things too
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and i don't have anybody to talk to would you be willing to help me maybe we can split the time and she said of course yes and what started to happen is
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every week we got together and i was genuine i wasn't faking it like i would unload and tell her what i was going
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through and what i was struggling with and it ended up that we wouldn't split the time it ended up that she would spend 90 minutes talking about my stuff
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right and she was the advice giver and she was the one looking for the patterns and she would leave on a high and that
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high would stay until the following week it was only when we reversed the scenario where that she was
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had the opportunity to take care of someone she loved that she was able to find the solutions to her own challenges
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and i'm a great believer that that we have to remember we're social animals
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we need each other and this is the great paradox of being human at every moment of every day we are both individuals and
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members of groups you know and there's a there's a there's a debate do you take care of yourself first or do you take care of others
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first and there's a whole school of thought that says you have to take care of yourself first because if you're not healthy you can't take care of others
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and there's a whole school of thought that says no you have to take care of others first so that when you're in need they'll be there for you and the answer is you're both right and you're both
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wrong it's a paradox it's a struggle and every day we're faced with sometimes big but often small choices
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do i prioritize myself at the sacrifice of the group or do i prioritize the group at the sacrifice of myself
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and you know folks like um uh uh maslov like maslow's hierarchy of needs
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maslow made him a huge mistake in that hierarchy which is his his baseline our basic need is food
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and shelter right i've never heard of anyone dying by suicide because they were hungry i've
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heard of people dying by suicide because they were lonely right and yet social relationships in in
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maya's law's hierarchy is number three but that kind of that doesn't sound right it seems like there's something more
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important to human beings than just food and shelter and then the top of the peak is self-actualization which sounds the
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most selfish thing in the world like i am so self-actualized that i would literally sit on top of a pyramid and look down at all of you unactualized
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people because that's my goal to be self-actualized he's half right the mistake that maslov
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made he's the only thought of us as individuals and as individuals yes i need food and shelter first but as a member of a group
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i need friends and i need love and self-actualization is not the thing i'm actually in pursuit of as a member
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of a group it's shared actualization that i'm looking for and unfortunately for various reasons
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which we don't have to go down that rabbit hole the past 30 40 years especially in the west we have doubled
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down on on individualism we have doubled down on my own career we've doubled down at how
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do i find love how do i find happiness we've doubled down on selfishness and it worked for a while it worked when
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the economy was really good like in the 80s and 90s and 2000s so awesome selfishness was great because it worked
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but now in a complicated messy world where the economy isn't great and everything's not roses
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all that self-interest is now not working except we haven't been practicing and developing the school
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skills of taking care of each other and that's what we need now more than ever and so
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i don't know your friend and so i can't make any i'm not i can't make any conclusions
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but we are we are animals in balance right and nature abhors a vacuum
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and so whenever i hear about these things my question is always about the balance so for example every single good thing that happens in our lives
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everything comes at a cost there's nothing for free somebody with
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an incredible career has no relationship with their kids right everything comes at a cost but at the same time
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everything we struggle with has opportunity and lesson that goes with it it's always balanced
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right and so whenever anybody tells me this great thing i was like yeah but at what cost and was the cost worth it sometimes the
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answer is yes and sometimes the answer is no and when something horrible happens in someone's life or something goes sideways i always ask but what did
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you learn you know i mean my career and yours is the same you know
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the whole the golden circle and the concept of why came out of me losing my passion and hating work
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i went through depression i never want to go through that again but i'm really glad it happened because it
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look what it's it's given me an entirely new life view and i think of strengths and weaknesses
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the same way you know i think it's hilarious when people say what are your strengths and what are your weaknesses well it depends
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life is balanced and it's always contextual and everything that we have that's a strength has liability attached
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and every weakness we have has strength that's attached i can imagine because of the books
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you've written and the you know the channels you have and the content you produce that a lot of people come to you um on a personal level friends family to
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help solve some of the problems that they're having in their lives i i find myself in somewhat of a similar position
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maybe they're not coming to me maybe i'm inserting myself into the problem to try and solve it because that's my nature
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but do you do you ever do you ever give up on someone something i've thought about and i'm i'm
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reflecting on my friend a little bit here yeah and friends i've had from my childhood who i've i've i remember
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offering a guy i was like if you can just do one month working in
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subway where he was working i'll pay for your rent so you can move out of that city yeah and go get a job he didn't do
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the one month in subway yeah and at one point there's part of me he's like you know everyone's solvable the optimism
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the optimistic in me and the other part of me goes at some point you have to give up on people
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um so the single greatest lesson i ever learned in my career that profoundly
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changed the course of my life and it comes right before the the realization and the articulation
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of why i learned how to ask for help and i learned how to accept it when i was offered
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okay and i think that it's not about giving up on someone it's that it's a it's that
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it's a that helping someone is a team sport success is a team sport and if you find
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that you're the only player in in their life when they should be the primary player you can only be you can only do the
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assists you'll never be the one making the baskets that's their job right but if they won't take the pass
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then at some point you stop throwing the ball and um it's not about giving up on people
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it's it's that they have it's about accountability to take responsibility for oneself and and giving up on
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somebody is don't ever call me again you don't take my advice this is over right that's giving up on someone
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for i think the other way to do it is like listen i i cannot help you if you cannot be
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involved to help yourself and i will want to sit down with them and i will want to i won't criticize and
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be like you're not doing this you have to follow my advice you have to do this you got to go work at subway for the week like that that's not what i want to
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sit down and understand what the blockage is there's something else that's the blockage that i can get to
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hopefully but at the end of the day i will say to them point blank listen
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if you're not going to be involved in this then there's no point to me to be involved you know you have to like this is a team and i'm the only
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player here so i will always be here and when you are ready maybe it's just
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bad timing i don't know what else is going on in your life and maybe this is not the right time or maybe i'm a bad fit
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but when you are ready i will still be here no matter what but you have to call me
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there's no more there's no more me throwing you the ball like you're gonna have to call me and then they call you and then sometimes you do sometimes they
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don't sometimes they do sometimes they don't in my case they call me and and then they say it's time i'm willing to accept the help and then the same cycle
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happens over and over again and you go you go you know five years of them calling you then you then then then it's
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then they're lying but they don't think they're lying they always think this time is going to be different i'm going to do it on monday
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i mean like i said i want to know what else is the blockage you you when there's that kind of repeated pattern
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then there's something else and i think i think you know our mistake in those situations is repeating our pattern
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which is okay i'm going to give you the same advice i'm going to do the same thing you're going to do the same thing i'm going to tell you the same thing i'm going to give up on you i'm going to go
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like we're we're actually repeating a pattern as well and so you know we know this as entrepreneurs
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which is you got to try something completely completely different um and i think you know this goes back
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to what we were saying a moment ago you know which is we we are we are not teaching the skills of how to help
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others and part of one of the biggest skills of learning to help others is learning how to listen
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and most of us are really crap at listening right we confuse um listening with
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hearing the words that were spoken you know you're sitting watching tv and you know someone you love is trying
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to tell you something and you're like uh-huh uh-huh and you're still watching you're not even listening to me and we turn around and repeat all the words
