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Designing a Life That Supports You: Presence, Beauty, and the Power of Environment with Nate Berkus

December 16, 2025 Leave a Comment

Designing a Life That Supports You
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In this episode, Nate Berkus explores what it really means to design a life that supports you—not through perfection, but through presence, beauty, and the power of environment. Drawing from decades of work and his own personal journey, Nate reflects on how our surroundings quietly shape our habits, emotions, and sense of self. He shares how moving through profound loss changed the way he understands home, meaning, and the moments that matter most. Through deeply human stories—including a transformative Oprah makeover—Nate reveals how small, intentional changes and genuine listening can create spaces that support healing, authenticity, and connection.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • The influence of environment and design on personal growth and habits.
  • The parable of the two wolves and its relevance to personal choices and mindset.
  • The significance of “the moments in between” in fostering genuine connections.
  • The impact of parenting on awareness and presence in daily life.
  • The importance of meaningful design that reflects personal stories and aspirations.
  • The relationship between emotional well-being and physical spaces.
  • The transformative power of small, intentional changes in one’s environment.
  • The role of gratitude in overcoming past hardships and shaping identity.
  • The necessity of human connection and understanding in design and life.
  • The balance between personal taste and collaboration in shared living spaces.

NATE BERKUS is one of the world’s most influential interior designers, known for his elevated yet accessible approach to interiors. His thirty-year-and-counting career has included innumerable television shows and home collections, along with designing award-winning interiors. Consistently named to the AD100 and Elle Decor A-List, Nate lives in New York with his husband, Jeremiah Brent, and their children, Poppy and Oskar. He is the author of FOUNDATIONS: Timeless Design That Feels Personal

Connect with Nate Berkus: Website | Instagram 

If you enjoyed this conversation with Nate Berkus, check out these other episodes:

Failure as Fertilizer: Learning to Bloom Again with Debbie Millman

Creative Thinking and Action Through Designs with Sarah Stein Greenberg

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Episode Transcript:

Eric Zimmer 00:01:07  Willpower gets a lot of credit, but environment does most of the work. In this conversation, designer Nate Berkus makes the case that our environment is never neutral. It’s either helping us become who we’re trying to be or quietly pulling us back into default mode. And I think that’s one of the most overlooked truths about change. We put so much focus on discipline and self-control when the space around us, our environment is a really big factor in determining whether a new habit has any chance of sticking. If your surroundings keep cuing the old behavior, it’s an unfair fight. We talk about how small shifts light layout, and what you see when you walk in the door can change how you feel in your own life. And we talk about his new book, Foundations and why the goal isn’t a perfect home. It’s a home that feels personal and supportive. I’m Eric Zimmer, and this is the one you feed. Hi, Nate. Welcome to the show.

Nate Berkus 00:02:05  Thank you. Thank you for having me.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:07  We’re going to be discussing your book called Foundations: Timeless Design. That feels personal. But before we get into that, we’ll start like we always do with the parable.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:16  And in the parable, there’s a grandparent just talking with their grandchild. And they say, in life, there’s two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops. They think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Nate Berkus 00:02:49  Well, it’s such a beautiful thing to consider. You know what I’ve learned over the course of 30 years, being intimately involved with people in. Obviously in the capacity of changing their homes and crafting these spaces within which they can make their own memories and live their lives, is that, I think, what we choose to focus on as human beings, whether we choose to ignore the fact that we’re all the same fundamentally, which is a long held belief that I have, or we lead with ego and allow sort of the lowest vibrational parts of how we move through the world to win in certain situations.

Nate Berkus 00:03:31  I guess what I’m trying to say is, I think that grace goes a long way in this world. No matter what you do, no matter what industry you’re in, no matter what you’re trying to sell or talk about, and nothing, including AI, will ever take the place of true human connection. And when we connect with another person, be it a stranger or someone we’ve known extremely well for decades, I think that that’s when we focus on on feeding not only the other person, but feeding ourselves. And those are the moments my husband and I call them, the moments in between. It’s not the grandiose gestures, it’s not the expensive vacations to far flung destinations. It’s those moments where we’re actually allowing ourselves to really see and really hear the other person and connect on a soul level. So I would say that when I hear that we have a choice every almost in every interaction we have with another human being, whether we’re feeding the good wolf or the bad one.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:33  Yep. I love what you said about Grace there.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:36  You know, there’s no situation that grace can’t improve.

Nate Berkus 00:04:39  No, none.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:40  There’s no way that when you bring some kindness, that it’s not a good thing. I wanted to ask you about those moments in between, because I picked that up in another interview you had done. And, you know, your career, for people who don’t know, you were a designer? Very young. You were successful young. Oprah found you when you were young. You’ve had a very long, very successful career. You’ve clearly been a person who is driven to achieve but within your own lane, with a great deal of integrity. And those moments in between, I think, and this has been a long running semi obsession on this show, is this idea of, yep, we want to do better, we want to strive, we want these things. And yet, how do we appreciate these moments in between? Let’s just talk about today. How do you sort of set down a very demanding, very good career so that you can focus on the moments in between?

Nate Berkus 00:05:37  Well, I think that for me, there’s two things within that question.

Nate Berkus 00:05:42  The first is I just want to clarify, I was very young when I rose to sort of fame and fortune and, and was on the Oprah show and all of that. But I wasn’t too young. I wasn’t 22. I was, you know, in my late 20s. And so I don’t think any of us are fully formed. I’m certainly not fully formed, but I was formed enough to not have any of that throw me. My priorities were always in a decent place. That’s an important distinction for me. And then the second thing that I would say to you is that it wasn’t until I had children that I think I really understood on a deep level what those moments in between met. I mean, obviously, I had been in significant relationships and I have a large family with lots of siblings. But, you know, I feel like I was going about a thousand miles an hour before I started and had the incredible opportunity to view the world through my children’s eyes and through their experience. And that was what cracked me open, probably more than anything in terms of really knowing that if I didn’t have that focus, if I responded to that email while one of my kids was explaining how their afternoon was in school, like that was me failing fundamentally as a person.

Nate Berkus 00:07:02  You have to be really stupid to be a part of the Oprah show for as long as I was, and not pick up stuff that has nothing to do with design. Like, you got to be really myopic and like, yeah, and just plain dumb.

Eric Zimmer 00:07:15  Exactly.

Nate Berkus 00:07:15  Yeah. I mean, wow, what that building held. I’m sure it was just insane. But, you know, one of the things that one of many things that I still think about to this day is long before surrogacy was possible, long before gay marriage was even legal. I was sitting in the control room at Harpo in Chicago, and Doctor Angelou was the guest on Oprah’s show that day, and someone in the audience asked her how she felt she had been as a mother, not just as a poet and a writer and a cultural force, but as Ma. And she said, I don’t think I did very well. I have to be honest with you. I don’t think I did that great of a job. And the audience member said, well, what would you do differently? And she said she thought about if she got a little bit quiet for a minute and then her response, I’ll never forget.

Nate Berkus 00:08:12  Her response was, do your eyes light up when your child enters the room every time? And this 20 ish me that was sitting in the control room again, unmarried. The idea of having children was something I always wanted but never thought could happen. Really, that lodged itself into my being. And so my children now are ten and seven, and I am actually acutely aware of whether or not Jeremiah’s and my eyes light up when they enter the room every time. And I think that that, as the basis for the moments in between, kind of lays the groundwork for a different degree of presence and gratitude and attention.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:03  That’s such a really good orienting rule. I think rules like that can be really helpful because they’re so simple. Like, this is what I’m aiming at. You know, my sort of all purpose intention is to leave every situation or place better than it was when I walked in. Do I do it all the time? Of course not. Sure, but it’s a simple thing. You know, it’s a very simple question I can ask myself and I.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:26  And I love that one for your kids. I think that’s really awesome. I almost name my son Oscar. Oh, really? This was a long time ago. he’s Jordan, but Oscar was on the shortlist. I love that name.

Nate Berkus 00:09:38  He’s a good Oskar. We call him Okee for short. He’s named after my former partner who died in the Indian Ocean tsunami. His middle name was Oskar. And so, it’s funny because here in New York City, it’s very uncommon still. But if we’re in anywhere else, especially in Europe or anywhere, everyone’s like, yeah, of course his name is Oskar, spelled with a K.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:00  Yeah. It’s not common in the States really much at all.

Nate Berkus 00:10:04  No, it’s a strong name, though. It’s a really great name.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:06  I think it’s a great name, too. You were talking about gay marriage, children. Do I have it right that you were the first gay couple to be married at the New York Public Library?

Nate Berkus 00:10:16  Yeah, yeah. I didn’t think we could afford to get married at the New York Public Library.

Nate Berkus 00:10:20  And Jeremiah was like, we’re doing it. It’s great. I’m Carrie from sex and the city. This is awesome. But we met with them almost on a lark just to find out, you know, how much could it be to get married at the New York Public Library? And the woman who was running it at the time said, you realize if you do decide to have your wedding here, you’d be the first gay couple ever to get married in these halls. And that meant something to us because I don’t speak for Jeremiah often. He’s not stupid. So he has a lot to say about his own philosophies and everything. But I do know that both of us have felt an enormous responsibility, being on TV, being on television with our kids, showing people that all families don’t look the same. If I had to, like, lock into a core motivation for agreeing to do these cable shows over the years together, the four of us, I would say that that was really our our founding intention was to be out there in the middle of the country showing people that, you know, families like ours exist and all love doesn’t look the same. In fact, all love looks very, very different.

Eric Zimmer 00:11:30  One of my favorite writers and a friend of mine, Andrew Solomon, writes a lot about that, about, you know, how we don’t even have words for so many of the different configurations that our families take these.

Nate Berkus 00:11:41  Days, 100%. I’m a huge fan of Andrew Solomons as well. Yeah, brilliant. Brilliant writer.

Eric Zimmer 00:11:47  He is. I’ve got a book coming out in March and, you know, you know this. I went out and got book blurbs, and one of them from him was like, oh, you know, for me, for me, for him as a writer and as a person, you know, like, I just, I he’s just unbelievable. So I gotta stay with the New York Public Library for a second, though, because I love that place. Where do you get married? In that place.

Nate Berkus 00:12:10  Well, they’ve got this down to a science. Now, let me tell you, you have choices. But the most inconvenient choice, and arguably what we think is the most special, is right when you walk in the front door.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:20  Okay.

Nate Berkus 00:12:21  So the library is open to the public until 6:00, and at 6:00 everything changes. The the chairs go up, the decoration goes in, the stage or platform is built. And so that’s what we did. you know, people, our guests walked up those marble steps in between the lions.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:40  I was going to say, you’ve got some wedding pictures with Lyons.

Nate Berkus 00:12:43  Oh. Of course. Yeah, and like, there were candles on every step. It was evening. I mean, it was absolutely beautiful. And then the dinner and the ceremony was there in the Grand Hall, right when you walk in. And then there’s all these amazing rooms in the New York Public Library, incredible, incredibly significant architectural rooms. And in the basement, essentially, there’s a beautiful event space. That was where our guests moved through the hallway and down these second set of stairs and into this beautiful room with paneling and lit with candles and filled with crystals on every table that we gave away at the end of the evening.

Nate Berkus 00:13:22  It was perfect. I mean, I can’t, you know, I still to this day, can’t believe we pulled it off in the way that we did, and we both sobbed the entire time. Everybody actually cried in the ceremony that just every single person. And Oprah at one point goes, oh, Lord, because it was just so heavy. Yeah. So emotional. I didn’t anticipate that, but that’s what it was.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:46  That’s beautiful. I would have had a hard time resisting the main reading room to do things in, because that room is just incredible.

Nate Berkus 00:13:52  Yeah. I don’t think they let us in there because. Yeah, because they could you could damage the books. And, you know, I think I think that’s why.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:59  So do you love libraries?

Nate Berkus 00:14:01  Sure. I love libraries, I love bookstores, I love books, and I love reading. So yeah, I’ve actually never thought about whether or not I love libraries, but when I’m traveling, I, I really do like I’m drawn to historic libraries and, and, and private libraries and things like that.

Nate Berkus 00:14:17  I think they’re really interesting. We just did an installation for this really adorable young couple uptown here in New York City. It’s their first apartment. She’s eight and a half months pregnant. And as I was putting their books away in their library, I even said this to them when they saw the apartment the first time that two days later, I was like, I’ve always liked you guys, but I like you even more knowing that you read about the history of Persia and like the subject matter in your library, is just so varied. And they laughed. They’re like, I know we’re a little bit schizophrenic in our interest. I was like, but it’s so great. You guys are 30 years old and you’re you’re reading about the fall of the Roman Empire, and then you’re reading, you know, Augustine Burrows like, this is awesome.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:59  Yeah, that is great. I walk into any room that’s got books, and I like if I go visit somebody’s house, I’m almost always like, I’m going to need just a couple minutes, right? Right.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:09  Because otherwise I’m going to be looking at it out the corner of my eye the whole time we’re talking, wondering what you read. Yeah. So let’s just let’s let’s get it over. Let’s get it over with.

Nate Berkus 00:15:18  It’s so funny. Yeah, it’s really funny. And then, you know, I read a tremendous amount of fiction. I prefer to read fiction. I like history, but I love fiction. Yeah. And I was with Jenna Hager the other day, and she has a book club read with Jenna. And she said to me, do you know how many titles you’ve picked for books that you put on your own social media that are actually read with Jenna. Books. And I was like, I promise you, I’m not even following copying, but we have the exact same taste. And she said, well, then here’s, you know, here’s a book you need to read. And she was right.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:50  Have you read any fiction recently that you love?

Nate Berkus 00:15:53  Buckeye.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:54  You have read that?

Nate Berkus 00:15:55  Yeah.

Nate Berkus 00:15:55  Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:56  Yeah. I’m. I’m in Ohio, so I have to read Buckeye.

Nate Berkus 00:15:59  Oh, you have.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:00  To read it. It’s on my.

Nate Berkus 00:16:01  List. We should stop this podcast recording and you should read it right now. It’s phenomenal.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:05  I’ll get back to you with my review. So your book is called foundations, which is sort of an idea of returning to what matters most. You’ve mentioned in your life that your family, your husband, your kids are a real foundation. What are other foundations of your life? Not necessarily your work, but your life?

Nate Berkus 00:16:27  Friendships. I’ve really long held friendships that that are deeply important to me. Laughter I have that Jewish thing where we laugh at like the most inappropriate, most dire, horrifying circumstances. And that continues on. Connection. I mean, obviously human connection is a huge foundation for me. Beauty is an enormous foundation. I’m constantly in pursuit of beauty and quality. It sounds materialistic, but I don’t mean it to be at all.

Nate Berkus 00:16:56  It could be the way that fibers are woven together in a developing country. To make a basket is absolutely as interesting to me as touring a 17th century porcelain manufacturing, solar powered in Bavaria. I love when creativity and product intersect. I’m interested in all of those things I from fine jewelry to furniture to decoration and paintings and all of that. And that definitely is a foundation for me because I get really excited when I learn something new, which I do every day, or discover something new. Obviously we’ve we’ve touched on family, which is an enormous foundation, perhaps, for the pursuit of learning and exposure. Nothing is more exciting to me than discovering a place I’ve not been. Preferably with Jeremiah by my side or that. But I really love culture, and I love understanding culture historically and and in the present. Most people, I think, move through the world using food as their kind of barometer of what’s interesting. Like everyone talks about, the food is so great, and Argentina or the food, you know, I love the food in Thailand.

Nate Berkus 00:18:13  I don’t really care about that. I care about craft. Yeah. So, you know, I’m drawn to kind of what the food is served in or served on as opposed to what it actually is. I would say that those are probably the main things for me.

Eric Zimmer 00:18:44  Beauty is an interesting one because I think implied in beauty are two things. There’s the craft that you’re talking about, and craft has a knowledge and a history and a skill. But there’s also care embedded in beauty, right? Like, you don’t create something beautiful if you don’t care. Like it just doesn’t happen. And so I think beautiful things have that other element in them. And I think it’s taken me as a, as a younger person in my sort of like, I’m not going to be a materialist kind of person. You know, I’m a punk rocker, you know, that’s none of that stuff. But I’ve really grown to love that. Like, beauty is not just in a piece of art that we would classify as art.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:26  It’s in all kinds of things. And that putting some of those things around you is actually really a worthwhile endeavor. My book talks so much about how important in making any kind of change environment is. It’s it’s arguably the biggest factor. And what’s more salient than your environment, like where you live. And my, my partner Ginny cares a lot about making the place that we live nice. And I didn’t have a full appreciation until I lived in it. And I went, oh.

Nate Berkus 00:19:57  To live with things that are nice. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:20:00  It’s thoughtful. It’s beautiful. Like, it’s not fancy. It’s not expensive.

Nate Berkus 00:20:05  It doesn’t need to be. That’s not the same thing. Exactly.

Eric Zimmer 00:20:07  Yeah, exactly.

Nate Berkus 00:20:08  Yeah. I am so on board with that. I mean, listen, I’ve spent 30 years in design. It’s the 30 year anniversary of my firm. I have had this incredible experience that very few people have of standing next to somebody, and their eyes are closed and their hand is in mine, and they open their eyes and they step into a new life, a new version of what their old life was overnight.

Nate Berkus 00:20:37  In an instant there. I’ve dreamt a bigger dream for them. That they could dream for themselves. And I’ve executed that in their home. And you can see and feel. People might have to take my word for this, but they can. You can feel the change in someone when it starts to sink in almost instantly. That this space belongs to me, that this space will be the backdrop, the set of everything that I hold dear, every memory I anticipate making good and bad. This will be the space that saves me. That is my soft place to land. And beauty has an enormous amount to do with that. But also so does organization. So does a sense of purpose. Good design. I’ve always felt really does represent the people who live there. And that’s not like a, you know, dove skin campaign tagline. Like, to me that means that our home should represent not only who we are, but also who we’ve been and perhaps even most importantly, who we aspire to be.

Nate Berkus 00:21:51  And when that is right, when someone has listened, whether it’s you just even listening to yourself, which is what my book is, is about. But when that comes together, it is so powerful to be surrounded by things that really do tell your story. Past, present and future. It’s like moving through the world. I’ve seen children do their homework better. When they have a designated area. Their backpack goes down the same hook and the table is right there, and the pens are in a pen cup or in a, you know, organizer or whatever it is. Children behave differently. I’ve seen people be excited to do their laundry because we’ve crafted this incredible, you know, space that might have a painting on the wall of a laundry room that belonged to their grandmother. The interiors that constantly rise up to greet us on every level. There’s no substitution for that, in my opinion.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:48  I agree with all of that. One of the things that I’m curious how you think about, because you really are focused on putting things in a room that matter to you.

Things that have a history, things as you’ve said, that tell a story of past, present and future. And one of the big challenges that we have as humans is we habituate, meaning, like at first time I see that painting, it means something. The second time, the third time, the 50th time. Oftentimes, I’m not seeing it anymore. How do you keep that alive for you in the rooms that you are? And how have you seen your clients who do a good job of that, maybe, versus the ones who just sort of end up taking it all for granted.

Nate Berkus 00:23:29  So design is an imperfect science. It’s a creative endeavor. There’s no one right way to decorate a room. That’d be a ridiculous thing to assert. I’m not always right. I wouldn’t, you know, I’ve made this my life. But it doesn’t mean that someone else’s opinion doesn’t or shouldn’t hold just as much or more value. On occasion, one change a series of small changes can redirect the energy in a room so quickly.

Nate Berkus 00:23:57  Even taking that painting that you’ve seen 50 times and moving it to the end of a hallway, even adding a new lampshade on the table beneath the painting completely shifts the way you view the room. When I’ve seen that, I’ve had the opportunity to see this so, so often when I’ve seen these homes shift just slightly, it refocuses how we view everything around it as well. So I think actually that is the science behind these like Weekend Warrior mini updates. I think that’s why people are carrying pillows out of home goods and throwing them in the trunk like it’s it’s that constant evolution. And, you know, my challenge as a designer has always been to install a home that feels layered and assembled over time, not instantaneous, even though we are doing it in one instant in most cases. So it’s been a real balancing act for me to make sure that I leave the spaces that we create with enough room for them to evolve as time goes on. Even our own home. Yeah, you know, our own homes.

Nate Berkus 00:25:10  It’s like it’s the big internal fallacy of almost every designer. You shoot your house for a magazine, and then the magazine comes out 4 or 5 months later, and by the time the magazine is out, the house looks nothing like what it did the day they photographed it. Like nothing. It’s happened to me 75 times.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:30  Because you just are in an evolving state of design and you don’t consider a room done.

Nate Berkus 00:25:36  It’s never done. It’s done enough. But it’s never done. Done. I know if my husband and I are sitting in our kitchen talking and his eye right, I just like, takes a little journey like you do with book titles. I know that we’re five minutes later, I’m going to get the drill out. We’re going to try the painting over there. I’m going to move this. And he’s I’m I’m the exact same way. If I sit in a space of my own long enough, I’ll think of something I can do to improve it. That’s the curse.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:05  Yeah. I’ve heard you say part of the reason you love reading fiction is just to shut that designing mind off for a little bit, because it just kind of does it 100%.

Nate Berkus 00:26:14  It doesn’t do it when I’m in other people’s homes unless I’ve been asked. It’s something that I’m able to turn off. I imagine it’s like, you know, a psychiatrist is not, you know, constantly evaluating their friends while they’re at, you know, the Cheesecake Factory. They’re just trying to navigate that menu. Like everyone else in the world. But I just think that it definitely in my own spaces. I’ll sit at my desk where I’m sitting now in my offices in New York, and I’ll and like, a pillow will annoy me and it’ll go in a closet and I’ll bring something else out. I just cannot, cannot shut that off.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:46  I’m not sure that good psychiatrists or psychologists would eat at the Cheesecake Factory, because they know that too much choice is problematic for the human psyche.

Nate Berkus 00:26:56  Maybe it’s a self-test.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:58  Exactly. They take him there to diagnose people. Exactly. It’s part of the diagnosis process, for sure. Your husband is also a designer, so I assume you guys don’t have the exact same taste. So how do these room adjustments play out?

Nate Berkus 00:27:12  We actually decided really early on in our relationship. We’ve been together 13 years. We decided really early on that that would not become a source of contention. We knew that we would fight about money. We knew that we’d fight about who ate the last. You name it in the fridge or whatever. But we chose again. You know, back to your parable. We chose to focus on how lucky we were that this was an endeavor that both of us love and are excited by so much. Because if you take the good of working with someone that you’re married to in the same profession, if you focus on that, the fact that we both love flea markets and we both love antique shows, and we both love exploring districts in foreign cities and countries and in our own cities and all of that, that’s really special. Like, that’s a really interesting way to connect. And he’s 13 years younger than I. And and so when we met, I would say that his point of view stylistically wasn’t as formed as mine was at the time.

Nate Berkus 00:28:28  And what’s happened in this really magical situation of our relationship is that I’ve changed and become more open to breaking rules and going against what I’ve always sort of held as to tenets of how I approach a space. And he has gained this sense of history and makers and historic references that I have shared with him. And so our first date, we had a pile of design books on the sofa, and we just went through all these different books of other people’s work and pointed out what was interesting to us and discussed it, and that really was a foundation of our relationship. So we don’t fight about that. And if someone says absolutely not like they don’t like an idea or a piece of furniture or whatever it is. The rule in our house is that you have to move on because I can sell anything to anybody and so can we. And so we can’t try and sell stuff to each other. That’s the that’s the rule.

Eric Zimmer 00:29:31  So there’s an absolutely not rule. And then there’s probably some version of who’s it most important to rule on this thing.

Nate Berkus 00:29:38  Yeah. I mean I stay out of the kitchen. I can’t cook. You know, I load the dishwasher 80 times a day. He stays out of the laundry room. He doesn’t care about my depth of drawers that I want. And I’m a Virgo, so I’m like, you know, horrible to live with. Anyway. On and on. So many levels. I like things exactly how I want them. You know, he stays out of the internal organization conversation. I don’t offer my opinion on appliances because I don’t know how to turn them on. So, you know. Yeah, it’s.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:07  You have your areas.

Nate Berkus 00:30:08  Yeah. Yeah, we have our we have our areas.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:10  Hey, friend, before we dive back in, I want you to take a second and think about what you’ve been listening to. What’s one thing that really landed? And what’s one tiny action you could take today to live it out? Those little moments of reflection. That’s exactly why I started good wolf reminders. Short, free text messages that land in your phone once or twice a week.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:33  Nearly 5000 people already get them and say the quick bursts of insight helped them shift out of autopilot and stay intentional in their lives. If that sounds like your kind of thing, head to oneyoufeed.net/sms and sign up. It’s free. No spam and easy to opt out of any time. Again, that’s one you feed. Net. Tiny nudges, real change. All right, back to the show. 

In the book foundations, you say personal design is never instantaneous. Give yourself time. And I love that idea because it’s at the heart of my approach to change, which is little by little. Right? You get there over time. Talk to me about this idea of, you know, design not being instantaneous or any way you want to elaborate on the nature of things not being sudden.

Nate Berkus 00:31:26  I wrote this book primarily to get people to slow down. We’re inundated with imagery. We’re inundated with trend. Trend is driven by, obviously, the desire to get people to buy more stuff that they don’t need.

Nate Berkus 00:31:41  I’ve always been vehemently anti trend as it pertains to the home because it literally is just again, it’s to make us buy stuff we don’t want or need and to make us feel bad about what we didn’t buy the season before. You know, it’s just the whole thing. The idea of that in home has always really bothered me. I don’t care what the Pantone color of the year is, I don’t care what the Wool Bureau thinks. I just to me, it’s just such a personal journey. And I philosophically, what I’ve seen, especially throughout the course of my career is the accessibility has changed. Furniture is so much less expensive now. You can find it everywhere. It’s you know, when I was a kid, the only place you could buy inexpensive furniture was when it was marked up at a furniture store. And the hook was that they had their own financing. No payments till, you know, 20, 30 deferred to this. And but you were still paying $1,800 for a dining room table that was made in China and a piece of garbage.

Nate Berkus 00:32:45  So I wrote foundations to ask people if you want to really live well. From everything that I’ve learned in the last 30 years, you have to slow down. You have to shut the noise out. You have to start making decisions that are more meaningful, more thoughtful, more strategic. And here’s how to do it. And you know, I broke the book into sections of of areas of the home. So if you don’t have to digest everything that I have to say about every space. If you are just redecorating a bathroom or renovating your kitchen, you can look at that. But most importantly to me was the idea that if we do take a slower, more thoughtful approach before we begin the design process, what will happen and what will happen is, is that we’ll end up with homes that really do stand the test of time, that really do represent us in this space. Everything we were just talking about previously, that’s the greatest part of design.

Eric Zimmer 00:33:45  Yes. Slowing down, that is such a big thing and such a difficult thing to do these days. It’s partially why I still love reading things. You just like a book takes a while to get through. It intentionally slows me down.

Nate Berkus 00:34:00  Agreed.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:01  I’ve always loved reading, and I’ve always particularly fiction also, but I’ve grown to appreciate it even more in recent years because I’m like, I rush through so many other things, you know, work wise and and this is a place that, like, really forces us slowing down.

Nate Berkus 00:34:17  Absolutely. Design’s the same. I mean, you know, wanting to live better is a universal thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:47  So I’d like to turn to a chapter of your life that you’ve been very open about. That was a very difficult chapter for you, which had to do with losing your partner in a tsunami. Can you talk us through what happened, and maybe we can explore it from a couple of different angles?

Nate Berkus 00:35:04  Yeah, it was obviously a probably the hardest time of my life. It was for me, a time of, like, great learning, great lessons. Really, really awful.

Nate Berkus 00:35:17  Yeah, on every level. But essentially, my boyfriend, we’d been together for a year and I were vacationing in Sri Lanka, and we were in a small fishing slash surfing village. staying in these sort of huts about 50m from the, the sea. And we woke up on Boxing Day and we were drowning inside the hut. It was about 9 a.m., I think, and I survived. Fernando did not. His body was never found. I still to this day, I’m not sure how I survived the force of that tsunami. I was taken inland over the entire town, passed cars and buildings and trucks and animals and babies and you name it, and then brought back out to sea and then pushed back in again over all the debris village Where we were. And I ended up in a still moment in between the the current changing direction, I was able to climb on top of a house, which I selected. It was fully submerged, but what wasn’t submerged was the roof. And I thought this might hold because it has a chimney, so it’s likely a little bit better built than everything around it.

Nate Berkus 00:36:30  And eventually I had to climb back into the water, into the bodies and the debris and and swim to the nearest shore. What I could guess was the shore at the time, because it was unrecognizable, and then was part of an effort of trying to help people reconnect with their families and their loved ones. While I was still actively searching for Fernando, I stayed in Sri Lanka, moved to the capital two days after the tsunami by car, first by military helicopter, to a hospital and then by car. And then when I finally decided to come back to the United States. I think part of me spiritually knew that he was gone. I don’t think I would have been able to leave the country if I believed that he was still alive. So it was a time where I noticed many things. I, I noticed my own ability to survive. I noticed what it means to be fully dependent on the kindness of others. I noticed what it meant to be in a foreign land and how those people, the Sri Lankan people, reacted and took care of all of the expats that were there on holiday.

Nate Berkus 00:37:48  I noticed how important it was to maintain your humanity, because I saw also lots of situations where people pushed to the front of the line to get on the helicopter, first in front of pregnant women who were gravely injured. There’s no button on this. You know, it’s something that I still navigate, not in ways I think people would think that I’m still affected by it, but in moments where I feel a real loss of control or real fear for my own personal safety or my kids or my husband’s safety, I am not great at navigating that still. It’s been 20 years, but that’s where it creeps up for me still.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:29  Yeah, I’ve seen a lot of the conversations around, around grief being a big part of it, but that’s an extraordinarily traumatic experience to go through. I mean, it must have been terrifying.

Nate Berkus 00:38:42  You know, I’m always grateful that I actually witnessed it and that I was in it and survived it myself and wasn’t back here in New York City or in Chicago at the time, and got a phone call that Fernando was killed.

Nate Berkus 00:38:55  I would have never understood the magnitude, the force of the world being turned upside down. That could take a spirit such as his away. I’m so grateful that that’s how it panned out for me, that I got to see it and experience it so that I would understand and be able to understand and work through the loss and the grief the way that I needed to. It was complete devastation in multiple countries. It was hundreds of thousands of people who lost their lives on that day. I had a hard time believing in physics and things like that. After that, I remember coming back to Chicago and walking down this, this sidewalk, wondering why the buildings weren’t just like falling on me. You know, my sense of balance, my sense of trust, my sense of gravity, all of that was completely affected for a while. And, you know, I worked with a grief counselor who came to my home. My parents had organized this, and I would just go in with a pack of cigarettes and talk for hours about all of this, and it was unbelievably helpful to me.

Nate Berkus 00:40:05  My fear was that I would be weird forever. That was my fear that I wouldn’t be able to function in conversation, in business, in in any way, socially after I had experienced that. And Colin, who was the doctor that I was lucky enough to work with, said to me, you know, it’s not linear. It’s, you know, this experience, the grief and the trauma is not linear. It’s it’s going to ebb and flow. You’re not going to get five gold stars and move on to the next stage of this. This is going to be something that you’re going to have a new normal, and you’re going to have to figure out how to navigate that. My father, who passed away, there was a moment in my apartment in Chicago, and all these people were in that apartment every day. When I finally returned to to the States, and my dad was in conversation with a couple of other guys, family, friends and, and friends of mine. And I don’t remember what they were talking about, And I was sitting there listening to their conversation and I couldn’t contribute and I didn’t care.

Nate Berkus 00:41:11  And I couldn’t believe that they were so ingrained in whatever they were talking about. I just was like, hovering above the entire thing. And so I was sitting there trying to follow their conversation, innocuous conversation about nothing. And I stood up and I walked down the hallway, and I was standing in my closet, just standing there. And I turned around. My father was standing behind me, and he said to me, what’s wrong? And I said, I’m weird, dad. I can’t engage like I used to engage. My mind isn’t able to do it. I don’t know what’s wrong with me. I mean, I know what’s wrong with me, but I just. I just feel so strange. And he put his arms around me and he said, whoever you are now is okay because the alternative is unthinkable. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:04  It’s beautiful. I think the the significant things that happen in our lives, they do change us. There’s no getting around that. And the work is often how do we integrate those things so that we end up becoming a better person because of them 100%.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:21  And I don’t think that’s automatic. Right. Because I think you can see people, and I’ve been fascinated by what causes some people to go through something like you did and emerge. ultimately not. I mean, not right away, but over time, a person who’s fairly healed, who’s more compassionate, who is able to take some things from that and, and put it into their lives. And, and then what causes some people to be broken by those things or be hardened by those things or become bitter or cynical? And I don’t think we know all the answers to why, but some of it certainly is what you did, which is to is to get some help. Yeah, things like that. Are there too big for a single individual to carry.

Nate Berkus 00:43:01  I think there’s a lot, you know, that’s too big for a single individual to carry. I think, you know, pain is pretty universal as well. I think all pain is the same. You don’t have to live through a tsunami to feel like you don’t have the skills to move forward or figure out an answer about a situation you find yourself in.

Nate Berkus 00:43:23  You know someone’s health scare. Is anything more important? Is anything less important than you know to the person that’s going through it at the time? I don’t believe that it is. In fact, I remember coming home from Sri Lanka and standing at CVS wondering what happened to the lady in front of me in line and what might have happened to the lady behind me in line. Like, we just don’t know each other’s stories like that. That’s why the one you feed exists. Like we want to know each other’s stories. I believe that we really do. And I believe we we benefit from it. I think that I’m proud of myself for not letting it break me. I am. You know, I’ve got an enormous sense of accomplishment around that, and I trust myself differently. I don’t think I could go through something of that magnitude again and come out of it the same way that I was able to the first time. Yeah, I don’t think I have that in me. And I hope I’m never, you know, tested.