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back to them that's not listening that's hearing the words that were spoken to you you listening is when the other person
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feels heard right and where you are in pursuit of meaning
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not the word spoken you're not so literal right and i think in the cases of of like your
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friend the the is to go from an advice giving mode and men suffer from this more than women
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which is we our intention is to fix everything right all we want to do is fix fix fix fix we see the problem
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here's the solution but sometimes that's not what people need people need to feel seen and heard and understood and maybe
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just maybe you're going too quickly to fix and he doesn't feel seen or heard or understood yet and in this particular
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situation and again i don't know the person but um i would i would go to an extreme
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listening you know give the kid the opportunity to empty his bucket like and there's only three terms you're going to
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use in the conversation go on tell me more what else because there's it sounds like there's
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it's whatever you think the thing is you're fixing it's probably something entirely different and until you can get
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to that um you're going to give up them somebody who maybe um it's just that we had the wrong
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strategy it wasn't until these examples surfaced in my life where i had friends asking me for this kind of help that i started to
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consider that maybe mindset itself is a privilege one that if you don't
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acknowledge and understand you'll end up giving advice from a very privileged place you know you know i might say well
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just work harder or just yeah just cheer up yeah these kinds of things come from like a a misunderstanding that my brain
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is fortunate enough to to think and be a certain way yeah um but i've never heard someone people talk enough about this
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idea that our mindset in and of itself is a privilege and that you know
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that's interesting that mindset is a privilege is that true if we think about the early
00:20:25
upbringing in childhood then yeah so that was maybe you know some people have monetary privilege from their childhood
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one thing that your parents or your experiences might have given you a real psychological privilege
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so let me just think out loud for a second right let's try let me try and unpack that you know
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there are many stories of people who
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when the odds were against them whether they came from extreme poverty or abuse rose up to have successful and happy
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lives right and when when we read about them or talk to them or meet them or hear interviews from
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them they talk about mindset they talk about my mother taught you usually the mother
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like my mother taught me that to never be a victim my mother taught me that i was capable of anything and so they had a mindset
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they you know where some people have a victim mindset and then they that's that's the life they continue to
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live some people have a might a different mindset and it can lift them out of what we would consider unprivileged
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circumstances right so you know it makes me question then is
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mindset a privilege and we both know people that have every privilege afforded to them you know
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every one of them and yet for whatever reason their mindset is the wrong one and they
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can squander all of that opportunity all of those advantages that they've been afforded you know
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um and make a mess so i i question whether mindset is a privilege there are a lot
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of privileges in in in life mindset i think is one of the ones that is is there for the taking
00:22:04
i i think about so i was 18 years old dropped out of university shoplifting food to feed myself and in that moment i
00:22:11
was entirely convinced that i was going to be a millionaire what did i do what did i what did i actively do you
00:22:17
just you're just counting your own point that mindset is not a privilege no i'm saying because i think that that i i have the privilege that that mindset was
00:22:24
given to me by my experiences and maybe by my biology i'm wondering why in that situation if
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you'd put me and my best friend that i talked about with the subway example in the same situation one of us would have catastrophized and me i just saw it as
00:22:36
this wonderful stepping stone to the point that i went around my house videoing my dispatch videoing my dire situation opening the fridge there's
00:22:42
nothing in it my first page of my diary on facebook knows which i kept says i'm keeping this diary because the tv production company
00:22:48
have asked me to i liked my own diary because i and i look back and go this kid was sure yeah
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that he was getting out of here well i i mean i played tricks and games with myself as well you know um
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i mean i remember i mean some of them are hilarious but i i did the same thing you know and and i said i i go back to
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the concept of why which is which is it's the experiences we had when we were young that formed us into who we are it
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wasn't the shoplifting alone it was your parents it was your friends it was your teachers like is that a privilege
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i mean at what point everybody has a y and everybody's why is affirmative
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you know and and so like i told you about the abuse story you know
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something really positive and someone really positive came out of that trauma um
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so you know
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i'm struggling to call you use the word privilege to mindset because what you're saying is anyone
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that anyone who's had any kind of luck or turnaround
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or has privilege where anyone who hasn't and has failed it's because of their
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lack of privilege like there's too many other factors
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involved in that in those in those comparisons to to to oversimplify it and call it
00:24:14
privilege i'm sure there are privileged components sometimes involved in that for sure but you know when we're if we're
00:24:20
strictly talking about mindset i i i i think it's uh
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it's i'm not sure i don't think so it doesn't because the control of our minds
00:24:33
is the one thing that we own it's the one thing that is not
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like we we can change the way we view ourselves and how we treat others um
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and i think what's important and it's a hard conversation right i think
00:24:53
one thing that's important is i think we have to have love in our lives it's from someone
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you know like even people who like i have a friend who came from a very abusive household um he he found his grandmother stabbed
00:25:05
to death and the knife was so deep that she was attached to the bed like that's how bad it was right
00:25:12
um and yet he had a coach who believed in him and so i think i think
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to have someone believe in us to have one person see a spark in us
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helps us recognize that it helps us see the spark in ourselves
00:25:31
you know uh it just i think it takes one with only one person whether it's a friend or a
00:25:36
coach or a parent a boss sometimes you know who says who takes a liking to us and almost all of
00:25:42
us almost all of us can remember one person in our lives where it's a coach or a teacher who took
00:25:47
us under their wing and saw something that we didn't see uh and every single successful person on
00:25:52
the planet has that person but i think most of us do most of us have somebody who who saw something in us and we are who
00:25:59
we are in part because of that person having someone in our lives um kind of links back to something you were talking
00:26:05
about earlier about trying to be less individualistic in our approach to our lives and our careers lots of your work and i was on your video subscription
00:26:11
library and lots of your work has that as a through line about connection and people and teams and yeah um
00:26:18
in the in the backdrop of the remote working world we're living in um
00:26:24
i guess my first question would be how do you think that this postcovid world has been impacted in terms of connection
00:26:31
community teams and that unity that should be on the bottom level of our maslowy and hierarchy of needs well i
00:26:38
mean obviously it took a step back you know um
00:26:44
though there are again i always think of things in terms of balance right and cost so it's not good or bad it's both
00:26:49
right and so let's weigh both of course we have freedom of schedule now that we
00:26:55
didn't have we have freedom to live wherever we want which we didn't have we have freedom to pick our kids from
00:27:00
school or go to the dentist where we used to have to ask permission or take time off we have that freedom now that we didn't have
00:27:06
um we have for people who are for people who are um introverted
00:27:13
they like that they can get their work done in the privacy of their own home you know there are many advantages to remote
00:27:19
working um the sharing of ideas is much more difficult like a brainstorming like
00:27:26
really really hard to do in a virtual scenario because it's hyper polite
00:27:31
right you can't interrupt somebody as easily like when you have a real brainstorming it's messy it's loud you step on each other's words you interrupt
00:27:37
each other you have to be like no no and nobody cares it's the it's the mess it's the joy of it right in an online scenario
00:27:44
it gets you literally can't hear people if everybody's talking at once and you're constantly apologizing and it's
00:27:50
your turn and you don't have that wonderful energy i and so i think brainstorming's suffered
00:27:56
um and then the obvious one which is um which is for a lot of people and i think
00:28:03
if it dramatically affected younger people more um but for for all of us
00:28:09
you you know when you're done with work you go out with your friends for a bite
00:28:15
to eat or at the pub and you about work and you about your boss totally healthy and you and you do it in
00:28:22
the with with the friends that whether it's a good job or a bad job it doesn't matter you have a you have a place separated from work
00:28:28
that's your friends that you go and get it all out right super healthy and you feel supported and loved and hurt and
00:28:33
all that good stuff that went away completely completely and so what ended up happening and again if you didn't have a
00:28:39
family if you were living alone it's all these things just get more and more exaggerated right so um what ended up happening was and again
00:28:47
especially young people but for a lot of other people too is we started looking to the people we
00:28:52
spent more time with people now at work on the on zoom with them all day and sometimes into the into the evening we
00:28:57
now started spending more time with these people we didn't have somebody to go out with afterwards and so we started
00:29:02
looking to work to be that therapeutic outlet right and so
00:29:08
what so many people did is first of all gossip starts to swirl a lot more because we're now venting and bitching
00:29:13
to each other as opposed to our friends right so especially if somebody's young or susceptible like gossips
00:29:19
can take off much quicker which is very dangerous to a culture but
00:29:25
what what i've what i've seen is that we find one empathetic person a the good
00:29:30
listener on the team right and we call them up and we about our job we about our boss but then he keeps going like i don't
00:29:37
know what i didn't what i don't want to do with my life you know i hate my boyfriend i hate my girlfriend i don't know if i should break and all
00:29:43
of a sudden you're dumping all of your life's problems on somebody from work who just happens to be a good listener
00:29:49
and what we're doing is we're increasing the stress on that person so we suffered it in our company i've heard
00:29:54