Nate Berkus 00:44:18  Yeah. But it has made me deeply empathetic. It has made me deeply connected to other people and the things that they go through. And it has also, you know, again, you know, reprioritize a lot for me in how I moved through the world. You know, we we spoke about Grace in the beginning of this interview. We we’ve touched on a lot of the sort of sentiments that connect you to the, the best parts of ourselves versus the demons are badly behaved. You know, which we all do. You always read about, like these women who go through breast cancer and they think they’re grateful that they went through it, and that before the tsunami was something I never understood. I was like, what could you have possibly gained from this experience that made you say out loud, or write down that I have gratitude for having had this. And after the tsunami, after some time had passed, I understood that so deeply. I understood exactly what they meant, and I understand exactly what I mean.

Nate Berkus 00:45:21  I would not be the same person I am today had I not experienced that. I’m still close to Fernando’s family. His brother’s extremely honest. He said to me once, I’m really mad it wasn’t you. I said, I get it. Yeah, I’m sure you are. I wouldn’t understand either. You know the city kid. Fernando was a surfer. He grew up in the jungle in Brazil. Like he should have survived. I shouldn’t have, you know. I wouldn’t have put my money on me. But I did. And I think even very early on, what I felt was this sense of obligation to his memory that I wouldn’t waste my life, that I wouldn’t, you know, just call it in, dial it in and not be present. I felt I owed him better than that, and I knew that that’s what he would have wanted for me. You know, I don’t always believe that we, you know, we assigned a lot of things to dead people that we think are, you know, going to serve us.

Nate Berkus 00:46:18  I assigned that to him pretty early on because he would have done the same. He would have gone through the grief. He would have he would have let himself be devastated and sad, but he would have pulled himself out of it as well. I really believed that.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:30  Yeah, yeah. That idea of being grateful for the bad things that happen. I mean, I was a homeless heroin addict at 24 and I, you know, I had hepatitis C and I was dying, and I had 50 years of jail time pending. And, you know, it was a pretty bad experience, albeit one I kind of put myself in. But nonetheless, I do think I’m grateful for that experience. I certainly can’t fathom who I would be without it. It’s a question that doesn’t even compute, right? Because it became such a part, and the healing from that and all that became such a part of who I was that to contemplate that I could be, that that couldn’t have happened doesn’t make sense to me, right?

Nate Berkus 00:47:09  I feel the same.

Nate Berkus 00:47:10  Yeah, I know exactly what you mean. I feel exactly the same.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:13  Yeah. As we wrap up, take one thing from today and ask yourself, how will I practice this before the end of the day? For another gentle nudge, join good Wolf Reminders text list. It’s a short message or two each week, packed with guest wisdom and a soft push towards action. Nearly 5000 listeners are already loving it. Sign up free at oneyoufeed.net/sms. No noise, no spam, just steady encouragement to feed your good wolf. 

We talked about this a little bit earlier on, but I’d like to I’d like to kind of come back to it for a moment, which is, you know, the intersection of our emotional well-being in the spaces that we live in. Share a little bit more about your belief in that, or what you’ve seen, or examples, anything you want to say there. But I want to hit that again.

Nate Berkus 00:48:05  I can’t change someone’s priority as a client’s priority. As I’ve worked with billionaires, I’ve worked with celebrities, I’ve worked with young couples, I’ve worked with people all over the country. I’ve worked with formerly homeless people. I’ve worked with. You name it. And, you know, if someone’s an asshole, they’re an asshole. Like.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:23  Their new couch isn’t going to fix that. Yeah, exactly.

Nate Berkus 00:48:26  I mean, like, come on. Like, let’s. You know, I’m not going to shift your paradigm if you’re, you know, vibrating at, like, the lowest frequency. But luckily, in my practice in my firm, I don’t have to work with you. Yeah. You know, that’s great. It’s also sometimes about listening. Can I share with you a story of one of the Oprah makeovers that stayed with me all these years?

Eric Zimmer 00:48:48  Please.

Nate Berkus 00:48:48  Yeah. So the producers and I got wind of a kid who had lost his twin brother to a car accident, and he was baking cookies with his mom and selling them in his community. And the name of the cookie company was the name of the brother who died. And they were on the local news, I think it was Baltimore.

Nate Berkus 00:49:10  They were on the local news and the Oprah producers got wind of the story. And, you know, this is exactly what a television producers dream is. And they were like, this is awesome. We’re going to go we’re going to build them a dream kitchen so that the mom and the surviving twin can bake their cookies in this incredible kitchen, and you’re going to design it, and it’s going to be so great. And I said, great. It sounds great. And so we all packed up and we flew to, to Baltimore and, and we did the pre-interview. And I had the pre-interview with the answers to the questions that were asked, the mom and the son. And we walk into their home and the crews all there. And I’m sitting. Talking with them. And the son is answering me verbatim what was written down as his response to the pre-interview. Every question I asked was verbatim, and I looked up and on their drywall, their white drywall ceiling were all the scuff marks of all the mikes that had been in that kitchen interviewing that kid and that mom.

Nate Berkus 00:50:15  And I said, can I have a just a moment, guys, I’ll be right back. And I went outside and I took my mobile and I called Chicago and I said, something’s wrong. I just feel it like the mom I don’t think can make it through the day. The son. His answers are so rehearsed. And he said them a thousand times. I’m not connecting with them. There were walls up, literally walls up, and their ceiling is all nicked up from all the sound equipment. So there had to be 50 crews in here. I don’t know how many times they’ve done this. And they said, well, what do you want to do? I said, I need to talk to them. I need to understand what this is really about. And so they said, okay, do your thing. We’ve never stood in your way. And I sat down with the kid, the son, and I said, what’s really going on? Tell me about this cookie company. Like, well, I’m doing it to honor my brother’s memory and my mom and I, and I said, no, but do you want to be doing this? And he looked at me and he goes, not really.

Nate Berkus 00:51:14  I said, well, what do you want to do? He said, you know, I feel like I have to do this because my mom’s so sad and she’s so sad all the time, and sometimes she even cries when we’re making the cookies. But I want to go to space camp, and I said, I got it. He was eight years old, I got it. And so I went back in, and then I sat down with the mother and I said, I want to talk to you about this because I can feel I’ve experienced loss and tragic loss and instant loss, and I can feel your sadness. I can feel how hard everything is for you. Even though you look beautiful and you have your makeup on and you know, and all this stuff and you’re ready for us to come today. You seem really sad. And she fell apart and she said, I can’t drive past the school. I can’t drive past the gas station where they used to beg me for candy bars. I can’t bear the idea of Thanksgiving coming up.

Nate Berkus 00:52:08  I can’t fathom the idea of Christmas and the anniversary of his death. Well, I take to my bed three weeks prior, and I. I can barely get out of bed, you know, for two weeks after I just all these dates, these dates, these dates keep coming at me. And I said, can I share something with you? You got to take the power out of the date. You’re allowed to feel sad whenever you want to feel sad. It doesn’t have to be on Christmas time. It doesn’t have to be on the anniversary of his death. It could be Tuesday that you can’t get out of bed, and that’s fine. But I’m worried here. I’m worried for your surviving kid. I don’t think he wants to make cookies anymore. I think he’s doing it for you. And she said, oh, well, what does he want to do? And I said, he wants to go to space camp. And she said, well, we can’t afford space camp. And I said, we can afford space camp, but do you want him to do that? And so I said, don’t worry, we’re going to give you a new oven.

Nate Berkus 00:53:09  Like, you know, we’re not taking it when you get a new kitchen. That’s that’s for sure happening. That’s why we’re here. But if we make the new kitchen and your son has grown out of this idea, even though it’s been on every news channel and all of this. Are you okay with that? Are you okay with just having a beautiful new kitchen? And she said absolutely. And I said, my wish for you is that this journey that you’re on, of the grief which no one can understand and no one should advise you on in all of this, is that you just let yourself let go a little bit of the calendar and how it’s attached to to how you’re moving through this. I’m really impressed that you’re letting him go to space camp. He’s going to be so excited. I think you should be the one to tell him. And we just had the most incredible experience. And in my final Oprah show, the producers brought back all of these guests and all these homeowners that I had had the great opportunity to impact.

Nate Berkus 00:54:05  And they were there. And she got on stage and she said to me, no one had ever stopped to listen to what I was really going through. And it became this news story that got away from us. And I knew he didn’t want to be in the kitchen with me every weekend baking cookies. I knew, but I didn’t know how to ask him, and I didn’t know how to to move through the situation. And you coming into our kitchen that day changed the trajectory for me of how I was able to grieve the loss of my son and face the holidays that I was so afraid to face, and also to be able to focus on what my surviving kid was going through. So thank you. That is where the power of intention for me has always lied. It’s never really been about the I know how to make a space beautiful. I know, I know, I’ve done it for 30 years. I could redo any space anywhere and make it better and leave it better than how I found it.

Nate Berkus 00:55:15  However, it’s the people that actually really have been the most impactful to me, not the architecture.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:23  That is a truly beautiful story and a truly beautiful way for us to wrap up. Thank you so much for coming on and sharing so many different things. I’ve really enjoyed this.

Nate Berkus 00:55:34  It’s my pleasure. I appreciate when you saw the booking. Nate Berkus, interior designer. Were you like, Let me think here.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:42  Well, I approve them all. But my producer, Nicole said, I think this one could be good. I think he’s good. I think this could be good. And when she feels strongly about something, I say, all right, let’s try it.

Nate Berkus 00:55:55  And then I appreciate you trying.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:57  Yeah. And then as I did prep, I was like, oh, I could this would be we got this, you know, we got this.

Nate Berkus 00:56:01  We got this. Thank you. Thank you for having me. I really am very grateful.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:05  Thank you so much for listening to the show.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:08  If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the one You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

When Your Brain Won’t Fit the World: Finding Your Creative Path with ADHD with Andy J. Pizza

December 12, 2025 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Andy J. Pizza joins Eric Zimmer for When Your Brain Won’t Fit the World: Finding Your Creative Path with ADHD, a conversation about creativity, identity, and what happens when you stop treating yourself as a problem to fix. Andy shares how discovering ADHD helped him reframe years of self-doubt, better understand his parents, and build a creative life that actually fits the way his mind works. Together, they explore self-acceptance, the role of labels, and how art can become a powerful way to excavate who we really are.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • ADHD as a form of neurodiversity rather than a personal deficit
  • The connection between ADHD and creativity, imagination, and divergent thinking
  • How self-compassion supports mental health and sustainable personal growth
  • The role of diagnosis and language in understanding identity and behavior
  • The influence of childhood and family dynamics on self-perception
  • Moving from self-criticism to self-acceptance in creative and personal life
  • Creativity as a tool for self-discovery, meaning, and emotional insight
  • Designing habits and environments that support how your brain works

Andy J. Pizza, based in Columbus, OH, is an American illustrator who has worked for clients such as The New York Times and LEGO, as well as illustrated picture books like “A Pizza With Everything On It.” (Amazon’s Best Kid’s Books List 2021, Booklist Starred Review). His podcast, Creative Pep Talk, hosts guests like comedian Abbi Jacobson and poet Morgan Harper Nichols. Andy is also storyteller, often pep talking teams at creative hubs like Warby Parker and Sesame Street. His new book is Invisible Things.

Connect with Andy J. Pizza: Website | Instagram | Twitter

If you enjoyed this conversation with Andy J. Pizza, check out these other episodes:

Creativity as a Cure with Jacob Nordby

Eric Tivers on ADHD in Adults

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Episode Transcript:

Eric Zimmer  01:50

Hi, Andy, welcome to the show. Eric, I am excited to have you on we are sitting here in your studio in Westerville, Ohio, which is right near Columbus, Ohio, a suburb so yeah, we live near each other. So it’s always fun to do these in person. I was out here a while ago, and I was a guest on your show creative pep talk. But today we’re going to be talking more about you and your path. But before we do that, we’ll start like we always do with the parable. In the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild. And they say in life, there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love. And the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops. Think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent, they say, Well, which one wins? And the grandparent says the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Andy J Pizza  02:48

Yeah, I think I have wrestled with that a lot. I think my whole upbringing, I feel like I would have had more clarity on it almost because I think I was raised in a world where everything seemed very doable. And I think I had a clearer sense of like, oh, this is what’s right, this is what’s wrong. And it’s not that I don’t feel that now. I do feel that way. But I’ve become interested in kind of poking at like, what’s behind the bad wolf. Like, What’s he after? I think for me, there was a evolution that happened where I shifted from, oh, I’m having these problems because I’m bad. And more like I’m having these problems, because I’m resisting who I am. And I think that getting curious about my addictions or my issues, instead of assuming like, this is something that’s wrong with me, assuming like, maybe this is just a misdirected good thing. Maybe I’m after something positive, really. But because I’m trying to ignore it, it’s turning into something out of control. And so I think as I think about where I am in my life right now, that’s the thing that comes up. I’m like, What’s wrong with this wolf? What? Why is this? Why is there a bad wolf in here? What does he need? What does he not understand? I’ve been going on a big Jung Yeon kick for the past few years. And I think it kind of gets at his perspective of the shadow, or thinking about whatever the Minotaur is in the labyrinth, like, that’s the part of you that’s got out of control, and you got to go in there and face it. I don’t know if that answered the question. But that’s kind of where my head goes.

Eric Zimmer  04:33

Yeah, I think it does. And as you were talking, I was thinking about, you talk to dog trainers often and you say to them, you know, I’ve got this dog who’s really out of control. They’ll often say, Well, really what we’ve got here is a people problem, meaning the environment you’ve got the dog in, and the message is you’re giving the dog and the signals that you’re giving the dog are creating this problem. There’s nothing wrong with a dog when the dog is given the right environment. It will begin to To be, quote, unquote, a good dog. Now, you know, humans are not that simple. But I thought we could start there, because you’ve talked recently about your mother. And you know, her struggles and your sort of desire to try not to be like her, and then maybe think that maybe you were like her, and maybe we could start there. Tell us a little bit about that.

Andy J Pizza  05:23

Yeah, I would love to talk about that. It’s a big part of my journey is growing up being the creative weirdo, you know, qualities that I clearly got from my mom. And when I was really young, I was, like, stoked about that, because she was the most creative, interesting person in my life. So being compared to her was great. But as I got older, I started to feel complicated about that, as I saw her life kind of devolve into chaos. And I noticed that people that told me that I was just like her, didn’t actually have the highest opinion of her, you know, they would say, so I was like, God, it’s not a compliment, like I thought it was, you know, they talked about how she can’t stick to anything, she can’t stick to a job, she’s late to everything, she can’t stick to an appointment, she can’t stick to a marriage like, and I started to as I got older, just feel like I don’t know how I feel about being just like her. And so I think by the time I was 17, I probably saw myself as a bad thing that needed to be overcome, and conquered and repressed. And I wanted to be the opposite of her. And I spent, you know, a few years really grinding down who I was, and desperately trying to shift these qualities and aspects of myself that I saw were coming from her. And I think that season wasn’t for nothing. There were good things that came from the, but ultimately, I couldn’t escape who I was. And I think it wasn’t until I came across this talk about us adult with ADHD. And I started to recognize all of these qualities, you know, as he’s going and talking about it, and, and talking about not being able to make an appointment or stick to things and stick to jobs and the difficulties around that. And I started hearing my story, but also my mom’s story. And I started reading all about ADHD. And the more that I read about it, the more I felt like I understood her, and I saw her in a light that I’d never seen her in. And so what happened was, I started to suspect that maybe she failed, not because of who she was, but because she was trying to be somebody that she wasn’t. And I started to get more curious about what would it look like to quit trying to be the opposite of her. And the way that I always think of it is, instead tried to be more like her than she ever let herself be. And that has proved to be a much better policy for me. And you know, the other thing that happened at that time, I think you were talking about environment at that same time. So I tried to be an illustrator, I tried to make that work right out the gate of college, I studied that in college, and then I got a few lucky breaks out the door. But ultimately, it kind of all disappeared overnight, for whatever reason. And I had to get a job at this youth shelter. So I was working at this youth shelter. And it was kind of my worst nightmare, actually, because it was connected to a juvenile detention center, which I didn’t understand when I got the job that I would be required to take shifts over there too. And so as someone with ADHD, I find like traditional employment to feel like a jail. And here I was like in traditional employment in an actual jail, it was my first shift. I mean, I was just having a panic attack, just going back into this lockdown facility without windows. But looking back, I’ve started to think about how much facing that fear was a very formative experience to me, because the thing that everyone knows that works there is that the kids that are in the shelter that are being taken care of because they currently don’t have a home and the kids that end up in the juvenile detention center. They’re almost all the same kids, literally, they just go back and forth from these two places. And the thing that I think really broke something open for me was that they could be in the exact same place literally. And depending on how they think they got there, completely change their behavior, because when they were on the shelter side, and they were there because they deserve a roof over their heads. They acted pretty good. When they were on the juvenile detention side where they were there because they were bad. They acted bad. And so I think that that worldview of are you a bad thing to repress? Or are you a good thing to cultivate? Ultimately, the seed of that I think was found in that job.

Eric Zimmer  10:11

There’s a lot of stuff in there that we could go into. And I want to start with going back to a little bit more about your mother, because it sounds like her problems were more than just she couldn’t make appointments.

Andy J Pizza  10:25

Yeah, yeah, I mean, it’s definitely true. So by the time I was about 17, she had left her second family ended up with this guy that was physically abusive, and kind of just a bad dude. And I got a phone call from her sister saying that she was in the hospital, and that they’d found out that she had a brain tumor, she had this very hardcore drug addiction. And, you know, they didn’t know if she was going to make it, they had to do emergency brain surgery, which they did. And, you know, part of the thing I relate to with her is that I’m a talker. So I have a podcast. So it was pretty devastating to watch her go through this, because when they removed the tumor, it actually initially really destroyed her speaking ability, because it was right in the center of like, the vocabulary area of the brain. And so when she got out, she couldn’t remember hardly any words. And so it was pretty devastating to watch her kind of lose her essence, in a way. And so yeah, it got pretty bad. You know, I remember seeing her after she got out of a hospital, and being devastated to see her in that place. But also just completely burdened by the idea of like, I’m just like this person, like, this is what’s going to happen to me. And the fact of the matter is, I was already doing drugs, I was already, you know, trying to avoid school and work if possible. And yeah, I could sense like, this is the path that I’m on.

Eric Zimmer  11:58

I think it’s interesting to think about our parents, because we are in reaction to our parents very often, whether that reaction is we are trying to be like them, because we admire them or because that’s how they want us to be and we want to please them, or because we think the way they are isn’t good. And we’re reacting against that. It’s this dynamic, where, if we’re not conscious about it, we can get spun around in really difficult ways. Like, I worked really, really hard, I was certain that I would not be my father. My father was very angry, you know, everybody in the neighborhood was scared of him. I mean, he was just an angry person. Yeah. And so that was the obvious sort of, quote, unquote, bad behavior in my house, it was the one that everybody remarked upon. Yeah. And so I’m like, I’m not going to be like that, I’m not going to be like that, I’m not going to be like that. And at the same time there was sitting over on the other shore was my mother, who her behavior seemed fine. But it’s interested in not becoming my father, I took on many of the worst qualities of my mother, which were depression, right? Because I was so determined not to be angry, that that emotion could have no place in my life. And all I could have is like, shove it down, shove it down, shove it down, which we know, leads to depression. And so then later on, I’m like, Well, hang on a second. I guess I’m not a lot like my dad. But holy mackerel, and a lot like my mom. And I just find it interesting to think about how those dynamics really play out slightly differently for everybody. But everybody’s doing that dance, they might be doing it differently.

Andy J Pizza  13:36

Yeah, 100%. I totally relate. I have my own versions of that. I kind of feel like the journey is to become a third thing to become a thing that isn’t either of those people, you know, that’s right.

Eric Zimmer  13:49

That’s right. And it does take a certain degree of intentionality and awareness of that stuff. Otherwise, we tend to be shaped by what’s around us unless we’re intentional in shaping it. Yep. So the next thing I’d like to go into a little bit more is ADHD. I’d love to hear about what your journey with that looked like after you went, Okay, maybe I’ve got this thing. You know, I’ve watched this talk, you know, you mentioned you then went on the internet and started doing scrolling for, you know, back before that was a word for ADHD, right, and learning all about it. So where did that lead you? And how is that unspooled over the years? Yeah,

Andy J Pizza  14:27

I mean, it’s been a massive revelation for me. And it started actually, before that, I kind of had suspected that I had ADHD all the way back when I was in kindergarten, I remember I think was kindergarten or first grade. And there was this kid named Jeremy who just would like run around the gym, and we’d both just be absurd and crazy. And then I remember one time in open gym, he stopped and he’s like, Hey, I just gotta go to the office real quick. And I was like, why? And he’s like, I gotta go get my medicine. I was like, Are you sick? And he’s like, No, I’m just hyper. And I thought, Oh, I I didn’t know you’d need medicine for that. I thought it was just being awesome. And then in high school, I had an experience where in my period where I was experimenting a lot with drugs, one time, we got some Adderall from a friend who had ADHD, me and a buddy of mine. And we both took it and went home. And we both did crazy things at night, my friend, Brian, he didn’t sleep a wink, watch, the Sunrise was completely wired. And I did something crazier than that, which was my homework and in an efficient manner. And I remember thinking like, well, I don’t know what this means. I can’t really tell my parents this because I’m doing illegal behavior. But I was curious about it. And so I think, but I also just stuffed it, because I just thought, this is something wrong with me, I don’t want to think about it. I’ll just get past it. And so as an adult, once I started to open that door, I think that it did a lot of things. I feel like there’s a lot of debate around, should you or should you not seek out a diagnosis around the different things that you’ve got going on? And I feel like I’m somewhere in the middle, in that. I feel like we have the DSM, we have so much information about what’s wrong with people in terms of neuroscience, and neurologically, maybe it just doesn’t pay to figure out what’s right with you. I don’t know, you can do that a little bit. But it just doesn’t seem as like, there’s not as much scientific rigor around what’s the cool things about your brain. And so I think for me, personally, I always encourage people, like go figure out whatever they say is wrong with you. Because it will be a roadmap. And if you see it through a different lens, like the way I see it is ADHD is not an all good thing. It’s not an all bad thing. But the more I understood what it was, the more I found ways to work with it. And then also have self compassion for like, the world I find myself in isn’t necessarily ideal for this. And I like to think of it like Waterworld, that Kevin Costner movie where some people have developed gills other people haven’t. I feel like I live in a water world and I didn’t develop gills. So it’s okay, if I need a snorkel and some scuba gear like I need some extra help, like and seeking that diagnosis, I think helped me find that and also helped me lean into the strength around it.

Eric Zimmer  17:32

Yeah, I think that question of diagnosis of label Yeah, of what’s the right response of what is just normal, sort of the range of human functioning and what is quote unquote, a disorder. Yeah, I mean, these are really complicated questions. Arey, I think we’ve come a long, long way as a society, around mental health. Yeah. And we have an extraordinarily long way to go. Because nobody really understands what is going on. You know, Andrew, and the more you get into it, the more you start realizing like Well, I’m not saying this is you let’s talk about Jeremy was Jeremy, Jeremy, Jeremy had ADHD. And then a little bit later, he was diagnosed with anxiety. And then a little bit later, he was diagnosed with perhaps bipolar. And you start looking at that and you go, Well, boy, Jeremy is an extraordinarily unlucky guy to be diagnosed with like five or six different What’s wrong, Jeremy has really been dealt a bad hand, right? So you start to go well, okay. There’s something going on underneath these, that there may be a commonality here, but we don’t know what it is. And your ADHD looks different than Jeremy’s ADHD. Again, I think we’ve made a ton of progress. And I think that we have ways of helping people who are suffering extraordinarily that we didn’t have. And still our own journey through it is really, really complicated. But I love that idea of the Waterworld analogy, because I feel the same way. Like, for whatever reason, I have mood issues, depression related and there been times that I’ve needed snorkels and I needed different things. And those have been extraordinarily helpful. And then there’s been times I’ve needed to go like, well, it’s okay that I don’t even swim that well. Like no big deal. Who cares about swimming like, so? It’s finding way through all that, that I think takes a lot of nuance.

Andy J Pizza  19:28

Yep, I agree completely. And I think shifting my thinking of like, oh, I need a snorkel because I’m bad. Yes, different than I need a snorkel because I love myself and I don’t need to grind through life just because these were the cards that I was dealt

Eric Zimmer  20:06

We all know that genuine self compassion and self love are absolutely crucial in the quest for healing, transformation and everyday growth. But what if we struggle to get there one of the most powerful yet effortless ways to settle our nervous system and reconnect with our true selves is by spending quality time in nature. It’s for this reason that this August I’ll be offering an in person awakening in the outdoors retreat at the beautiful Kripalu center this summer, I’ll be co teaching the retreat with Ralph de la Rosa, who’s a three time guest of the podcast author, psychologist, meditation teacher and friend during these five days together will enjoy hikes, outdoor meditations, art, insightful workshops and lively discussions. Our goal is for you to walk away feeling restored with a firm awareness of new resources and a new relationship with the gifts nature holds for us to learn more about this special retreat and sign up go to one you feed.net/nature How do you tweeze apart ADHD and creativity? Yeah, because there’s some crossover there in what you see. And so I’ll give you my personal example of this. And I’d love you to reflect on it and your own case, which is on one hand, I have suffered from depression, and there’s times it’s been really bad. And on the other hand, I think I have a slightly melancholy type temperament. And I think some of that is who I am. Yeah. And so you know, I don’t want to be pathologizing very natural and good parts of myself. And yet, to your point, I don’t want to be suffering unnecessarily. So how have you thought through that?

Andy J Pizza  21:46

Yeah, I’ve given that a lot of thought. Because I don’t think as a society, we take the idea of the hero’s journey or individuation. seriously enough, I like to think of it like if an alien came through a portal and gave you a device and said, this thing is unique in all the universe, and it’s one of a kind, and then another evil alien comes through a different portal and killed him before he could tell you what it does, you’re gonna be like, I gotta figure out what this does. Like, it’s one of a kind, it’s unique in all the universe, it’s one of the most powerful devices in all the universe, that’s your brain, that’s your brain, your brain is like no other brain. And it is the most powerful thing in the universe. Now, AI is coming up. But our brains at least work in a way that still is a mystery, the way that they work is completely insane. And so I’m taking the long way route here to get to the answer. But I just feel as though it’s really important to take seriously like, how does this particular brain function and what are its strengths and weaknesses, that was one of my favorite things about learning about ADHD was I felt like it gave me a cheat sheet for how my brain was working so that I could kind of codify it in a way where it wasn’t just happening on accident. And the way I like to think about it, I don’t know if this is scientifically accurate, but it’s the way it feels to me is that I have friends whose brain, it seems like you’re in an attic. And it’s like a little tiny spotlight, almost like a laser. And it laser focuses on one little thing in that attic, it can just see this old mannequin or whatever. And it can really drill down and get the micro details of that thing in my brain. And my attention feels much more like this giant spotlight. And I’m seeing 10 things at the same time. And so I think that has really served my ability to do things like analogies and storytelling and metaphor. Because every time I think of a thing, I don’t think of that thing. I think of 10 things I think of oh, it’s like that. And it’s connected to this and connected to that, you know, so my brain thinks in this very kind of abstract way. And the more that I’ve understood like, oh, that divergent way of thinking comes really naturally to me. Well, the reason I highlight that is because I actually think creativity means a lot of different things. I think that there are people who approach creativity through the lens of like Weegee board creativity, where you’re just like, well, I don’t know what the paintbrush is gonna do. So you start and you don’t know what the end is. Whereas, I think is just as creative and I probably lean towards more like puzzle solving or, you know, mystery book writing where you have to work in reverse where you’re like, that’s where I’m going. I’m gonna lay everything, all of the pieces in a giant puzzle. And so I think as I’ve understood how the ADHD brain typically works, I could start leaning towards creative opportunities that’s really well suited for. Does that make sense?

Eric Zimmer  25:09

It does. So what sort of creative activities is the ADH brain well suited to I’m just kind of curious. So yeah, you sort of mentioned the spotlight versus the laser, the laser. Yeah. Or the, you know, diffuse focus versus the detail focused. Right. Yeah. So that sounds like one big area. Are there others?

Andy J Pizza  25:29

I think there are others. I think that the thing that comes to mind as I don’t know if I’ve ever seen anybody say this, but I feel like, I don’t have the bottom level of the building. And not that level of the building is reality. It’s like the way things actually are if you said, How are you feeling? I couldn’t say, this is how I’m feeling. I’d say it’s like this. It’s all metaphor. And so I think that the way I’ve come to understand that is illustration. So illustration is it’s usually the work of symbol and symbol is essentially analogy. And so I think that that’s probably the main way but then also, the other way, I think that the bottom level of the building not existing, like whatever the basic, obvious answer, I feel like I can’t even grab that answer. It’s almost like you’re stuck in a room, there’s a door, and I’ll do everything, but try the handle. So I’ll find out 10 Other ways to get out of this room that aren’t opening the door with the handle. And so I do think it gives me a whole bunch of options. But it does often mean that I don’t do the common sense option. And that is true, whether I’m making art or a podcast episode, or whether I’m just at the grocery store, just doing something weird. And someone comes along that works there. And they’re like, Do you need help? So yeah, I feel like it’s Yeah, seem that divergent all these different ways of doing things. And then I think it’s the illustration as symbol and analogy that comes really natural to me.

Eric Zimmer  27:13

Yep. It’s interesting. As I look around, and I look in your studio here at all of your art, right? It’s pretty obvious, you’re not a detail focused guy. Yeah. Your creatures don’t have a lot of lost in any fine detail, you know, which I’m not in any way criticizing, just as you were saying that I was like, that tracks.

Andy J Pizza  27:32

That’s my jam. And actually, when I started really trying to develop my visual vernacular, I did this project where I did a new character every weekday for a year. And really the challenge I knew for myself is that one of the reasons I did it was because my taste is so abstract lack of detail. Even when I was growing up with superheroes, I liked the ones that had almost no detail, like spider man was very cool. But even like Black Panther was cooler than that for me, because it’s just a black suit, all curves. Anything that was like, too much stuff going on. I don’t know, it just not my taste. So I did these 260 characters, because the challenge was, how do you do very little, but evoke everything you want to say and do it in a unique way. Because if your taste is that minimal, like in the world we live in a lot has been done. So trying to find your voice within a circle with legs is not very easy. And it comes down to the nuance. So those 260 characters were made just trying to figure out from doing very little, how can I do a ton

Eric Zimmer  28:41

now? Did you give yourself specific constraints or your taste was the constraint?

Andy J Pizza  28:47

Just my taste? I mean, taste is a big thread through everything I do. It’s a thing I talk about on my podcast all the time. Like, I think taste does not get enough play. I don’t think it’s everything in creativity. But I do think it’s the starting block. You might have saw, like 10 years ago, there was this clip of Ira Glass that went viral. Yeah, he talks about taste in that. The funny thing is, though, everybody talks about that clip, because it’s like the gap, the gap between the tastes that you have, and the work that you’re able to do and your tastes and saying this work that I’m able to do as in any good. Everybody talks about the gap of that, but I got hung up on an earlier part of that video, where he said, everybody starts making stuff because they have great taste. And I heard that and I thought, I don’t think that’s a given. I’ve never heard anybody say that. I heard Gordon Ramsay say a similar thing. And I was like, What is this Gordon Ramsay was asked like, what do you look for in young chefs to know that they have talent and I thought, you know, cook a steak to perfection. I’m thinking skill based things. And he said great taste. He’s like, if they don’t have a great palette that can pick up on nuance. They can’t make Good food. That’s the thing that guides your creative process. And I think they were getting at the same thing. And so I’ve kind of dove deep into that world over the past eight years to try to figure that out. And then as you pull it that you realize, like, I’m not super versed in philosophy, but I know Immanuel Kant is pretty famous in that world. And he had a huge body of work around the idea of taste, because he thought it was one of the only things that came built into your system. A Priore, like, taste is something that you don’t learn. And I think that’s the building blocks. So yeah, when I was going into that project, I knew I’m not going to make stuff that I don’t like, like I’m going to have to stick with in this taste, but then find the edges of it. Because it can’t just be stuff that I like, that’s already been done that I know that I like, I’m going to have to like, mess up and push it and all that. But that’s going to be my guide.

Eric Zimmer  30:55

While I’m going to have to ponder whether taste is built in I tend to be a believer, not much is built in and that it’s all gray conditioned.

Andy J Pizza  31:03

I would only say I would disagree with Kent in this way. But only slightly. I think the interesting space is between guilty pleasure, which is I wish I didn’t like this. But that’s really valuable because it’s telling you something about your palate. Again, because it’s hard to get past persona. It’s hard to know, like, What do I like? Because I think it’ll make me look good. Or what do I like? Because I just like it. Yeah. And then there’s that. And then there’s acquired tastes that I think are as as interesting and valuable.

Eric Zimmer  31:35

Right. Right. It makes me start thinking like, I used to just love Three’s Company. And then I just, you know, like,

Andy J Pizza  31:41

that’s the good stuff. I interesting, I guess.

Eric Zimmer  31:43

But what’s interesting is that if you look culturally, most people like the same things, the same things become very, very popular, which might say that our tastes run very similar. Yeah. Which then most artists will say, well, but a lot of that stuff is just lowest common denominator. Well, okay, is it? It’s just fascinating questions. Yeah, it’s

Andy J Pizza  32:06

interesting. What it makes me think of next is, I don’t know if this crosses over into all the different types of tastes that you could have. But as I’ve been thinking about and exploring the idea of taste, one of the things that I came across is this idea of a super taster, which is a Have you heard that before? Yeah. So it’s just somebody who has way more taste buds than your average person.

Eric Zimmer  32:28

You heard that They Might Be Giants song about Super testers, oh, their children’s records, you got to you have to go listen,

Andy J Pizza  32:35

that’s awesome. I’m, yeah, I, I have kind of like, got obsessed with the idea of, hey, there you go. So I’m gonna listen to that. But yeah, I’ve thought about it like that, like, I think leading with your super taste is a good idea as a creator, like leaning into the thing that you have in a unique receptivity to nuance. Because when you have that, first of all, you’re able to like reverse engineer or recipe, like if you really are tuned in to comedy, you can not just enjoy the comedy that you love. But you can listen to it with a fine tooth comb kind of and just figure out like, how are they achieving that? Yeah. Because you’re able to, like, put it on your palate and break it down. I think there’s a lot of reason why there’s that mono culture thing. Again, I think part of that persona, people just want to like what’s acceptable, what they’re exposed to, I mean, so many reasons. But I think as an artist, the best bet is to bet on the thing that is maybe the weird tastes that you have.

Eric Zimmer  33:38

Yep. What’s interesting about what you’re just saying there about taking something that you love and sort of deconstruct it. Yeah. You know, it made me think of something else that you were talking about that I wanted to go into a little bit where you were talking about how, at least early on, everybody talks about art being creative expression. Yeah. And that for you, it felt like art early on was creative excavation. It was using a shovel. Yeah. And I’d love to talk a little bit about that. Because as I was thinking about that, I was also thinking about how personal growth happens, or spiritual development or whatever you want psychological development, Shadow Work, pick your term, right? Yeah, is that that happens by taking ideas. And then really using those ideas to reflect upon yourself in a deep way. It’s one thing to read a book of, you’re in too young right now to read a young book and be like, Oh, those are all really interesting ideas. It’s a whole different animal to stop and take those ideas and go, Okay, well, what is my shadow? Yeah, you know, or follow some of the exercises that some of these books have and sit down and do that writing and do that excavation. In the same way that you’re saying that to create good art you need to take what you like and instead It of just consuming it, actually deconstructing it or excavating it or excavating, what about you is responding, it’s moving from a consumer of these things, to some form of deeper reflection upon these things. Yeah,

Andy J Pizza  35:15

I think the best term for it, for me would be a young term, which is active imagination, active imagination, anybody that’s not super familiar with it. I’m not a youngin analyst. So I can’t speak to an expert lay by I can speak to it as an artist, act of imagination is kind of like dreaming while you’re awake. It’s kind of just like trying to find the symbols that are coming up naturally and excavating those. That’s what a lot of artists are doing, whether they realize it or not, you’re just taking the things that are coming to you the ideas that are coming to you, and you’re trying to put them on the page, or you’re trying to put them into music. And the projects that I was doing early on that I would consider self excavation. They were active imagination before I knew what that was. And I figured that out. That prompt came from one of my all time creative heroes, which was Charles Schultz, creator of peanuts, and Charlie Brown. And I had heard him say in an interview, like, so when I got stuck, and I felt like, man, everything I’m making, this is like, a couple years out of college, when everything just died down. I just got stuck feeling like I’m just working in trends, I don’t really feel like this is authentic to who I am. If I’m going to make a real go at this over my life, I’m gonna have to go deeper than this. But really, there weren’t any podcasts about creativity that I knew at that time, I struggled to find any direction. So what I just started doing was obsessively consuming everything that I could find that my creators had said about their process or about their work. And one of the things I came across was Charles Schultz. And he said that you would always be asked, Is he Charlie Brown? Because his name’s Charles. Charlie Brown is the main character, it makes sense, you know, and Charlie Brown is a loser. So it’s kind of a funny question. It says, Hey, how are you Charlie Brown? And he’d say, Yeah, I am Charlie Brown. But I’m also Lucy, like, Lucy’s my sarcastic side. And Snoopy is my cool side. And Linus is my religious side. And all these characters are me. Yeah, just different sides of myself. And so when I did that first daily drawing practice, where I was doing a new character, every weekday for a year, that’s what I was thinking of, I was thinking, I’m going to put a different part of myself onto the page as its own character. And I’m just going to do that over and over and over and try to find all these different facets of who I am only much later that I realized that that’s actually exactly what active imagination is, which is, instead of going out in your life, and projecting your worst parts of you on to other people and subjecting the world to them, you can do that in your sketchbook, you can like project all those pieces out of yourself and onto a page. And it can act as a kind of soul mere, it can be a thing where you can see the inside, on the outside, you can take a look at it and get to know it. And actually Carl Jung even thought that creative work was a great way to excavate the psyche, even beyond trying to make pretty thanks or a career of it.

Eric Zimmer  38:42

This is a totally different thing. But it’s interesting in something called Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, which is a type of therapy, they talk a lot about cognitive diffusion, being able to sort of not be your thoughts, but be able to look at your thoughts be able to get a lot of distance. And one of the tools that they recommend is slightly similar what you were just saying, which is you give these thoughts, you know, particularly the ones that are coming up again and again or problematic. You give them a character. You know, like for me, it’s not as creative as creating my own character. Right, right. But for me, my sort of low mood kind of guy is er, yeah, that’s such a bad day.

Andy J Pizza  39:23

My wife and I were just talking about how Winnie the Pooh applies to this perfectly. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer  39:28

So when I do that, right, it just gives me a little bit of distance. It makes me smile, but you created 250 new characters. Yeah,

Andy J Pizza  39:36

it was Jonathan 60, I guess 16 week days.

Eric Zimmer  39:39

Okay. Yeah, that’s good to know. I don’t feel like I have 260 parts of myself. So did they just come naturally to you? Or what was that excavation process? Like?

Andy J Pizza  39:49

I mean, I definitely took inspiration from other people in my life. That was true to okay, but for the most part, I think it was just nailing down a particular behavior. or a particular desire or, and I think you’d be surprised if you start making a character every weekday how much stuff you got going on in there, and all these different kind of warring factions in your brain, it started out that way. But what ended up happening and this is kind of why I recommend creators that are trying to find their style, or this even better the substance of their work, or the story of work is that they would get it out and start working it out on the page. And I think at the same time, you’re looking at those psychically charged images that come up when you’re trying to pair these facets of yourself with symbols. And as I did that, I knew like I was really obsessed with, you know, in Dr. Seuss, if there was a page where there were eyes and a tree trunk at night, and it’s all dark, like I knew I was obsessed with that. So I was really like paying attention to the symbols. And at first, I just thought, and I think a lot of creators think this. Well, why do you like that? I don’t know. It’s just cool. That’s all there is to it. But if it resonates on a deeper level, I’ve come to feel that there is a reason behind that there’s something going on there of why that’s resonating on a deeper level. And as you work through it, you start getting closer to the bottom of that. And so it started out as this project where I was just making characters. And then eventually, I realized, like all these characters that are like hiding, they’re getting it’s kind of abstract forces. And it became this thing called invisible things, which there’s a poster Yeah, keep looking at it. We have a picture book me and my wife just made, it’s coming out this year, called invisible things. And it’s all these characters that are personifying the invisible forces, the phenomenon like dark matter and gravity, and then feelings like love and joy and all that. And then also the sensory things. And, yeah, over time, the more stuff I made, the more I had a sense of like, what those images were doing in my head. And for me, I think it’s just that, as an illustrator, kind of maybe what’s broken about me or maybe interesting is that I don’t really like the visible world, I’m not really interested in the visible world, which is kind of weird when you’re working in a visual medium. I’m really just fascinated by all the things we can’t see, and then come to find out, you know, there’s different figures, depending where you look, but something like 95% of our universe is invisible. And so there’s a lot of good stuff to go at. Yeah,

Eric Zimmer  42:37

I mean, there’s all those different numbers like that blow your mind, the other one I love to think about as we look out, and we’re like, alright, I see what there is to see I’m hearing what there is here. But no, we’re not, like on our senses pick up a very small range of all of these things that the frequencies that can be heard, we hear just a little bit of the rest of them are all around us. We just don’t know it. The thing is to be seen, well, we’re picking up a spectrum of what can be seen, but the rest of it is all out there. I just love to sometimes close my eyes and be like, what’s actually out there? Yeah, right launches, like God only knows.

Andy J Pizza  43:14

And I think it goes back to since we’ve been releasing this picture book, I’ve been thinking a lot about this story that I wrote with my wife, it’s actually got, I feel like the same point as another book that we just wrapped up that I haven’t talked about publicly yet not to be overly cryptic. But I realized, like, oh, they have the same point there about how, you know, when I was growing up, all of the things I liked, were about hidden universes. You know, when we were talking about deconstructing your favorite things. When I was doing that project, that character project, I collected a bunch of my favorite stories. And the truth is, before you do that, it’s not really obvious what they have in common. It took me a long time, after the fact to start seeing that, you know, I collected Alice in Wonderland and Wizard of Oz and Fraggle Rock and spirited away. And now as I say, I’m all together, maybe people listening, just see the obvious connection, that they’re all about hidden worlds. They’re all about these hidden fantasy worlds, really. And so I kind of lived in fantasy. I even played pretend way past when it’s normal. Like I had a younger brother that was quite a bit younger than me. So I’ll give myself a little bit of credit on that front. But I was just living in a fantasy world. I think, you know, I wasn’t interested in the world that we find ourselves in. I wasn’t engaged. I was kind of saying no to it, actually, on an energetic level. Like, I don’t want this. I don’t like it. It’s boring. It’s not interesting. And I think a lot of that was ADHD. And then I had a friend. He’s also lives in Columbus now, but we’re both from Columbus, Indiana. Weirdly. He lives in Columbus, Ohio. Now, he gave me this printout of an article back in probably 2004. That was about like Popular Science, kind of quantum physics stuff, and it was the first time I’d ever heard about string theory and you know, the different dimensions and multiple worlds theory, all these things. And I was like, wow, this is the first time I’ve ever been interested in this universe or life. You know, our world is incredible. And I think it broke open this thing. There’s this scene and Truman Show where the kid is like in school, and they say, What do you want to be when you grow up? And he’s like, I want to be an explorer. And the teachers like, well, sorry, we’ve already explored everything. And I think I felt like that, until that moment when I was about 17. And so I think the picture books that I’m interested in making, they’re less like fantasy hidden worlds, and they’re more like a magical, actual realism, where it’s like, these are real hidden worlds. They look fantastical. And yes, I made up the characters. But all of the stuff you’re seeing this is how multifaceted and interesting our universe is, and how much there is to lean into that I think that’s what kind of compels me to make that stuff. And it’s filters back to the ADHD thing, too. I think that that was the thing I had to overcome. Is boredom. Just boredom with being alive. Oh, and it’s weird, because not everybody relates to that. But yeah, but I think that it took me until I was about 17. And that article, along with a few other things, getting into music and stuff like that, kind of switched me on to life. And I think that was the metaphoric say yes. To the call to adventure that is being alive and being in pain, you know, yeah. Why would you want to stick around and do that? I don’t think I knew until that time,

Eric Zimmer  46:43

I want to go back to very early in the conversation, it just sort of glossed over this piece. And you didn’t gloss over it. We were just on our way, other places, but I wanted to pick it back up, which is you got out of college, and you were deciding that what you’re going to do is be an illustrator. And you got a couple of pretty early successes, right? Nickelodeon called you. Yeah, you were really into doing concert posters. And you were offered a chance to illustrate a video for the band that December is right. You had a lot of really early quick wins. Yep. That then faded quickly. I wonder if you could talk us through that time period, that process and finding your way you sort of found yourself out of creativity and discouraged and back into it today, you’re clearly a successful creator. Share a little bit more about that.

Andy J Pizza  47:32

Yeah, I think that when I was 17, and I was going through that with my mom, and I kind of went through this period of time where I thought I want to be the opposite of her want to be the opposite of who I am. At the same time, I was going to college for illustration. And that’s kind of a weird place to be in as an artist, where you are trying to run from yourself, but make art that’s a you know, it’s not gonna work. And I remember going to school and talking to my teachers and being like, look, all my favorite artists, it seems important that they have a style, they found a style and it’s working for them. I think a lot of young creators that’s attractive to them. They want to figure that out, right? And I told my teachers that this first year, I’d like to focus on nailing the style, and they’re, you know, they were left rightfully so kind of like, okay, slow down, buddy, like, but that’s not how it works. Like, you can’t just find a style, you know, a style find you kind of thing like kind of stoner Yoda mystical thing that you get in creativity. But you know, I think that there’s definitely something to that. And I was like, Okay, no, but I got to figure this out. Because this is gonna be my job. And they were pushing me to be like, Yeah, your style emanates from who you are, like, try to get in touch with yourself, find yourself and your style will kind of come from that. But I was literally trying to run for myself. I was afraid to look in the mirror, look at the shadow. I wanted to get away from that. And so I think discouraged by their advice. I decided, like, I’m going to just adopt trends. I’m just going to be doing trendy work, which is, I think, part of the process too. You know, I don’t look down on anybody that goes through that or works that way. It’s fine.

Eric Zimmer  49:17

Do you think there was a conscious choice? Like, I’m going to choose a friend or just that was what was there? And that’s what you did?

Andy J Pizza  49:23

I wasn’t conscious enough about what was going on? Yeah, I think I just thought like, well, the people that are getting work are doing this and I liked it. It wasn’t that it was disingenuous or something. But there was just like the psychedelic kind of doodle movement going on that was a kind of reinvention of like Peter Max yellow submarine, that kind of stuff. I feel like that was happening pretty hardcore in the mid 2010s, or 2000s, like 2005 to 2008 ish is that time. And so I just started kind of like joining that movement, which is not a bad impulse. Like I said, I think there’s a time for that. But the problem is if that’s all you Have when that trend leaves as soon as it came, you’re kind of back at square one. And so I think some of those early jobs that I got, and those lucky breaks were a lot just because I’m part of this movement doing something trendy. They know I’m one of the people doing that. And so they turned to me. That was the same time I got the job at the juvenile detention center and worked at the US shelter.

Eric Zimmer  50:23

This was after these early, early loading all that didn’t work out. Yeah, essentially. Yeah. I thought like, Okay, I’ve hit it big. And then it turns out, no, you haven’t. Yeah,

Andy J Pizza  50:32

I’ll tell you. What happened with that was a year out of school, I got an opportunity to illustrate this music video that was going to be on a Nickelodeon TV show. And it was with one of my favorite bands, which is the Decemberists, and I was like, Dude, I’ve died and gone to heaven. I’ve beat the game like I’m I just got started. And like, I’m crushing it. And I remember just doing everything I could think of to make it great. But I didn’t have a lot of resources, like I just started and I sent over my final illustrations. And they replied pretty quick. And they were like, rough draft looks okay. It’s like I was so I had tried everything that I knew how to do to the point where I didn’t know how to make it any better. Right? I literally didn’t. And the only thing I could think to do was just write an email that was like, those are actually not the rough tracks. Those are the finals. And they weren’t happy about that. It didn’t go how I wanted it to and I, I felt like I kind of had blue my once in a lifetime dream opportunity, you know. And so after that, just slowly that trend dried up, the economy got bad. It was like 2000 A, and then, you know, for six months, I didn’t get any work. And I ended up having to just get a job at the juvenile detention center. And honestly, I took down my website because I had tried so many different ways to pick it back up. And it just just nothing I was doing was working. And it just kind of hurt to keep trying shirt, you know. And so I gave up. And then I think what ended up happening was I met a guy who wanted me to do some of this work and do a collaborative show in his gallery in Cincinnati. He’s like, I’d done a coloring book. It was called the indie rock coloring book. And he’s like, Hey, I saw that book. What if we did like a color in like adult coloring thing, but in the walls of the gallery, like a huge coloring book. And this was like before adult coloring blew up. So it was like a thing at that point. Or it wasn’t it was starting to be a thing. And so I was like, I’m kind of scared to open that door again. But I begrudgingly just was like, Okay, let’s do it. You know, what could it hurt? And before I went there, he called me and he’s like, Hey, there’s a problem with the show. And I was like, here it goes again. Like, I’m like, my dreams are crushed. And I was like, he’s like, No, it’s I love the idea. I just feel like it’s incomplete. His name is Andrew Dyer. He’s like a product designer and concept artist, conceptual artist. He was like, the show’s great. But there’s a problem with it, because we’re gonna do this giant mural. But we can people come in color with regular sized markers, the concept breaks. And he’s like, we need giant markers. And I was like, Okay, if you know, like Rick Maraniss has got to reverse shrink rag and blow a few of those bad days up, like I’m game for that. And he’s like, now, I’ll make some and there’ll be there when you get there tomorrow. And I hung up the phone thinking they’re definitely not going to be there. Like he’s gonna go and try to make giant markers and realize you don’t just whip up giant markers. And I went to his gallery the next day. And it was in this cool part of Cincinnati that was up and coming at the time and like exposed brick and this just gorgeous like gallery. And those giant markers were there. And I was just like, Who is this guy? This guy’s like a creative wizard. And we did the show. And it was a big success. We’ve done the show a bunch of times since then we’ve taken it to Stockholm and New York City, all kinds of vices. But I think that that was the first part of a breakthrough where he’s really different than me in a lot of ways. But I saw a bit of myself in him. And I also saw him owning that. And it made me feel like maybe I’m not all bad. It made me inspired to look into who I am. And find out what parts of me aren’t bad. And I started the just kind of binge watching talks from my favorite artists and reading interviews and all that kind of stuff. And I started to recognize all these ways that I had things in common with them. And even people like there’s a designer Are Aaron draplin, who was very popular online and has since kind of become a buddy of mine, and he’s out in Portland now. But he’s a proud midwesterner. He’s from Michigan, and he wears it on his sleeve. And I remember just feeling like, oh, I never seen an artist be proud of being from the Midwest, like, okay, maybe that part of me is not so bad. And then there was this artist, Kate being a member who did this whole project about her credit card debt. And, you know, she drew every one of her credit card statements, like, that’s exactly what it sounds like, like just hand copied on a piece of paper, and then did this massive show. And she did them until the credit card debt was paid. It was like this weird conceptual art kind of thing. And I thought, okay, so maybe this part of me that’s terrible with numbers isn’t something that I have to be ashamed of. And I think just slowly, I started to get curious about myself. And that ended up leading to the ADHD diagnosis, which was a big break for me. And the way I like to think about it now is art really is self expression. And you’re never going to love your work, you’re never going to love that self expression. If you hate the thing that it’s expressing, which is yourself, you’re going to have to, at some point, make peace with or make friends with or feel excited about something about yourself, if you’re ever going to feel any of those things about your work, because it is an expression of you. And so I think that that was the path to doing the character project, looking deeper into myself, and ultimately changing, seeing myself as something to repress and overcome as something to cultivate. And I think it led to a lot of the creative breakthroughs that helped me build what I have going on now.

Eric Zimmer  56:49

Awesome. Well, I think that is a great place to wrap up with this idea of you’re not a bad thing. You’re a good thing. You’re not something to be overcome, you’re something to be cultivated. So thank you so much for coming on and sharing your journey with us and I’ve really had a great time talking with you.

Andy J Pizza  57:05

Absolutely. Thanks, Eric. These are great questions and ones that I don’t always get to explore so I really appreciate it.

Chris Forbes  57:22

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The Price of Wanting: How Desire Shapes Happiness, Fulfillment, and Who We Become with Eric Jorgenson

December 9, 2025 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Eric Jorgensen discusses the price of wanting and how desire shapes happiness, fulfillment, and who we become. He explores the power of useful beliefs, agency, and a growth mindset. Eric also delves into authenticity versus attachment, the role of judgment, managing desires, and the influence of environment on habits. Drawing on thinkers like Naval Ravikant and Elon Musk, discover practical strategies and philosophical insights for living intentionally, fostering optimism, and building a fulfilling, empowered life.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • Personal growth and mindset development
  • Cultivation of positive habits and beliefs
  • The parable of two wolves representing internal good and bad qualities
  • The concept of “useful beliefs” and their role in achieving desired outcomes
  • The importance of agency and a growth mindset in personal development
  • The impact of internal narratives on self-perception and motivation
  • The balance between authenticity and attachment in relationships
  • The development of judgment and its significance in decision-making
  • The challenge of managing desires and their effect on happiness
  • Strategies for creating an environment that supports positive habits and reduces temptations

Eric Jorgenson writes about technology and startups. He is also CEO of Scribe Media. His blog has educated and entertained more than one million readers since 2014. He is the author of The Almanack of Naval Ravikant (over 1 million sold) and hosts the podcast Smart Friends. He also invests in early-stage technology companies. His new book is The Almanack of Naval Ravikant

Connect with Eric Jorgenson: Website | Instagram | Twitter 

If you enjoyed this conversation with Eric Jorgenson, check out these other episodes:

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Are Your Desires Really Yours? How to Recognize and Reclaim What You Truly Want with Luke Burgis

How to Find Zest in Life with Dr. John Kaag

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Episode Transcript:

Eric Jorgenson 00:00:00  You don’t need to be born into a certain situation or a certain level of sort of neurochemical happiness to become a happy person. There are people who are, but for the rest of us, like there is always a change in that slope that you can make through deliberate sort of attempts and practices.

Chris Forbes  00:00:23  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have. Quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:08  I had a moment a few years ago when I realized I was carrying around dozens of half form desires that were just draining me.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:16  I should be in a band. I should be writing more. I should do this. Should should, should. There’s a line in this conversation that hit the nail on the head for me. Keep your desires few and carefully chosen. My guest today is Erik Jorgensen, the curator of the Almanac of Naval Ravikant, and we spent a good chunk of our conversation on this idea of desire as either your greatest ally or your worst enemy. One of the best moments for me was when Eric talked about understanding the price of a desire. And if you’re not willing to pay that price, you should let it go. Not someday, but now. Because every desire we hold that we’re not willing to work towards is just stealing energy from what actually matters. This isn’t about lowering our ambitions. It’s about getting brutally honest about what we’re committed to. I’m Eric Zimmer, and this is the one you feed. Hi, Eric. Welcome to the show.

Eric Jorgenson 00:02:16  Hello, fellow Eric. Thank you for having me.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:18  I’m happy to have you on.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:20  You’ve done a bunch of things in your life. Venture capital, different things. But one one of the other things you’ve done is sort of compile the thoughts of what I would consider some of our newer best thinkers. And the book that I used to prepare for this interview is called The Almanac of Naval Ravikant. So we’ll be talking about that. But before we get into it, we’ll start like we always do with the parable. In the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and in love and the other’s a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops and they think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you and your life and in the work that you do.

Eric Jorgenson 00:03:18  I like that parable. I think it may be a little optimistic in that it assumes that you always know what’s right. and I think the hardest parts are knowing whether you’re truly even when you believe you’re guided by virtue, whether you’re doing the right thing for yourself and for those around you. But I think it’s very true that, you know, the one you feed, the loops, you reinforce, the stories you tell yourself. That’s what you become over many iterations. So I think, you know, every little proof point you have for yourself, every little bit of reputation you gain for yourself, of what type of person you are, makes it a little easier that day to wake up and be the best version of yourself the next day. And that’s really, really helpful and useful when you have a positive loop going. And it’s perhaps not as useful of a belief when you don’t have a positive loop going. So I would say I’m a fan of leaning into useful beliefs. And if you don’t find that parable to be useful in the state that you’re in, I would put it aside and find a useful narrative.

Eric Jorgenson 00:04:15  And then if you do find it useful, I’d continue to use it.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:18  Excellent. So let’s talk about that for a second. That’s a great phrase. Useful beliefs I often think of thoughts that way. You know, when interrogating a set of thoughts, I’ll be like, since a lot of this I’m just constructing anyway in my mind, why not use it? Useful interpretation out of it. But what does useful beliefs mean to you?

Eric Jorgenson 00:04:38  I mean, the number of times that you’re like, objectively correct about something is extremely low in your life. And so it’s a lot of times more useful to better depending on your outcome. Like to ask, is this a useful belief or is this not a useful belief? Rather than is it specifically true or specifically false. It’s also helpful when you see someone else’s story. You’re trying to help someone through something, or trying to reflect on something that you’ve been through. Like useful is a good measure that people rarely evaluate their own thoughts by, I think.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:07  Yeah, I agree, I think that is so important because, like you said, the number of things that are objectively true are relatively low compared to the number of things that we are narrating a story about, which is most everything.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:24  Right. We’re meaning making machines, and that ability to construct meaning based on useful is really good. I think the place that gets particularly tricky is sometimes in stories about ourselves, where we’ve got some sort of limiting belief, or when we’re predicting the future and we’re maybe looking at past results as a guide. So what’s the best way that you found in either of those situations for you to to find a useful belief.

Eric Jorgenson 00:05:56  I mean, a useful belief is usually the most positive or optimistic interpretation I’ve found, right? So I think it’s I think it’s called the Hanlon’s Razor, but it’s this tool of thought or like you never attribute to malice something that you can attribute to incompetence or even like a good natured mistake. And I think a lot of people, you know, go the opposite. You, you see malice in things that have no malice in them. And then you kind of feel like you have to go around with your guard up, with your shield up, because the story in your head is that there’s all these attacks, sometimes even personal attacks, like coming your way.

Eric Jorgenson 00:06:33  And so you go around with a protective shell on you go around with suspicion. You regard people as perhaps not having your best interests at heart. And humans are really smart at subconsciously evaluating sort of someone else’s state of mind. And so if you come in paranoid about somebody, if you come in expecting them to take advantage of you, they’re going to read that and they’re going to close themselves off, or they’re going to see you as paranoid or see that they don’t trust you. and so I think a useful belief is like, even if somebody is specifically out to get you, just assume they’re not. Just assume they’re just like suck at their job or having a bad day or mad at somebody else. And you were, you know, accidental, incidental collateral damage that, you know, just unlucky maybe to be in that time or place or receive that word and like, that’s a useful belief. I don’t know. I think that’s a it helps you stay optimistic. It helps you stay open to the next positive thing that could happen.

Eric Jorgenson 00:07:33  to build trust with the next person that comes along rather than assuming the negative path, because that’s the pattern that you see.

Eric Zimmer 00:07:39  Right? There’s certainly the case where we are applying beliefs or stories to people outside of us. And I love what you just said there. What I often find is that it’s the internal stories where the useful belief can be harder. You know where you’re looking at. Maybe you haven’t succeeded in the way you wanted to. Up to this point, or you’ve tried some things that didn’t work up to this point, or you’ve formed some picture of yourself at this point. And I think where we get stuck in finding something useful is also finding something that we believe to be true. And so how do you work with that? Say you know yourself with dealing with any sort of interior feelings of doubt or belief or belief in your ability, etc.? Or do you have them?

Eric Jorgenson 00:08:32  I mean, I think everybody has them. It’s just a matter of, I think where you place the focus, where you place the emphasis.

Eric Jorgenson 00:08:38  We all have times where we failed when we hope to succeed, but we also have many successes, like no matter how small. and we tend to, I think, especially those of us who are striving, trying to be better, yearning. You tend to focus on the areas where you’re weak rather than the areas where you’re strong. People take their victories for granted and focus on their failures. And maybe that comes from a place of believing that that’s how you would make progress, rather than leaning into your strengths to, like, avoid the weaknesses or correct the failures. But that has this negative impact of having you focus on the places where you’re underperforming, rather than the places where you are performing. And so I think a really helpful habit. I mean, some people do this through journaling. Some people do. It’s through gratitude. Some people do this through like, you know, annual reviews or something like that. But if you zoom out a little bit and look at the progress that you’ve made can be really empowering and really helpful and particularly jarring when you haven’t actually paid any attention to the things that you’ve done.

Eric Jorgenson 00:09:35  Right, because you sort of took them for granted. You just focused on, you know, the thing that’s not yet done or the the deal that didn’t happen or, you know, the time when you got in a fight instead of all the times when you avoided a fight with somebody that you’re, you know, trying to build a relationship with. So the positive evidence can be invisible sometimes. And depending on who you’re talking to and the loops that they’re reinforcing and the evidence that they’re highlighting and what you sort of are ruminating on, and I’ve been in this place myself. You can spend hundreds or thousands of times more time thinking about something that you did wrong or negative, or haven’t done yet, or feel bad about then something that you feel good about. And there’s the opposite version of this, of somebody who’s like, you know, still going around talking about one tiny thing they did right ten years ago. Like there’s an unhealthy version of that skew also, right? But I think a lot more people probably traffic in their negative feelings, you know, orders of magnitude more than they traffic in.

Eric Jorgenson 00:10:32  They’re positive. And it takes a deliberate habit to shift those and counterbalance them. And it feels so refreshing to like, feel that pendulum swing a little bit back the other way and get you back to that useful belief of like, yeah, there’s things I still want to do. There’s times when I haven’t been my best self, but there’s also, you know, 90 or 90 9 or 99.9% of the time. I’m actually doing pretty good. And I just have to remember that that’s that’s actually how it breaks down.

Eric Zimmer 00:11:00  Yeah. Yeah. I’ve worked with a business coach for a number of years now, and one of the things that he just does a really good job of is exactly what you’re saying. Like before I meet with him, he asked me to fill out a form so he kind of knows what’s going on. He can come into the call prepared and and the first thing on the form is always what has gone well since we last met. And that’s a really useful framing. And then he often in the call will, in our time talking together will do the same thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:11:28  He’s like, I just want to pause for a second. I want you to reflect on where you were at X point, and now look at where you are now. Like, let’s let’s remember let’s look at this gap. I mean, we’re obviously talking about the problems yet to be solved, but we can all approach the problems yet to be solved from a better place. BJ Fogg once said he’s a behavior change scientist about habits, and he has a phrase I don’t know if I’ll get it exactly right, but he said people change best by feeling good rather than feeling bad. And I think that’s true also, with any sort of problem we’re trying to solve or a decision we’re trying to make, coming at it when we’re a little more cognizant of and reflective of our strengths is just a much better place.

Eric Jorgenson 00:12:12  Yeah. And it’s interesting how often we need that positive reinforcement to come from outside of ourselves rather than inside. Like if you evaluate the number of times you give yourself compliments versus give yourself criticism, and then and then of course, try to externalize that and be like, would I have would I keep someone in my life if this was how they talked to me all the time? Like, that’s just such a useful reframe I find.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:35  I want to go back to something you said when we first talked about the parable, and you said you think it’s optimistic in that we know what’s right Or what? The right thing to do in a given situation. It reminds me of a quote that is somewhere in the book. I don’t have it exactly where he says something to. The effect of the problem is not that people can’t do the things they set out to do. The problem is they don’t know the right things to do, essentially. Again, I kind of butchered it. You might know it better, but I think it’s a really interesting idea. I actually think both sides of those equations can be problematic for different people at different times, but that knowing what the right thing to do, this ability to make decisions. In the book, there’s a whole section on building judgment, which I think is all about this core idea.

Eric Jorgenson 00:13:23  Yeah. If there’s one core theme of the book, it is just that you have agency over things that you may not realize you have agency over, that the realm of possibilities of your life is much broader than most people tend to think.

Eric Jorgenson 00:13:36  And things like, obviously, the whole first half of the book or first section of the book is about building wealth, but then also about building judgment and also about building happiness. People tend to view those as like relatively fixed things. You know someone is smart or not smart. Someone is rich or not rich. Someone is happy or they’re not happy, and they just assume they’re born into some sort of level and then they stay there. And what I find so refreshing about novel’s sort of approach to life is that he assumes all of those things are changeable. They are all learnable skills that if you break them down and evaluate them and understand them properly, you can make progress along those things. You don’t need to be a genius to have good judgment. You don’t need to be born into a certain situation or a certain level of sort of neurochemical happiness to become a happy person. There are people who are, but for the rest of us, like there is always a change in that slope that you can make through deliberate sort of attempts and practices.

Eric Jorgenson 00:14:33  And I just find that to be a really, really helpful starting place because it applies outside of the things that he specifically talks about. Health is another one.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:40  I think that’s one of my most core central beliefs, is that there’s always like a positive step, a positive direction, a positive change, not in an unrealistic way, because, you know, there are some people who have a certain temperament who are never going to be myself, as an example, probably never going to be as happy as some people who have an easygoing temperament. But have I become happier as a result of efforts? Undoubtedly. Undoubtedly. Right. And I do think that with anything, we can get better. I mean, the core idea there is just, you know, Carol Dweck popularized with that idea of a growth mindset, right? Which is that you’re not fixed. You can change. And what’s interesting is how we can have that growth mindset in certain areas, but not others of our lives, we might believe.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:30  Indeed, I can get in better shape, but I can’t get smarter. Or maybe I can make money, but I can’t become a nicer person. It’s not so simple as just to say somebody has a growth mindset or not. I mean, you can see some people who are very clearly have a like a fixed mindset about everything. But for a lot of us, it’s more subtle than that.

Eric Jorgenson 00:15:50  Yeah, the original book is like five years old, and I just had the opportunity to talk with Norvell for a new special edition audiobook that we just did, and he remarked, and I, it still sticks with me. He’s like, it’s so interesting how people the example that he used is like, I know billionaires, like people who are so smart in the domain of building businesses, making money, investing, who just exert no agency over the rest of their life, and they are miserable because they have not examined the beliefs and assumptions. They haven’t tried to hack the system, they haven’t zoomed out, they haven’t literally applied the things that they know how to apply in the business world to, you know, their personal life or their health or their happiness or the logistics at all.

Eric Jorgenson 00:16:33  And, you know, through that frame, I don’t know, I tried ever to enter a comparison mindset too often, but there’s something a little reassuring about knowing that, like, you can become much happier than a billionaire, than many of the billionaires very easily, by simply like choosing to attempt to make your life a little easier and a little better and, you know, train your brain to be a little happier on a daily basis. Yeah, I think that’s a hilarious and somewhat like, motivating sort of frame. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:17:21  One of the quotes I pulled out is shed your identity to see reality. What does he mean by that?

Eric Jorgenson 00:17:27  I love that one. We all have an identity. It’s built up. It’s reinforced over and over again through our own sort of internal image of ourselves, but also how other people treat us. People have a tendency to want to treat us the same way, to want us to be consistent. We receive positive reinforcement when we show up as the same person over and over again for people, and they roughly want us to stay, that there’s all these subtle pushes to like, be your role at work, right? Like if you’re a sales guy, you want to be all these things.

Eric Jorgenson 00:17:54  If you’re a mother, you want to show up as all these things. If you’re in one political party, you’re expected to sort of believe these bundle of beliefs and be, you know, move as part of the tribe. If you live in one city, you know, or others, you know, it’s it’s very funny how we sort of group together in these little tribes of all different sorts. And there’s this like, magnetic attraction towards the average of the groups of humans sort of tend to do. And when you do that, and it would be when it becomes part of your identity of like, this is not me, I’m just going to describe this person. I’m a like a Democratic Denver living sales person, like you already know kind of what that person tends to believe almost how they dress all these things, but that makes it really difficult for you to truly see underlying reality. That person is going to see something very, very different from a freelance graphic designer living in Eastern Europe who, like, grew up under communism, right? Like, those are very different worldviews, and they both have a lens on reality that is so independent and so different from each other.