it from many other companies which is those people those empaths they're quitting and if you ask them why are you quitting
00:30:00
they go because i'm burnt out and you're looking at their workload and be like i don't understand like how you burnt out they're burnt out from taking on all of
00:30:06
everyone else's stress because they're empathetic everybody else's stress becomes their stress right
00:30:12
that's the problem with this which is and it's good that someone like as covetez is up like going out with our
00:30:19
friends and having that that safe space to vent away from work
00:30:24
is really important so in a cultural standpoint it's very hard to control for that like i can't interrupt it i can't
00:30:31
tell them they can't you know they don't want to go to their boss to talk about those things but what what
00:30:37
again particularly young people but others as well but particularly young people they're they're recognized that there
00:30:42
are boundaries at work and you by dumping on one person that they should take on all your problems
00:30:48
and they listen and they listen and they listen and they listen and sometimes they give bad advice but they listen and listen we're doing a great disservice to
00:30:55
that other person to make ourselves feel better for a few minutes i've it's one of the first times in my life that i've started to think again
00:31:01
about culture design and it's funny because i ran a business post covered for seven years we had almost a thousand
00:31:07
people i then left in the middle of covid and i'm launching businesses after covert and it seems that not all of the
00:31:14
rules apply and a lot of that's because of comparison now so that a modern employee is comparing the
00:31:21
working culture that they're seeing on tick tock right and linkedin right to their own and it's almost as an employer
00:31:27
we're competing with a false tick tock social media narrative that is um
00:31:32
and people never really know what they actually want i think as it relates to culture even me so when if you ask someone what they
00:31:38
want from their working culture would it meet their fundamental needs probably not yeah
00:31:44
um so my question to you is how are you on a practical level
00:31:49
what changes have you practically made or believe are necessary in a post-covered world
00:31:56
that you wouldn't have maybe stated in a pre-covered world if any
00:32:02
let me come out to it let me come at it from a slightly so if you go back a bunch of years
00:32:08
um our lives look very different than they do now obviously um
00:32:15
we got our sense of purpose from church
00:32:21
we got our sense of community from you know whatever bowling league
00:32:27
we hung out with our neighbors they came over and on the weekends and had barbecues with us and
00:32:34
work was a place that we went to make money to pay for our lives pay our bills and it was also a
00:32:40
different time where we were super loyal to the company and the company was super loyal to us right and that was
00:32:46
that was life and then church attendance started to decline
00:32:51
bowling leagues basically are gone they've disappeared we don't uh go to community centers anymore we don't have
00:32:57
our neighbors over on a weekend basis and so we've our sense so all of those things we started to look to work to replace so now we say to work you have
00:33:05
to give me a sense of purpose you have to give me my social life you have to give me a sense of community and belonging
00:33:10
um and now it's we've added things to that list now since coverage was like and you have to agree with all of my politics
00:33:16
and by the way you also have to be my therapy now you have to be my place for therapy which is what we were just talking about right and it is an
00:33:23
impossible standard to put on any culture that they can do all those things for you just like
00:33:29
um we've put impossible standards on romantic partners that they have to be my intellectual equal they have to be my
00:33:36
they have to be sexually compatible with me they have to be emotionally compatible with me they have to share all of my interests all of my politics
00:33:42
you know we have to vote it for all the same like these are impossible standards to put on another human being and we're literally setting people up to fail
00:33:49
we're setting up business cultures up to fail as well like literally no culture can can can live up to that standard and
00:33:55
so um in pursuit of that the grass is always greener
00:34:01
you have people who are going from relationship to relationship to relationship worse from job to job to job to job and
00:34:08
when i was younger you know if you didn't like your job or if you didn't like your boss the bad news was you had
00:34:14
to stay there for a year because if you left in anything less than a year you would hurt your cv they would be like
00:34:20
why did you leave in under a year you know and now young again particularly young people
00:34:26
there's no um there's no stigma to quitting um and it happens sometimes too quickly
00:34:31
like if your confrontation avoidant and i've seen it happen confrontation avoidant i'm too afraid to ask my boss
00:34:38
for a raise so i just quit i've seen it happen right or um i've been here for four months i
00:34:45
don't like the culture i quit right or i got in trouble at work i hate
00:34:50
my boss i quit like and so people are quitting so much my fear my fear like i
00:34:56
don't mind if something's super toxic get the heck out of there most places are not super toxic imperfect yes
00:35:03
but toxicity is like a like there's a standard you know and it's a high bar and
00:35:08
um uh or this doesn't fit my values or this disagree with my politics i quit my fear
00:35:14
is that if you go if we flash forward five years there's going to be a disproportionately high number of people who have eight jobs in five years and
00:35:21
what's going to happen is an employer is going to look at them be like i can't take the risk that you're going
00:35:27
to stick around i'm not hiring you you're you sound like an amazing candidate but you're too high risk for
00:35:32
me or or and because you've had so many jobs over such a short period of time you actually
00:35:38
haven't stuck around long enough to build up a skill set or know what it's like to manage a storm because you've stuck around in the good
00:35:44
times and bailed on the bad times and so you have now been in the workforce for five years but you don't have five years
00:35:50
of work experience you have four months of work experience and so i don't want you either because you
00:35:56
don't you've never been through a battle you know and i and i and i see it happening um
00:36:01
a young person who's been at a company for eight months uh goes to their boss and says
00:36:06
i want to raise i want a significant raise because i'm doing the same job as those people um those people have been
00:36:13
in the workforce for 10 years i know but i'm doing the same work as them and i'm doing good work that's true you are doing the same work
00:36:19
as them and you are doing good work the difference is i'm not paying them just because they've obliquely been in the workforce for 10
00:36:25
years i'm paying them because you know how to hoist a mainsail in calm waters and you can hoist a mainsail in
00:36:31
calm waters as well as they can hoist a mainsail and calm waters the difference is they also know to hoist a mainsail in
00:36:37
a storm i don't know if you can always do main sail in a storm i pay them more because i know that if if we run into
00:36:44
hard times i know that they know what to do and i can trust that we can navigate and i also know that they will teach you
00:36:50
how to hoist a mainsail in a storm it's like the same reason i buy insurance i don't expect my house to burn down but i pay
00:36:57
just in case i'm paying them more for a skill set that i hope they never have to use that's why they get more you know one of
00:37:04
my fears at the moment which is perfectly linked to what you're saying is i have a fear and i've never expressed this openly so this is the
00:37:09
first time so don't all come for me at once i have a fear that gen z are the least resilient generation um that i've
00:37:16
ever seen and a lot of it and this sounds so stupid and not evidence-based
00:37:21
but if you look at what tick-tock is telling this generation work is and there was a video that went viral on
00:37:27
twitter the other day out in silicon valley where it shows like a facebook employer one of the big tech companies
00:37:32
she arrives at work in the morning she takes a latte all this free muffins she goes over and has the free muffin it shows her in a tick tock literally doing
00:37:38
like 30 seconds of work then she's out doing some like pottery making class that work i've put on she comes back to
00:37:43
the desk doesn't have 30 seconds of work then she's off to a work social and i
00:37:49
i reflect on the storms that my father went through at work
00:37:54
and i i just know so deeply inside of me that there's no way some of these younger gen zed people
00:38:02
could weather such a storm without quitting um reporting doing a long linkedin post to
00:38:09
criticize their employee then quitting employer then quitting and i just i just fear that
00:38:14
gen z when when i'm hiring people that are in that generation i almost need to to go to an extra length just to check
00:38:21
that they can cope with a high-intensity culture where demands might come on a saturday
00:38:26
because the world doesn't stop on saturdays and sundays so i wanted to get your take on that
00:38:31
um so let's examine both sides right let's again let's let's think of it what's the balance and what are the
00:38:37
costs right um it is a generation that already was starting to ask these
00:38:43
questions but coveted forced the rest of us ask these questions too which is what is the definition of work right like what does a full-time job mean and these
00:38:50
these are unanswered questions so i don't have an answer as to what the future of work is because it's right now everything's in flux and
00:38:56
we don't things are have not landed yet right so what is the definition of a full-time job if i don't come to work
00:39:02
the definition used to be i come in at eight or nine and i leave at five or six that was the full-time job now how much
00:39:09
work i did between those hours you know it was it was face time and we know that because we've all had jobs where we
00:39:15
stuck around until seven so we got face times our bus liked us right we've all done it
00:39:20
right but facetime is not a thing anymore and so i have a full-time job and i'm
00:39:25
offered another full-time job and i took it and we've seen we see this like employees who like have productivity
00:39:31
issues and then they say that they're burnt out and like i know how much work you have you shouldn't be burnt out how
00:39:36
do they have a second job and why shouldn't they have a second job well we pay them benefits so what
00:39:42
like as long as they're getting their work done do we care when people all have side hustles even people who've got
00:39:47
full time come to work everybody's got some sort of little side hustle so the definition of what full-time
00:39:53
employment is is up for is up for debate and i think young people feel
00:39:58
in particular that why shouldn't i it's my time i can do what i want with it or i only work 40 hours because those are
00:40:05
my those are my limits respect my boundaries right um and
00:40:10
uh the problem is is i think all of it is so literal which is
00:40:16
yes boundaries are important but the edges of the boundaries are fuzzy right and it's not like i don't work on
00:40:22
saturdays well i i agree with you i don't want you working on weekends
00:40:28
this one weekend i really need your help to finish this project so we can get it out the door or you know just i'm i i don't take
00:40:34
meetings after five o'clock i agree with you i think we should have that life balance but today i just need you to
00:40:39
work till six to get this one project done to recognize that you know so one of the things they're getting right
00:40:45
is that we're married to work and we take our phones on holiday you know we take our computers on holiday with us
00:40:51
and that work has ultimate say on our time i agree that should be we should that should go the way of the dodo but
00:40:57
the extreme is not to put these hard lines everywhere and say i don't do this
00:41:02
as an aside the irony is you know they demand that we respect their boundaries and yet they seem to step on every other
00:41:08
boundary about bringing you know emotional professionalism at work and dumping all of my problems onto my colleagues which is
00:41:14
emotionally unprofessional it's like that's a boundary you can't cross um uh but there is good evidence to your
00:41:22
assertion that this young generation seems less capable to deal with stress than previous generations that is true
00:41:28
um they are good at curating you know they've grown up in an instagram facebook you know tik tok
00:41:35
world where i'm really good at showing you the life i want you to think that i lead and so they're really good at presenting
00:41:41
a confidence that they don't have they they sound they sound like they have all the answers when they don't but
00:41:47
then i see you presenting that live to me if you're a fellow gen z yeah and i go what are my my life's stressful and
00:41:53
difficult and my i had to work really late and you're having a frappucci lotto latte whatever yeah at 3am doing pottery
00:42:00
lessons i need to quit yeah it raises the question what do you want from your life and what do you want from your work
00:42:07
like why do you have this job you know um if it's just to pay the bills
00:42:13
i mean i i hope we've i know that is the case for a lot of people that i have to have a job to pay
00:42:18
the bills and i hope that employers are good enough that even survival jobs are a nice place to work you know
00:42:25
uh uh trader joe's great company where people who have survival jobs is still a nice place to work you know
00:42:30