Eric Jorgenson 00:18:56  And you need to shed those layers of identity and the sort of various aspects of groupthink that are like being pushed on you through the tribes that you become a part of in order to see what might be objectively correct or incorrect in the underlying reality. Groupthink is a really pernicious thing. We all know these people who have joined a group, and we all feel compelled to. Socially, it’s a very safe, psychologically safe thing to do to join a group like evolutionarily. We understand how this happens, but it really inhibits your ability to see the underlying reality for for what it might be or to individually examine those beliefs and select the ones that may or may not work for you. Going back to like what is true versus what is useful.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:42  Yeah, he says in the book, any belief you took in a package. You know, example Democratic, Catholic, American is suspect and should be reevaluated from base principles. I love that idea, and it’s one that I think I’ve gotten better at over the last decade.

Eric Zimmer 00:20:00  Maybe doing this show different things, looking at the places that I identify in a certain group. You know, as a here’s my political views. And seeing that, yes, if I had to pick between, you know, we have a two party system, if I had to pick between those two parties, this one far more often seems to reflect what I think, but also then being able to look at each of the things that are in there and the ways that they behave from different lenses, and realizing that there’s a lot more going on in there than we think. And and I just think this idea of perspective. Right. I don’t think we can get away from having a perspective. Right. I can’t get away from the perspective that comes to a white, heterosexual male who lives in Columbus, Ohio, in this time and place and has worked in these kind of fields, like there is a worldview that evolves, and I see the world through it. I think it just happens automatically. But I think what we can do is question that worldview and try lots of different ones on.

Eric Jorgenson 00:21:08  Yeah. So I think there’s a few things there. Like I think you can transcend that worldview. I think that the novel also talks about like enlightenment. Is this like binary condition where you have sort of completely surrendered the illusion of the self, right? Where you’re like, so far you are just part of the one. Right.

Eric Zimmer 00:21:29  I agree, yes. I think that that rarefied state, but up to that rarefied state. I think what we do is we transcend. One worldview for another, and we transcend one for. But there’s always still one there.

Eric Jorgenson 00:21:42  Yeah, maybe one step below that. I like to say, like the more people you truly love, the more of the world you understand. Like, if.

Eric Zimmer 00:21:48  You.

Eric Jorgenson 00:21:49  Know and truly, deeply love someone on the other side of a political aisle or a border or a pick your thing, like whatever the thing is that you think you disagree with someone on, if you really if you become close enough with someone that you really fully empathize with their worldview enough that you really deeply love them, and you can understand why they believe what they believe and what they’re striving to accomplish.

Eric Jorgenson 00:22:14  I think that’s a really useful frame. And I think the other, going back to the very beginning of the sort of shed identity to see reality is just like I like to ask people, if you’re not weird, how do you know you’re free? Like if you are in a group where anytime you question a belief that the group holds, you are seen as a threat to that group. You are not free. Like if you if you are trying to choose to stay a part of that and that group holds you to that standard. Like that is not a truth seeking group and you are not free so long as you are a part of it. And I feel like that’s a that’s a tough situation to be in because, you know, you’re choosing that sort of social psychological comfort versus, you know, being a low identity, truth seeking, like trying to find what the underlying reality is actually telling you. And I think that’s why, you know, it’s it’s a serious, typically kind of a lonely path.

Eric Jorgenson 00:23:03  Like, to truly be weird enough, to be free to examine all of the beliefs and individually assess them. One, it’s hard work that most people aren’t going to do. but to it’s it’s lonely because people tend to sort of push away anybody who’s questioning their beliefs that they haven’t themselves questioned. People tend not to welcome that.

Eric Zimmer 00:23:21  Yeah. Doctor Gabor Mate talks about a lot of things, but the thing of his that I’ve resonated the most with, that makes the most sense is that we are always in a tension between attachment and authenticity. That’s always a tension that’s happening. Do I act more this way? So I have more attachment so I’m more connected, or do I act more in the way that’s in truth of me, which may may strain or fray some of those attachments? And I think just seeing that fundamental tension and knowing that never gets resolved. Right.

Eric Jorgenson 00:23:54  It’s I.

Eric Zimmer 00:23:55  Hope that helps.

Eric Jorgenson 00:23:56  You think. I hope that gets resolved. I mean, I have relationships in my life in which I’m deeply authentic, and I think that brings us closer.

Eric Jorgenson 00:24:04  But they are people who also have, who also sort of reject that dichotomy and who I accept the way, the fully authentic way that they show up. It’s not the majority yet, but, those relationships can and I think should exist and should be something that we aspire to.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:22  I agree, but I think even within like take a, take a closer relationship with someone. There’s always some degree of compromise that has to happen between those two people, unless they always want the exact same thing, which, you know, maybe happens on one level. But when you get into like close, you know, family ties, there’s times where I think I’m making a decision like this is the better thing for us as a family. This is a better thing for our relationship. Even though what I might personally want just in a vacuum would be X. And I think that’s the way in which I mean that tension doesn’t fully resolve. I think the tension of being able to be completely open and honest about who I am does resolve in a lot of cases and in certain relationships, but I think that there’s still a tension that arises in what it means to be in relationship with people, which means that not everybody gets what they want all of the time.

Eric Jorgenson 00:25:20  Yeah. I mean, I think you can have compromises with authenticity, right? Like, I don’t think authenticity necessarily means, you know, doing exactly what you want all the time, every time. But I think of it as like the ability to be fully yourself, express yourself, and yeah, be honest about who you are and what you what you want, whether you get it or not, in every individual circumstance. there’s relationships where that doesn’t exist and people who insist on, you know, overtly or not, you sort of complying or molding to their, their worldview or their wishes. And, you know, I think to the extent possible, like you, you do want to choose authenticity over those attachments. that’s, you know, easier said than done for 1 million reasons that are all unique situations. But I don’t think it is a useful belief to go through the world thinking that attachment and authenticity are actually completely at odds with each other. I think you always you want both. And there are circumstances where you can have both, and you should be seeking those out and striving for that.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:20  Before we dive back into the conversation, let me ask you something. What’s one thing that has been holding you back lately. You know that it’s there. You’ve tried to push past it, but somehow it keeps getting in the way. You’re not alone in this. And I’ve identified six major saboteurs of self-control. Things like autopilot behavior, self-doubt, emotional escapism that quietly derail our best intentions. But here’s the good news you can outsmart them. And I’ve put together a free guide to help you spot these hidden obstacles and give you simple, actionable strategies that you can use to regain control. Download the free guide now at one Eufy Net and take the first step towards getting back on track. Staying in the theme of judgment, navel says, my definition of wisdom is knowing the long term consequences of your action. Wisdom applied to external problems is judgment.

Eric Jorgenson 00:27:20  Yeah, judgment is a very I think it’s a tough thing to pin down, but I like it as a it’s a more precise word, I think, than like smart or clever or not smart or anything like that, because it’s, it is implied that it is built over time.

Eric Jorgenson 00:27:31  I think we all know really young people with really good judgment. We know, we know older people that have a lot of experience but haven’t evolved their judgment at all. And it’s a really good distillation of like, what do you trust this person with? Are you willing to, like, outsource your decision making to them in what domains? But we can all build better judgment through either direct experience or vicarious experience or reading. And it ties in very importantly with, you know, everything that all says about building wealth, which is like you will accrue sort of opportunities relative to your the quality of your judgment, and you want to be paid for your judgment, not your work. Right. And the better the judgment you get you have, the more resources you’ll be sort of bestowed with, because your judgment, multiplied by the resources that you bring to bear, sort of creates the output, the total outcome that you want. And when you see people who are earning like what seems like absurd salaries or outcomes or building really big businesses, you know, we lived in this power law world where there’s like some people earn a massive amount because their judgment is truly millions of times better, and they’re exercising their judgment over massive, massive, massive sets of resources like, you know, $100 billion companies or billion dollar companies or, you know, millions of people.

Eric Jorgenson 00:28:51  You know, in the case of like, politics or, or war or something like that. And the returns to good judgment in those seats are so massive that it is worth paying that person incrementally, like tremendous amounts of money, because they’re applying their judgment at such massive scale. And you can work on that. You can build your judgment like you will find your judgment, I think, is correlated with the opportunities presented with you and the amount of trust that you receive and the amount of micromanagement you may receive or or even like opportunities within your family. It’s a useful thing to sort of evaluate yourself on in an honest way and and to try to exert agency over. And there’s lots of sort of light ways to do that or heavy ways to do it. But going after improving that, you know, is, is, I think, a really high return thing in life.

Eric Zimmer 00:29:36  And so how would you think of if wisdom is, you know, sort of knowing the long term consequences of something when you apply that to external problems, it’s judgment is decision sort of the same thing, or is decision like even one level down from that where you’re you’re getting more specific? How do you think about that?

Eric Jorgenson 00:29:57  But I think decision making is the exercise of judgment.

Eric Jorgenson 00:30:00  And so a decision comprises many things. Right? Is judgment. It’s timing. There’s luck. There’s like all these things that go into it. It’s whether you got the opportunity how well how effectively you executed the decision. But it is one of the sort of places where you start to understand the quality of your judgment and see that return.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:41  Another thing that he says in this section that I relate with so much and I think is so true for all of us and is really difficult, is that the more desire I have for something to work out a certain way, the less likely I am to see the truth. Ouch.

Eric Jorgenson 00:30:58  Yeah, yeah. I mean, the human, the natural human tendency towards sort of wishful thinking. and it’s tough because I, you know, I really believe I’m an optimistic person. I believe optimism is a moral duty. but I think it’s very important to be, I think the useful sort of way to, to be specific about this. It’s like optimism about the big picture, pessimism about the details.

Eric Jorgenson 00:31:23  I really believe I can build this business like I believe over the ten year time frame, like this is going to work. However, I am going to wake up this morning, assume that everything is not going to work, and I’m going to get to work on the details of today, like protecting the downside and be triple checking everything and being sure that it’s going to work. I’m not going to be optimistic about the details because they are not going to take care of themselves. But if I’m pessimistic about the details, the big picture will resolve and I will keep the faith. Even if you know I have a bad day or a bad hour or a bad week. and so I think there’s like the natural way to battle wishful thinking is to be pessimistic about the details while remaining optimistic about the big picture.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:06  That’s super. That is a great, great phrase and framework. Actually, I was, you know, thinking it through in my own life and in my own situations and businesses. I’m like, that’s exactly it.

Eric Zimmer 00:32:18  That describes what I’m trying to do. Maybe not always successfully to certain degrees, because certainly sometimes I get pessimistic about the the big picture and I overlook certain details. But in general, I’m really trying to, like you said, sort of I think this is all going to work. However, that might not work, right? Like, you know, that thing right there needs we need to spend some more time thinking about because that part might not work. You know, it reminds me a little bit of. You’ve probably heard of it. You read so much, the Stockdale paradox of Admiral James Stockdale, right? He highest ranking prisoner in in Vietnam. I’m not going to tell the whole story, but his basic idea was the people who got out, lived through that sort of captivity were people who were able to confront the brutal facts of their reality as it was, but never lost the sense that they would find a way through. I’m paraphrasing, but that’s the essence of it, which is kind of what you just said in a slightly more concise way.

Eric Jorgenson 00:33:19  Yeah, I think the tactical version that that he said, which is, you know, I use all the time, is like, I will get out of this prison, but it will not be today. Like, I know it won’t be today. I’m not going to hope that it’s going to be today. It probably won’t be tomorrow. But one day I will get out of here. And I know that with absolute certainty. And I think that is a really helpful. It’s a really helpful frame in a lot of different areas of life. I mean, naval has a slightly different articulation of this that is even more general, which is impatience with action, patience with results. So like the ten year picture you’ve got to be patient for, but you need to be impatient to wake up and get what you need to get done today. And everything should be happening faster. But you know the results are going to take time to compound and manifest.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:00  I want to talk about happiness because one of the main things that naval says pretty clearly is that happiness is what’s there.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:11  When you remove the sense that something is missing in your life, So he’s really painting the picture of our desires make us unhappy, which is a fairly straightforward Buddhist take of the world. How does that align with how you think?

Eric Jorgenson 00:34:26  Yeah, I had not been deeply reddened in Buddhism before encountering navel. So to me that was like a unique and useful and new sort of set of ideas. And I think we live in a world in time where there’s never been a better, there’s ever been better tools for creating desire in you. You know, you could not come up with a more evil, genius mastermind way to create desires over billions of people than Instagram. Like that is a desire generation machine. Oh, yeah. You’re all the hottest people in the world. Here’s all the richest people in the world. I’m going to show you 32nd clips that may or may not even be real of, you know, peak human experiences that somebody’s 50 or 100 years ago might have. Most people would have never even seen a hint of in their entire life, and we’re just going to bombard your brain with it at a moment’s notice, I know.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:18  I mean, I was in trouble the minute they started having, like, beer commercials with beautiful people on beaches. Like, that’s about all that my desire meter can, can sort of handle. I don’t need this, you know? Now it’s like, you know, it’s like super nuclear.

Eric Jorgenson 00:35:33  Yeah. It is an unbelievable, like, psychological super weapon. and, you know, I think that’s partly why these ideas are so useful right now. Like the understanding that desire is upstream of unhappiness, that your desires. No, this is another nihilism. Desire is a contract you make with yourself to be unhappy until you get what you want. Yeah, right. And we are. So it is so easy to create a new desire in us. You can spend, you know, ten minutes on Instagram and most people spend hours a day seeing all these different things and in seconds form a new desire. Oh, I want, I want that partner. I want to live in. That place I want to take that vacation.

Eric Jorgenson 00:36:15  I want to eat that meal. I want that career. I like all of these highly incompatible things that are completely untethered from, like, your tangible reality that all of a sudden you have all these desires and you didn’t evaluate them. They were just sort of appeared. Yeah, manifest in you instantly. And if you don’t have a mechanism for like pushing them away, ideally avoiding them all together, but like or immediately destroying them or pushing them away, you’re going to go through your whole life deeply unsatisfied with what is actually one of the best existences humans have ever had in in modern times, right? Like most of us are not dealing with a great war. We have our material needs satisfied. There’s more people who are obese than are starving. Like we have eons of entertainment at our fingertips for pennies. It is an objectively incredible life. You know, if you got a roof and a hot shower, like you’re doing better than almost every one of the billions of humans who ever lived. But we have subjectively, all these really difficult experiences that we’re dealing with because we have so many insane desires created.

Eric Jorgenson 00:37:18  And of all, you know, just as I find my life, I am happier and my life is better when my desires are few and carefully chosen. And so that this goes back to judgment, this goes back to authenticity. Like, what are the deep, thick underlying desires of your life that are actually the most important things to you? And how do you protect, you know, sort of your mind and your attention and your energy to invest in those things and prevent these sort of thin, shallow, harmful desires from taking over your brain chemistry. And that’s really like the way to look at it. I think it is very it is a very like, drug like relationship that most of us have with, with our phones, with social media apps and with like, new desires in particular.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:00  Yeah. I think all that is turned up, the fact that Buddhism basically was founded, I don’t know what now, 2500 years ago, and they were talking about exactly the same thing. Right. Our natural tendency to always want things to be different, i.e. better than they are.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:19  I read a couple of scientific studies that I found were really interesting is that when you ask people to imagine things being differently, they always imagine them being better. Almost always. That’s mostly where our our mind goes to. Now, I’m not saying we don’t have worry and anxiety, I just simply mean that any given moment we can think of how to improve it. I mean, I can tell you right now, I could if you just gave me five seconds, I could be like, oh, what? That would be better. And I’d like that to be better. And what’s this buzz in my headphones and what like right instantly and and so I think I was so drawn to Buddhism because I saw that so clearly in me. It was just so clear. Like, I am never satisfied, you know, I am never satisfied. Now this gets tricky and I’m interested in, you know, your thoughts on how naval and you navigate this because desire is also the engine, the energy that drives everything that we do, even if our desires are quote unquote better and thicker and all of that, it still is an energy and an engine that if we lose it, we’re kind of stuck.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:32  And so this is the question I think about all the time. How do you balance that? How do you balance what feels to be a natural sort of human desire to create and strive and improve with this deeper understanding of like and it’s just lying the way it is?

Eric Jorgenson 00:39:49  Yeah, I think it is ideal to hold those, both of those gently in your head and hands at the same time, all the time. In practice, that’s extremely difficult to do. I think there’s a few sort of helpful tricks that I’ve collected, some from Nouvel, some not. You know, I would not proclaim to be an expert in this at all. Like I’m trying to learn and trying to apply. And just like a guy on a journey like everybody else. You know, obviously we covered few and carefully chosen. I think that’s a great, you know, category of desires in your life. I think the other is that I hear James clear talk about a lot, actually, is like, figure out the price of the desire.

Eric Jorgenson 00:40:27  Like, and if you’re not willing to pay the price, get rid of the desire. You know, like, I have these. In my case, I love comedy, I love standup comedy. I, I just appreciate the art form, I enjoy it, I always have. And sometimes if I’m watching a lot, I start to, you know, we’re we’re mimetic creatures. Like, this is a very natural thing. I start to be like, I could be a great comedian. Like, I could do that. I want to do that. That’ll be my next career arc. Like, I’m gonna start writing. If I actually look at the price of being a great comedian, I do not want to pay that price. I don’t want to leave my family. I don’t want to travel around the country and do small bars. I don’t want to, you know, put ten years of obscurity in. I didn’t start when I was 14 in nightclubs like Dave Chappelle. I am not willing to pay the price to materialize that desire, and so it does not make any sense for me to hold that desire.

Eric Jorgenson 00:41:17  Yeah, like I just need to reject it or understand that I’m not willing to pay it. I think a lot of people have this same thing with like, you know, seeing somebody who’s, you know, 8% body fat and super jacked and like, you know, they want to be super jacked. And it’s like, do you actually want to, like, eat at a caloric deficit every single day for ten years and go to the gym, you know, two hours a day, five times a week for ten years? Like, if not, then you don’t actually want that desire. You don’t want to pay the price it takes to get that thing. And you should just stop wanting it. And that’s totally fine. Nobody told you you have to want that 100%.

Eric Zimmer 00:41:49  I mean, I think that losing these half formed ideas and desires is really valuable sometimes in the coaching work that I’ve done with people, that’s sometimes all we accomplish. But it’s huge because you don’t run around all the time.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:05  Thinking all the way, you should be doing this and you should be doing that. And I wish I was doing this and all these half baked ideas. And you can actually then take your energy and time and put it on what actually really matters, what you actually really do want, what you are willing to pay the price for. So I think that is so important. I’ve told this story several times over the history of the show, but I used to play music in bands, and when I started this show, I was in a phase where I really wanted to be in a band again. It was really bugging me. I was like, I gotta, I gotta be in a band. I got it. And then I just realized that, like, that was fundamentally incompatible with another life, right? Which was one where I had a job that that paid well, but I was traveling a lot, and all my spare time was going into building this podcast. And I just finally one day looked at it and went, not now, right? Not now, and dropped it.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:02  It’s not to say it doesn’t creep up and occasionally I wish it, but it’s not. There’s not this ongoing narrative that’s sucking energy about why you should be in a band. I’m not doing. I’m not living up my potential. I’m a blah, blah, blah, blah, right? You just had to make a choice. And I love that line. Say it again about choosing.

Eric Jorgenson 00:43:20  Keep your desires few and carefully chosen. Yeah. Understand the price. You know the price of a desire and choose whether or not you’re willing to pay it. the other maybe leg of the stool of just making up a framework on the fly here. But beautiful is understand where desires come from and control your environment. You know, I always like the, the observation that, like, your environment determines what’s in your mind, but the clever mind can control the environment. You know, we are very lucky in that we can do that. But it takes it takes effort to create the environment that creates the mindset that you want.

Eric Jorgenson 00:43:56  And so, you know, this is there’s a bunch of this in kind of the habits literature of like, if you don’t want to eat candy. Throw out all the candy in your house. Make it high friction. Go get candy. but understanding where your desires are coming from. And if you can eliminate those sources of of thin, chaotic desire from your life. Obviously, number one, being social media, probably for most people, is is probably extremely, you know, five seconds to delete an app. Extremely well used five seconds. Yeah. and I find generally that like the longer form, the content is that I’m consuming, the happier I am, I’m happier if I’m reading a book than listening to a podcast. I’m happy. If I’m listen to a long podcast than a short podcast, I’m happy to read a blog post than a tweet. I don’t always live by it, but like, that sort of stretches time. And when you’re choosing to read a book rather than, you know, read a tweet, you’re making much more deliberate decisions about, like, I want to change this part of my life.

Eric Jorgenson 00:44:50  I want to, you know, this aligns with a thick desire. And when I look, pick up and look at this book that helps me, you know, achieve wealth, achieve purpose, achieve meaning, improve my relationships, have hard conversations, whatever it is. And I’m going to invest the, you know, 5 to 10 hours to learn this subject for this big desire. That’s just much more deliberate motion that helps you kind of use your time intentionally and have bigger memories of bigger steps in your life.

Eric Zimmer 00:45:14  yeah. In my upcoming book, I have a line like, if you gathered all the behavioral scientists in the world together and you ask them to agree on one thing, the one thing I think they could all agree on is rely on willpower as little as possible. Set up your environment right in a way that you’re more likely to succeed. Now, DoorDash and these alcohol and weed delivery services have made this even harder. It used to be pretty easy, like just get the junk out of your house, and as long as you don’t get in your car and drive somewhere.

Eric Zimmer 00:45:45  And then I was like, oh, wait, you know, and actually now we need to get rid of your home internet connection. And, you know.

Eric Jorgenson 00:45:54  I mean, sometimes all it takes is a little bit of friction. You know, your phone just out, you know, throw your phone into the other room. Yeah, like delete the app if you have to download the app and recreate an account. You know, it’s just that like enough time to observe yourself doing something that you know, you don’t actually want to be doing.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:13  I agree. I mean, users have heard me talk about this a lot, but I use apps to block things on my phone or computer. my main way to sort of like if I’m working and it gets hard and I’m uncertain or I’m tired, I’ll hop out and start playing solitaire. So I block the solitaire website. Now there are a million solitaire websites. Just go to Google and type solitaire. It’ll give you a game literally right there. But that’s enough that I go, oh yeah, I don’t want to do that.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:42  The best part of me decided, I don’t want to do that. The tired part of me thinks it’s a good idea, but that doesn’t mean it is. And just that sort of thing, like you said, friction, you know, increase friction if you don’t want to do something and decrease it, if you want to do more of it, it’s a pretty, pretty straightforward equation. I’d like to back up a second here and talk a little bit more about some of your views on different things. You’ve now compiled an almanac of novel. Someone named biology. I believe you’re working on one of Elon Musk’s thoughts. What are some, like first principles that you can decode from each of them that are similar? Like where, you know, if I look at different religious traditions, I kind of can start to hone in on some really core ideas, like love your neighbor, right? It kind of shows up everywhere. There’s there’s some of these things. What do you find when you go through all these different people? Some ideas that really converge.

Eric Jorgenson 00:47:45  Well, some of this will be selection bias on my part because they’re the people that I’m drawn to. So caveat with that. But I think one that we talked about already that I think is really important is just high agency, like kind of a broader scope of what they think is possible in life. Another that we also touched on is optimism. I think, you know, Elon Musk, biology, naval are all like fundamentally extremely optimistic. not just like that. The future can be better, but they are working on manifesting that optimism like they’re working at the frontiers of technology. They’re building things that most people would consider impossible. I think the desire and ability to collect incredibly talented people, is certainly a commonality among them. Like the A, players want to work with A players. and so just like find yourself, try to get into that stream of, of really, really talented people, by any means necessary, you know, joining, joining those teams, working on those projects, you know, they all live in the future a little bit.

Eric Jorgenson 00:48:44  They use the past to inform the future, but they don’t live in them. They don’t live in the past and they barely live in the present. you know, they’re very like future focused. And I think they all share that kind of like long term optimism. Short term, incredibly focused, diligent execution. they all focus on speed and really shortening timelines, questioning assumptions and driving things forward in ways that most people may not see as possible or take. Take no for an answer. I think on on timelines in ways that they don’t. But I’m drawn. I’m drawn also to, you know, people that I have not written books on, but I read a lot. Charlie Munger and David Deutsch, both, I think, are, you know, the combination of like, wisdom and very optimistic, and provide this sort of holistic, full spectrum kind of life philosophy, that like if you, if you embody this, like you are better off, your family is better off, your community is better off, humanity is better off.

Eric Jorgenson 00:49:42  There’s not there’s not the sense of, you know, good versus evil tribalism. There’s really like, just progress that we are all to some extent responsible for primarily in first, first and foremost in our own lives. but like how that weaves into the broader fabric. I think all those people have a sense of it, and I think that’s really powerful.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:02  Do you see any areas or have you noticed areas where there is difference where you’re like, wait a second, so-and-so thinks X, but so, you know, someone else is say, you know, and again, I’m primarily talking about the people that you’ve spent a lot of time compiling their wisdom or people you’ve spent a lot of time with, not the fact that people have different opinions, because of course they do. I more mean within this collection of people, are you? Are there areas where you’re like, wow, okay, geez, they look at that very differently.

Eric Jorgenson 00:50:29  Yeah. The biggest I mean, Ellen is just an outlier of outliers for lots of reasons, right? Like Elon does not care about his happiness.

Eric Jorgenson 00:50:37  He doesn’t I don’t think cares about other people’s happiness. He just wants to get important shit done. And that is like his North Star in life. And I don’t think he’s like a great example of a of a balanced life. I mean, he’s one of the most extreme people alive. and in that sense, I don’t think he’s a good, you know, full spectrum model for most people, I think. Yeah. Naval. I appreciate what naval has to say about almost every topic. Like, I think his thoughts on on family and politics and education and business building and investing, I think they’re almost all interesting and almost all correct. He’s very thoughtful and and like, cross-references a lot of those things more often than and I think Elon is like spicier, like he’s got more extreme beliefs. He’s more all over the place. He has a much broader sort of technological purview and like, is trying to execute on a lot more things in parallel, certainly than biology or, or naval. I think biology and Elon share a lot of thoughts about media, share a lot of thoughts about technology.

Eric Jorgenson 00:51:43  Like, technology is a fundamental moral good. Like by pushing technology forward, we create more for less, for more people. that is like the sort of the fundamental driver of value creation in the world.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:55  Before we wrap up, I want you to think about this. Have you ever ended the day feeling like your choices didn’t quite match the person you wanted to be? Maybe it was autopilot mode or self-doubt that made it harder to stick to your goals. And that’s exactly why I created The Six Saboteurs of Self-control. It’s a free guide to help you recognize the hidden patterns that hold you back and give you simple, effective strategies to break through them. If you’re ready to take back control and start making lasting changes. Download your copy now at once. Let’s make those shifts happen starting today when you feed a book. So if somebody were going to compile the almanac of Erik Jorgensen. What would be a couple of the key elements of that. I mean, you’ve given you’ve given some good ones already, but are there some things that would be like very fundamental to your worldview? And they may be restatements of of the things you know.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:04  You’ve obviously been influenced by these people.

Eric Jorgenson 00:53:06  Yeah. Please wait 50 years. before accepting that I’ve got a long way to go to, you know, build this thing up and try to align a truly correct and well-supported worldviews and cross-reference everything. I think partly what I’m doing is I don’t really seek a spotlight for myself here. Like, I think if I have any talent at all, it is in recognizing the genius of others. And I’m very happy to build useful things for readers out of the building blocks that other people who I think are, you know, more articulate, wiser, more experienced, more accomplished have created for us. and so I think, you know, in a way you can see my values in the blocks that I choose and the puzzle that I choose to put together. Somebody else could create a compilation of anybody on Earth, and they would impose different values. They might choose somebody else. But even if they chose the same people, they would emphasize different ideas. They would organize in different ways, and they would build a different mosaic out of the same raw material.

Eric Jorgenson 00:54:11  And that’s, you know, that’s a beautiful thing. I think at least the three books I’ve written now and Ellen’s not out yet, but it will be next year, hopefully early next year. you know, you see, you see technology, you see optimism, you see wisdom. You see, progress, a desire for, like, human thriving. you see an appreciation of the builders, the engineers. I do think in the like David Deutsch, beginning of infinity sense. There’s something really unique and special about humans. I think that’s something that really only a fraction of people truly appreciate today. That is something really, really important that I wish and hope to sort of share that idea with more people and for them to see the truth of it that like, as far as we’re aware, we are the only conscious beings that exist. And there’s a lot of I don’t know if it’s misguided environmentalism or sort of an unhealthy personal psychology that has just spread to like a species scale. it feels like it’s part of the water, but there’s a lot of people that don’t actually, they’re not proud of being human.

Eric Jorgenson 00:55:19  They’re not proud of humanity. They’re not proud of our progress. They don’t appreciate how far we’ve come. they don’t understand that they are part of this, like, big, beautiful story of a bunch of hairless monkeys that sort of spontaneously developed consciousness through this millions of years of evolutionary process. And we’re now at the cusp of, like, setting foot on another planet and expanding from, you know, this, this beautiful garden that we were born in that is inevitably eventually doomed, and all life on earth that we’re aware of in the galaxy will die unless we get out of the solar system in the next, you know, whatever, a couple thousand years. But that this civilization there were a few thousand years into May go on for millions more years. We are just the acorn that is like starting at the very barest edge to sprout, and that we are part of this incredible, epic thing that we’re all an important part of and can be proud to advance. You know, in our in our 100 years here on earth.

Eric Jorgenson 00:56:18  But it doesn’t feel day to day like we are all sort of rowing in the same boat in the same direction. But we are like, I believe ultimately that we are. And the more time you spend sort of in that head space again, back to the more people you love, the more the world you understand. You’re really you’re in a healthier, more generous, more optimistic, more excited mindset to be part of this really grand story instead of this really small one that’s sort of squabbling over, you know, some some words on a page or some lines on a map. And I find that to be a really exciting place to spend time. And I hope to sort of bring more people into that world view through my work.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:58  Well, that is a beautiful and optimistic and hopeful place to wrap up. Eric, thank you so much for joining me on the show. It’s been a real pleasure.

Eric Jorgenson 00:57:07  Thank you for having me. Appreciate you.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:09  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:18  Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

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From Family Secrets to Self-Discovery: How Understanding Our Past Heals Us with Carmen Rita Wong

December 5, 2025 1 Comment

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In this episode, Carmen Rita Wong shares her journey from learning family secrets to self-discovery and how understanding our past heals us. She delves into forgiveness, personal responsibility, and the impact of upbringing, as well as practical strategies for self-examination and habit change. Carmen shares how therapy, compassion, and embracing her complex heritage helped her build resilience and authenticity, offering listeners insights on navigating identity, breaking cycles, and finding peace with the past.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • Exploration of complex family history and identity
  • Discussion of the memoir “Why Didn’t You Tell Me”
  • The parable of the two wolves and its relevance to personal growth
  • Themes of forgiveness and personal responsibility
  • The impact of childhood experiences on adult life
  • The role of therapy in healing and self-examination
  • Navigating multicultural identity and heritage
  • The process of uncovering family secrets and understanding one’s origins
  • The importance of empathy and compassion in human relationships
  • Strategies for habit change and personal transformation through small, intentional actions

Carmen Rita Wong is the author of “Why Didn’t You Tell Me?: A Memoir”. She’s a writer, speaker, and an investor and advisor to women-owned businesses. Carmen is a former national television host, magazine advice columnist, and faculty professor. She was Vice Chair of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America and board director at The Moth. She also hosts a podcast, has published novels, and is currently working on her sixth book.

Connect with Carmen Rita Wong: Website | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook

If you enjoyed this conversation with Carmen Rita Wong, check out these other episodes:

Faith, Identity, and Finding Your Voice with Dante Stewart

Racialized Trauma with Resmaa Menakem

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Episode Transcript:

Eric Zimmer 00:01:03  Most of us spend our lives trying to simplify our story, make it neater or cleaner or easier to live with, but the truth is rarely neat. Carmen Rita Wong, writer, former television host and author of the wonderful memoir Why Didn’t You Tell Me Has lived That Truth. Her story holds love and anger, loyalty and betrayal, and the long work of forgiveness that doesn’t rewrite what happened but changes how she carries it. Her honesty reminds us that wholeness isn’t found by choosing one side of the story over another. It’s found in the courage to hold the whole truth and still keep going. Because who we are isn’t what happened to us. It’s what we do with what happened. I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed. Hi, Carmen. Welcome to the show.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:01:51  Hi, Eric. Thank you so much for having me.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:53  I am really excited to have you on. We’re going to be discussing your book called Why Didn’t You Tell Me a memoir? But before we do that, we’ll start, like we always do, with a parable. In the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with her grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:10  One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops. Think about it for a second. And they look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:02:34  I actually love this parable because I’ve told it to my daughter a few times with a little twist on it, because I’ve spent many years of self-examination and all sorts of things, including therapy, to figure out those wolves. And what I have found most helpful for me is not giving them kind of this bad, good, or any kind of judgment on the one that’s not creative meaning like the one that’s destructive that we’ll call it. And I’ve learned that that, Wolf, for me, is a child. It’s me as a child.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:03:09  And our childish emotions fear, ego, resentment, just all of those feelings that are actually of protection. We want to protect ourselves. So it’s not that I need to starve it. Instead, I just kind of do like I love dogs and I’m I have to myself. And I just know, like, even some of the most unfriendly dogs, there’s a way to approach them, right? Not all of them. Please don’t take that advice, but just I pat it on its head, you know, and I say, I hear you, I hear you, I got you. Settle down. So that’s how I treat the wolves and the other wolf. I try to, like, get it to hang out a little bit more, get a little louder, play a little bit more. But yeah, that’s really worked for me.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:52  That’s great. What kind of dogs do you have?

Carmen Rita Wong 00:03:54  I have a rescue, and she’s 14. Gloria. We got her in Brooklyn, and she came with a name.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:03:59  So. Gloria. Sticks. And the other one’s a little, pandemic puppy. He’s two. And he’s named Hubert.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:08  And what type of dog is Gloria?

Carmen Rita Wong 00:04:09  Funny enough, you know me and the DNA tests did a little doggy DNA. I mean, it was. It was the best, like, 38 bucks I’ve spent. We thought she was a puzzle, but she is, like, four things. And I’ve actually kind of forgot, because when it comes to dogs, it’s more just like. Who is she as a dog? Let me tell you. Yeah, she’s £17 of diva.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:30  Is she doing okay at her age?

Carmen Rita Wong 00:04:32  Oh my gosh, it’s amazing. She’s been in great health. She has some arthritis. You know, just like granny. She’s on gabapentin. You know what I mean? But she’s but she’s still walking around. And the funny thing is, is that getting that puppy in the pandemic, who’s like this tiny little wiry poodle thing they said that he gave her, like two years of life because she was already kind of on a downward.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:04:55  And then ever since he’s been around now she’s jumping and running around and he loves her like crazy. It’s adorable.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:01  Yeah, I’ve got an old lady. She’s not doing as well. Oh, my back legs are kind of failing her.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:05:06  And yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:07  She’s I think almost 14. She’s a little Boston terrier.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:05:10  Oh, beautiful. Yeah, I’m very concerned. and it’s. We were taking it really day by day and just. Yeah. Yeah. I’ve unfortunately lost many dogs.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:19  Yeah. Podcast listeners are gonna be like, she’s still around. Because, I mean, I’ve been talking about her demise for six months, you know, because I thought for sure, like, it’s imminent. And she just keeps outlasting, you know, which is good. I’m glad to have her. Yes, but it’s on my mind a lot. Like, I wish she could just tell me, like, is it time, sweetheart? Yes. You know. Yes. How is your quality of life? You know.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:41  But anyway. All right, we’re off topic. But I could talk about dogs all day.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:05:45  I know, me too.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:46  What you said about the wolves is interesting, because one of the things that I’m struck by in your book, and I’ve heard you refer to this elsewhere, is I mean, there’s a lot of people in the book who do things that we might conventionally say are not good. They’re lying. They’re selling drugs, they’re abusive. They’re all kinds of things. Right? And a lot of that is pointed at you, but not exclusively. But you do a really nice job of saying like, no one’s a villain. And I’ve heard you sort of say, you know, everyone is a product of their times, their place. I just wonder if you could share a little bit more about how you’ve arrived at that place with people, and how does that inform your view, looking out at the world as a whole, not just your own family?

Carmen Rita Wong 00:06:36  That’s a big one. Eric, I’ll say this, though it doesn’t absolve anyone of responsibility.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:06:40  I want to make that very clear upfront. Understanding people as human beings does not absolve them. Responsibility. It does not mean you forgive them. It does not mean they can get away with it. But it does help you look at your own life and other people’s lives in a way that’s almost a little impersonal. I want to say this personal, but just you see them as people separate from you. Our ego is a big thing, you know, and it attaches us to things, and it takes things very personally. And it’s this, that the other. But maybe that person’s having a bad day. Maybe that person got bad news. All of those things with me, in order to process and understand and answer that question that I’m asking my mother’s ghost. Right? Why didn’t you tell me this tremendous secret of my life? I, as you read the book, can see that I had a very difficult mother and relationship and family and and all of that. So in order to find peace myself, I had to see her.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:07:40  Something else besides my mother. I had to see her as a person. Just a person. Just a person who? She was a child. She was a helpless child with her own abuse in her vicious, vicious abuse. She was born of a time when she had very few choices. She was brought to this country again, no choices. Married off by her father, horrible situations she found herself in. And you know what she did, what she did with what she had. Now I could label it and we can. And yes, it was abusive. But I’ll tell you this, understanding her as a human being brought me so much peace, understanding the people that hurt you as their own people and not everything in reaction to you. Like for me, I stopped feeling like it was my fault. Why would she do that to me? And is this person mad at me and why is it it’s this is what’s happening. This is why she’s this way. I’m going to be okay. And the funny thing is, Eric, is that when you start doing that to people, especially people that have really affected your lives, you do it to yourself.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:08:44  Meaning I’m kinder to myself for it because it is that kind of idea of like we’re human beings. There’s a lot that puts us together and we can’t take everything personally. We really can’t. And of course, that’s a little easier for me to say now with 15 years of weekly therapy under my belt and unfortunately, my mother being gone for almost 20 years, it took that long.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:07  Yeah. You write somewhere, it’s a lot easier to forgive people after they’re gone. Right.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:09:11  Yeah. And I haven’t forgiven her, though, by the way. Okay. I don’t know. No, because I believe that, first of all, forgiveness. Who does it serve? If I’m looking for peace, I’m looking for peace. How do you get there? Well, forgiveness definitely serves the person who hurts you, right. And you’ve already been hurt. So why are you doing something for them? I think they have to do something for you first to be forgiven. You know, you have to get an apology and a change in behavior.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:09:41  And I’ve gotten either from any of my parents. So, you know, to me, it’s I have found peace. I see you as a human being, but forgiveness. Yeah. You got to do something for it.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:54  Right? The studies that have been published that, you know, people who study forgiveness will say something very similar. It’s exceptionally difficult to forgive. And unacknowledged crime, for lack of a better word. Right. Unless someone has come and said they’re sorry, it’s very difficult to forgive. It’s a key piece of it. And I think that distinction is helpful about making peace. It is. You’re sort of treading another line in there that I think is a really important line, particularly as we become a culture that is a much more aware of the impacts that our childhoods have had on us. Right. And I think the window of being a good parent has shrunk and shrunk and shrunk. It’s pretty narrow these days for you to be like, well, you did everything right, because of course you didn’t.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:38  You know, it just feels like it’s a shrinking window, which I think in many ways there’s a lot of good that has come from that. But I think that the thing that is difficult to get the balance right on is to say, because I see people on one end or the other and I’ve been on both these ends, which one end is like, everything was fine. My parents did the best they could. Right. People are a product of their places. I’m fine. Which does not acknowledge at all the impact that that had, or the other extreme is one of sort of almost giving all our power over to the parent who did this in that, like, well, I’m this way because of all these things and all the focus is on them, right? And I think what you’re describing is this middle way where we say, yes, that had impact, and I need to work on healing that impact. Like that’s a very real thing. And carrying hate and blame doesn’t really help me.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:11:34  Oh no, not at all. And the thing is that we have to understand that we’re responsible for our own behavior, regardless of our childhoods and what happened to us, because that is the issue. When somebody hurts you and refuses to apologize or refuses to see how they’ve hurt you, or that they’ve hurt you or acknowledge it, or any of those things, you know, and they’re saying, yes, but I suffered. You know, it’s very dishonest, right? We have to acknowledge other people’s feelings, but we also have to acknowledge our own and take that responsibility. And I have been in therapy mostly not just because I knew I needed it, because I had a really messed up childhood, but because I wanted a better life for myself. And I knew that that meant taking control of a lot of emotional things. And I, you know, make better choices, of course, but also because I was a parent myself. Yeah. And I always swore to myself, if I ever became a parent, I did not want to be my mother.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:12:29  And we all say this, right? But guess what? We do have some ability to change that. Of course, there’s epigenetics and of course, like things are handed down and temperaments. I’m Latin, I yell a little bit, just a little bit, you know, but you’re not going to catch me screaming. I’ll never insult, to belittle or all those other things. So it’s really about me figuring my mother out, which helped me figure myself out, which then helped me figure my parenting better, and stopping a long, long chain of abuse and violence and lies.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:04  Yeah. And lies. Yeah, yeah. You have a line about this that I really, really loved. And you say sometimes I have to remind myself that my mother may have blended the concrete, but I am the architect. And that is a really great way of sort of saying it. You know, as you said, we’re still responsible. We’ve got to take the raw materials at hand and like an architect, make the best thing we can out of them.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:13:28  Yeah, absolutely. I love this story. I don’t know if you heard recently this year that they found, you know, why is the concrete construction in Rome? How has it lasted so long? And it’s all about what the concrete’s made out of. And that that brought me back to that line that I had in there. And I said, well, oh, damn, they got good concrete. That’s like good parenting. What an advantage. But then I thought to myself, I’m like, okay, will we know that? And so if the concrete’s not great, what it means is, is that I need to actively and possibly always be repairing. Yeah, but to repair, I have to always be noticing the cracks, knowing where the weaknesses are, paying attention to them, and then doing the best I can to really fill it in. And the Japanese also do that with the, you know, the gold. Yep. They put back together wabi sabi. I love that so much because I’ve hung on to that since I first learned about it years ago and just said, that is going to be my life.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:14:28  Because I think for many of us who have difficult childhoods, we can really feel the weight of the ugliness and the brokenness, and instead, you can make all those cracks just so beautiful. You can make beautiful things out. All that stuff.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:42  Totally. As you were saying that I was thinking about, I was in France last summer, and some of the best Roman ruins are in southern France, and there’s an aqueduct there which is still standing, and it is spectacular. And there’s nothing holding the pieces of concrete together. The concrete is so good and it’s so perfectly placed. Yeah. And as you were talking, I was like, yeah, so you could build an aqueduct that would last with other materials. But to your point, you would want to put more support into it than exists in that one. Right. And I think those of us who have had challenges and over I don’t even like the word overcome them, have made them beautiful, have learned to live with them, have been able to grow from them, I think that the thing we learn is what support we need, what that actually looks like, and it looks different for everybody.

Eric Zimmer 00:15:36  It could be therapy, it could just be exercise and it could be 50 different things. But we figure that out and then we sort of remain committed to doing our best to watch for the cracks, like you said.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:15:47  Yeah, yeah. And then you know what? You get older and you are the architect. So you always could, you know, add a new bedroom or I don’t know, you know, you can always be building. That’s why I like that analogy. When it came to me, I’m like, I could just always be building and adjusting the blueprint.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:01  Yeah, yeah, yeah. It’s such a good analogy. You know, so much of your book is about identity. Why don’t you give us the short version of the book without revealing too much that you don’t want to, but that at least gives the context for the ways in which your identity has sort of shifted over time, because I’d like to explore then identity a little bit more deeply, but I think listeners need a little more context before we do that.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:16:26  Sure. Well, the one sentence I’m going to give you is going to just start you off with a lot of identity. So I was born a Dominican mother and Chinese father in Harlem in New York City, and my mother divorced my Chinese father and moved us to New Hampshire with an Anglo father. My Chinese father, my Anglo father were from completely two different worlds. And so that was very different. But my childhood started in the very, very rich cultural atmosphere of, you know, if you’ve seen the Heights that was, you know, my early childhood and Chinatown, which is pretty incredible. And then we went to New Hampshire and New Hampshire in the late 70s, early 80s was not very welcoming to my older brother and I. He was six years older than me. And we were, you know, we’re brown folk. My mother was black, Dominican, so we’re Afro Latinos. And it was very, very difficult. And it’s one of those things where sometimes, you know, if you get to go through life not having to think about identity, God bless you because we don’t have the choice.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:17:23  And so it came down on us pretty hard. And, you know, I went through life, Carmen Rita Wong, and that has followed me through many things that had shaped so much of my life, whether it was the racism, the expectation, the low expectations of people to being questioned all the time about what am I, who am I? My mother, very much wanting to assimilate, so not necessarily giving me the right answers or not necessarily telling me whole stories. And then of course, in the end, what the book’s really about is I find out if she’s dying. I was 31 years old, and she was only 59, that I was not. Poppy Wong’s daughter and my stepfather at the time was the one who tells me this. And then I find out a confront her. She has a whole bunch of stories, more news, stories about who it is. And then I had gotten this book, sold the book. It was in edits, and I was doing all this DNA testing, and I hired genealogists and no one could figure out who my father was.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:18:26  You know all those about that money later and all that research later and a lot of dead ends, which are really interesting, actually, that I write about in the book. And I’m in edits and I had to write the epilogue because in the end, I found my paternal family, which is wild. But that origin story of going between Harlem and New Hampshire and Dominican and Chinese to New Hampshire. It was a lot. It was challenging. And I think for many people who have discovered that they have different parents than they thought they did. You know, there is always that added element. Of course, if they happen to be a different race, there’s that two or different culture. The book is really about me asking my mother that question, why didn’t you tell me? And trying to answer it myself when I wrote it. You know, page turner, thriller type of mystery solving book because that’s the way it felt. You know, I wanted you to feel it along with me. Like as I’m going through my life in this kind of like mystery of like, who is this woman and why would she do such a thing? And all these characters that come into my life is just it’s wild stuff.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:19:30  As my daughter would say, mom, your life is crazy.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:34  Yeah, well, you know what? We tend to throw that word around pretty easy. Like, that’s crazy. But yeah, your life is heading in that direction for sure. Like, there’s a lot of chaos and a lot of different cultural characters. I mean, your father is a essentially a gangster in Chinatown, which you guys have no idea. You’ve got a pretty rich soup there.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:19:55  Yes. Between the father, who’s a, you know, a Chinese gangster. Right. And then the stepfather, who’s like, graduate school of economics at Columbia. Like, this is this was absolutely the juxtaposition of my life. But here’s what I’ll tell you, which is how and really why I really wanted to write the book wasn’t just, you know, for myself to answer the story, of course, I absolutely love memoir, but I do believe the storytelling. And I know people say this a lot, but it is the truth.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:20:20  It is the most powerful thing. It’s very much our humanity. This is a very American story. We just don’t hear it. But there are millions out there like me, and we need to hear more American stories about, you know, immigrant families and black, Latino, Asian, all kinds of families that really make up this country because I was made to feel completely as a child, that I was lesser than I was worthless, I was invisible because I wasn’t in school. Well, this was in New Hampshire. Of course, I wasn’t in the library. I wasn’t talked about in history like nothing or television. Yeah, and kids carry that with them a lot, even adults. So it’s helped some people, which I’m happy to have heard from.

Eric Zimmer 00:21:04  Yeah. You describing moving to New Hampshire and being like the only. I know you don’t like this word, but I’ll use it for ease of use. The only minority family, because you were in that case, you were brown.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:21:16  non-White.

Eric Zimmer 00:21:17  White. Yeah. non-White. White. Yeah. Brought back a memory for me, and one that I am not particularly proud of, which is that I grew up in. Sounds like very much like the neighborhood you grew up. And you talked about your mom ringing a dinner bell to bring everybody in, right? Same, same sort of thing. Dad went off to the office with a briefcase and a very generic suburban thing. But there were two Chinese families that lived in our neighborhood, and they really were just on the outside. And I, as a child, I think I just internalized the sort of otherness towards them that was there. I don’t know that I was ever, you know, outright. I mean, I don’t I don’t have any recollections of that. But the me today would respond very, very differently than the Me did then. You know, I think the kids just seemed strange to me and, and I didn’t know what to do with that. And I hadn’t thought of that in I mean, it’s been a number of years, but I was reading your book and I was like, oh, I wish I knew where they were to be like, sorry I didn’t do better.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:22:18  That’s the thing, is that it really starts with the kids, right? And as parents, we gotta understand that your kids absorb a lot from you.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:27  Yeah.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:22:27  And so, you know, you, instead of seeing, you know, neighborhood kids and being like, they’re just kids. They’re just kids, like, hi. What’s up? You know, they’re just kids, you know, and and hanging out with them and being friends with them. It seemed odd or strange or weird. This happened with one of my nieces. She was very young, but we had all had gone out to dinner back in New Hampshire a year ago, and we went to Chinese food restaurant, which we loved. The kids, they love the Chinese food because they don’t get to go there very often. And we were using chopsticks and she said, this is weird. This is weird. I say, honey, it’s not weird. It’s just different from the way you eat. There’s billions of people who use chopsticks.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:23:10  Billions. And they would think you’re weird for using a fork. So let’s just not call it that and say this is different. Let me learn. Let me try. Tell me more about it.

Eric Zimmer 00:23:21  Yep. And that was the word that was used by the adults about these families there. Weird othering, you know. And. Yeah. And again, I had absolutely, you know, no context for which to do what you did, which is like, well, maybe compared against this very white background, but.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:23:38  Yeah, just acknowledging the differences, because once you realize that those differences and that’s another reason why I wrote the book is like, look, it’s what I’m saying. It’s an American story because we all have parents that we don’t get along with. We all have siblings we have trouble with. We all have secrets in our family. We all sometimes feel like an outsider when we realize that people from other races and cultures, though they we all have our different kind of history and weight of living in this society, that we are people, that we can be curious and that we can learn.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:24:09  You know, seeing people’s full human beings. Like going backwards to what I was talking about, about my mother really makes a huge difference in how you see the world. Yeah, for sure. And I think being cross, racial cross, cultural cross, everything that is a gift, even though it was painful in many ways, that was a gift to me. My ability to empathize with almost anybody and to see things very big picture.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:35  I think it’s a definite limitation to me growing up the way I did. You know, in the place I did there is a still you know, we talk about implicit bias. There is still in me. I have to really watch it and work on it, which is where I just want people to be like me, you know, like, this is the way to be like this, you know? And again, it just comes up sort of automatically like the way we respond to certain things inside of us. And I now see it and I’m like, oh, step back.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:03  Like, hold on. That’s ridiculous. But it is an orientation that I grew up with. And as we know, anything we grow up with, and it’s unquestioned for a long time. Takes a lot of questioning to unwind.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:25:13  Well, I’m glad you are, because it actually can be very dangerous. Extraordinarily, yeah. To people you know who aren’t of your group. Right. So, for example, I say to my daughter, it’s like, look. Because when you’re teenagers especially, you tend to be very ego focused, like everything’s about you. You’re very much a narcissist, which is very normal as a teenager. Right. And to say to them, like, look, you’re worried, you’re anxious, everyone’s talking about you. You feel like this, everyone’s this, this, everyone’s me. Do you realize that everyone that you’re in class with goes to bed at night with the same thoughts going through their heads? Yep. Everyone’s thoughts are just thoughts, just like yours. And I’m trying to help her, which I did for myself and I wish many people would do.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:25:54  Especially if, you know, you had a limited upbringing or childhood, is to look and see that when you have a bias to look, let’s say it’s like you just you encounter a person and instantly your head goes, I pull away or I’m this or I don’t talk to them or Bill, which I see all the time. I mean, people, whether it’s they didn’t want to sit next to me in the cafeteria or they don’t want to sit next to me in a bus or whatever. It’s just stop and go. That’s a person.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:20  Yes.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:26:20  Just literally saying that in your head that’s a person. That could be my cousin. Whatever. If they were a different color or that could be my, you know, that if they were a different gender. So it helps not only you interact with the world, but I’ll tell you, it makes your world so much richer, so much richer to approach the world as that’s a person.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:59  There’s a Buddhist practice called commonalities practice, and it’s been revolutionary to me in practicing it over probably 25 years now, which is that you can find whatever wording you want.

Eric Zimmer 00:27:11  But in essence, it’s realizing, like every single human wants to be happy just like I do. And they want to avoid pain just like I do, without exception. I hate to say without exception, because there’s always an exception to something, but 99% of the time people are just like this. You know, I was wondering whether sociopaths are that way anyway.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:27:33  Well, let’s put it this way we don’t need to spend any time on sociopaths, you know what I mean?

Eric Zimmer 00:27:37  Let’s skip.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:27:38  Those. They do that for themselves.

Eric Zimmer 00:27:40  But for everybody else, that phrase and I mean, I’ll just sit on public transportation in like a city and just looking around and just doing that person to person to person and just realizing, like, just like me, just like me, just like me on that fundamental level. And from there, everything to me is sort of strategy. You know, we may disagree about the strategies that emerge for getting those things, but we’re after the same thing.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:28:05  And we don’t all have the same tools.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:28:07  You know, we come up with, like, for example, the idea of the architect in concrete. Like, I would have probably been a very different person had I stayed with my people. You know, the Chinese and Dominican community and stayed in the city. I can’t say if I’d be worse or better off. I just think I would have been a different person. What I encountered in New Hampshire during like, very important years of growth and growing and establishing myself as a human being. I could have done without some of that. Like, you know, how they say it was like people say, oh, it builds character. I’ve had enough character, I got, I got, I got loads, you know what I’m saying? But I think too, I like to just take myself out of myself and meaning, like not centering myself as in relation to and instead. And I do this in my family, and I do this with a lot of folks, and I’m not perfect at it.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:28:53  But just really saying, like, that person is hurting. Yeah, that person is happy. That person is, you know, I wish and I would hope that, you know, the more listening and understanding that is done, the better, the less generalization. So I have a master’s in psychology. So one of my favorite tenants with statistics and theory was always differences within groups are equal to or greater than differences between groups. Right. So you can say men are better runners than women. And I can tell you I could get you the slowest man and I could get you a woman who beat him, or I could get you the fast man. I could get you a woman who would equal him. Do what I’m saying. So there’s so much variation within groups that we form in our heads, whether it’s by race or culture or gender, whatever it is, there’s so much variation that it’s equal to the variation between the groups. We can always find examples. So if you look at the world that way, you start to see that to your point commonality is it? We are human beings.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:30:01  Period. Yeah. We just come through different stuff.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:07  Totally. So I want to circle back to the idea of identity, because as a I’m not going to say I’m not a Buddhist. I’ve practiced Buddhism a great deal. I don’t I don’t know what it doesn’t matter. But as a practitioner, a student, you know, anyway, one of the things that sits at the heart of that tradition is this idea that the self we think we are isn’t as solid as it is. And if you start taking the pieces apart, you go, well, what’s really there? Right? And so I wanted to talk to you about that because I think you’re coming from a slightly different angle on it, which, you know, you say in the book, how do you become un Chinese after, you know, that’s not your wording exactly, but you thought you were Chinese all these years, and all of a sudden you find out, at least by genetics, you are not. So there’s that identity.

Eric Zimmer 00:30:56  And then this father shifts, and there’s so many identity shifts that are happening to you. I’m curious how the external identity shifts that have occurred. In what ways do they contribute to a strengthening inner identity? I know the ways that they’re destabilizing. Right. And you talk about those very well, how destabilizing that is. But I’m curious, is there something about that process that has allowed you to get a stronger inner identity that isn’t based on the things outside so much?

Carmen Rita Wong 00:31:28  Oh, yeah. Oh yes yes yes yes yes. And that’s been like a beautiful thing through all of this. Which, by the way, I’m still Chinese, but but I’m not biologically. But let me tell you, you don’t stop just because, you know, it’s like my Asian friends who are Latin American three generations back. Like, they don’t say they’re Asian. They look at you like, look at them, and you’re like, you’re Asian. You’re like, listen. And they’re like, mirror, you know, like that.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:31:50  The Spanish is there. So we all have to come about it our own way. And I’ll tell you this. My big revelations have been happening since the book came out, and since other things, of course, happened. For example, Papa Wong passed away in June and having to reveal also to my stepfather who my biological father is, that was a whole nother thing too, because I spent my childhood trying to please my parents, and my mother wanted to assimilate more, right? And I wanted to be this new father’s kid. And they went on to have my four sisters after me, and I felt too other. I felt completely unmoored. We left all of our family, everything we knew, everything the community, everything. So I really spent a lot of time trying to be him. And at one point I was in therapy. Maybe, gosh, I want to say eight years ago or so when I was doing TV and I had an moment where I realized if I really loved finance, I was covered financial journalism for 20 years.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:32:55  If I really love finance, you know, I would be just making Bank on Wall Street, right? That’s not what I loved. What I loved was writing. What I loved was being on stage, giving advice, all that stuff. So I said, you know, I think this stepfather, Marty, he used to always be in front of the TV when he was home. Right? Kind of like your dad comes home with a briefcase, opens up the newspaper, Wall Street Journal, and then is watching Wall Street Week and all those shows. I had a byline in those magazines that he subscribed to. I was an editor at the magazines he subscribed to. I went on the shows and hosted a show on the networks he watches. I wanted him to see me and find me valuable as a daughter, as a child, and look at me like I’ve spent decades of my life trying to win somebody. And in the end, you know, he wasn’t my father either, right? But also to no recognition of what that did to me.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:33:55  And then I started realizing, as we do. Many of us, when we’ve been neglected by parents emotionally. We people please. And we act. We perform for approval. And I realize that a lot of my life was about that. So now where I’m at 51 years old, there’s something about the 50 mark, man. Like, it really does it to you.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:18  I’m there, I know.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:34:20  Yeah, I just realized.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:21  I would never have guessed that about you, but.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:34:23  Thank you, darling. That’s the Dominican side. but I realized, especially when Papi Wong passed away, how much I’m really his daughter. Like, really? I am really his daughter. I am so much a Wong, and it’s just so clear here is this Chinese drug dealing gangster who I never even knew, by the way he did all these things until, of course, very late in life. But his character, in the way he was and how he was just, you know, could go up to anybody, no matter what their background and all of us.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:34:59  You just just love this guy. You know, it’s like very social kind of person, very community focused, very much let’s get things done type of guy and very entrepreneurial. And that’s something I very much am. But I’m just his daughter for sure. And so I think in terms of identity culturally, yes, too. But I think him as a human being, as a person and as my brother’s sister, like the two of us very much his kids and my mom’s, of course. But I was just kind of surprised to figure it out this late in life just how much. And it took him leaving because trust me, he was a very disruptive presence even in his old age. I can tell you to be able to sit still with it, you know, and to realize that as I’m getting older and I’m discovering how much of me is really me. How much of me was built to please to win love? That, by the way, children should just get no matter what. To win acceptance and approval and defy expectations of the larger community that thought less of me because of my race and gender.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:36:06  There is so much of that. So I’m excavating, and it’s pretty amazing that, you know, you can find yourself once you kind of dig out from all of that and to not feel bad about it either. I think there’s this idea of like, you know, no, where was I fake or whatever, whatever the kids say, you know? No, it’s just like we’re all like that. We all want mommy and daddy to love us. We all want to be accepted, you know?

Eric Zimmer 00:36:30  Yeah. We’re all responding to and reacting to and being shaped by so many different things. I’ve heard you talk about, you know, there’s culture, there’s color, there’s your family. There’s I mean, all these things are always shaping us to the point that I think the question of like, who’s the real me in here is almost a red herring in that it can be very hard to find any real me that wasn’t shaped in some way, shape or form. Now, that’s not to say that we don’t have personalities and that we don’t have versions of ourselves that feel more true than others.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:37:05  Yeah, and that’s the whole midlife crisis thing, right? If people say that, it’s because all of a sudden you, like, stop doing what the world tells you you’re supposed to be doing, and your parents tell you what you’re supposed to be doing, and then you go out and you’re like, I’m doing what I want. We become kids again. And it’s that whole idea of like, what were you like when you were like eight? What did you like to do? What made you happy? What was exciting to you? I recommend going back and doing that. That’s an exercise I’ve been doing with myself.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:32  Yeah, it’s an interesting one because I do that from time to time and I’m like, somewhere I crossed over and it happened relatively early, sort of a weird little different creative little kid who was kind of into his own world and suddenly became really into sports in the sports world. And that didn’t feel fake at all. Yeah. And yet I can see there was some degree of cultural shaping.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:58  So, I mean, I think even, you know, really little I’m like trying to make my, my home work for me. Yeah. As Gabor Mate writer says, I think he summed this up the best, which is we’re always in a battle between attachment and authenticity. Yeah, right. You know, on one hand, we’re trying to be the person that gets loved and is securely attached, and yet we have a desire to be authentic. And those two things are in a push and pull. I think to some degree, it’s a tension that I don’t think it’s completely resolved ever. Right. It probably shouldn’t. Right. Because those are two important needs. They’re both needs.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:38:38  One thing that was helpful that my therapist, who’s very informed, He’s very Buddhist and Jungian, so which I love him to pieces, I love, I love him. I got him my Obi-Wan. He helped me a lot by making me think of these parts of me as separate people at a table. And there was the one in the naming them, giving them little names, little characters, because he knows I love to write and create worlds, and that makes total sense.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:39:02  And it’s like, okay, so this one’s been in charge for a while because she was constructed to protect you and and strive and this and that. The other thing and then this one over here, it’s been a little quiet, you know, and now this one wants to come and sit at the table. And it’s not that any of them are inauthentic mes, it’s that they’re all me. Yeah, but there is one that should be at the head of the table, the one that when you’re kind of get to know them all, when you know that they’re there, then you can kind of slide over to the one that’s going to to your point about the one you feed. This one is going to sit at the head of the table because she knows how to do it the best way. You know what I mean? Like, one of them has to get up and be like, scooch, scooch. I need to come in here. I need to come in here for a second, and then you can call on them, too.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:39:53  That was very helpful to me, because for me, it was pretty traumatizing to realize how much I’d been living my life for other people. Really, it was it was kind of devastating. And it’s not that I’m horrified. I mean, shoot, I’ve done so much. I look back and I go, oh my God, who was that person? Well, she was doing a lot, and she’s not who I want to always be. But you know what? She did what she had to do because that’s what she thought she had to do.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:38  Check in for a moment. Is your jaw tight? Breath shallow. Are your shoulders creeping up? Those little signals are invitations to slow down and listen. Every Wednesday, I send weekly bites of wisdom. A short email that turns the big ideas we explore here in each show. Things like mental health, anxiety, relationships, purpose into bite size practices you can use the same day it’s free. It takes about a minute to read and thousands already swear by it.

Eric Zimmer 00:41:11  If you’d like extra fuel for the weekend, you also get a weekend podcast playlist. Join us at one UFI newsletter. That’s one you get a newsletter and start receiving your next bite of wisdom. All right, back to the show. It’s interesting even going what I thought was like my own path, right? I’m not going to go to college, and I’m going to pursue being a musician and screw everybody else. And that that descended into heroin addiction and drug addiction. It didn’t end well. And even that was a reaction to. Right. I’m not saying that no part of that was authentic because some of it, of course, was to your point. It’s not all one thing or the other, but there was a definite reaction to being brought up in a white, middle class society that I said, I don’t want anything to do with this. So I pushed it away so hard. And that’s just the opposite of playing to win in that system. Right. It’s still a reaction to the system.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:10  Yeah. Versus a way of embodying who we are. And in the same way that your career that you’re saying, you know, you were playing to win. There are also parts of you that were being fulfilled as you went through that. So it wasn’t all. Sure. You know, so it’s yeah, we’re always kind of this blend of things.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:42:26  I remember I got very insulted when someone, you know, older white banker guy looked at my background and my degrees and all that stuff and was like, oh, hello? You overcompensated, didn’t you?

Eric Zimmer 00:42:36  Oh.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:42:37  And I was like. See, you just told on yourself.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:43  Yeah.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:42:44  Because would you say that to your fellow white male banker over here. Would you say that. No. So what did you just say to me about yourself that you’re racist? Basically, you’re a bigot. And, you know, my answer was like, I don’t compensate for anything. This is just my existence. This is just who I am. Like, there’s plenty of us out there.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:43:04  Get used to it. Yeah, but there was an element of I’ll show you. Yeah. And it was a lot actually about though my mother in my house, I couldn’t exist without getting straight A’s. I mean like really she would have put me on the street but it was very much like I’ll show you I can do it and then leave like it was my way out and it was communicated to me then in school with these nuns that it was just they just thought I was going to be barefoot and pregnant by 16. And so there was and I think I wrote about this one where I was just like, I got to taste what spike tasted like. And at the time I liked it, but it was really like overly sweet candy that would give you some cavities. So you got to be careful. But when I was young, I was I was like, oh, look at her. She’s mad that I aced this. Oh, that tastes good. But then I learned that that’s quite poisonous, you know, so you can’t do things out of spite.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:43:56  But I did them anyway because I wanted to do them anyway. You know, if I broke someone ideas of who I should be as a young Latina, then I did. Hopefully I served somebody else.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:06  Yeah. Someone asked you about the overarching message from the book that you’d like to give towards your daughter, and you said there was two, one practical, one personal. But I’m not going to tell you what those were because I want to see if there are any different now. So if there was one overarching method.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:44:22  That’s a trick question.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:25  I’ll tell him if you want. I actually was going to read them and I thought, I wonder if they.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:44:29  Tell me then I’ll tell you if I still agree or not.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:31  Because I’m like, all right.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:44:32  All right. Yeah. Oh, man.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:34  So the practical one was that your daughter got to watch how hard it was for you to get this book published. Right. The rejection again and again, and about learning to just take that and sort of get back up and keep trying.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:47  That was the practical. And then the personal is. I’ll just read it because it’s beautifully said. I hope she sees how I learned with empathy to see my mother as a full human being, faults and all, to not treat her as a villain though she caused so much trauma.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:45:02  Yes, I would have definitely said that. Second one compassion. Compassion. And I’ve heard from quite a few people. And thank you to everyone who’s ever written a review or written to me or anything, because authors love it who’ve been surprised by how much compassion I’ve had. And that compassion is very hard earned. I worked really hard to do that, and it’s probably one of the biggest gifts I feel I’ve given myself is the ability to be that way. And in terms of practical to I would add on, that’s about book writing. That’s about like being in the business. Right? any artistic, creative business, it’s like you just got to keep going. The rejections will keep coming. It’s very subjective. But I’ll say this, I think and I hope she also learned how to manage family and history and to be honest about it and to tell your story and that your story has value.