but i think the question is is what is the life that you're trying to build and if you want a job simply to pay your
00:42:36
bills and you know there's this concept of quiet quitting have you heard this one quiet quitting i've heard this time but
00:42:42
i've maybe i heard you talk about it well i i i mean it's been written about right um it's not my concept um but
00:42:49
quiet quitting is this thing where um i don't quit the job but i basically will dial back my effort
00:42:55
and give you the minimum so you pay me to do this job and i will do the basic minimum amount to do the job
00:43:02
where you can't really fire me because i'm not really doing anything badly or wrong but i'm also not going above and beyond
00:43:09
at all right so there's this concept of quiet quitting where people are coming to work and they're just doing the minimum doing
00:43:15
their hours doing their job not volunteering or raising their hands or going and that's it
00:43:21
and and it raises the question is that bad you know and i and i'm a great believer
00:43:27
that that it's all about expectation management you know um like i get asked about amazon a lot like
00:43:34
do i disagree with how amazon has run and my answer is always the same which is they never lied they didn't tell you it's a magical
00:43:41
place to work where it's all kumbaya and we all like you know we all hang out with you know unicorns every day it's really amazing
00:43:47
they're very up they're very open about it that it's very very aggressive and very rough and very competitive
00:43:53
and even the people who love it only last two years because they burn out um and so because they don't lie
00:44:00
you know what you're going to get if you go work there and if you like that kind of culture then go work there if you
00:44:05
don't like that kind of culture then don't work there but don't take the job and then say i didn't know because you did like apple you know people say well
00:44:12
steve jobs used to drive his people really hard like but you ask the people who loved working there they will tell you yes it was hard and
00:44:18
there was a lot of pressure but i did the best work of my life and i'm glad i worked there because i never would have been able to work to that standard if i
00:44:24
didn't work at apple back in the day right so the important thing is that companies are honest about the kinds of
00:44:30
cultures that they have right it's the lying it's the look how everything's come by and like and look
00:44:37
no culture's perfect even good ones have problems and even bad ones have advantages right but i think it's it's
00:44:42
about managing expectations and i think it's okay for somebody to say of themself
00:44:48
look i'm not a careerist i am okay with the fact that i will
00:44:54
never be an owner or a senior manager i want to be paid fairly
00:44:59
i want to do decent work um but i want work to fit neatly in my life and not overwhelm it
00:45:06
and i'm going to look for a job where that is possible and i don't think we're at the point where we have total honesty on both sides yet i hope we can get to
00:45:13
the point because there's still stigma because the older generations like you and me are looking at if somebody would say to us i only want to work 40 hours
00:45:20
i'm i'm willing to push my boundaries occasionally but really this is just we would be like well you're not working
00:45:26
here you know so i it hasn't normalized yet yeah but i
00:45:32
think it's just a question of being honest with oneself and you're allowed to change your mind as well
00:45:37
like i've decided i do want to be a little harder driving and i do want i do have more ambition than i thought you
00:45:43
know or less but i think i think it's just about honesty
00:45:48
um and this this this point of view is as true in personal relationships as it is in
00:45:55
our professional relationships so i had a conversation with somebody with somebody recently and i found absolutely
00:46:01
fascinating and she is polyamorous
00:46:06
she has four boyfriends right and
00:46:11
she is very open about it and one of the things that that she explains
00:46:17
is you have to be very honest with everybody so that everybody knows
00:46:22
what the deal is you know we're thinking i think what a lot of people do is they're dating somebody it's new it's
00:46:28
casual and they're dating somebody else that's doing casual but they don't tell them about each other so they both think
00:46:34
that they're more special than they are or they both are driving towards something that may or may not be true because you know you're dating two or
00:46:39
three people and you're to wait and see which one works out this in the poly world what i'm learning
00:46:45
is you tell everybody everything so everybody knows and it's very open and honest everybody
00:46:51
knows where they stand you can you can say i'm not into this i want to be the soul or i'm okay with this and maybe
00:46:57
something will develop maybe it won't but the point is it's on the table and i admire the level of
00:47:03
communication what i'm hoping is that we do the same thing
00:47:08
in our professional lives so you sort of have poly work if you will you know i have two full-time jobs you know i have
00:47:14
i have three things going or i only want this kind of relationship and it works if both parties are really open and
00:47:20
honest because it's all about managing expectations hold on i thought that you were going to
00:47:26
give me all of your attention and all of your effort and all of your ambition and you're telling me you only want to work
00:47:32
you want to treat my job as a casual job like just replace relationship with job
00:47:37
all the same rules seem to apply but if i knew that i would be fine with that it would have given you a different job and had different expectations it wouldn't
00:47:43
have pushed you really hard i would have given that work to someone else because i i'm assuming you want to live your career like i live my career
00:47:50
like i assume that i'm getting into this relationship and you're getting into it for the same reasons as me because we never had a conversation
00:47:56
we are nowhere near that in terms of social acceptance for that kind of conversation but i aspire for
00:48:03
that that somebody sits down and says a part of your cv and part of your interview says
00:48:08
you know what kind of work-life balance do you aspire for and how do you view work
00:48:13
even if you change your mind and then as if expectations are managed then what's the problem you've answered one of the
00:48:18
the actual number one questions i wanted to ask you about today because when i read your book um the infinite game
00:48:24
one of the big things that changed in my life was i remember i was on a plane i read the book started writing some stuff
00:48:31
came back to our office in the uk and i did a big presentation to all my teams about how we create a sustainable
00:48:36
company because if what you know if what you're talking about in the book is is true then um and and we're not playing a finite
00:48:44
game here how do we redesign the business from the ground up so that it is fundamentally sustainable yep i came
00:48:50
up with this thing called www.work welfare and world which is the three reasons why we exist we made um 2020
00:48:56
goals so this was in 2019. 20 goals before uh 2020 for each of these areas and i'm thinking about it again a lot
00:49:02
now which is like if i was to design my business in a way where my team members would stay working here forever how
00:49:09
would i go about that you've just answered it by saying the point about honesty yeah expectations so sitting them down and saying what you want from
00:49:15
your life because i've never asked that yeah i'm as you quite rightly identified i'm presuming they want what i want
00:49:21
exactly um so honestly i've wrote it here as a question to ask you how do i get my employees to stay forever okay so
00:49:28
why not like a dictator that sounds awful but i understand yeah but why should a it's
00:49:34
you want to create a place in which if people want to stay it'll be an enjoyable place that they can make a career and and grow within the
00:49:40
organization right like and for some people who don't have aspirations for leadership that they can
00:49:46
come and do good work every day and sort of get fair raises on you know on a on a regular
00:49:51
basis so that they would you know with cost of living adjustments etc that they want to stay there even if it's a middle
00:49:58
level like not everybody aspires to like be a hard driving you know owner you know and i think it's about making it a
00:50:04
conversation we we never treated work like a conversation you know we treated it like a like a
00:50:10
speech this is how it's going to be and i think so one of the good things that's coming out of you know covet and
00:50:16
young people is they're they're asking questions about why does work have to be that way and employers are rebelling against it
00:50:22
because it doesn't fit the way we grew up and doesn't fit our understanding of relationships you know and it's just a
00:50:27
conversation that's all it is and by being honest up front then
00:50:33
you can say i don't think this is going to be a good fit for us i don't think you'll enjoy working here and so if i
00:50:38
employ you knowing what i know now we will both get frustrated and
00:50:44
i will either ask you to leave or you will just tell me you're going to leave that's how this will end you know
00:50:50
um because of misaligned expectations and so i think being honest about what you want and who
00:50:56
you are and what your ambitions are even if they change in the middle you can knock on the door and say i've changed my mind
00:51:01
i think i want to stay here forever i told you i didn't but i really love it here you know and i know this from the
00:51:06
military you know some people join the military because it's a steady job in a bad economy or because the military will
00:51:13
pay for you to get a college education and they didn't have the money to get it without it so they join the military and then when
00:51:19
there they fall in love with it they never came in for service they discovered the service and the
00:51:24
brotherhood and the sisters and decided to stay you know and some people might have come in for the service and realized this isn't for me
00:51:30
so work should be the same but uh i i think i think there needs to be
00:51:36
honest conversation about and like i said i i've had debates even with my my partners my work partners you know um
00:51:43
you know when they say well if we're paying them a full salary and giving them benefits they shouldn't have another job and my question is why not as long as our work
00:51:51
product doesn't suffer as a result like if they're phoning it in missing all the meetings then yes absolutely right like we're paying for certain
00:51:58
expectation of performance but not necessarily of when they get it done and so
00:52:04
why shouldn't they have two jobs uh but i think again there has to be
00:52:10
honesty which is we have an expectation that that of x and and if somebody says i don't
00:52:17
want to meet that expectation because i want to have two jobs and you can adjust for salary that way you
00:52:22
can be like all right then how about we pay you less and you can have all the freedom you want and again it's a conversation
00:52:28
we don't make these things conversations we make them one way come and by the way that's from the employee to the employer too i demand x you know somebody asked
00:52:35
me recently how do i you know i want to ask my boss for a raise how do i do it and i said the problem the way most people ask for a raise is like
00:52:42
i want a 20 raise i did my research and my job the average
00:52:47
salary on my job you know is x my friend gets paid x my my friend gets paid x i
00:52:53
know somebody who i work with you know i'm doing the same work as them so i want to be compensated equally and i
00:52:59
want a 20 raise right and so they're positioning the question
00:53:04
that leaves the employer no choice but to say yes or no right it's and even if it's
00:53:11
i can help you get that but this is how it's going to be like you're going to have to have certain targets it still
00:53:16
comes across as a no right because the the request was binary right and so the advice that i gave to
00:53:22
this person was stop thinking of your job as an event and think of your job as a career think
00:53:28
of your job as a continuum and go to your boss in the middle of this continuum um i've worked here for two and a half
00:53:35
years i've been here through high times and low times you know i'm loyal
00:53:42
and my aspiration is to stay here and grow with the organization um
00:53:48
uh can you help me figure out a path that gets me to this salary
00:53:53
it's not a yes or no now now it's like absolutely i can i can give it to you today yeah no path necessary
00:53:59
or absolutely i can we're going to set some target goals that i want you to hit and if you can hit them then you'll
00:54:05
absolutely work to that salary but again it's it's giving it's allowing for conversation and it's allowing somebody
00:54:12
to to recognize that you view your own career with the organization as a continuum that i've been here and i want
00:54:18
to continue to be here so can you invest in me take bet can you take a bet on me rather than meet my demands
00:54:25
and so i think a lot of these things fail um because they're poorly presented amen
00:54:30
and this goes once again to you know this younger generation who seem to lack the skills for coping
00:54:35
with stress um not very good at asking for help um very confrontation avoidant like i
00:54:42
said so afraid sometimes to have the question the ask the boss can i have a raise that they would rather just quit
00:54:48
and it's often with an email that says you don't appreciate me you don't pay me enough i was like what you just had to ask me i would have given you a raise you know
00:54:54
um uh and i think part of it is also that you know when somebody is anxious about
00:55:01
something they do poorly present they do make things binary because there's fear
00:55:06
or anxiety or stress or fear of rejection what if my boss says no
00:55:12
right can i handle that like all of these things that come into these very sort of binary aggressive things and i
00:55:18
always equate all of these challenges at work to personal relationships like you can't go to your the person you love in
00:55:25
your relationship and say i demand this it's just not going to go well
00:55:31
right but you present a situation you say i i want us to move through this and how do we work through this together
00:55:38
and i think that's how these difficult work conversations need to happen they a work a work relationship is a relationship
00:55:44
like any other relationship you know there's there's trust there's anger there's uh care there's um
00:55:53
good days and bad days and all of the same nonsense a messiness in our personal
00:55:59
relationships are at work as well you know there's slightly different standards of professionalism and emotional professionals and things like
00:56:04
that but but in terms of it's a relationship like any other relationships you have to treat it like a relationship and in fact
00:56:10
go read relationship books if you want to fix things at work quick one we have a brand new sponsor on
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those features and the reasons why i use blue jeans in the coming episodes if you want to check it out you can head to
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www.bluejeans.com to learn more when i read about our history as sapiens
00:57:20
or homo sapiens or whatever it appears that we weren't with one one partner we're with multiple partners we've now
00:57:26
lived in the society where we're in arizona told to be with one partner um is that natural is it human does it
00:57:33
work the stats seem to suggest it's not really working so well i mean if i bought a tv and 50 and they
00:57:39
said oh by the way there's a 50 of these are going to break yeah i wouldn't buy the tv right i'd maybe you know rent one
00:57:45
right [Music] that's funny
00:57:51
uh esther perel who's wonderful if you don't know her work
00:57:57
uh you know she talks about the changing definition of monogamy monogamous used
00:58:03
to mean i'm in one relationship for my whole life now monogamy means i'm in one relationship at a time
00:58:09
right so even that definition has changed where monogamy and people who consider
00:58:14
themselves strictly monogamous have 15 monogamous relationships right
00:58:20
over the course of ten how many clothes i've had six close you know relationships
00:58:25
they were all monogamous right so these these definitions are evolving anyway
00:58:31
right that's number one number two i like
00:58:36
that we are having conversations about the health of relationships like we're having conversation about the health of work
00:58:41
and these things have always existed the difference is now the stigma of talking
00:58:46
about them seems to have dissipated at least in the united states where i
00:58:52
live like it's amazing how many people are talking about open marriages open
00:58:57
relationships polyamorous relationships consensual nog monogamy like i don't even know what all the differences of all these words are if i'm honest like
00:59:03
they it's there's so many words that seem to mean similar things i don't understand the nuances but the
00:59:08
point is is like it's amazing to me how many people are raising the question of what is a healthy relationship and i
00:59:14
think one of the things that boils down for me is it goes right back to what we're talking about which
00:59:20
is it base it's based on both parties and they both get a say and so if you say i
00:59:26
want to live this kind of lifestyle and you're upfront about it and somebody says i'm cool with that then great but if you
00:59:33
lie and say i want to have this kind of i want to be a strictly monogamous but you don't really
00:59:39
because you like the person a lot and you think that if you tell them that you want a different kind of relationship you're going to lose them like we're
00:59:44
it's the relation the conversations we have are largely born out of fear you know if i tell her what i really
00:59:50
want she won't like me and then i won't get another date that's true that is that is a
00:59:56
possibility but if i tell her exactly who i am and what i want and she likes me for who i am
01:00:03
then isn't that better and i think it's the same thing that we're just talking about work so i don't think it's right for us to
01:00:09
say we should be strictly anything because some people want
01:00:15
one kind of relationship let me let's rephrase that both people in that relationship want that kind of relationship and both people in the
01:00:21
other kind of relationship both want that kind of relationship then we just have to respect that we have different points of view about what
01:00:27
brings happiness as long as you're happy and it's kind and it's consensual i i think
01:00:33
we're done and usually the problems arise when somebody has most of these decisions most of
01:00:39
these problems are born out of fear fear of loss right insecurity in a relationship jealousy for example this
01:00:45
is the other thing um that friend i was telling you about who who's super open and honest about her her life i was
01:00:50
talking to her the other day and she says i'm jealous she says i'm having jealousy
01:00:56
and i'm i'm trying to figure out where it's coming from and what i found so fascinating about it
01:01:02
is she treated jealousy as a feeling like happy sad angry
01:01:08
where in most monogamous traditional relationships jealousy is usually an accusation
01:01:15
right i saw you look at the barista that way
01:01:21
right and jealousy is born usually out of fear and hyperprotective you know possessive
01:01:28
is born out of fear fear of loss right and what i found so fascinating was she didn't blame her partner for her
01:01:35
feeling of jealousy she wanted to understand where her feeling of jealousy was coming from
01:01:40
it was a feeling right um and not an accusation
01:01:45
and so i think the same is i we're to all of this whether we're talking about work or personal
01:01:51
relationships everything we're talking about today comes right back to those human skills
01:01:58
that we are lacking and i hate the term soft skills hard skills and soft skills we talk
01:02:04
about right hard and soft are opposites right they're hard skills and human skills
01:02:10
these are the hard skills you need to learn to do your job and these are the human skills you need to learn to be a better human being we're really good at
01:02:15
teaching hard skills we're junk at teaching human skills and human skills include things like how to listen
01:02:22
how to have a difficult conversation how to give and receive feedback how to have an effective confrontation
01:02:29
these are skills that most people lack we saw it after the murder of george floyd the number of leaders who after
01:02:35
george floyd was killed did nothing they said nothing to their teams not
01:02:40
because they're bad people it's because they weren't taught how to have a difficult conversation and so they were
01:02:45
so afraid there's that fear again of saying something wrong that they would accidentally offend someone or inflame
01:02:51
the situation that they chose nothing and i think the same goes in our
01:02:56
relationships we make too many decisions out of fear right now as entrepreneurs we understand
01:03:02
risk right we understand risk right and that big reward comes with big risk
01:03:09
small reward comes with small risk no risk you're leaving it up to somebody else and to get over the fact that if i tell
01:03:17
somebody who i really am that they may not like me well don't you want to find that out
01:03:22
sooner rather than later because they're gonna find out they're gonna the truth is always revealed sometimes quickly sometimes
01:03:28
slowly the truth is always revealed eventually but think about the magic of being able
01:03:34
to say the kind of job you want to have and the kind of life you want to live and the kind of relationship you want to have at the risk that they may not hire
01:03:40
you or they may not go on a second or third date with you but think about the opportunity if you do take that risk i'm thinking about all
01:03:47
the people listening to this right now who are in a relationship they've been there for 15 years it's become loveless
01:03:52
maybe they're not having sex anymore yeah and they're driving on the motorway now listening to us speak and they're thinking i really want to have sex with
01:03:57
someone else and if i go home and tell jane or john whoever it is i don't want
01:04:03
to be gender specific then i just want to have sex with someone else and i also want to keep them around they're going
01:04:08
to leave so i can't be honest simon right so um once again it goes like asking for a
01:04:14
raise right if you make it binary you're giving you're backing someone into a corner
01:04:19
i i realize our marriage is loveless so i want to start seeing other people
01:04:25
and you can too you know and what you're doing is you're making a binary you're forcing someone into a
01:04:32
binary yes or no which is unfair to somebody and you're setting yourself up for probably failure right
01:04:39
as opposed to saying i love you you're my life partner you're my best
01:04:44
friend i never ever want to lose you at the same time
01:04:49
our relationship is loveless and i'm struggling because i crave love and i crave that
01:04:55
kind of affection and we don't have it and so i'm struggling and don't know what to do
01:05:02
and i want to know how you feel and i want to we can work on this together so you're making it's just like the
01:05:07
raise it's like let's let's make this now if if you hate the marriage and get out of the marriage you know like
01:05:13
if you've tried the counseling and it's broken then that's a different conversation but if there is the desire
01:05:18
to stay in the loving relationship in some way shape or form but you're looking for to fill a place
01:05:25
that's missing then that's a conversation but it's not a demand or a request
01:05:31
it's a difficult honey i need to have an uncomfortable difficult conversation and we may not get it resolved today
01:05:38
but i want us to promise to stick through each other stick this stick through this with each other
01:05:43
so we can figure it out together it might take us a day might take us a week it might take us six months but i
01:05:48
i i'm going to be here throughout and want to go through this with you because i am struggling in this relationship
01:05:54
somebody else has the right to know that their partner is struggling in the relationship and odds are if only one person is struggling
01:06:00
there's no there's no scenario we're only one person struggling it's like when we have a problem with an employee like if we really can't
01:06:07
they hate their job too like it's not a shocker you know and like to start the conversation like listen i'm struggling
01:06:13
with you i know you hate it here because it can't be one way right that doesn't exist
01:06:19
um i'm pretty sure most of the issues i've had in my life stem from the fact that i didn't have an honest conversation
01:06:25
sooner me too of course me too and i made the mistake in my life that
01:06:30
i didn't and i was it was well intentioned i didn't want to hurt their feelings i didn't want to uh offend them or upset
01:06:38
them and so i dealt with the difficult thing in my head and tried to come up with the solution that i thought
01:06:44
best looked after my needs and your needs because i wanted but if i told you this i would burden you with the stress
01:06:50
of having to figure this out so i'll figure it out and then i'll make the decision that i think is best for it failed every time
01:06:57
because the mistake that i made is i treated the relationship as an individual when it's not it's two
01:07:02
people and the problem with a relationship with two people is i'm not in total control of the relationship remember i'm a member of a group i'm a
01:07:08
member of a tribe i'm a member of a team i'm not in total control of everything and i have to relinquish some control
01:07:14
and the thing we have to deal with more than anything is fear it's fear that is the underlying thing why we don't have
01:07:19
honest conversations it's why we are hyper aggressive or make things binary it's because we fear
01:07:25
rejection we fear loss we fear whatever it is and it's it's and we can ask for
01:07:31
somebody to reassure us and we can deal with the fear first
01:07:36
and by saying i'm going to stay here and an employer or or a
01:07:41
a lover can say i promise you i will stick this stick through this with you as well i will not
01:07:48
abandon you we'll get through this together that takes the fear down a notch
01:07:53
right that that that we will do this together and in in my own relationships
01:07:59
you know coveted all the bad that came with covet again you know how i see the world i see the world is balanced there's bad there's
01:08:05
good and bad in everything right all of the struggle and bad that happened in covet
01:08:10
there was tremendous good also um and in my own
01:08:16
in my own life um i had the opportunity like many of us to stop
01:08:22
get off the hamster wheel and then look backwards and saying do you want to get back on the hamster wheel
01:08:28
you know or look at all my relationships like why weren't they working like where's my
01:08:33
accountability in this you know uh what was i doing wrong
01:08:38
and i realized that one of the things i had to do was i had to not i had to be a better listener
01:08:44
and so you know my girlfriend you know and when we first started dating she's a
01:08:51
terrible listener terrible right i mean we joke about it uh
01:08:56
where i would say babe i need to have an uncomfortable conversation with you this is something i'm struggling with something you said or did that it's
01:09:02
making me uncomfortable i need to work it through with you and she would start telling me a problem she had with me
01:09:07
right and so what i would do is just hold space for that the conversation would just change entirely you know