Eric Zimmer 00:45:54  Yeah, the compassion being a hard one thing. I’m curious what led you to compassion being something that you wanted to cultivate? I’m curious if you can remember what brought you there.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:46:09  Well, a couple things. I, thankfully was built with a lot of compassion for other people. So because I ended up advocating for my little sisters a lot, you know, it was always going to bat for the little guy, right? Or always then going to bat for my people. There’s young people, nonprofits like all this stuff always, you know, raising money, always doing those things. I’m an activist. You know, all those things. Always going to bat for people. And I realized that I was killing myself with the voice in my head that was so loud, saying that I was doing the wrong things, making the wrong choices, being bad. I was not good enough, not good enough, not good enough. That. Which, of course, is my mother’s voice. That, you know, we can turn down the volume on that record.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:46:58  That record will not maybe leave us ever. And that’s okay. But I can turn down the volume. But in order to do that, it does take some self-compassion, because I had found that I had more compassion for other people than for myself, and it was very damaging. Right. And then being a mom, I had to feel more for my child than react to her. That is something that unfortunately gets handed down. Of course, in families of generational trauma and abuse, this idea of, you know, don’t you talk to me and you respect me and you fear me, and I refuse to do that. So that took me being compassionate to her as a child, as a human being, a separate human being for me, with her own sets of feelings and own personality and own self. And not everything’s in reaction to me, not everything’s about me. And then turn that on, you know, to myself what I was told was be curious about why I’m feeling that way. Be curious about where that voice comes from.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:47:59  Be curious about when it shows up and how and why. Yeah. And what’s it saying? You know, so it’s not so that you just hear almost like a clattering sound. Instant clattering sandwich can bring about a physical response where I’d be like, I need a drink, you know, whereas now I’m just kind of like, I don’t need that. Fine. You know, like, I don’t have these automatic physical reactions to like, make these things go away. Instead, I’m just kind of like, who is that voice? What’s she saying? And sometimes you just talk back to it. Can I swear I’ll be like, you’re full of shit. Sure. Yeah. Feel like you’re full of shit. You’re scared, you’re afraid. And then it’s. I keep digging and going backwards. You’re afraid of what? What are you afraid of? It’s almost like a little conversation. That’s compassion. Yeah. And when you have that compassion for yourself, that helped me understand everybody around me. But again, I understand them.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:48:53  It doesn’t mean, you know, I’m like peace. I’m all about my peace. Like, it’s about time I had some peace. but I’m not responsible for others peace in that way.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:05  I love the way you deconstructed that process, because that really is a lot of when we talk about self-compassion. I mean, some of it we talk about being kind to ourselves, which is important, but it’s so nebulous, right? But you really described a very clear process. And it’s funny that you said, I need a drink because as I was getting sober, I had to do it a couple times, but the second time that thought would just emerge and I would notice it was just running in my brain and I would go, what is happening here? Right? Some of it is habit pattern, right? Sure. But some of it. And so then I began to notice what situations most caused it. And then it morphed. And not in a way that initially sounds better because it went to I want to die.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:53  yeah. But even that’s been there. But I didn’t want to. Right. It was just this habitual voice. And I was able to then go, well, what’s causing that? And notice it. And I was able to have a little humor around it, a little bit like, okay, let’s step down the drama here a little bit like, you know, without minimizing the hurt that was driving that, right? For me, it was really about going, what is it that causes that to come on most strongly. Yeah. And I’ve identified those things. I mean, for me, they tend to be coming to a situation where I’m going to make someone unhappy. Like with whatever choice I make, someone is going to be unhappy. I’ll acquiesce on my own behalf far easier. But when I’m trapped. Yeah, that’s certainly one of them. But another I’ve realized over the years is when I don’t know the answer to something that could be a variety of things. I don’t think humans, we like uncertainty.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:41  It makes us uncomfortable. But as a kid, the one thing that I was praised for was being smart. That was it. That was the thing. And so to not be smart is like to not exist.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:50:52  Yeah. But to say I don’t know is, you know, the smartest thing of all.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:56  Yeah. I mean, the Zen tradition is, is very clear about this is an old phrase from a Zen master not knowing his most intimate. And I love that phrase. So I get it. Absolutely. And I just know that it’s something I still work to unwind, but I can just catch that voice going now a whole lot easier. I like that way of saying clattering, you know? Yeah, because now it is a noise almost. I’m like, wait, hang on a second. Like, wait, hold on. Yeah. That’s not what’s actually going on here. What is you know. Yeah. But thank you for deconstructing that because I think it’s really helpful.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:51:31  I needed that too.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:51:32  Like I needed that then. Yes, this was therapy provided my my Obi-Wan I needed that. And especially since I tend to write and think in very kind of visual, textural ways and processed ways, you know, don’t just say, be kind. What does that mean? I don’t even know. I don’t even know how to be kind of myself. I don’t even know what that means. But it’s like, okay, well, you’re a curious person. Be curious about. Yeah. Why did you just have that thought? What were you feeling when you had that thought? Why are you reacting to that person in that way? What are they bringing out to you? What are they remind you of? What just happened there. And I started doing that. Like when I interact with people and I just walk away and just think and be like, oh, this is interesting. And if you start doing that and you make it very much a habit, it’s quite fascinating what you see of yourself.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:52:21  Yeah, I found it to be an incredible way to kind of excavate and do the work, as they say on yourself is really just asking these questions. And to your point about when you say, you know, oh, I need a drink or I need this, or I need just stop. Well, what the hell am I feeling right now? Yeah. And sometimes it’s just a matter of just feeling those feelings and just being like and naming it and just being like, all right, maybe I’m also just tired. You know, let me take a bath or let me just, like, watch a good show or something else. It’s been incredibly helpful, and I’m hoping to pass that down to the kid because, boy, man, if I had had that, how tremendous for people to have that. It opens up your world too, right? Because then you’re not so ego forward.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:04  Yep. Absolutely. So let’s close with I just got to throw this line in here. It’s not what I want to close with, but it’s so good.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:13  Which is? Catholicism lends itself well to obsessive compulsive disorder. Say the full rosary before bed and then another three Hail Marys just to make sure. Cross yourself three times every night before you go to sleep and kiss your right thumb after the last. I would say the Zen tradition is similar. I came to it as an adult, but you know, there can be so much like focus on exactly like, which foot do you step into the zendo with then? Well, anyway, that’s not really where I wanted to go.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:53:40  But well, I was going to say, why do you like that line?

Eric Zimmer 00:53:42  Yeah, it made me laugh. I think it is true. And I and I think it points to how I’m very interested in ritual in the role of things like that, which is what those are there rituals and how they can be either constricting.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:53:58  Oh yes.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:58  Or they can be freeing and how they can be meaningless or packed with meaning, you know, the very same exact thing.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:54:09  I tell you, I am completely, like absolutely non-practicing for many, many years not raising my daughter in any religion.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:54:16  It’s not about that for me. It’s really about many other things. But I still, when I get in the car behind the wheel, I still do my little blessings, the cross and I still and my daughter even does it. And she’s the most agnostic person on the planet and we do it. But the thing is, what I realized, I was like, why am I keep doing this? Like, I don’t like superstition. I don’t want it to be about superstition. I wanted to have some kind of meeting. And it’s every time I do it, I think about my mother and not in a bad way. It’s almost like I am saying to her for just a moment, because we spent many hours behind the wheel, or she did of just like, hi.

Eric Zimmer 00:54:53  Yeah. And I think that speaks to something you said a couple minutes ago when you were talking about sort of how to work with these inner voices. At one point you said doing it. I don’t know if you said consistently or over and over, and then you also use the word habit in there.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:09  Yeah. And I think the point is the little cross in yourself in the car, what that’s giving you is it’s an anchor point. Yes. That you then have an opportunity to reflect in a certain way that if we don’t have anything like that, we just get caught up in whatever is happening. But now you’ve got a little way of reflecting on your mother that’s sort of built in and habitual at this point.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:55:32  And it’s just for a split second.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:33  Exactly.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:55:34  I respect all dangerous things that we involve ourselves in, like crossing the street in New York City, which is always dangerous. But getting behind the wheel is a dangerous thing. And it’s I respect it. So I do the cross, and it’s not a superstition. It gives me like literally split second to just like a breath. Yeah, yeah, a memory and a breath. And then we go. So I’m very cognizant and aware of what I am doing. And to your point, like it’s just a very grounding thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:00  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:01  Well, I teach this program Spiritual habits. And the goal of the program is to take sort of common spiritual principles that everybody would pretty much agree on, and then use what we know about behavior science to live them more fully. And one of the keys there is to use triggers to remember because we just don’t remember. We’re so busy. We aren’t. And so what you’ve got there is sort of we could call it a location based trigger. Right. When you get into the car, I do this thing. And it’s those small moments, though, that add up over and over and over and over and over again. That tends to be the way we change most. Some people have sudden awakenings, but. But so much of change is just this gradual. Yes. Accumulation, both good and bad.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:56:43  Yeah, yeah. And it can be very much in your head. It doesn’t have to be like an outward thing. I do that very much. I do the anchoring thing and I do like, you know, where’s my drink and that sort of thing, but I’m not, you know, and OCD is a very real diagnosis, which is unfortunate in my family quite a bit.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:56:58  So it can be very painful. But when you are able to kind of put where it disrupts your life aside and instead understand what it’s about. About that emotion that you’re not processing. But instead, now I use my quest for order. I use it more so as as a way to ground myself. So for me, it’s like instead of when I was a kid, it was, if I don’t turn this page, someone will die. Like, those are the thoughts that go through your head when you have severe OCD, right?

Eric Zimmer 00:57:30  Yeah.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:57:31  So instead of that, it’s I like to turn, you know, my things in my bathroom cabinet. Like to be facing forward. Is it someone going to die if it doesn’t know? So instead now it’s I’ll take a moment and straighten it up. And sometimes when you know things are crazy on the outside world, creating order like cleaning your house just really grounds you. So, yeah, but no more rosaries.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:59  Yeah. Well, I’m glad we went down this little street that I wasn’t planning on because I think it yielded a lot of really useful things.

Eric Zimmer 00:58:06  And I really love what you just said there, because it’s back to that idea of a ritual can be freeing or constraining. Yes. And you’ve taken something that has become sort of habitual in your life, and you’ve changed the meaning around it.

Speaker 4 00:58:21  Yes, yes.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:58:23  And that has been so incredibly helpful. Whether it’s sometimes I need to, you know, recharge my iPad, I flip it over so that I know when I wake up in the morning and I’m half brain dead to recharge my iPad, like, so I have all these little things that I do, whether it’s reminders or things that ground me or that things that just change other rituals. So for example, like a lot of people in the pandemic and there’s no judgment here, I was a margarita day person, you know, trapped at home loving my tequila. And I realized that, you know, it made me unhealthy, I gained weight, I felt terrible going through menopause. It was just awful. I was like, I can’t do this alcohol stuff anymore.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:59:02  So now I get this, you know, mocktails. But I do the same ritual. So I do the same cup, the same tahini and salt on the edge, the same way I do the same thing, and I just trick myself into it. And it’s just I don’t miss anything about it. I realized that what I had thought was helpful in the substance was actually partially about the process.

Eric Zimmer 00:59:29  Yeah, in behavior science, it’s called the habit loop, right? That there’s a stimulus and there’s a reward, and then there’s an action in the middle. And it’s very difficult to change the stimulus, which is like, I want to feel like I’m unwinding after work as an example. Right. Or I’m stressed after work. The reward you want is to feel like you’ve unwound a little bit, but we can change the thing that’s in the middle, and that’s often the most effective way to do it. Just yanking something out and being like, I’m not doing that anymore.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:59:55  Oh gosh, no, it’s too hard.

Eric Zimmer 00:59:57  It doesn’t work for me.

Carmen Rita Wong 00:59:58  Once I found this, it was so satisfying. And then I realized that what really was helpful to me was actually the ritual, not necessarily the substance. Substance made me feel like crap, but the ritual of it. The sound of ice shaking the sand, the salt, the taste of. And it’s understanding those things. And you know, when am I likely to, you know, buy something on Instagram I don’t need, you know, that’s, you know, just always being aware of those things that you want to stop. You can reformulate a lot of habits that way for sure.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:30  Before you check out, pick one insight from today and ask, how will I practice this before bedtime? Need help turning ideas into action? My free weekly Bites of Wisdom email lands every Wednesday with simple practices, reflection and links to former guests who can guide you even on the tough stuff like anxiety, purpose and habit change. Feed your good wolf at one you feed your net.

Eric Zimmer 01:00:55  slash newsletter again one you feed net letter. Well I think that is a great place for us to leave off. Carmen, thank you so much. This has been really enjoyable. The book is wonderful. Again, it’s called Why Didn’t You Tell Me a memoir? And we’ll have links in the show notes to where people can find you, where they can find the book. And thanks so much for spending some time with us.

Carmen Rita Wong 01:01:17  Thank you so much for having me, Eric. It’s been great.

Eric Zimmer 01:01:19  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time.

Eric Zimmer 01:01:51  Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

Filed Under: Featured, Podcast Episode

You Become What You Practice: What It Takes to Heal Individually and Collectively with Prentis Hemphill

December 2, 2025 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Prentis Hemphill discusses how you become what you practice and what it takes to heal individually and collectively. Prentis explains how healing as an ongoing practice, the importance of embodiment, and the intersection of personal transformation and activism. Prentis also shares insights from their work in healing justice and the Black Lives Matter movement, emphasizing the power of community, somatic practices, and love as a force for change. This conversation highlights how cultivating awareness and relational skills can foster both individual and systemic healing, offering hope for more connected and compassionate futures.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • Healing as an ongoing practice rather than a fixed destination.
  • The significance of embodiment practices in personal transformation.
  • The relationship between internal healing and external activism.
  • The impact of cultural practices and ancestral rituals on healing and community connection.
  • The interplay between self-acceptance and self-improvement.
  • The role of somatic awareness in understanding oneself and others.
  • The influence of aikido principles on personal and relational dynamics.
  • The importance of community and mutual aid in the healing process.
  • The challenges of navigating trauma within systemic contexts.
  • The transformative power of love and connection in fostering change.

Prentis Hemphill is the bestselling author of What It Takes to Heal, a groundbreaking exploration of healing, justice, and transformation. A therapist, somatics teacher, facilitator, political organizer, and writer, Prentis is also the founder of The Embodiment Institute and a leading voice in embodied leadership and collective healing.

Connect with Prentis Hemphill: Website | Instagram 

If you enjoyed this conversation with Prentis Hemphill, check out these other episodes:

The Nonlinear Path to Healing: Finding Wholeness After Trauma with Daria Burke

Healing Painful Patterns and Finding Freedom with Radhule Weininger

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Episode Transcript:

Prentis Hemphill 00:00:00  If you live inside of any culture that is different than yours, or if you look at your own culture more closely, you’ll see that there are these little like trails, like the little crumbs that have been left along the way of life. This is actually what we did to process big emotion, to realign as a community. Embodiment practices, I think, are one of our first languages as a species. Actually.

Chris Forbes 00:00:29  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have. Quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking. Our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:14  When Prentice Hemphill says, you become what you practice. It sounds simple until you realize how quietly that truth shapes everything. Who we are isn’t just what we believe. It’s what we repeat. The ways we tense up under pressure, the words we choose when we’re scared. The things we reach for when we’re hurt. Those are our real practices. Prentice, who’s the author of What It Takes to Heal, says healing isn’t a finish line, but an orientation, something we live inside, not something we achieve. And that shift away from fixing ourselves and towards practicing who we are meant to be as at the heart of this conversation. We talk about embodiment, activism and the love that lives beneath both. I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed. Hi, Prentiss. Welcome to the show.

Prentis Hemphill 00:02:07  Hi, Eric. Thanks for having me.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:09  I’m excited to have you on to talk about your book, which is called What It Takes to Heal How Transforming Ourselves Can Change the World. And I think this is a really important question right now that I think a lot of people, including myself, are wrestling with.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:24  Right? Where is the internal change? Where’s the change I can do in the world? On what scale should I be trying to even attempt to do that change? And I think your book hits us from a lot of different levels, and I’m excited to talk about it. But before we get to that, we’ll start like we always do with the parable. In the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops. Think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Prentis Hemphill 00:03:16  You know, I’ve listened to this show and I’ve listened to that parable before, and what I hear in it is a kind of piece of the work that I do around embodiment, which is essentially that you become what you practice, you become what you do over and over and through repetition. So to me, that is what that is underscoring. Be mindful of what it is that you do every day, because in the end, that’s who you will become.

Eric Zimmer 00:03:41  So let’s talk about that. That is something that I certainly highlighted as I was looking at your book. Is this idea of practice. You say at one point practice is the portal for change, which is a lovely line. And you talk about that idea that we practice kind of all the time and that we have practiced, whether we realize it or not, who we are right now. And so I think that’s a that’s a truth. And yet sometimes it feels overwhelming to think like, oh my goodness, every moment is shaping who I’m going to become like that.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:14  You know, so how do you work with that in yourself so that that feels liberating or healing and not oppressive?

Prentis Hemphill 00:04:21  That’s a great question. I think part of it for me is that healing in general is not something that I think I will ultimately achieve. It’s just, you know, I say it in the book. It’s sort of an orientation, a way that I live my life. And so that frees me up. I mean, it both limits and frees me up in a way to go, this is a journey, and I will discover things along the way, and I will never perfect this path. So I’m guided a little bit by what I can understand and what I’m curious about in this moment. So if I’m wanting to be attentive to a certain aspect of what it is that I’m practicing, I just let that emerge and show up for me. I may not get it all right or see everything. I may not get it all right in this lifetime, but I follow where my awareness, what my awareness allows me to see about myself and I.

Prentis Hemphill 00:05:09  I work with that. So I, I try to take a lot of the pressure off, even though I know it can feel really big. I try to take some of the pressure off from, for all of us of like, you know, we’re humans on this journey and that’s the that’s the ultimate thing.

Eric Zimmer 00:05:21  Yeah. You wrote something really beautiful about that that I highlighted. You say, when I started seeing a therapist, I hoped I’d be made anew after a couple of sessions. Don’t we all? It didn’t happen, of course, but over time, as I centered the practice of healing in my life, something else occurred, something more profound. My vantage point shifted. I learned that I could exist and even thrive with my trauma. As the space widened between the pain of it and my response, it didn’t overwhelm me anymore. I saw that it was only when I gave deep commitment to my personal transformation that real change happened. And I just love that that my my vantage point shifted and how that was even more profound.

Prentis Hemphill 00:06:02  Isn’t that an interesting thing? It’s like we go in wanting to fix ourselves or fix other people. I remember that. You know, when I started to see clients first in therapy, most people came to fix somebody else and they’d be like, why can’t you fix this other person from here? But yeah, what I found really significantly was this other thing that I could change. Actually, I don’t think that that was something that I was completely aware of in the beginning, that I could change the feeling and the qualia of my life would shift, that there were ways of being, in ways of feeling that I didn’t yet know. And I say that with people I worked with all the time, there are things to be felt that you have not felt yet. And that to me, is the real magic stuff. You know, when your you’re vantage point changes, when you’re like, oh, there’s actually breath here or this other emotion here or a longing here, where before there was simply reactivity.

Prentis Hemphill 00:06:58  There’s actually a lot more texture and nuance in space that changes the way my life feels. I find that the most interesting thing about, you know, kind of doing your work.

Eric Zimmer 00:07:08  Yeah. I was on Substack this morning and somebody posted a note. I don’t know who. I didn’t even pay any attention, but it caught my eye and it said, basically, like, I am so over coaching and self-improvement and over optimization and morning rituals and habits and, and I get like, I heard that and I got it on one level. Yeah. Right. Yeah, yeah. But then I also at the same time, like you think that there, there, there is ways to become more whole, more truly ourselves. And to me it’s, you know, the great Zen master Suzuki Roshi said, all of you are perfect the way you are, and you could use a little improvement.

Prentis Hemphill 00:07:52  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:07:53  And I think that’s the idea, and I feel like so much of this show is, is me exploring that dance between self-acceptance and self-improvement.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:02  I think the art is in knowing which of those to lean into at what time.

Prentis Hemphill 00:08:06  That’s right. Right. And knowing which one has kind of calcified into an avoidance or a punishment or whatever it might be, you have to and sometimes you have to find that you have to just enter into that and you go, oh, this is now this is no longer serving my exploration. It’s it’s serving something else.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:23  That’s a great word for calcification. I often think of just tendencies. Right. We have tendencies in a certain direction. And knowing what those are can be really useful.

Prentis Hemphill 00:08:33  Not right.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:34  Not locking into them like I’m this way because that’s not good. But recognizing like, oh, I tend to over correct in this direction can be really helpful.

Prentis Hemphill 00:08:44  I think. So, you know, I was teaching a course, I guess, a week and a half ago, and we were exploring some of these tendencies that we have, our kind of embodied tendencies, the things we tend to do under pressure and getting curious about that rather than the things that we think we do.

Prentis Hemphill 00:08:59  What does our body actually do? and it’s this delicate dance of not becoming over identified with that tendency, not becoming like, oh, this is the thing I do. Oh, I know what this thing is. This is what I do because it kind of closes it down. And once it’s closed down or locked in, in that way, we tend to lose some aspect of curiosity about it. And more than that, I think from an embodiment perspective, it loses its movement, its ability to change or shift or the subtle decisions that we’re making inside of that. To me, the thing that really harms us the most is when things become calcified or entrenched without awareness. And, you know, when we bring things back into movement, I think that’s where we have a lot more power, right?

Eric Zimmer 00:09:45  That’s the negative side of practice we were talking about, right? Habits are wonderful things. If they’re good habits. Yeah, but if they’re bad, that’s a it’s a whole nother animal because they are you know, they can be very difficult to unclassified but certainly doable.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:59  I mean I’ve, I’ve done it I know countless people who’ve done it, but. Yeah, but it’s hard. I had a question today. I thought about embodiment, and I thought I would ask you, as somebody who writes about embodiment and somatic practice. I think for me, it’s certainly been one of the things I’ve learned over the last ten years is how to inhabit my body a little bit more. Yeah, but today I was in the shower. And sometimes when I’m in the shower, I just like to do a little bit of mindfulness because it’s easy to do, right. Like there’s just lots going, you know, like, if I want to pay attention to my foot, there’s a lot going on. Then there normally is if I’m trying to pay attention to my foot where there’s, you know, relatively less going on. But I realized that I still am relating as if my foot is down there and its sending sensations to me up here.

Prentis Hemphill 00:10:54  Right?

Eric Zimmer 00:10:55  And I was curious, as somebody who has spent a lot of time in embodiment, is that your experience or is it your experience a different one than that?

Prentis Hemphill 00:11:05  Well, my experience is many things I sometimes experience myself as up here, my foot down there.

Prentis Hemphill 00:11:10  But I do, you know, all these years of practice, I do find that I have a way of being in myself that is much more integrated, almost like pulsating. My awareness can move around more than it used to, or the way that I was kind of trained to identify. I find that now I can listen from different parts of my body. I can respond from different parts of my body. Sometimes it makes me look a little weird when I’m talking to people because, you know, I’ll be like, what? You know, moving around. But I do feel like I have more access, more of the time. It’s not like, oh, my arms feeling something or my legs feeling something. There’s more like a awareness of the swirl of life that is moving through me at once.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:02  Yeah, yeah. I mean, I’m a longtime Zen student, and Zen is really into, like, the horror, you know, getting down into that space. And that has always been one of the harder practices for me.

Eric Zimmer 00:12:12  It still feels like, okay, I’m aware that there’s sensation there. I’m aware something’s happening, but I don’t feel like I’m in there in the same way that I feel like I’m in this head. Yeah. And so I’ve just kind of curious what your experience of that was like.

Prentis Hemphill 00:12:29  Well, you know, I have done some Zen training, too, and a lot of the somatic that I am trained in is actually based on a lot of aikido and, practice. So there is a lot of hara, a lot of that center sense. Recently, the way that I’ve come to understand it more is that actually there are different selves. It’s almost how I think about it. So the self that I think I am, that I’m very, very identified with it is real. That is me. The apprentice is oneself. When I am kind of in my center, in my hara more. And I’m not a, you know, there are people that are further along on the Zen path than me, but I’m just telling you my my experience is that the me that is there is actually a different me.

Prentis Hemphill 00:13:16  And so that me is actually much more like the timeless self. Almost in my belly, I can feel the universe. I don’t know if that makes sense, but that’s sort of how it feels for me. So it’s a little bit willing to have a different sort of relationship with who you even are. That allowed me to drop more into my centre and to Mahara.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:38  You say that much better than I do. You’ve got the right accent on it.

Prentis Hemphill 00:13:44  I studied. I studied a little Japanese for that.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:46  Okay. I sound like an Ohio and trying to say a Japanese word.

Prentis Hemphill 00:13:51  I’m from Texas.

Eric Zimmer 00:13:52  Exactly what I am. I’m glad that you brought up. I say a Kato. Is that right? How did you say it? Yeah, okay.

Prentis Hemphill 00:13:59  I’m not an expert.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:00  All right. All right. So it was interesting that you mentioned that was part of your somatic practice. And it’s one of those things that about every six months I end up with a browser tab open looking at the Columbus Aikido School.

Eric Zimmer 00:14:15  And I never quite seem to make it there. I never really go, but it keeps calling to me. Yeah, probably because of the Japanese relationship to that and Zen, but also the idea of an embodiment practice that is more than sitting there trying to feel your body. So I was curious kind of how you got into that and what your experience has been.

Prentis Hemphill 00:14:38  Well, I want to say two things to that, and I’ll answer your question first, which is that the somatic school that I started with, that was the foundation, the teacher who kind of, I’ll say, started or translated all his lineages into this lineage. He was an aikido master. So he went to his teacher and said, can I use some of these moves for somatic? So that is the way that I learned somatic is through aikido moves. It’s foundational for me. I then took aikido classes to have a kind of different, more traditional perspective on it. I think that it’s an important practice, especially for somatic, because it’s like, how do you work with energy and how do you work with the energy in your body? How do you work with incoming energy, and what are the moves that you have that are maybe outside of just simply being reactive to it? How can you transform this movement? So if I’m coming to you with a strike or something.

Prentis Hemphill 00:15:34  How can I take that strike and almost transmute? That energy is really a powerful set of skills to have inside of oneself. I will say in terms of, you know, practices that are not just sitting there, you know, I studied schematics. I talk about the work more as embodiment work these days because in a way, I want to open up what we understand as schematics or embodiment to understand the role that culture has played over time, that a lot of us don’t have practices anymore. But the people that came before us, our ancestors, certainly did have practices. And I would say all of our ancestors had practices, dancing of, you know, seasonal rituals of eating together for grief practices, birth practices. All of these, to me, in a way, are embodiment practices. And if you if you live inside of any culture that is different than yours, or if you look at your own culture more closely, you’ll see that there are these little like trails, like the little crumbs that have been left along the way of life.

Prentis Hemphill 00:16:34  This is actually what we did to process big emotion, to realign as a community. Embodiment practices, I think, are one of our first languages as a species, actually.

Eric Zimmer 00:17:14  Being predominantly German and English, I think R’s are a little further back there.

Prentis Hemphill 00:17:19  Are there still there though? They’re still there.

Eric Zimmer 00:17:21  I know, I’m joking.

Prentis Hemphill 00:17:22  They’re still there.

Eric Zimmer 00:17:24  You had a line in the book totally changing direction for a second that just made me laugh out loud. You’re talking about how your mom took you to lots of churches. And you said we’d visit the multiracial Pentecostal churches to make new friends, the black Baptist churches to see family, and the white Methodist churches when we wanted to leave on time. Yeah. So good, so good.

Prentis Hemphill 00:17:47  That’s true though. Black churches. I’m like, what are we doing? Why are we still here?

Eric Zimmer 00:17:52  I have gone a couple times to black churches with friends, and I think the first time I went, I wasn’t aware that I was signing up for half of my, you know, three quarters of my Sunday.

Prentis Hemphill 00:18:03  It’s a lot. It’s a lot. And sometimes my mom would just wake up and she’d be like, I don’t want to be in church all day. So we’re gonna go.

Eric Zimmer 00:18:11  We’re gonna go here. All right, so back to Aikido. Is that the same as judo, or is that something different?

Prentis Hemphill 00:18:18  I don’t think it’s the same as judo. And I’m going to show my ignorance. Is it? Judo was actually created as a mixture in Honolulu way back by some.

Eric Zimmer 00:18:28  You would know better than me.

Prentis Hemphill 00:18:29  I actually think that’s true. I think that’s true. All right. Correct me if I’m wrong. But Aikido, you know the path of peace. It has a different language.

Eric Zimmer 00:18:37  I want to go back to where the book starts, which is you really talk about what you call a false choice between internal work and external activism. Talk to me about how they go together in your mind. And we talked about getting calcified. I often feel like we get calcified in one of those two places.

Prentis Hemphill 00:18:59  Yeah. Yeah I would say when I started this work, you know, I originally started doing political organizing. I kind of talk about that in the book. And then I saw that there was something missing that we weren’t able to talk about that showed up in our relationships with each other and just how we were as people. And then I got really interested in semantics and trauma and went down that path. And luckily I was in a a school that could hold that complexity, but a lot of the larger world of healing and wellness and all of that didn’t know how to talk about systems, context, history. It was sort of allergic to that. And I struggled with that for a long time. And I mean, I still really my whole life is weaving all of that together. To go there is not just you and then the world that you are a part of the world. You’re kind of trained and shaped by the world, and you also recreate the world all the time through what you do.

Prentis Hemphill 00:20:02  I mean, the whole premise of this podcast, through what you put your attention on, it creates and recreates the world. And sometimes we don’t realize to what degree we’ve been either shaped by our, you know, for a lot of organizers, they weren’t aware of how deeply shaped they were by how they grew up or their families or their own habits. They weren’t aware of that everything was external to them. But then I would be another spaces, and people weren’t aware of how deeply shaped they’d been by their own history, by the the geography that they grew up in, by how different groups of people related to each other, that that also shaped who they were and how they behaved in this moment. And so for me, I’m like trying to just tell this more complete story of we are not only individuals, we are an individual is a is a social being that is always relating, always communicating, always building in a way the world through our actions and to bring some attention to that.

Eric Zimmer 00:21:01  You just said something there that kind of opened up for me an idea I hadn’t had before, because I often feel like systemic work feels to me like you can’t change it, right? To a certain degree, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:21:18  And so I default more towards an internal kind of work, a personal kind of work because it feels like I’ve got some degree of agency. But the way you just said that made me realize that yes, there is the changing the systemic element of it, but there’s another way to relate to that, which is to widen my view of what influenced me beyond. Just like if you’re trauma informed, you’re thinking a lot about your childhood, what happened to you in your childhood and what your parents did or what you know this person did that really hurt you. But when you were saying that, I was like, oh, but you can look at all the systemic pieces and bring that in as part of it, in addition to how you choose to engage to change those circumstances.

Prentis Hemphill 00:22:04  Yeah, that’s such an important point. I mean, I talk in the book about my own family life and my own story and the abuse that was happening in my household. And I talk about that because that trauma deeply shaped me.

Prentis Hemphill 00:22:16  And I’ve never been able to look at that trauma only as the set of actors did this. I also had to look at my father’s understanding of who he was and what he needed to do, and the constraints on him not as an excuse, but as a way of understanding how moments like that get created. Because if we are really concerned, in my opinion, with undoing those moments where children don’t have to endure the brunt or the weight of their parents lack of agency or, you know, powerlessness, then we have to understand the factors that really create it. The other thing I’ll say to your point is that, in a way, I think a lot of our culture really looks at our problems in an individual way. So if we look at systems, we go, I can’t affect that. How can I impact the system? I’m me. But systems require relationship to change. No system will change because you or I saw that they needed to be change. Systems change through relationship with other people and that’s how we can shift things.

Prentis Hemphill 00:23:20  So it necessarily brings us into relationship. There is a part where we go, how do I recreate the system in my own behaviors? But also if I’m committed to changing a system that actually requires working with other people?

Eric Zimmer 00:23:32  Yeah, yeah. As you were saying that, I was thinking a little bit about how I can reflect on my parents and I can think, well, they were that way because their parents, I’ve thought about following that, that chain up. But I’ve never really thought about the world that my grandparents grew up in, that much I can sort of grasp that world a little bit because I’m like, okay, it’s 1900s in America. I kind of know, I don’t know what that was like, but I, I have some context of.

Prentis Hemphill 00:24:01  Some of the factors.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:02  But go back two generations to what their life was like in Germany. I don’t have the foggiest clue.

Prentis Hemphill 00:24:08  Right? We can’t know everything. I mean, that’s the other thing, because a lot of people were like, I want to heal my ancestral trauma.

Prentis Hemphill 00:24:13  It’s like, yes, yes, and there are things we can know and there’s things we can’t ever know, but it’s really about like, how do I orient myself to understanding as much as I can, that human beings are always inside of a context. Human beings are always inside of a moment, and they make choices. And some of those choices are not the choices that are going to lead to more connection, more aliveness, more kindness. Sometimes they make choices that are really foundationally about fear. You know, I wish that my parents or my father had made a bunch of different choices, and I think there were points where they could have made different choices, and I understand them in context as much as I can to, and I hope my child grants me the same thing 100%.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:00  You know, I can look at my son at every stage of his development and what our relationship is like, and feel very confident that he got better than I got. And I’m sure there’s lots of blind spots in there, right? I’m sure there’s lots of things that he’ll be, you know, if he’s not already.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:19  He’s 26, you know, talking to his therapist about what his dad did, you know, like it’s it’s in there, you know for sure.

Prentis Hemphill 00:25:25  That’s right. I think about that every day.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:28  My kid well.

Prentis Hemphill 00:25:30  Sure, she’s only four. But I also think about, like, you know, sometimes I feel really stressed or sad about the state of the world. And I’m like, even though I’m there, you know, I spend a lot of really quality time with her. I’m like, you know, there will be things that she will pick up about what her parents were like in this moment, and she may be able to look at the context and go, okay, there’s a lot of pressure, whatever it might be, and it will still have an impact on her, on her life. And that’s just the way it is.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:58  So let’s talk a little bit about societal change, right? Because you mentioned you came up as an activist, right? And now you’re trying to really sort of blend the world of internal healing and systemic healing.

Eric Zimmer 00:26:12  And I was wondering if you could tell us about you were you were, I think, fairly prominent in the Black Lives Matter movement, and then you ended up having to step away from that for a bit. I was wondering if you could tell us kind of what led to that, and I’d love to hear how you’ve reengaged since then in a different way.

Prentis Hemphill 00:26:31  You know, it’s funny because people don’t ask me about that very often. I talked to a lot of people, and people don’t ask me about that, so I kind of appreciate the opportunity to speak on it. You know, my work in that ecosystem, that kind of movement and organization was I did this healing justice work. And so what it looked like was grief support. It looked like conflict support. It looked like connecting people with practitioners they could work with. And it was really hard. And I I’m not saying it was the hardest thing by any means. A lot of people were in really difficult positions, but it was really hard in one way because I remember feeling like I was having to look into the.