01:09:12
[Music] but i had to learn what i learned about listening is this holding space
01:09:17
to learn to hold space for someone you know to learn to to as if as if holding a baby
01:09:24
you know like to let someone feel safe telling you what they need to say
01:09:30
without you trying to fix something or disagree with something or correct something right go on tell me more what else
01:09:39
was the most valuable thing i learned in covid
01:09:44
and the nice thing is is when you give that to someone weirdly they
01:09:50
by some weird osmosis they gain the capability to give it back to you
01:09:56
because you've done it if you do it enough times you can say this is what came later which is i i
01:10:02
hear what you're saying and i want to talk about that but for now i want to finish the thing that i
01:10:07
started talking about can you can we just start with that and you can say it politely and they recognize that you've held
01:10:13
space for them so many times that they'll offer you that service and they know how to do it because they've seen it modeled the really interesting
01:10:19
thing about that i was thinking about my own relationships with my with my partner is the reason why that's so true
01:10:24
for me is because most of the time when someone is talking and talking and
01:10:29
repeating themselves because they don't feel like they've been heard correct so in my relationship with my partner the fact that we do exactly what you've
01:10:35
described where we literally go give me a safe space and then i talk means she only feels like she has to say it once
01:10:41
because she feels like it was heard the first time right in my previous relationship my i remember being i'm gonna be honest
01:10:47
i was in the wardrobe one day and i've locked myself in there my girlfriend is banging on the door repeating herself
01:10:53
and i've i'm not proud of this but it's the truth i long context i said i'm going for new
01:10:59
year's eve mean a client are going out to singapore it's their birthday it's the biggest client in the world they've asked me to come it's their birthday she goes i want
01:11:05
to spend new years with eve with you and i go yeah but i i've told them that i'm going to singapore she goes i want to
01:11:12
spend new year's eve with you yeah and that just went oh no and at one point she's like screaming at me so i just like go and hide in the wardrobe yeah
01:11:17
she spends all night hanging on the bloody door like repeating the same thing over and over in my new relationship
01:11:23
we we communicate with more context and we actually listen when the other person's speaking so it only needs to be said
01:11:28
once yeah and then she can speak and then i listen and i repeat it back to her and then i speak
01:11:36
so what are the things that same right so this was 10 years ago by the way i'm not trapping myself in more so so uh you
01:11:41
know uh the thing that i learned about being in a relationship i used to come home and do the same thing like
01:11:48
uh hey babe you know i got a thing on friday with a client right or
01:11:55
i'll give you an even simpler one um um the joneses
01:12:00
uh invited us over for dinner on friday i know that you're free on friday so i i so i said yes so we'll go for another
01:12:06
joneses on friday and hell ensues you know and i was like but i know you're i know
01:12:11
we have no plans you know and so now what i've learned is when the joneses call me and say you want to come for
01:12:16
dinner if i go oh my god i'd love to let me check and i come home and say hey the joneses invited us out for dinner on
01:12:23
friday but i want to check with you first oh my god i'd loved it great i'll call them and confirm and i've made that again instead of me well-intentioned
01:12:29
making all the decisions even though i know i know exactly what it'll be yes i know the answer is going to be yes
01:12:36
what i'm doing is including the other person in the relationship that's all it is it's making someone feel seen and heard and included and it
01:12:43
and like i said there's so many great lessons we can learn from our personal relationships which we can apply at work because again
01:12:49
an easy way to understand how i view how i approach all these things i view it all as just human beings interacting with human beings that's all it is and
01:12:55
all the anxieties and fears and egos and all it applies everywhere what's the most difficult conversation
01:13:01
you've had to have with someone um when we're talking about that honesty and
01:13:07
communicating as authentically and openly as we can as soon as possible what are those difficult conversations you've had to have or a conversation you
01:13:13
had maybe too late down the line and you thought i wish i'd had this conversation sooner i mean
01:13:19
they're not different from anybody else i mean as you know talking about george floyd to my team
01:13:26
talking to george floyd with my black friends that was really hard um and i made mistakes
01:13:34
you know like i remember with one of my friends one of my black friends i was crying you know as we were talking about it and
01:13:40
i said to him why aren't you crying and he said because it's new for you it's not new for me
01:13:46
he says i'm exhausted i'm like i'm glad you're having your experience but it's not my experience
01:13:52
that you're you're this is you're seeing this for the first time i've seen this my whole life you know like that was that was hard you know to
01:14:00
have that being told at me to me it's true too um but
01:14:06
my conversations are the same as i mean the difficult conversations you know it's about it's about honesty and relationship but honestly with with him
01:14:11
you know with somebody on a team you know if something's not working out or if you give somebody really hard
01:14:17
feedback somebody who you are really close with it doesn't mean you're letting them go but like there's really
01:14:23
hard feedback you need to give to someone and learning to deliver it with love learning to be a matter of fact
01:14:29
you know one of the mistakes i would always make you know this you know these all these theories about give somebody the you know the compliment sandwich
01:14:34
tell them something good tell them thing you want to tell them tell something good doesn't work because it's it's generic something good really
01:14:41
specific something bad and generic something good you know seven good things one bad thing generic generic generic really
01:14:47
specific so it doesn't work in my opinion it doesn't work like you if it's really
01:14:52
it's like you know i really like that you show up to work with a smile and there's one other thing i need to talk about you know
01:14:58
um but what i've learned is when delivering good news be very emotional
01:15:04
and when delivering bad news um remove the emotion
01:15:09
and so like bad news at work especially you know when we sit with time someone's like
01:15:15
um ah so i don't i don't want to belabor this um
01:15:21
you've been with us for a long time uh i need to this is really hard i need to give you
01:15:27
some difficult feedback i'm infusing all of the emotion into this
01:15:33
right but to be dispassionate about it's like hey i need to give you some difficult news i need to just have a
01:15:38
really blunt conversation with you about something that's going on at work and it's going to be really hard for you to hear but i need to tell you boom here it is
01:15:44
it it people appreciate it when we're just straight with them and you know not infuse all the extra
01:15:49
emotion um but you know yeah i think the same i think the same
01:15:54
is again same as true in all relationships i've always found that i i struggle to use the word employees
01:16:01
and you just went to use the word then and you changed it to team yeah is that
01:16:06
something that you also the reason why the reason why so i use whenever i'm on the podcast i talk about it but my my team will never hear me and if they
01:16:13
might not have noticed this but this has been the same for 10 for about 10 years i will never in a in a chat set call
01:16:18
them and call people that work in my company employees yeah it seems to be somewhat of a violation of my values
01:16:24
somehow and i just noticed you went to say the word team someone on my team that's what you did yeah i mean i i do the same i mean i
01:16:31
i when i show up to a group called my k team and like yeah then you know um
01:16:36
employee to me is a technical word you know yeah i don't mind talking about employees when we're talking about
01:16:42
generic company stuff um i don't mind referring to employees when i'm talking to an insurance when
01:16:47
i'm talking about insurance you know or benefits you know it's like it's a technical term that i think is
01:16:53
totally fine to use in technical times but when i'm referring to people and those people have names and faces
01:16:59
then they're the team do you you know this andrew tate thing this and you take guy has been in a lot
01:17:05
of the headlines you know he is probably a good thing you don't um he's been in it's this guy that kind of came out with
01:17:11
this kind of pro you know pseudo weird kind of strange masculine approach his base thesis i
01:17:17
guess is saying that men young men and men generally are missing something in their lives that the modern
01:17:23
world hasn't given them um jordan peterson has alluded to similar things jordan peterson's been on this podcast a few times it's got me thinking about
01:17:30
gender differences in our needs in in the world a lot of people there's a lot of people in like youtube in the
01:17:35
self-help space that are saying men have these unmet needs because the world is becoming more equal
01:17:40
and they are lacking their sense of purpose and men are meant to be i don't know tribe leaders and all these kinds
01:17:46
of things and when you look at the the suicide rates in our country the single
01:17:51
biggest killer of men under the age of 40 is themselves it's suicide and so i've been
01:17:56
i've been mulling this is is the is is there gender differences in your view these are all very
01:18:01
difficult topics i understand but and is are men in particular having certain needs go unmet because of a
01:18:08
changing world in your view everybody has unmet needs because of a
01:18:13
changing world fact are there gender differences of course
01:18:19
there are gender differences and how we respond to men versus how we respond to women is different
01:18:24
a friend of mine who was um she was she
01:18:31
three things happened to her simultaneously in the military three things happened to her simultaneously any one of them would would be difficult
01:18:36
but all three of them happened her at the same time she was promoted to senior management she became lieutenant colonel
01:18:43
she was deployed for 13 months 12 months and she was given her very first command
01:18:50
okay so any one of those things is a is a trial and all three happened at once right
01:18:56
and she took over a job where the previous five leaders had all been fired it was a
01:19:01
poorly run uh group she would be working with people from different forces so she's in the air
01:19:07
force she'd have air force and army reporting to her some of whom were much older than her and much more experienced than her
01:19:13
and she is a hard driving you know passionate young officer who said i'm
01:19:20
going to turn this group around and i'm going to prove to everybody that i can turn it around i've been practicing leadership i've been studying leadership i want to be a
01:19:26
great leader and it was a failure like it was people weren't they were
01:19:31
ignoring her they weren't taking her seriously and no matter how she powered up it didn't work
01:19:38
and um every night she started she would cry herself to
01:19:44
sleep and started regretting being in the military all she wanted to do was go home she didn't want to be stuck on
01:19:51
deployment anymore what was something really exciting now became a regret and
01:19:57
she didn't know what to do she was failing which was hard for her to deal with alone i mean as it was and so she
01:20:05
decided to give up and she said i'm i will not turn this group around
01:20:12
so if i'm gonna fail at my job then i might as and i'm stuck here for another six months and so is everybody else i'm
01:20:18
going to change my mandate and instead of turning this group around i'm just going to ensure that the rest of their time here they really enjoy it
01:20:24
i'm just going to make it more fun for them to come to work every day because they're also away from their families and stuck
01:20:30
and then something strange really started to happen they started to listen to her take her seriously they started to respect her more and she ended up she
01:20:37
ended up being very very high performing at the end and the group completely turned around because
01:20:44
on her way in she made it about herself and she made it about the metrics and she made it about the performance
01:20:49
the lesson she learned was if you make it about the people then the people will take care of everything else
01:20:55
and i remember i sat down with her a week or two after she got back and she's telling me this whole story for the first time you know after she got back
01:21:02
and she started crying and and when she said to me jesus i have
01:21:07
never felt a joy so deep as seeing someone discover that they are
01:21:12
capable of more than they thought they were which is very different than i'm going
01:21:18
to turn this around so in in her telling me this she said one of the big lessons she
01:21:23
learned is there is such thing as female leadership and she had a conversation with one of the army one of the soldiers
01:21:31
and like why didn't you listen to me like why why was it so difficult why did we struggle and he said point blank because when a
01:21:37
male officer yells at me right i take it i hear it i move on right it's fine
01:21:44
when you yelled at me i felt like my mother was yelling at me and it was more difficult
01:21:50
you know so there are gender differences in how we respond to each other because it is a mom dad
01:21:56
thing right we respond differently um and
01:22:01
um and men are sometimes not always but men are sometimes better
01:22:08
at just being told blank by another guy just do this and you go i'll just do it but when you create gender it creates
01:22:13
all kinds of other other interpretations and associations like our mothers so i think we cannot discount those
01:22:22
and you know traditional male leadership qualities are things like decisiveness aggression you know those kinds of
01:22:28
things traditional female um qualities are things like patience you
01:22:35
know maternal instinct uh empathy and i think the mistake we've made across all leadership is we teach male
01:22:42
leadership we teach decisiveness and we teach aggression and these are the things we teach we teach that to everybody and the reality is is what
01:22:48
makes great leaders is they have a balance and what we should be teaching is more of female leadership
01:22:54
and you know all leaders should take on the qualities of patience and empathy
01:22:59
you know this this is the irony um and so uh
01:23:04
i think we i i think we do need to teach those skills i mean those this goes back to what we're saying before these are those human skills you know women get my
01:23:11
work a lot quicker than men when i was starting my career you know women were just not and be like yeah
01:23:17
yeah what do you of course and men would be like what are what are your case studies and what cases studies you have to prove
01:23:23
your your model you know men would fight with me on some of the
01:23:29
details and women just inherently intuitively understood that the humanity of the work that i was preaching just
01:23:35
made sense and there's space for that and so yeah i think i think female leadership and those qualities are just necessary
01:23:41
everywhere but yes there are differences and they cannot be discounted it's difficult to talk about them though isn't it it feels like a minefield even
01:23:47
when i talk about gender differences it feels like i'm going to step on a mind somewhere because you're entirely correct and my previous
01:23:54
company was a managing director was a woman and i think the business was more successful
01:24:00
because of those qualities you've suggested empathy care patience um
01:24:05
she was much more honest about uh honest about forecasts yeah and how how
01:24:12
the business was going to perform versus a male leader i mean this is such a narrow example so it's not necessarily
01:24:17
truth but a male managing director we had who was extremely exaggerating and very very very
01:24:24
ambitious about forecast that we never realized that makes sense that that's consistent and and i think you know
01:24:29
there's lots of data on this you know men you know when they apply for a job
01:24:35
and they say we need these ten things and if they have six out of the ten they apply for the job and women won't apply for the job unless they have nine or ten
01:24:40
of the qualities you know men are a little you know i've seen it happen in meetings where you know
01:24:46
there's a male entrepreneur and like the client is saying you know we'd love this to have we'd love to have this and they
01:24:51
kind of have it and the guy goes we can totally do that yeah you know and they'll sell it they'll sell it right there and then figure it out later yeah and i've sat in
01:24:58
meetings with a female entrepreneur who has almost that like they're really close and i and that you know somebody's
01:25:04
saying we would love this i'm like do you have that they're like it's not we haven't tested it yet
01:25:09
i'm like you have it tell them you have it they're like what's no it's not perfect yet you know
01:25:15
um so yeah i mean i i mean some of it some of it is a cultural as well
01:25:21
i have a female entrepreneur friend who has a theory and i have to stress this is her theory
01:25:28
exactly exactly right she believes men make better entrepreneurs than women
01:25:33
she believes men make better entrepreneurs than women okay yes and the logic is
01:25:39
uh that uh as when we're young
01:25:44
traditional roles for the most part still exist that if you want to go to the prom
01:25:49
[Music] generally the boy asks the girl right it's it's i think it's softening but it's
01:25:56
traditional roles are still still there which means from a young age boys
01:26:01
learn to muster up courage take a risk and get rejected
01:26:07
and then they have to do it again and then they have to do it again right and so you flash forward to
01:26:14
adulthood and men who learn that skill of asking of taking
01:26:21
a risk facing rejection being rejected and then trying again
01:26:26
makes them resilient entrepreneurs where for for again assuming traditional roles are played you know if if
01:26:34
a a woman who hasn't learned the skill of risk rejection um is more afraid of the risk
01:26:41
as an adult now we could argue that with online dating you know swiping left and right that everybody's losing the skill
01:26:49
you know we could argue that nobody has to take a risk because you just swipe right you don't know that
01:26:55
they swipe left on you they think maybe they just didn't see you so you only get the oe it connected but you nobody ever
01:27:01
gets rejected so are we building that goes back to the original conversation of a young
01:27:06
generation that's less capable of dealing with stress than older generations like much there are fewer opportunities to
01:27:14
risk reject have to try again right and the things that we learn as
01:27:19
kids these social interactions they they they do become skills as adults
01:27:24
and so you know is it a softening of a generation should not we be asking both
01:27:30
you know you know uh uh boys and girls you know shouldn't we not be asking them
01:27:37
to to go to the to learn to both have to learn to take risk as opposed to taking the risk away from everybody i don't
01:27:43
know no you know what the what i will say is i've had two very successful um women entrepreneurs
01:27:49
on this podcast who've said the same sentence which is as women in the in the workplace we typically don't ask for
01:27:54
raises as much as our current parts and that kind of supports what you're saying there which is men have at some point
01:28:01
learned to just ask for the things that they they they want
01:28:07
whether it's a raise whether it's a job whatever it is you know but i think i think you know the theory here that that
01:28:13
my friend posed is that it doesn't come from
01:28:18
our experiences of dating when we're younger that we build these skill sets that benefit us
01:28:23
later in life as entrepreneurs the whole it's not risk reward it's risk reject risk rejection
01:28:30
whenever i speak to someone that does a lot of interviews and conversations and talks you know um online a lot i always i always try
01:28:37
and think of questions that i would ask them that they've never been asked before and one day i remember it was actually
01:28:42
after you left when we were in the studio in l.a i thought to myself if i was going to interview myself
01:28:47
it would probably be the most interesting interview in the world because i know all of the and i know all of the stuff that no
01:28:53
one's ever asked me that i've maybe scattered away from or whatever if you were sat in my chair and you were
01:28:58
interviewing simon today what does what are some of the questions you would have asked you to get to
01:29:05
to get the most interesting stuff out of you maybe just give me one question i think you've done a pretty good job i mean
01:29:12
i think the best interviews are conversations i think the best interviews have no
01:29:17
agenda but the interviewer has genuine curiosity i think the best interviews are
01:29:24
open-ended questions that are difficult and in this case of your interviews you
01:29:30
know you are pretty blunt with an with a question that doesn't leave a lot of wiggle room
01:29:35
you know a lot of questions i can wiggle out of and yours less so um but they give an opportunity to me to
01:29:42
think out loud you know i think a lot of the questions you asked today i i haven't thought about or if i
01:29:47
have i haven't sort of codified it and what you heard were not answers but you heard
01:29:54
me thinking you know and if you go back and listen to them i probably they're probably sort of like sort of bounce around a little
01:30:00
bit because you hear me trying to get to an answer they're not answers i'm trying to get to an answer and those for me are the best
01:30:06
um because i walk away feeling enlightened because i got to think
01:30:13
um where usually the answers the questions are i've heard them all before they're very
01:30:19
focused on my work when you wrote this when you wrote that you know what were you thinking
01:30:24
and i don't learn anything so when you ask me about my work i know the answers when you ask me not about my
01:30:29
work you asked me about life and you asked me about challenges that the world is facing that's what i love so you know i think
01:30:36
you've done that and so the questions that i ask myself are the questions you asked me okay i'm going to ask you the
01:30:41
question i'm not copying out it's no different genuinely you're very good at what you do i will ask you the question i would ask myself okay which is what is
01:30:48
the greatest i was just thinking about it then what is the greatest fear you have about how you're currently living your life
01:30:58
what is the greatest fear i have about how i'm currently living my life
01:31:07
that i'm not 100 honest with myself
01:31:12
because i'm not honest with myself i won't be honest to others um
01:31:18
you know and when somebody asks me a question that that i'm afraid of the answer not
01:31:23
because i'm afraid of offending them but i'm i'm i'm afraid of how i feel about the
01:31:29
answer myself you know uh i think that would be it have you got a
01:31:35
suspicion that you're not being completely honest with yourself uh i think that all of us have a capacity
01:31:43
to rationalize it's it's one of the genius things about being a human being we can rationalize
01:31:49
anything you know i can make any decision the right decision
01:31:55
you know and i can convince somebody of it as well you know like this is definitely the right decision
01:32:00
um and i think it's that it's that gut that deep down inside to be truly honest
01:32:05
even if the answer is i don't know um or i'm scared
01:32:11
or i'm uncertain or i want this and i feel like i shouldn't want it
01:32:17
do you have a suspicion that you're not being honest with yourself in a certain area of your life do you have a suspicion that i'm not
01:32:23
being honest yourself i don't think it's a suspicion i think it's i think it's confirmed
01:32:28
i don't think i suspect it i think i think i think i'm i like every human being
01:32:34
have have elements of of self-doubt and security of course you know and
01:32:40
and can convince myself of anything you have self-doubt in certain areas of course
01:32:45
that's none of your business but that's a good enough phone so yeah those are those are those are my those are those
01:32:51
are my that's that's like not i i'm i'm pretty open but there are things that i want to resolve
01:32:57
myself i want to resolve with myself before before i'm able to share them because if i
01:33:03
share them it has to benefit others yeah and you have to have done i guess work on i have to do work because and
01:33:08
i'm happy to share stuff that's in my life if i believe that that conversation even if it's unresolved has a benefit to
01:33:14
others maybe it does maybe it doesn't i find it really interesting is you know as i do this podcast where my line is what won't i share and there is things i
01:33:21
won't share yeah it feels like maybe i'm bullshitting myself maybe it's quite a lot of stuff i don't
01:33:27
show or i twist it to make myself look better people like to be a hero you know i mean or or like
01:33:34
i think we live in a world that we have confused vulnerability with broadcasting our
01:33:41
feelings right and going on a podcast or worse
01:33:46
sitting in your bedroom with your phone on self view
01:33:52
and broadcasting your breakup or your anger or whatever it is on tick tock or whatever your medium of choice is
01:33:58
you know is not vulnerability even if you're crying have that exact same conversation with
01:34:04
those exact same words with somebody you love and see how difficult that is that's vulnerability
01:34:10
and i i just the idea of broadcasting everything i've i i think it's you know
01:34:15
putting pictures of me as a baby and my dad holding me and happy father's day dad i love you my
01:34:21
dad's not on freaking instagram what am i why don't i just call my dad and say happy father's day i love you as opposed
01:34:27
to like i think it's hilarious that our need to broadcast everything
01:34:32
and we think that's vulnerability and it's not it's broadcasting our emotions which are different so i think you know
01:34:38
um those conversations that you're struggling to have and like the ones that i'm the ones that
01:34:44
i won't share it's not that i won't share them with anybody it's that i won't share them with you
01:34:49
because i like you but we're not you're not my soul mate you're not the person that i confide in
01:34:55
i will absolutely share those deep those things that i'm struggling with but i'll share with somebody who can hold space
01:35:01
for me with love not with the desire to make a good podcast you know
01:35:06
um it's almost an old-fashioned perspective you know so so the mistake people will make is to not
01:35:12
share them with anyone and when i say it's not your business it doesn't mean it's not out of anyone's business
01:35:18
i absolutely do share those things because it would be unhealthy not to but i want to help i want to share those things in a really safe
01:35:24
really safe magical space with somebody who loves me no matter what and kiss me no matter what and will stand by me no
01:35:31
matter what interesting no one has ever responded
01:35:37
like that before which i think is um which is amazing in and of itself because it's really it's really changed