Prentis Hemphill 00:27:21  It’s almost like a black hole of, grief, of trauma, of despair that my community was holding because I don’t think, you know, a lot of people didn’t understand, you know, they didn’t understand at the time that it’s like when a public death like that would happen, you know, where people, you know, were like, oh, people are in the streets. What actually got activated was everybody’s story of that happening of something similar or losing somebody that it was actually every time it’s a massive trauma activation and people focus a lot on like what’s happening in the streets. But from my vantage point, I was like, oh, this is every time is a massive activation. I’m talking to mothers who’ve lost their children. I’m talking to siblings who are deeply traumatized and can’t go on with their lives. It’s huge. And it took a toll on me to stare in the face of that every day and to feel like, you know. I remember asking the question kind of to my own higher power.

Prentis Hemphill 00:28:21  It’s like, I actually don’t know how we are going to heal this trauma at this scale. I don’t know how to do it. I can’t think of a way to do it, and it feels like it needs to be done because it’s causing so much pain in people’s lives and relationally. I stepped away in 2018, so pre 2020, I stepped away because of the physical toll that it took on my body. I had a scare around a heart attack that, you know, my partner was just like, you’re done, get out. You’re done. But I think it was a lot of the the just incredible stress. I mean, I can’t even tell you how stressful that experience was is incredibly stressful, incredibly painful. And there are a lot of people under a big banner going in 100 million different directions.

Eric Zimmer 00:29:37  Eight years ago, I was completely overwhelmed. My life was full with good things, a challenging career, two teenage boys, a growing podcast, and a mother who needed care. But I had a persistent feeling of, I can’t keep doing this, but I valued everything I was doing and I wasn’t willing to let any of them go.

Eric Zimmer 00:29:57  And the advice to do less only made me more overwhelmed. That’s when I stumbled into something I now call this steel Point method, a way of using small moments throughout my day to change. Not how much I had to do, but how I felt while I was doing it. And so I wanted to build something I wish I’d had eight years ago. So you don’t have to stumble towards an answer that something is now here and it’s called overwhelm is optional tools for when you can’t do less. It’s an email course that fits into moments you already have. Taking less than ten minutes total a day. It isn’t about doing less, it’s about relating differently to what you do. I think it’s the most useful tool we’ve ever built. The launch price is $29. If life is too full, but you still need relief from overwhelm, check out overwhelm is optional. Go to one you feed. That’s one you feed. What sounds like there was both. What you’re describing is the looking into the black hole of suffering.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:04  Yeah. And then there was just all the tension and urgency of a new movement that is morphing beneath your feet every minute, and that you’re contributing to. You know, I don’t want to trivialize something like Black Lives Matter into being like a startup, but there’s that frantic energy.

Prentis Hemphill 00:31:23  Absolutely.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:24  Where, like.

Prentis Hemphill 00:31:25  Absolutely.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:25  Anywhere you turn your head, there’s a problem.

Prentis Hemphill 00:31:27  And imagine being in a startup like that where everybody feels like they’re a part of it. So what somebody else is doing over here? Yeah, everybody owns it. And you’re like, wait, what they’re doing over there isn’t. You know. Yeah. Aligned or matching up and there’s media. There’s narrative. There’s like yeah, I think for a lot of the things that we struggled with and I haven’t fully reconciled is like the story that was told versus what actually happened. There’s such a giant chasm between what people were doing on the ground and in their communities. And actually the beauty of a lot of what was happening. And then every day, I mean, we’d have a check in every day of like, this is the story that’s come out and you’re like, how do we get the story to come out about what it means? And so, you know, since then I will say that I was like, what did I learn during that time? What did I learn about groups of people and how we get along, and how we come together, and what sense we make of our pain, and how our pain can impede what it is that we’re trying to build.

Prentis Hemphill 00:32:37  What it means to really have a vision for the world that can include more people. I learned a lot, and I pulled back for a while, and I just spent some time kind of laying out my lessons. And that’s really what it takes to heal is like, these are the lessons I learned, not just about that movement, but what I learned about being a human being and what I think we might all embody a little bit more of to be in right relationship with each other and the world that we’re building. It’s really like taking my lessons from that time and offering them back to everybody. I mean, the book is for everybody.

Eric Zimmer 00:33:12  So this is a big question that I don’t know if you have the answer to, but it’s pointed to in the book a little bit. And I think about often, which is one of the things we’ve lost in modern days, is sort of the influence of religion or spirituality in a cohesive way. I don’t mean that people don’t have their own experiences of it, sure, but I mean, we can’t assume that if you bring 100 people together, most of them are going to relate in the same way.

Eric Zimmer 00:33:43  And so if you look at, like the civil rights movement, you can’t divorce it from the black Christian church. Yeah. And if you look at Gandhi, right. And and that movement, you can’t divorce it from the religious context that it was in. Yeah. That’s one of the casualties of modern life is we’ve lost that or I should say, for better and worse. But do you feel like that is problematic in trying to build movements today?

Prentis Hemphill 00:34:07  That’s a great question, Eric. This is another great question nobody ever asked me. I largely feel that our relationship with a big mystery, which shapes our relationship with uncertainty, is something we don’t talk about because we’ve lumped everything into religion and specific dogma. I’d say certain kinds of Christian church, and I understand why. One, it’s like not everybody practices the same faith. And that’s just the reality of of the world. And we want to be more inclusive. And I think what is shared, if we can be generous enough, I know sometimes, you know, religion gets into these, you know, turf wars or like turf turf on the mystery.

Prentis Hemphill 00:34:54  It’s like, I know the answer to the to the mystery. I think if we can back just an inch off of that and say we are all relating to and maybe we feel like we’ve gotten the right, we’re on the right path, but we’re all relating to this big mystery, this big source, this question of the big source. Because I didn’t get us here. I didn’t come up with this. I didn’t make you. You didn’t make me. Something else is at play. Whether or not it’s a giant equation, a simulation, whatever it might be, it’s much bigger than you or I. And inside of that is what is not yet what has been the mystery, the great logic. And I find that the black church in particular in the US has always it’s not even just about Christianity or Jesus. I think the way that we have engaged with that is to draw resource from the great mystery, to move us on a path towards love and freedom for all people. I think that is the remix that the black churches and other churches have done too.

Prentis Hemphill 00:36:06  And I think it’s really vitally important for us to engage with the mystery and let it humble us, but let it also empower us to do things that are greater than we thought we could do before. I think the last thing I’ll say here is that, you know, I’m often thinking about those that are very certain about God or think that God gives us certainty rather than mystery, rather than guides for engaging with mystery. And my hope is that we can admit our relationship with the mystery, with uncertainty. I think it humbles us. It rites sizes us to know that there’s something much bigger than us. But when we get too big and too inflated and too certain, we become, you know, almost, we imagine ourselves as surrogates for God and, you know, administrators of that certainty. And I’d much rather live in a world of humility, of big questions, of, you know, making attempts inside of this big, this big mystery. So short answer is yes. I think we’ve lost a lot by disallowing spirit into movements.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:16  Yeah. It strikes me that that certainty in religion also translates into certainty in certain type of activists. Absolutely. And I think no pun intended to a certain degree. Maybe you have to have that to have the clarity of purpose to move forward. Right? Like, I’m not a great activist because I’m like, well, what about this? And what about that? And what do you and I, if you pull on that, right, I’ll caveat the hell out of everything until there’s nothing left, right, left in my own devices. So I don’t make a great activist. You know, I’m a person who sort of rebels against certainty of any sort. Like all argue against a point I believe in. If the person seems to certain, which I think is some sort of perversity of personality that I have. I’m not saying that’s good. I’m just saying it triggers that in me. But it does seem that there’s a certainty to, I would say, people on all sides of the political divide that think they know the answers, like very specifically.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:20  And I’m like, we have no idea when you start. Like, our system is so complex. There are so many different things here. We don’t know, like, we could think that this thing is really good and then we don’t see the backlash that comes after it, which means that we then don’t see. Like that’s not a question. This is kind of a.

Prentis Hemphill 00:38:41  Yeah, yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:41  Yeah.

Prentis Hemphill 00:38:42  I mean, it kind of goes back to what we were saying about the calcification. It’s like the the dogma, our allegiance then to the dogma doesn’t allow us to pull back from it and go, what, what, what are the benefits and the limits of this? And I absolutely think there can be. Certainly in the political realm on all sides, a kind of, religiosity, you know, for your worldview. I think that that is actually the thing that scares me the most. I mean, it’s that certainty and I mean that for everyone that I’ve encountered, I, I feel less certain about where we’re going than ever before.

Prentis Hemphill 00:39:23  I do feel that, you know, the things that I understand about the body and our ability to like, process and face and come into deeper understanding about what it is that we are living in, are, I think that that has some some key, some key, because I think we’ve been avoiding being real with ourselves, feeling what’s here for a long time. So I sort of have a trust. It’s almost a vague trust In those processes of the body’s digestion, of experience, of history, of emotion, that what we then produce on the other side of that, the politics that a body that is a feeling body creates to me will be fundamentally more trustable than the politics on either side than an unfeeling and uncertain body creates.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:15  I mean, certainly history seems to show that. I mean, I don’t know if it shows the positive of what you’re saying, but it certainly shows the actual we don’t tend to end up with better situations once we overthrow the old one. Right? That that is, there is no guarantee that that is going to happen.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:31  That’s right at all. And you see the people who you think are the good guys suddenly then become the bad guy and you’re like, wait, what is going on here? Yeah. That’s right. And so your point is a good one. How have you reengaged in this work? Right where you are staring Tearing down. Maybe that’s the wrong word. Maybe. Maybe you would. You wouldn’t even use that word. And that might be part of it. But you’re back in this world where you are seeing the collective trauma, both individual and societal, of certain types of people, and you are working with those types of people. How is it not feel like you’re falling into a black hole again?

Prentis Hemphill 00:41:13  Yeah, I think that that’s a good it’s another good question, Eric. I more understand my role now and what I think is my role. I mean, I’m sure that will change and fall away and I’ll, you know, be tricked by the universe at some point. But, right now, my role feels like making creating this bridge and saying, hey, we can do this.

Prentis Hemphill 00:41:42  Hey, we can feel this. Hey, we can get to know each other. You know, I was talking to a good friend of mine who’s an organizer here, but is also a mystic, really. And he was saying, you know, I want to be in community where we can feel we can tell the stories of our pains and our hallelujahs, that all people can sit down and tell those stories. And I want that. I think I want that more and more. And I think what that does for me is like, I can’t save the day. And I thought I could, I thought that I could save the day. I thought that I could be skillful enough or, you know, whatever. I thought that I could save the day or even that we could save the day. And I don’t think that anymore. I think that all I can do is what I feel called and compelled to do, what seems to be my peace, to offer that I acknowledge people along the path that I see making their own clear offer.

Prentis Hemphill 00:42:42  You know when you can tell when someone’s making their offer and it just kind of rings, you know, it sounds like the bell. The meditation bell. You’re like, oh, that’s that sounds clear to me. To encourage those people to see each other, say, see you on the path, but not try to save the day, because that’s when I start to get, you know, my own ego gets inflated. I start to think of myself as a surrogate, you know, to God instead of part of a much a massive thing that I can’t understand. So to me, it’s about community. It’s about other people. I want to teach in a way that inspires but doesn’t have people glob onto me. And if I do that, if when I work with people, they go back to their own lives and go, oh, I want to try something different, that’s the victory for me. But if people are like, I want to listen to you all day, that is not the victory for me.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:31  Yeah, I do, you know, I think a lot of us are wrestling with where do we have an impact in today’s world? You know what? What do we do? And, you know, there’s that old, hippie bumper sticker, right? You know, think globally, act locally. Yeah, but I have been feeling that more to some degree. I think there’s a Buddhist saying of like, you know, you’re five feet of ground, you know, like the five feet that surrounds you at all times and the things that make their way into that five feet. Now, I also think we can we can go bigger than that. Sure. But that save the day attitude. It becomes a real limitation in a I mean, we can see the grandiosity aspects of it, but I think there’s also once you realize, like, I can’t personally do this huge thing and I feel out of control, like I feel like it’s all a little bit out of control. The tendency is then to go, well, I can’t do anything and succumb to despair.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:35  And that is where I actually feel myself at points with the state of the world teetering on. Yeah, you know, teetering on that point, which then causes me to go, okay, let me stay in my lane and do what I really know how to do. But then I sometimes feel like. But I’m abdicating the bigger. Yeah. Like, I and I don’t think I’m alone. No. In this feeling.

Prentis Hemphill 00:44:59  You know, it points back to that relational point. I just want to bring that forward again. I actually think this moment more than it can be the same, John. More than like self-help. I think we need relational help. Yeah, we need willfulness in how we do relationships, but also just to even understand, you know, we were talking earlier about how do I see myself, what’s the self that I identify with? Is it the deep self of the hara? Is it the self of my mind? What is it? It’s almost like that. I think there has to be a little bit of a reorientation to understanding ourselves as relational beings.

Prentis Hemphill 00:45:40  Things. You exist inside of relationships. I exist inside of relationships at every moment. The fact that I can do this podcast right now, without a four year old interrupting me, is because I’m in relationships with people that are tending to my child right now. I’m in relationships with the environment around me. I’m breathing out, you know, carbon dioxide, the trees like it. They’re giving me oxygen back. I am made of relationship. That is the reality. Yes. And we are trained to not see the relationships that we are embedded in that nurture our lives. So partly I want to say to us, it’s like the overwhelm feeling. And I say this thing all the time. People have heard me say it. Sometimes things feel like they’re too big to feel in our own bodies, and I think that is because they are that they require multiple bodies to process that thing. And we are really out of practice. Like our muscles are super atrophied around the collective Communal peace. Like how many people would feel awkward being in a collective grief process?

Eric Zimmer 00:46:45  Yeah.

Prentis Hemphill 00:46:46  Crying and yelling and stomping with other people. A lot of people would be like, no thank you. That feels awkward and weird. What I think is true is that a lot of the things that we need are just on the other side of weird.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:02  Well, yes, I think that’s true. And then there’s those things that are even one step beyond weird, which maybe we you know, I’m talking.

Prentis Hemphill 00:47:10  About.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:10  That. I don’t know how many, how many steps towards weird do we want to go. But but yes, yes. I mean.

Prentis Hemphill 00:47:15  I.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:15  Mean, well, yeah, I mean, I think, I mean today to say you’re a member of a 12 step group is kind of like, yeah, whatever.

Prentis Hemphill 00:47:22  You can say that.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:23  Yeah. But 25 years ago that that was a weird thing. That. Right. That was a weird thing. So I think there’s lots of lots of instances that and I agree with you a lot about this relational aspect. I have a friend who’s going through something very, very difficult and she will say, it’s too much for me.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:43  And I say, yeah, yeah, right. Of course it is. That’s right. Of course it’s too much for you. Yeah, it’s not too much for all of us. Yeah, right. And you have to bear the brunt of it. It’s not like me coming along. Right? I’m gonna. It’s gonna fix everything.

Prentis Hemphill 00:47:59  That’s right, that’s right.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:01  But the hardest and darkest times in my life are the times that I was forced. Yeah, into some degree of community. Yeah, yeah. Right. Like, just on my knees. Okay.

Prentis Hemphill 00:48:14  Yeah. That’s right.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:14  And those are the times that I end up changing the most and healing the most. And I do think there’s a modern challenge among people of we don’t get brought to our knees generally that often, which I think is a good thing. Right? I’m not I’m not advocating everybody have a life crisis on a regular basis so that that doesn’t happen. And we’ve also got these very individually engineered, comfortable little pods.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:41  Yeah, right. And the combination of those two factors makes it really difficult to get into community. I mean, we’re launching a community later this year. We’ve launched it to some of our people who’ve already been a part of it. And there’s a big part of me that’s like community, like, I don’t know if I wanted to, but then when I thought about like, what? Really?

Prentis Hemphill 00:49:02  Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:02  Do our group of people need. Yeah, that’s the thing. I don’t know. I don’t know if people want it. Yeah, but I don’t know if anybody’s gonna want it and sign up for it and do it. But it’s funny because like AA gets labeled as a self-help group, you could not be further from a self-help group. Yeah. In any way, shape or form. It is not a self-help group. It is a group in which you help each other. I think it got labeled that because it’s not a you don’t go to a doctor.

Prentis Hemphill 00:49:31  That’s right.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:31  Right. But but to think of it in that way is to fundamentally misunderstand.

Eric Zimmer 00:49:36  That’s right. The nature of that.

Prentis Hemphill 00:49:40  That’s right. I think that’s so powerful. I think about the AA model all the time in our work. We have a a community, a kind of online community where people practice together. But part partly what I’ve been, you know, we’ve been kind of working towards and trying to take it slow and figure it out is that some of the people are coming online to the it’s called the practice ground. And then people are self-organizing in person once they feel ready to meet each other. And I’m like, that is that’s it, that’s it. And a lot of us need that first, you know, because of our generation or whatever it might be, we need first, like the online entry point. And then we’re like, okay, I’m going to I’m going to take another risk, which is actually meeting people in person. We’ve gotten for whatever reason, we’re twisted around. It’s much easier for me to meet you this way than to.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:27  You know, person.

Prentis Hemphill 00:50:28  Be in person. But to me, practicing community and really feeling our bodies and our lives. That is a lot of the recipe for what’s needed. And when I do embodiment trainings, there’s always people that are like, I came to this, but I don’t want to do any of this weird stuff, and I try to create it in a way that, you know, it allows people to to ramp up. But a lot to me, it’s it’s it’s really telling in our world that feeling your body is weird. That’s really telling to me. Being with other people is weird. Feeling your body is weird. Even getting a hug is weird. Touching each other is weird because we’ve primarily sexualized it. There’s a richness to our experience of being a human beings and being alive that has been relegated to strange, awkward, weird that I’m like, I really want to retrieve that because I think there’s some important keys for this moment in that.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:27  Yeah. That’s beautiful. As you were talking, it occurred to me two things.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:30  One thing I thought of is like, maybe some of these communities ought to cross meet. Like, you know, this community is going to join this community today for this practice session, right? Like, you know, there might be some energy in that. That would be interesting. And yeah, I mean, my first foray into this was we I had this program used to be called Spiritual Habits, and it was called Wise Habits. And people would sign up and we’d meet as a big group on, on Sundays and on a Wednesday nights. I divided people up by time zone and they met together virtually. I wasn’t there, I wasn’t any part of it. And one of the things I’m most proud of are those groups that still exist. Wow. You know, two, five, you know, years later, the ones that have met in person, the ones that describe each other as, you know, their family. It doesn’t happen every time, which is part of what I’m trying to solve with a community, is to be able to engineer it a little bit better and be able to sort of, you know, nurture it Nurtured along, but those are some of the things I feel best about that I’ve accomplished.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:33  And ultimately, it’s not about me. Like, to your point. Those things only work if when I disappear. Yes, they keep going because if it relies on me, there’s only so much of me, right?

Prentis Hemphill 00:52:45  That’s right, that’s right. It’s such a skill for leaders or people that create or however you identify yourself, to let yourself be a spark rather than, you know, the kind of central flame like let yourself be a spark a little bit more and disappear and go somewhere else and do something else and let community build.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:02  Yeah. I mean, there’s so much of your book we’ve not even gotten close to yet. I’ve got a lot of notes here, so I’m going to try and see if we can hit a couple of them here. One of them that we talked about a little bit is in the section on practice. You share a story about being wanting to be a basketball player. You were somewhat athletic, but you were a terrible basketball player. You got cut from the team and then you worked with somebody who just taught you all the the basics again and again and again and again, and you learned the muscle memory to do these things.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:33  And you go on to then say, I don’t think it’s a far jump to assume that we can just as easily learn ways of relating to our emotions and engaging with one another that can become as embodied as our ability to make a free throw or swing a golf club. The key in each case is practice.

Speaker 4 00:53:52  That’s right. That’s right.

Prentis Hemphill 00:53:54  Yeah, I say this a lot. When I go around, I ask people to think about when they learned how to drive and that driving, we call it driving, but it’s actually a bunch of discrete movements and me learning how to do a layup. The the trick was learning that a layup is actually many moves that you make and getting those moves together, and that it’s not dissimilar to me learning in my family, for example, that there was only one person who could express anger. And so it didn’t mean that I didn’t feel anger. It meant that I couldn’t express it. So what did I do when I felt it flare up? Well, I learned how to, you know, slack my face.

Prentis Hemphill 00:54:34  I learned how to, like, push my body back. I learned all of these discreet movements that made my anger imperceptible to a person that might have been, you know, activated around that anger. And I learned how to do it over time so well that I almost couldn’t perceive my own indicators of anger. It’s amazing. Yeah. It’s like, I don’t think we we consider how physical or emotional expressions and emotionality can be and that we’re learning all the time. Okay, this isn’t acceptable. All right. I’m going to comport myself in a way that keeps me safe or or I can maintain belonging. and we do that in our families. We do that in our society. We start to shape ourselves through practice to convey what we think is necessary for us to convey now. Some of us, like myself, are not consistently as skillful as that. My face will betray me often, and show what I really feel. But, you know, a lot of us do that. we comport ourselves in order to maintain the status quo.

Prentis Hemphill 00:55:44  So that’s what I mean. It’s like we do that. We learn that. And bringing our awareness to to how we do that is actually the key to start to unravel and allow different things to happen.

Eric Zimmer 00:55:56  Yeah, I couldn’t agree more. I think our thought patterns are nothing if not habitual and repetitive, and we have learned them and they are wired in, you know. Well, I don’t like the word wired in that, but they are they’re in the nature of being wired in. Right. Yeah. And the good news is I do think you can change them. The bad news is it takes a lot of reps, right? Right. And so much of like the the wise Habits program that I taught and my book that’ll be coming out next year is like, what is a method to catch that stuff often enough? Yeah, that you can actually start to work with it because for most of its it’s operating under the level of conscious awareness. It’s this strange thing that we can be completely lost in an emotional state or a thought state, and also yet be completely unaware that we are like, it’s it’s a strange human phenomenon, I think.

Eric Zimmer 00:56:47  But I just loved you tying that directly, that the processes are the same. That’s right. Right. The process of learning your thoughts, like how you think is the same way that you learn to drive, and it just happens automatically. And there are ways to slowly untangle all of that.

Speaker 4 00:57:04  That’s right.

Prentis Hemphill 00:57:05  Through awareness. Through awareness and practice. Yes. You got to keep practicing that layup. You got to keep staying with the anger a little bit, because maybe you’re in a space where it can actually be received now, but you got to stay close to it and practice. And again, it’s Everything that we need is on the other side of awkward. So can. Can you let yourself be a little bit awkward? You’ll learn a lot.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:27  Maybe that’s the title of your next book.

Prentis Hemphill 00:57:29  Oh my gosh. What?

Eric Zimmer 00:57:30  Everything we need is on the other side of awkward. I don’t think I’d call it weird. I think that’s going to be a problem, but awkward. We all relate with awkwardness.

Eric Zimmer 00:57:39  Yeah, yeah, we all know what that’s like. Speaking of your book, I didn’t ask this beforehand. Do you happen to have your book? Yeah, yeah, I was going to ask you to read something to finish up. Sure. So I thought where we could end is where you end your book. The last chapter is called love at the center, and it’s a beautiful chapter. And I really love the way the book ends. And I was wondering if you could close this interview up by reading that last section?

Prentis Hemphill 00:58:06  Sure, I’m happy to. The love this book speaks to. The love that it takes to heal is a verb to be practiced out loud. It is the love found in listening, the love of hard truths. It is the love of showing up for one another when it’s risky. It is the love of this inescapable web that compels us to care for the land and its sacred sites. It is a love that compels us to remember and relearn what has been lost. It’s a love that lets us arrive present to this time.

Prentis Hemphill 00:58:37  A love that, like the light from the sun, provokes a flower into its full bloom. Love can do things no other force can. It is only through love that we are ever really changed. There’s a love to be practiced. That can tear down the walls of anything in its way. I believe in this destruction, but only for the sake of love, so that love can be set free in our relationships and our institutions and our cultures, and so that it becomes the shaper of our futures.

Eric Zimmer 00:59:06  Amen. So Prentice is going to join me in the post-show conversation, where we’re going to talk about courage and how conflict is like a video game listeners, if you’d like access to that. This post-show conversation, other post-show conversations, ad free episodes, a special episode I do each week. And most importantly, if you would like to support a show that really needs your support. Go to one you feed net. Thank you so much for joining me on the show. I’ve really enjoyed this conversation.

Prentis Hemphill 00:59:38  Thank you. It’s been such a treat, Eric. I’m honored.

Eric Zimmer 00:59:41  Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity. But we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.

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Embracing Uncertainty: The Key to True Intimacy and Connection in a Chaotic World with Prince EA

November 28, 2025 Leave a Comment

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In this episode, Prince EA discusses the importance of embracing uncertainty as he delves into the key to true intimacy and connection in a chaotic world. He explores what it means to be truly present, mindful, living consciously, and how daily choices shape our lives. Prince EA shares his personal experiences with depression and healing through spirituality, science, and creative expression. The conversation explores meditation, the value of not knowing, and the power of community and self-inquiry in overcoming challenges, ultimately offering hope and practical tools for living a more conscious, fulfilling life.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!


Key Takeaways:

  • Mindfulness and its significance in daily life
  • The concept of conscious living versus being on autopilot
  • The parable of the two wolves representing fear and love
  • The impact of habits on personal development and mental health
  • Personal experiences with depression and the importance of self-awareness
  • The role of spirituality and science in understanding mental health
  • The importance of social support and community in recovery from depression
  • Different meditation practices and their benefits
  • The distinction between “insane” and “unsane” mindsets
  • The value of curiosity and openness in relationships and personal growth

Richard Williams, better known by the stage name Prince Ea, is an American spoken word artist, poet, rapper, filmmaker, and speaker. After graduating Magna Cum Laude from the University of Missouri-St. Louis with a full scholarship and a degree in Anthropology, he initially pursued a career as a hip hop artist. Inspired by artists like Immortal Technique and Canibus. In 2014, Prince Ea shifted his focus from music to creating motivational and inspirational spoken word films and content. His YouTube videos have received over three billion views, and he covers a wide range of topics such as environmentalism, race, work-life balance, and spirituality. Today, when he’s not creating, Prince Ea speaks at conferences and gives lectures to high school and university students nationwide on the topics of self-development, living your passion, and the importance of being motivated and engaged in the classroom.  Prince EA’s work is widely recognized including Oprah’s Super Soul 100 and Forbes 30 Under 30.

Connect with Prince EA: Website | Instagram | Sauna Sessions Podcast

Resources mentioned in this conversation:

Tao Te Cheng

Anthony Demello

David Burns: (Book: Feeling Good)

Stephen Wollenksy

Byron Katie (Interview from 2015)

Eli Jaxon Baer (Interview from 2019)

Timothy Leary

Robert Anton

John Tarrant – (Author of Bring Me The Rhinocerous)

Alfred Korzybski

Adyashanti (Interviews from 2021, 2019-part 1, 2019-part 2; 2017

If you enjoyed this conversation with Prince EA, check out these other episodes:

Gradual Awakening with Dr. Miles Neale

Deconstructing Yourself with Michael Taft

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Episode Transcript:

Prince E.A. 00:00:00  So many of us don’t live life. Life lives us. And I think it’s up to us to really live consciously. This is why mindfulness is so important.

Chris Forbest 00:00:15  Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts. We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.

Eric Zimmer 00:00:59  I’ve heard before that every moment asks us a simple question Will I choose fear or will I choose love? And I’m often skeptical of that. And then I realize I have a real tendency to overcomplicate things.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:12  And choosing love over fear is how Prince E.A., the poet, filmmaker and creator whose spoken word videos have reached billions, sees the world not as something happening to us, but something were invited to live consciously. We talk about what it means to stay awake inside the 35,000 or so decisions we make each day, and how mindfulness isn’t meditation on a cushion. It’s remembering to be here for a single breath, a single cup of coffee, a single kindness. Because the little things aren’t little. They happen to be exactly where our lives actually happen. I’m Eric Zimmer, and this is the one you feed. Hi, Prince. Welcome to the show, Eric.

Prince E.A. 00:01:54  I’m so happy to be here. Thank you for having me on.

Eric Zimmer 00:01:56  Yeah, I am really excited to talk with you. You talk about a lot of the same things that we talk about on this show, in your videos and your courses. And so I think we’re going to have a lot in common here. But before we get to all that, we’ll start like we always do with the parable.

Eric Zimmer 00:02:11  In the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with their grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandchild stops. They think about it for a second, and they look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.

Prince E.A. 00:02:42  Wow. Thank you for sharing that. funny, I wanted to film a video on that a long time ago, and I still might, because it’s such a powerful, potent story. It’s a parable, right? It’s, you know, hundreds of years old. So it’s time tested. And what does it mean to me? It means that we have a choice.

Prince E.A. 00:03:01  I have a choice. And I think it comes down to the two wolves, which for me, it’s either fear or it’s love. I think these are the two forces that play in our dimension, in which we inhabit on this planet. And I think at every moment we have that choice to choose either fear, limitation, anger, this very negative vibration, I would call it. Or we could choose love, which is more open, which is more compassionate. And I think the more that you feed one of them, the more that will grow. Right. And it was not Hahn who said, he says nothing can grow without food. Not the anger, not the hatred, and also not the joy and not the happiness. So that’s what it means to me. And it’s a it’s a very powerful, powerful metaphor for life. And it really comes down to each moment. Which are we feeding in each moment, each decision. Because that’s what our lives are, right? It’s an accumulation of the small moments.

Prince E.A. 00:03:57  There’s a movie I love. It’s, vanilla Sky. I don’t know if you remember that film with Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz. I don’t, it’s a beautiful film. One of my favorites haven’t seen in years. But I always remember this quote in the movie. He says, oh, the little things. There’s nothing bigger. So it’s the little choices. Are we going to choose fear or are we going to choose love?

Eric Zimmer 00:04:20  Yeah. And I think what’s interesting about what you just said about little choices is that it’s the little choices. And it seems like the choices are inconsequential. They’re so little. Right. And there’s so many little moments of them and they feel like well there’s not really a good or bad here. There’s not a love or fear here. This is just I’m making my coffee, I mean, and I’m going to do the next thing. But but it really is, as you’re saying, the more intentionality we can bring to our choices. I was reading something I always forget where I get what I get from my guests, but it was something you had said about some scientists believe we make 35,000 choices a day.

Eric Zimmer 00:04:59  And you said, I don’t believe that to be true, because so many of those choices are happening automatically, right? We’re not conscious of the choice. We’re not conscious of which Wolf might be getting fed. You know, it’s just the default autopilot. And again, some of that’s a human advantage, right? I can’t make every choice. I can’t be deliberately moving my hand right now. Right. It’s just kind of it’s doing its thing. But the more of them that are deliberative, you know.

Prince E.A. 00:05:27  100% it’s habits. You know, I think we all know James. Clear atomic habits, right? One of the most powerful books written in the last freaking decade. It’s all about cultivating those habits because, you know, they say the first part of our lives, we make our habits. In the last part, our habits make us. I think that’s so true. And it’s so important for us to get in front of these habits. Yeah, we still got a chance Because we really don’t want to be a victim of life.

Prince E.A. 00:05:56  So many of us don’t live life. Life lives us. And I think it’s up to us to really live consciously. This is why mindfulness is so important, to be mindful as you’re pouring the coffee and you’re not just thinking about, okay, what do I have to do at work? I’ll tell you a parable which you may have already heard, but there was a story of the Buddha. He met a very, very impatient disciple, and the disciple he said, Buddha, Buddha, can you enlighten me right now? And the Buddha says, I can enlighten you right now. It takes time. You have to cultivate these practices. It says, please, please, this is just enlighten me. Just, just, you know, I got I got a plane to catch. I gotta, I gotta get out of here. Please, please. And the Buddha, he said, okay, here’s what you do when you eat. Eat and when you walk, walk. And it really is just that simple to do what you’re doing right.

Prince E.A. 00:06:50  To really be in it. Right? You’re not thinking about what’s going to happen two years from now or two minutes. You’re really in the moment. And this is what all the sages, all the gurus talk about the power of the now.

Eric Zimmer 00:07:01  Yeah. It’s funny, you and I were talking beforehand about my newly discovered love of surfing, and that’s really it, right? Is that when I am surfing, there is nothing else. You know, that’s it. It is that moment entirely. All my attention, all my focus. It’s just all right there. Yeah. And that’s probably the key to it. Is it does that better for me? Easier. Right. That that state is easier for me to achieve on a surfboard for some reason than it is other times. But it’s always worth striving for.

Prince E.A. 00:07:37  Yeah I mean we’re talking about flow. We’re talking about being in the zone. We’re talking about being in the now I think it’s the Japanese. They call it mushin the Daoist. They call it the Dao.

Prince E.A. 00:07:48  Right. That eternal noun. This is what we’re all looking for. And the funny thing is, you’re never not in it. It’s just the mind that tries to go to the future or go back to the past and rehash that mess. The breath is a good doorway to the moment, to the now. You know the breath is always there. And if we can just come back to the breath that will bring us to that place of beauty. You know what we’re all searching for. They say the true tragedy in life is not in how much we suffer. The true tragedy is how much we miss, how much of the beauty that we just walk past or run past. Not even aware of what’s happening. So to cultivate mindfulness, I think it’s the number one most important thing to really live a happy, fulfilled life.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:35  I’ve heard you say that you don’t love that phrase.

Prince E.A. 00:08:38  Because.

Eric Zimmer 00:08:39  Who wants a full mind? Yeah, and it is a phrase that has gotten way overused, but it doesn’t change the simple fact that being aware of what’s going on in our mind and around us is kind of the whole game.

Prince E.A. 00:08:52  Yeah, that’s the cheat code.

Speaker 4 00:08:55  Yeah, yeah, that’s the cheat code to beat the game. Yeah. That’s that’s it. Yeah. I don’t like that. It’s funny, I like you. You did. You did your homework. Yeah. Mindfulness is an interesting, you know, language.

Prince E.A. 00:09:05  Language is power. It depends on how I’m feeling, I guess. You know, but mindfulness. Sometimes I use, awareness or mindful awareness. Presence awareness. All of these are words that really point to the same thing, which is just coming back to the witness. Just witness. Don’t get involved in the thoughts. Don’t get it. Just just witness. Just watch. There’s a guy, Anthony de Mello. He said, don’t try to change your life. Just. Just watch it and then it’ll change. Then it’ll change.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:33  He is a great seer and his writing is very confrontational too. It is. No no BS like he’s not soft footing around any of it. You know it caught me off guard first reading it I was a little bit like whoa hang on buddy, take it down a notch.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:47  But but he’s speaking the truth. You know, speaking the truth.