01:35:42
my perspective on a few things as you know we have a closing tradition on this
01:35:47
podcast where the last guest asks a question for the next guest yes they have no idea who they're asking it for correct
01:35:53
i wonder i'd love to know how somebody answered my question last time we could look it up i'll tell you yeah
01:35:59
often um it's a slightly interesting one because it feels like it's something we've
01:36:04
discussed in many respects um what's one conversation
01:36:11
what's one conversation you haven't had which you know you need to and why haven't you had it are you willing to
01:36:17
have it yeah won't share the answer and yes i will
01:36:24
because you'd rather have it with the person i'd rather have it with the person like i i'm like to me to broadcast it now
01:36:30
before i've talked to the person seems unfair and disingenuous and i think
01:36:37
you know it's kind of like when like there's a respect you know it's
01:36:42
like when you hear about you know there was a tragedy and people were killed and they don't
01:36:48
release the names before they've told the families they tell the families first then they release the names
01:36:54
just out of respect and i think the same goes for these kinds of conversations which is i think we owe it to the people in our lives we
01:37:00
love and care about to let them be the first to hear the thing that has to be said rather than the second or the last
01:37:08
i think it's just it's just that's how i want to be treated too i'd want to be the first to hear it if
01:37:13
somebody has something to say to me it's just respect so yes there are things and they will be
01:37:19
said i completely agree and enjoy it really it really ties in nicely with your earlier point about having a
01:37:25
conversation as soon as possible an honest conversation as soon as possible but also i guess the the adjacent point to that is having it with them first
01:37:32
yeah making sure they don't find out by the grapevine or podcast can i can i can i yes 100
01:37:37
and i've heard stories of like people hearing about things on television you know yeah and people losing their jobs
01:37:42
they found out through somebody else things like that um uh can i just share one funny story about being honest before we close
01:37:50
um honesty always has to be honest right like honesty is really easy just tell
01:37:55
the truth but honesty doesn't have to happen in the moment and this is a lesson i've learned right
01:38:02
so i went to see a friend of mine's play and it was easily
01:38:07
the worst thing i've ever seen in my entire life i mean [Music] if she wasn't in it i would have walked
01:38:14
out it was awful and at the end of the performance i hung around with the you know close friends
01:38:19
and family in the in the foyer and she eventually came out still in costume still in makeup and she knows i'm an
01:38:25
honest broker so after the thanks for coming the first question was what did you think
01:38:31
right now i'm an honest person but she's all jacked up on adrenaline she's all jacked
01:38:36
up on emotion now is not the time but the problem is i can't lie you know we do it all we lie all the time to protect
01:38:43
other people's feelings you know you get given a gift it's the ugliest sweater you've ever seen in your life and they go what do you think you go oh my god i love it thank you you don't love it
01:38:50
right so don't say you love it to protect them right but you don't have to be honest in the
01:38:56
moment so what i said was oh my god i'm so proud of you it was so amazing to be here and watch you do your thing i've
01:39:01
never sat in the audience and seen you do your thing before it was so much joy to see you on stage all of that was true
01:39:08
and that was it done the next day when all the adrenaline had come down and there was no more emotion
01:39:13
i called her up and said can i tell you what i thought of the play she goes yeah and then i told her point by point why it sucked but we had a we had a rational
01:39:20
conversation the next day and i think we make this mistake all the time in our
01:39:26
relationships which is we think we have to be honest in the moment but we don't read the room and understand that
01:39:31
there's too much emotion involved to have a rational conversation you know somebody's mad at us and we're good this is not the time for rational feedback
01:39:38
you meet emotion with emotion you meet rational with rational you can't mix the two and sometimes we're rational but they're
01:39:45
emotional which means we have to stand down right so what i've learned about honesty is we have to be honest but we can
01:39:51
actually delay you have to meet rational with rational and emotional with emotional let me give you some honesty then um i i
01:39:57
i went um i went on your video subscription library absolutely love it i'm a member now you'll see my name in the back end
01:40:04
um looked at the live the live courses coming up watch loads of the videos amazing it feels like it feels like it's
01:40:09
too cheap to be honest because the amount of value there around all of the things that are foundational to my life
01:40:14
my businesses my relationships everything it feels like it's a little bit too cheap it's like a couple of cups of coffee yeah for a month and i can
01:40:20
just binge all of your content all of the videos and you've got all of these other instructors on that yeah who are teaching the lesson it feels very cheap
01:40:26
that's not the thing the only thing i thought i thought oh i don't know if this is this is the best is the name
01:40:31
go on i the word subscription for me is
01:40:37
a bad thing give me another name uh simon's unit simon sinek university simon's library any of these things
01:40:42
would have made me way more so i was thinking about the name and i was thinking video video subscription library video yeah it's not really why
01:40:49
i'm here subscription it's not it's not a great one yeah so i was i was just thinking this would
01:40:55
change it but no i'm so i i mean i have it but i have no emotional connection to anything and the reason why
01:41:00
it's a technical thing and we call it a technical thing i watched your last episode and you talked about honesty in it and i was thinking this is way better
01:41:07
than it sounds yeah you've got and i have to say this because people have to check it out basically the the you've distilled your
01:41:13
books into actionable courses there's live classes there's all of your content on there yeah everything you've ever
01:41:19
done it feels like i'm ripping you off by being a member that's very nice i genuinely think if i hang around there my life would be better if i hang around
01:41:25
for an hour a day my life will be so basically we'll change the name which will make people feel even more value
01:41:30
and then thanks to this conversation we're going to charge people more you should genuinely i mean we've i haven't
01:41:36
been i you know i've had this conversation with before with people which is i know that our wide discovery course i know there are people who offer
01:41:41
sort of all kinds of purpose-finding courses that they charge 1500 bucks for you know and
01:41:46
i know because i've been told that our course is like a thousand times better than a lot of things on the market and
01:41:52
yet we charge like i don't know i think i can't remember the prices it's like it was 20 something dollars for a month but
01:41:58
i mean but but if you take the y discovery course it's like 85 bucks 125 i can't remember but but it's low
01:42:05
and the reason is is because i believe i have a responsibility to let everyone who wants to learn their why
01:42:11
learn their why and not those who can just afford fifteen hundred dollars and you know the way we attempted to
01:42:16
price that product was what would be slightly expensive for a college student a bloody college student you know doing
01:42:22
150k debt right so fraction of what you so so that's my point which is like 1500
01:42:28
is um exclusive and i would rather s i would rather try and make it up
01:42:36
in volume because i want more people to learn their why so you know is that too low i mean it is a
01:42:42
trial right now just you know we just launched it so it's full of bugs so you know i'm sure one of the the mental
01:42:47
things was like you know we probably shouldn't like we should probably like ease people into it just a
01:42:52
little buggy um i appreciate the feedback um but it is important for me to keep prices relatively low because
01:42:59
it's more important to me that people learn the stuff than don't the price fine i want it to be cheaper for my own
01:43:04
selfish needs right it was actually the name i thought did it disservice okay i'm gonna that was it simon's library or simon's university i'm done yeah uh i
01:43:12
have no i have no emotional attachment to it whatsoever so we'll make that change thank you very much for the feedback everything's written in pencil exactly
01:43:18
thank you thank you for coming again simon honestly it's a huge it's a choice and i learned so much from these conversations that i wish i actually
01:43:24
need to go back through this episode with my own notes so i can um change my business and my life for the better
01:43:29
thank you so much it's a joy i i learn i learn as much if not more than you do so i really appreciate you having me it's
01:43:35
amazing we'll do it again sometime i hope so thank you i had a few words to say about one of my sponsors on this podcast my girlfriend
01:43:41
came upstairs yesterday when i was having a shower and she said to me that she tried the heel protein shake which lives on my fridge over there and she
01:43:47
said it's amazing low calories you get your 20 odd grams of protein you get your 26 vitamins and minerals and it's
01:43:53
nutritionally complete in the protein space there's lots of things but it's hard to find something that is nice
01:43:58
especially when consumed just with water and that is nutritionally complete and that has about 100 calories in total
01:44:06
while also giving you 20 grams of protein if you haven't tried the cure protein
01:44:11
product do give it a try the salted caramel one if you put some ice cubes in it and you put it in a blender and you
01:44:18
try it is as good as pretty much any milkshake on the market just mixed with water it's been a game
01:44:24
changer for me because i'm trying to drop my calorie intake and i'm trying to be a little bit more healthy with my diet so this is where heel fits in my
01:44:30
life thank you hill for making a product that i actually like the salted caramel is my favorite i've got the banana one here which is the one my girlfriend
01:44:36
likes but for me salted caramel is the one
01:44:42
[Music]
01:44:48
oh [Music]
01:44:54
[Music]
01:45:00
[Music]

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This episode stands out for the following:

  • 70
    Most inspiring
  • 70
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  • 70
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  • 70
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Episode Highlights

  • The Power of Why
    Simon Sinek discusses how our 'why' evolves and its impact on our lives.
    “My why is to inspire people to do the things that inspire them.”
    @ 02m 28s
    September 08, 2022
  • Balancing Self and Others
    A discussion on the paradox of prioritizing oneself versus helping others.
    “It's a struggle and every day we're faced with choices.”
    @ 10m 36s
    September 08, 2022
  • The Power of Mindset
    Mindset can lift individuals out of unprivileged circumstances, regardless of their background.
    “Mindset is not a privilege; it's there for the taking.”
    @ 21m 56s
    September 08, 2022
  • Cultural Shifts Post-COVID
    Workplaces are now expected to fulfill roles of community and therapy, creating impossible standards.
    “The grass is always greener, but it's an impossible standard.”
    @ 34m 01s
    September 08, 2022
  • Concerns About Gen Z Resilience
    There's a fear that Gen Z lacks the resilience to handle workplace challenges effectively.
    “Gen Z may be the least resilient generation I've ever seen.”
    @ 37m 09s
    September 08, 2022
  • Work as a Conversation
    Work should be treated as a dialogue rather than a one-sided directive.
    “Work should be treated like a conversation, not a speech.”
    @ 50m 04s
    September 08, 2022
  • The Importance of Human Skills
    Human skills are vital for effective communication and relationship building.
    “Human skills are essential for better relationships.”
    @ 01h 02m 10s
    September 08, 2022
  • The Power of Honest Conversations
    Honesty in relationships can lead to deeper connections and understanding. 'Somebody else has the right to know that their partner is struggling.'
    @ 01h 05m 54s
    September 08, 2022
  • Lessons from Leadership
    Effective leadership requires a balance of traditional male and female qualities. 'What makes great leaders is they have a balance.'
    @ 01h 22m 48s
    September 08, 2022
  • Cultural Gender Differences in Entrepreneurship
    Discussing how traditional gender roles affect risk-taking and entrepreneurial success.
    “Men learn to muster up courage, take risks, and face rejection.”
    @ 01h 26m 01s
    September 08, 2022
  • The Importance of Timing in Honesty
    Honesty doesn't always need to be immediate; sometimes it's better to wait for the right moment.
    “Honesty doesn't have to happen in the moment.”
    @ 01h 37m 50s
    September 08, 2022
  • Vulnerability vs. Broadcasting
    True vulnerability is sharing with someone you trust, not broadcasting emotions online.
    “We think we have to be honest in the moment, but we don't.”
    @ 01h 39m 26s
    September 08, 2022

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Mindset Privilege20:13
  • Mindset Matters21:56
  • Post-COVID Culture Shift34:01
  • Loveless Relationships1:03:47
  • Fear of Honesty1:07:14
  • Female Leadership1:22:54
  • Vulnerability Defined1:33:41
  • Timing of Honesty1:37:50

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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