Prince E.A. 00:09:50  I think the truth sometimes has to be told in a way that shakes you up.

Eric Zimmer 00:09:54  Yeah. For sure.

Prince E.A. 00:09:55  You know, because we don’t change when we’re comfortable. That’s a message for me. I think that’s definitely part and parcel of my success, and it’s something that I have to also remember that it really is about the package. It’s about the package. It’s not just about the message, but it’s about the packaging. Right. It’s like if you go to a restaurant, it’s a five star Michelin restaurant, and the waiter brings out the food and they bring it out on a paper plate and give you some plastic utensils. The packaging isn’t right. Yeah. Yeah. So it’s it’s really it’s the same thing. The one you feed, how you serve the food has to be packaged in a way that I think really does justice to it. And I think what you’re saying is Anthony de Mello, he was very, very forthcoming, very to the point, very poignant.

Prince E.A. 00:10:47  Yeah. In in the way that he communicated. And I love it. And I think the most powerful people. Martin Luther King I mean, he man, he that guy he was cutting. He was cutting. He cut through. Yeah. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:10:58  Behind me there’s a statue of a bodhisattva called Manjusri. And one of the reasons I love Manjusri is he’s, you know, got one hand on like a lotus. Right. But the other one is holding a flaming sword. And that flaming swords job is to cut through ignorance. And that’s kind of what we’re saying here, is sometimes that’s the cutting that needs to occur.

Prince E.A. 00:11:21  That’s beautiful. You got to send me a picture of that after we finished. I love that. I’ve never heard of him.

Eric Zimmer 00:11:27  Yeah, he’s a bodhisattva in the Mahayana Buddhist tradition. So, changing gears, I’m wondering if we could talk a little bit about you and your challenges of depression. You made a video with a I don’t know what the group was. It’s a group that supports mental illness recovery.

Eric Zimmer 00:11:45  Is it called impact? Maybe. Yeah, it’s quite a video of you’ve got depression as a person sitting in a in a crime room, right? I was really moved by it. But talk to me about, you know, when you had depression and what was it like?

Prince E.A. 00:11:58  Yeah. Well, you know, I grew up on the north side of Saint Louis, and, you know, my family were very like, I don’t know, traditional in the sense of most people where I’m from, we don’t really go to therapists. So I say that to say I was never clinically diagnosed. I never got on medication or anything like that. I didn’t go to church or I know a lot of people are like, you know, just pray it away or you know, Jesus will take the will and make it go away. I think there’s an element of spirituality that can indeed help depressive states. Yeah, but I also think there’s a science. And I think we need to kind of look to the science.

Prince E.A. 00:12:38  I love the Dalai Lama. He’s I know he’s in some in some hot water these days. He always says, hey, if science disagrees with Buddhism, we might have to rethink. Buddhist teachings, and I love that. I say that to say I was never clinically depressed, but I looked at all the symptoms and I definitely experienced depression throughout my adolescence. And also, I do feel as though just my own awareness that my brain that I have could be. Biochemically, I believe that it may lean naturally towards that state because I know that if I don’t ingest certain minerals, supplements do certain things, it just kind of goes that way. It can still be here, but I’ve also trained it through different therapies. CBT reboot Buddhist tradition is also a good, fortification of the mind and to not believe in the thinking mind stoicism, I can kind of rally off all the names of the things that I’ve studied to help me. But it all started, I think, like I said, my adolescence definitely experienced, you know, some suicidal thoughts.

Prince E.A. 00:13:48  They weren’t like every day. But there were some points where I woke up and I just didn’t want to be here. I didn’t care about my parents, didn’t care about friends, just didn’t want to go outside. Right. These are kind of classic depressive symptoms. And then I just started looking into it. I just started trying to understand it and came across a book from David Burns called Feeling Good. The new Mood Therapy came across. Books like the Tao Te Ching, came across traditions like Advaita Vedanta. Say that you were not these thoughts, you were not the thinking mind. Thoughts come and go like clouds in the sky. Watch your thoughts like you’re crossing the street and you watch traffic. So these different things, what they did was they gave me distance. They gave me distance from the thoughts. I wasn’t the thought itself. I wasn’t tied up in it. I could actually observe it. I could watch it, I could be mindful of it. And just that awareness was a huge relief, a huge relief.

Prince E.A. 00:14:47  But I think the depression was also a bit of a gift because it allowed me to look within and, you know, find out what was going on under the hood. You know, what kind of nutrient therapies amino acids could I play with to change the hormonal balance in my brain? So I always tell people to think that they are depressed. I say, you are not depressed. You are experiencing depression. Who you are is not depressed. Who you are can observe that depression, and it’s difficult to understand that when you’re in it. Yeah, learn. Helplessness is a huge thing. But I love the work of, He was a scientist and he created something called Learned Optimism. And I think we can retrain our brains, as we were talking about earlier, to see the good, to see the positive, to just shift our perceptions. There are so many tools that I always tell people it’s not hopeless. It’s not a hopeless situation that you’re in. In fact, you should be very hopeful because there are so many tools out there in our modern world today that you just have to find it.

Prince E.A. 00:15:51  You have to find the right one that works for you. So, you know, going back to my story, I think depression played a role. It forced me to try to understand it. And I think at one level, it also allowed me to bring out the creativity inside of me, to bring out the vulnerability inside of me. You know, I started out as a musician and, you know, musician is like a poet. It’s a very vulnerable art form. And so I was very vulnerable and very vocal about what I was going through. And, you know, when I would create music, I would find my audience. They would say, oh, I feel the exact same way. Thank you for putting that out there. And then that’s how you build community. That’s how you build friendships. That’s how you build connection. Connection came from the expression which some say is the opposite of depression. Depression. While, you know, I think it is a virus. I think that it can also be an opportunity, an opportunity, a signal, an alarm that something’s off.

Prince E.A. 00:16:47  You may not be living the life that you’re meant to live.

Eric Zimmer 00:16:50  Yeah, I’m very similar to you. I think I have a brain that orients towards that direction when I let it off its leash, you know, and I, like you, have found that there’s a lot of different things that contribute to managing it. There’s a lot of different tools. And I’ve had to, over the years, kind of put together my little depression recovery kit. You know, mine’s going to look different than other people’s. But but knowing what’s in that kit becomes very important. And as you were talking about the thoughts, I was thinking a little bit about, you know, part of the problem with depression is that when I’m in it, when I’m experiencing it, I like your phrase. When I’m experiencing it. Right, I can know that my thoughts are not correct. I can be like, look, you know, your brain’s not working real well today. And, you know, ignore those thoughts. And underneath it, there’s still this like air feeling, you know, and I’ve talked on this show many times about sometimes I treat it a little bit like the I call it the emotional flu, you know, which is that when it comes, I treat it a little bit like I would the flu, meaning I don’t make a big fuss out of it.

Eric Zimmer 00:17:56  I don’t take myself to the emergency room. I make sure am I doing everything I can to support myself. I know that while I’m sick, the world’s going to look kind of crappy. You know? I let it kind of roll now. That’s again after having dealt with it head on. So I’m not saying that’s always the case, but for me, becoming aware of the fact that, like, there’s some degree of this low mood that feels like it’s a companion of mine, that doesn’t seem like it’s gonna completely go away. So how do I work with it as skillfully as I can? And to your point, you know, what opportunities does it present? You know, I wouldn’t be doing the work I do like you if I hadn’t had it, you know, I wouldn’t be doing the work I do if I hadn’t been a heroin addict. I mean, all these things contribute to our lives being meaningful. They’re part of our story.

Prince E.A. 00:18:44  That’s it. I love the analogy of the puzzle pieces put in, and everybody has their own puzzle that they have to put together.

Prince E.A. 00:18:51  Right. Like, I think social support for just the human species is it works. Right. So that’s a big one. Yeah. The thing about depression is like when you’re in it, that’s the last thing you want is to be around people. Yeah. The very thing that can allow you to come out of it is the thing that you’re, like, pushing away, which is another trick.

Eric Zimmer 00:19:12  Totally. Even things like movement. Right. Like, we know movement helps, but the last thing you want to do is move when you’re feeling depressed. Exactly. It is challenging in that way. How do you work through that?

Prince E.A. 00:19:24  Well, you know, I haven’t had the need to work through it lately. Yeah. But in the past, well, just that book. Right. So that book by David Birds is so powerful, right? You know the book, right?

Eric Zimmer 00:19:36  I do, yeah.

Prince E.A. 00:19:37  Yeah. So this book actually created a practice of its own called Biblio therapy. People got better just by reading the book.

Prince E.A. 00:19:44  It’s got so many tools in it. I think if you read the book or if you study CBT, which is cognitive behavioral therapy, or as I like to call it, crushing bad thoughts, you will find a list of ten cognitive distortions. Print this list out, put it on your refrigerator. Put it anywhere that you can see it. Because I feel like whenever we suffer 99% of the times, it is because of one of these ten cognitive distortions, period. But when you see it, you can see, oh, there it is. My brain’s just trying to trick me again. Right. So you observe it. Yes. Depression is something you really can’t think your way out of it. You can’t intellectualize your way out of it. This is why I think behavioral activation is one of the more successful treatments for depression. Yeah. Moving. But like you said, you don’t want to move. So this is why having that good social support, that network is so, so important. That’s the biggest thing.

Prince E.A. 00:20:40  I mean, this is the reason why I like to study cultures. You know, I got my degree in anthropology and I love Dan Buettner. His work on the blue zones where you have people rights, people who are, you know, centenarians, they live well past 100 years old, and they’re healthy. They’re happy, they’re vibrant, they’re still having sex. They’re still, you know, watering their gardens. They’re still playing with their great, great grandkids. They’re still riding the bike. And you know, this is baffled a lot of scientists for years. And they really finally figured out why they live so long. And it’s because of their friendships, because of the love that they have around. Right? They a lot of them have the same friends that they had when they were kids when they were ten now, and they’re 110, they have the same people around them. So the human animal, I think we do need each other. And when we get in these low mood states, We have to trust the people around us.

Eric Zimmer 00:21:36  Yeah, yeah, I think that’s really true and really important. And those other people can be the things that do help us do some of the things that we need to do, you know, that are good for us. But one of my favorite quotes is depression hates a moving target, right? So for me, that’s kind of it. It’s like, just get off the couch. It doesn’t even matter what. Just be moving, you know? And how much I’m able to do may vary. I may be like, well, you know, today I’m not going to get on the peloton bike and do a crushing hour, a ride. But I might walk, you know, around the block.

Prince E.A. 00:22:09  Yeah. Here’s something else you don’t even have to move, but it simulates moving. But a sauna, a sauna or an ice bath, both of those things. I mean, you can just sit there, right? And you are making physiological changes in your body. You are helping your nervous system.

Prince E.A. 00:22:27  You are fighting depression when you just sit there so you can sweat it out and you can shiver it out, too.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:33  Yeah, or you can do both. That’s my favorite. Back and forth.

Prince E.A. 00:22:36  Back and forth. Okay.

Eric Zimmer 00:22:38  Yeah, but you brought up sauna, so you’ve got a fairly new podcast that you do in a sauna. You basically have people come join you in the sauna. Why do you choose to do a podcast in the sauna?

Prince E.A. 00:22:50  You know, I just like doing stuff that’s never been done. Yeah, I’m one who takes the road less traveled or not even paved, I should say. So. I wanted to do something different. And also, I’ve had a lot of good conversations inside of saunas, you know, at the gym, at the club, you know, so it’s like, what about having conversations with celebrities, scientists, cool people just inside of a sauna as we as we sweat out the toxins and the BS, what’s what can happen? Yeah. So we landed on a sauna.

Prince E.A. 00:23:22  We tried to figure out how to get the equipment inside the sauna without melting. We figured it out.

Eric Zimmer 00:23:27  Yeah, it sounds really good. I was like, I can’t believe how good this sounds for being in a sauna.

Prince E.A. 00:23:33  Yeah. Yeah. Thank you, thank you. Yeah. That’s that’s my producer Dustin. He works magic but we got it. It’s an infrared sauna. It’s not a dry sauna so it doesn’t get that hot. But so we do 20 minutes in the sauna and then we do another 20 minutes outside the sauna for like what we call a hydration session, where we sit, we get like a foot bath with Epsom salt. We drink, coconut water and we continue the conversation in our bathrobes.

Eric Zimmer 00:23:59  This sounds like a good podcast gig.

Prince E.A. 00:24:01  I haven’t had any complaints. Oh, yes, they love it. Come by. We can. We can get in.

Eric Zimmer 00:24:06  All right. I will take you up on that.

Prince E.A. 00:24:08  Awesome.

Speaker 5 00:24:31  Eight years ago, I was completely overwhelmed. My life was full with good things.

Speaker 5 00:24:37  A challenging career, two teenage boys, a growing podcast, and a mother who needed care. But I had a persistent feeling of I can’t keep doing this, but I valued everything I was doing and I wasn’t willing to let any of them go. And the advice to do less only made me more overwhelmed. That’s when I stumbled into something I now call this still point method, a way of using small moments throughout my day to change not how much I had to do, but how I felt while I was doing it. And so I wanted to build something I wish I’d had eight years ago. So you don’t have to stumble towards an answer that something is now here and it’s called overwhelm is optional tools for when you can’t do less. It’s an email course that fits into moments you already have. Taking less than ten minutes total a day. It isn’t about doing less, It’s about relating differently to what you do. I think it’s the most useful tool we’ve ever built. The launch price is $29.

Speaker 5 00:25:38  If life is too full, but you still need relief from overwhelm, check out overwhelm is optional. Go to one you feel. That’s one you feed.

Speaker 6 00:25:52  So I want to talk a little bit about meditation.

Eric Zimmer 00:25:55  It’s a big thing in your life, a practice you’re really into. And I wanted to just sort of start and ask you a little bit about what is the type of meditation you’re doing these days. How has that changed over time? How does it vary week to week, month to month? I’m just kind of curious how you approach that big topic.

Prince E.A. 00:26:14  First of all, I want to say I love your questions. I love your vibe. I’m so excited to talk about these questions because they’re super important. I don’t think there’s anything more important than the topic of meditation. I do believe that meditation is the anti-virus software that can cure a world of all of its ills. Meditation is not something you do. It’s actually a state of being. I think there are portals into that state, but I think the portals have gotten a bit confused.

Prince E.A. 00:26:45  But the portals of meditation, they vary. Right. I’m a big tantra guy and I know people listening to this. They might say, oh Tantra, you must have crazy, wild sex, I’m like, no.

Speaker 7 00:26:59  No no no no no no.

Prince E.A. 00:27:00  See, this is what the commercialization of spirituality has done. So, so Tantra is a science and one of my favorite books, the Vinyasa Bhairava Tantra. It speaks of 112 tantric practices to reach the point of what they call Bhairava oneness, Krishna consciousness, Christ consciousness, whatever name, Nirvana. Only two of them have to do with sex. One that has to do with sex really doesn’t even have to do with sex. What it is, is, they say at the point of orgasm, you put your mind fully on God. So I love the practices of tantra because they take meditation. I’m using air quotes. They take meditation off the mat. They take it out of lotus and bring it in the world. Right? Yeah. One of my favorite is space spatial awareness.

Prince E.A. 00:28:00  Right. So I don’t know if people are driving. If you’re driving, don’t do this. But if you’re sitting in a room or maybe when you pull over or you sit in your office, I want you to just look around and ask yourself, what do you see? And when I ask people this question, they say, oh, well, I see chairs, I see a desk, I see a window, I see people and I say, okay, yeah, but you miss that which was most abundant The space which allows all that to inhabit the space is what we are space. I feel like if there’s any religion or any god that should be worshipped, it should be space, because space is the most abundant thing in the universe. Matter is very, very, very tiny. Any physicist will tell you this, but this is just one to really focus on. The space you can focus on. The space in between my words. So when you’re speaking to somebody, you put your mind attention on the space.

Prince E.A. 00:29:03  And what happens is your mind starts to take the form of the space. So this is something that people can do anywhere, anywhere. It really brings you to this non-dual awareness, this piece, this feeling of home. One of my favorite gurus in this saga, Dada maharaj, he’s got a quote that I have on my wall and he says. He says, having never left the house. You have been searching for the way home, having never left the house, you have been searching for the way home. We search. Search and search in life for joy and happiness and fulfillment. And what he’s saying is it’s already here. It’s you. It’s not something you even have to do. It’s your very nature. It’s here and now. I love this practice, this tantric practice, one other meditation that people can do in their daily life that I like to do from time to time, is a walking meditation that I got from Tik, not Hanh, the Zen Monk bestselling author. We mentioned Martin Luther King earlier.

Prince E.A. 00:30:06  Martin Luther King nominated Not hard for a Nobel Peace Prize. And what you do is when you’re walking, you can be in nature. You can be in your office. When you’re walking, you want to focus on your breath. And with each step You want to breathe in. And as you breathe in. You say to yourself, I’m here. And you breathe out on the exhale. You say, I am home. So I am here on the inhale. I am home on the exhale. And you do this as you walk. And as you walk, you imagine your feet are kissing the earth with every step. So you say I am here, I am home. And as you walk you kiss the earth with every step. And what you’re going to notice is your pace is going to slow down, and you are going to be filled with so much joy and presence and aliveness with this meditation. So this is another one of my favorites. Let me give you three just to finish the Trinity off.

Prince E.A. 00:31:10  Let’s see what else I got. So this is one that I got from a guy named Steven Wilensky. I don’t know if you’re familiar with this guy, Steven Wilensky.

Eric Zimmer 00:31:18  I’m not. I’ve followed you on all the references so far, but you’ve got one here, I don’t know.

Prince E.A. 00:31:23  Okay, so Stephen Walensky is like, there’s a few people that I want to meet in the world. I’d probably count them with one hand. And he’s probably at the top of my list. Okay. He’s an author. He’s written so many beautiful books. He’s done documentaries. I have no idea where he is now. He kind of just disappeared. He’s probably in deep meditation somewhere. He was a disciple of the guy that I mentioned. The saga of Maharaj and Stephen Walensky had a meditation where what you do is you well, first, you obviously you, you know, you bring yourself to this moment. You relax your face, your jaw, your eyes, your shoulders. Take a breath. And then you ask yourself, without using your thoughts, associations, perceptions, emotions or memories.

Prince E.A. 00:32:12  Am I an American? Am I Russian? Am I Ukrainian and my Canadian or neither. And then you do that again, you say, without using your thoughts, associations, perceptions, emotions or memories. Am I black and my white and my Asian or neither? And then you go deeper, you say, without using your thoughts, associations, perceptions, emotions or memories. Am I a man? Am I a woman? Or neither. And then you go deeper without using your thoughts, associations, perceptions, emotions or memories. Am I a human being? Am I even a spiritual being? Or neither. And what you do is you stay in this gentle, non-judgmental awareness. This is our true nature. This is home. This is who we always were. Without a name. Without a label. This is why the, the Hindus, if you look at the Sanskrit word nirvana. People think nirvana is this state of, just ecstasy.

Speaker 7 00:33:53  And.

Prince E.A. 00:33:54  Amazing bliss. Actually, the word nirvana means extinction.

Prince E.A. 00:33:58  There’s no more you there?

Speaker 7 00:34:01  Yep.

Prince E.A. 00:34:02  So that meditation alone, I think, is a shortcut to pretty much what every spiritual tradition points to, which is the oneness.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:14  Right. What’s really interesting about that type of meditation, as you said, is getting to that place when you’ve suddenly said, I’m not any of those things. To go, well what am I. And to really look at that and if you’re able to stay with it, you know my experience is what you will find is like I don’t know. Yeah. But as you were talking, I can never pronounce that spiritual teacher’s name.

Prince E.A. 00:34:38  Miss Sagar Dada maharaj.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:40  Yeah. You know, he’s got that idea of, you know, you abide with that sense of I am.

Prince E.A. 00:34:46  Yeah, right.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:46  That’s it. Nothing after it. I am. Because when you do that, you’re like, well, I’m clearly there’s something here. Like something is. But but what is it? Where is it? What is it? You just suddenly start going like.

Eric Zimmer 00:34:59  Well, I don’t know. There’s nothing here that to find. And it’s a mystifying, sometimes mildly disconcerting state, if you can get to it, but also deeply freeing.

Prince E.A. 00:35:09  Only for the mind. Only for the mind.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:12  That’s fair. Yeah.

Prince E.A. 00:35:12  Because the mind wants to figure it out. It wants to objectify that which cannot be objectified. The eye cannot see itself. The knife cannot cut itself. The mind cannot truly know itself. What’s what’s behind it. You can’t get there with the mind. It’s not the right tool. I think the last step of the inquiry is when the questions themselves disappear.

Eric Zimmer 00:35:37  Yeah, I was out today. I’ve been meditating in nature recently. I’m teaching a retreat this summer at Kripalu about nature and connecting with nature as a way. And so I’ve been really engaging in that practice. And I started reflecting on something I heard recently. It was some book about human development or evolutionary past, and that there was a time that we were human, but we didn’t have language to imagine.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:06  What that might be like is a fascinating thought experiment, because most of our thoughts are words that we’re saying to ourselves. But if you didn’t have those words, what is the experience of being? And I found that as a really interesting thing to reflect on. You know, and I do that sometimes as like to your point, if not using memories, you know, not using language even. Yeah. What is this is a really powerful way for me to get closer to that state of being.

Prince E.A. 00:36:38  Wow. Yeah. Because the word is not the thing, right?

Eric Zimmer 00:36:42  It’s it’s the dial that can be named. Is not the doubt, right? Yeah.

Prince E.A. 00:36:47  Yep yep yep. So that’s how we get caught up. We get caught up in the words. So that’s a fascinating thought experiment.

Eric Zimmer 00:36:54  Yeah exactly. Well but we must have been thinking. We must have been thinking. Right. Yeah. You know, but we didn’t have the words. And it’s just it’s similar to me when I try and imagine what it might be like to be an octopus, for example.

Eric Zimmer 00:37:07  It’s just a fun way of trying to say, like, there are states of consciousness that are very different than the ones we inhabit, and what are the different ways of kind of getting closer to those and being able to see with those eyes? I’m a Zen practitioner primarily, and one of my teachers said to me once, and I thought this was so wise. We do a lot of koan practice in Zen, right? And they’re nonsense, right? At first glance, they’re nonsense. But the advice I was given is sometimes imagine what the state of mind would have to be for the person who said that and believes it to be true. Instead of going, that doesn’t make any sense. That’s nonsense to say. What state of mind would I have to be in that? That would be true. It’s it’s sort of a reverse engineering way of entering into the mind, and you can’t do it. Exactly. These are all just tools, portals to use your word. Right? You know, that’s another one is when a spiritual teacher says something that you’re like that.

Eric Zimmer 00:38:07  That sounds nuts. One way of approaching is go. Well, what would their mind state have to be for that to be true? You know, we’re just kind of playing with ways of getting deeper, powerful.

Prince E.A. 00:38:17  I mean, I gotta you can’t see I got chill bumps here. I mean, that’s it. That’s empathy. Right? Empathy. The Greek word to see through the eye of the other. I mean, that’s that’s it. I mean, there’s another meditation that I love. It’s called to install the guru. So what you do is, is you visualize your guru or your teacher, your enlightened master, and from the feet to the head, you imagine that their body merges with yours. You have installed the guru into this self which is very similar. Like what state of mind would that have to be in? Right to believe that powerful love that air. So good, so good.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:20  Do you have a spiritual teacher that you actually work with, or do you feel like your spiritual teachers are primarily the people that you read? I mean, I know you’re a voracious reader, just as I am.

Eric Zimmer 00:39:32  Do you have teachers that you actually work with, or is it been more your sort of quote unquote gurus or the people we’ve talked about that you’re reading?

Prince E.A. 00:39:40  Yeah, yeah, the latter. I’ve definitely attended seminars and like Byron Katie and I love her. Gangi and Eli Jackson Baer, who were disciples of a man named Papa ji. And, you know, being around some of these people, but never on like a 1 to 1 student disciple. I’ve never had that, but I’ve just been so touched by so many masters. You know, I think Ram Dass was one of my first on ramps into spirituality and, you know, Timothy Leary. Robert Anton Wilson. I’m a big science guy, too. So people say, oh, science and spirituality, they don’t go together. Why not? Well, science is the empirical pursuit of the truth, and spirituality is the experiential pursuit for the nature of what’s real.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:27  Yeah. They should go together. They should. I mean, because you’re seeking the truth.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:31  In both cases, sadly.

Prince E.A. 00:40:32  Yeah. So I never had a direct teacher. I think that that’s not to say I never will. I do believe that everything that we need is within us. Sometimes we are grace to be able to see that. And sometimes people need a master or a guru to point to it and tell them that actually you’re already that you don’t even need me. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:40:53  All these stories of people like Ram Dass, when they saw their guru and they instantly were, like, transformed, has made it difficult for me to work with Zen teachers, which I found to be beneficial working one on one with a teacher because my mind is always like, well, is this a truly enlightened being? And it’s kind of silly, right? In a way, because it’s almost there, more like a spiritual friend than they are. Like a guru, right? But in the Zen tradition, there are I don’t like this word, but I don’t have a better one.

Eric Zimmer 00:41:24  There are correct responses to koans that have been passed down for thousands of years. And your teacher is the one who’s like, yep, good, let’s go on to the next one. Or, you know, very politely, some are more polite than others. You know, you need to sit with that some more is what my teacher would always say, which was the polite way of saying, nope, you do not have it.

Prince E.A. 00:41:44  Yeah, yeah, I love koans, by the way, and I’m so happy that you study that. I’ve got books this stick on all the koan. Yeah, yeah. You know, it’s what I’ve gotten from it is actually you become the answer.

Eric Zimmer 00:41:59  That’s exactly it. The answer is always that, you know. Yeah, it’s a little of that game we talked about a minute ago. Like what would it be like to be in the mind, you know. What would it be like to be the distant temple bell ringing? You know, that’s one. How do you stop the sound of a distant temple bell ringing? Right.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:22  You can’t get to it. Right? You know. And so it’s about you become that thing. Some of it, to me, has been an imaginative exercise, which turns out to be a powerful approach.

Prince E.A. 00:42:33  Love that. Yeah. That’s it. That’s it. Yeah. Koans. Oh, my. What’s my favorite koan? Yeah, the sound of one hand clapping. Classic. Probably the most famous one. Yeah. Yeah. Does the dog have Buddha nature? Moo. Moo? Yeah, exactly. Classic mood. Yeah. So there’s so many beautiful ones. So many. They’re. They’re great. I love them so much. Yeah.

Eric Zimmer 00:42:56  There’s a book that you might like. If you haven’t read it, it’s called Bring Me the Rhinoceros.

Prince E.A. 00:43:01  Maybe that sounds very Cohen like.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:04  Yeah, yeah. Bring me the rhinoceros by a Zen teacher named John Tarrant. T a r r t. It’s another one of those. Where. Yeah. I mean, basically, that’s the end of the koan.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:14  Bring me the rhinoceros. Which of course, is just nonsensical, but, you know.

Prince E.A. 00:43:18  Yeah. So good.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:19  But that’s a really great book about koans and about sort of a modern approach. And he’s a beautiful writer and teacher. He’s really gifted. If you’re into koans, that’s definitely one to read. Okay. Me the rhinoceros.

Prince E.A. 00:43:34  Write it down. Now bring me the right. Bring me the rhino. Cool. I’m on it, I’m on it.

Eric Zimmer 00:43:39  I loved what you said about meditation, about bringing them into more of the moments of our lives, taking them out of, you know, just a formal sitting practice. I’ve got a program called Spiritual Habits where we try and take the science and behavior change and apply it to spiritual principles. And that’s really the key piece, is like, it’s great to believe in these things. It’s great to think about these things, but you need them in the moments of your life. And so you’re talking about doing that. Do you have a formal practice that you do regularly, or is it kind of just depend at different phases of your life, different things?

Prince E.A. 00:44:12  I don’t have a formal practice.

Prince E.A. 00:44:14  It is very spontaneous. I think throughout the day what I find happening is just a reflex to come back to the here and now. But I don’t do the, you know, the 30 minutes in the morning or the Osho, I think, you know, he said, man, actually, I think it can be useful. But I think when meditation becomes regimented, very militarized, we can miss the, the beauty, the life of it. Yeah, the spontaneity of it.

Eric Zimmer 00:44:43  So of more interest than that actually is what you just said, which is you reflexively come back more to the present moment. How did you train yourself to do that? Because what I think is one of the biggest problems to what we’re talking about, which is having these moments throughout our day where we connect back to the moment, our deeper nature. Whatever you want to connect back to? Is that we forget? Yeah. We get busy and we forget. And so to me, the Holy Grail is when you begin to sort of, as you’re saying, you’ve trained this into yourself a little bit.

Eric Zimmer 00:45:16  So it is a little bit more habitual to turn back towards the present moment or turn back towards your deeper nature. And so it sounds like you have done that to some degree. Are you able to think back to how you got there?

Prince E.A. 00:45:30  Well, I think there’s different paths for different people. I feel that it is good to have, like in the beginning, to have structured pockets within your day that maybe you do nothing. Maybe you’re just in a state of wonder or just give yourself that space, that openness, that awareness. But for me, it was really the practice of self-inquiry, asking myself repeatedly, who am I? To whom do these thoughts come to? To whom do these thoughts come to? To whom do these thoughts come to? And recognizing that, number one, there’s no verbal or intellectual answer to that. The question just dissolves. And it was at that deep recognition that I realized that a lot of the spirituality, just like a lot of the psychology is, is kind of just a game of the mind.

Prince E.A. 00:46:20  And I think once you recognize your true nature, you’re kind of out of the game that glimpse, you just can’t unsee it. Yeah. You just can’t go back to, I think, how it was. If you really saw the illusion for what it is, you can’t really get. In my experience and this one’s experience, you can’t really get caught up. So I think really recognizing it first and not just from an intellectual level, but really from a deep seeing because, you know, so many teachers, even like Addie Ashanti and so many teachers.

Eric Zimmer 00:46:52  One of my favorites.

Prince E.A. 00:46:53  Yeah, yeah. Well, they they speak about like it’s just being an accident. They say meditation makes you more accident prone, right? Yeah, but it’s like it’s it just kind of graced. So for me, it was that practice of self-inquiry that Ramana maharshi, the sage of Arunachala, his words of to whom do the thoughts come to? Where do they arise and what do they subside to? Yeah, just that recognition.

Prince E.A. 00:47:23  The more that you see it, the more that the pockets of awareness and the space is going to arise.

Eric Zimmer 00:47:28  Yeah, yeah. When you were talking about the meditation on space and all that, it made me think of, there used to be this meditation app on the phone. This was a long time ago, and it has since, I don’t know what it’s called. It never got updated. You can’t use it anymore, but it was this kind of amazing app where it would play a sound. I don’t remember what it was, whether it was a little bit of music or what it was, but your job was to tap the button when the sound went away. And so what you were watching for was that disappearance. You are watching for things that have come into existence to disappear from existence, and it was just a totally different way of doing it than what most of us are doing. And I love that app. I wish it still existed because it was just a fun. And when I say fun, I mean like I enjoyed doing it, it was effortless to kind of sit and do it.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:21  You know, you can do that with anything, right? We can go outside and do it right. Yeah, we can notice the sound when it comes. But we can also notice when it’s gone. Yeah. Be like well where’d it go.

Prince E.A. 00:48:32  That’s it I love that I love them. We might have to work on that and get that app back up and running or create our own.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:38  That’s I’m down if you you want to partner on that for sure.

Prince E.A. 00:48:41  Great. Awesome.

Eric Zimmer 00:48:42  I want to ask you a question. I’ve heard you use this phrase before and you’ve talked about the world being not insane, but unsane. I’m just curious. That’s an interesting slight change of words there. Talk to me about what those two things mean to you.

Prince E.A. 00:48:58  Well, like all words. They’re all useless. but for me, insanity is one thing. I actually, I believe I got this phrase from Alfred Kozinski, author of Science Insanity. Beautiful book. Of course, he created a language called English Prime.

Prince E.A. 00:49:19  And in this language, this is a very scientific language. You don’t use the verb to be. You don’t say, this is a microphone. This is a mason jar. You say this appears to be a mason jar. This appears to be a microphone. And his whole premise on doing that is because absolutism and certainty has created so much harm and violence in our world. And when we can get more skeptical about our language, like we said earlier, the word is not the thing. The map is not the territory. It humbles us. You don’t say, oh, Bob is angry. You can say, oh, Bob appears to be angry right now. It softens us. Yeah, it’s more aligned with reality. So the Unsane mindset is, I think, the mindset of certainty of this is the way it is. But for me, I always prefer to, as the Daoist say, the I don’t know mind or the Buddhist say the beginner’s mind, right? The expert. What’s the old saying? You probably know this one.

Eric Zimmer 00:50:31  This in the beginner’s mind, there are many, many possible experts. There’s few or. Yeah, something like that.

Prince E.A. 00:50:38  Yeah. So I think the world, we’re very definite. We don’t have that level of, of doubt or uncertainty to say maybe I’m wrong or it’s just a beautiful state of being to be able to say, I don’t know, because it’s like in our world, you turn on the news, everybody knows. OS. Everybody is so 100% certain about everything.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:01  Oh so certain. I know there’s that great Bertrand Russell quote, which is I won’t get it right, but it’s something like the problem with the world is that the intelligent are uncertain about things, and the idiots are so sure of themselves. Right. Like I butchered that someone I’m sure can create it. But it was this idea that so many people are so certain of themselves, and usually their certainty is problematic.

Prince E.A. 00:51:22  Yeah, yeah. And this is what I call not insanity, but insanity.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:26  That’s a good word for it, because insanity has a more specific framework versus insanity.

Eric Zimmer 00:51:31  I like that you’ve given me two different authors that I’ve never heard of, which happens so rarely on this show. I’m so excited.

Prince E.A. 00:51:38  Yeah, I feel like we’re gonna do that for each other. The boat is behind you. I don’t have no idea. Yeah. I hope we have a great, friendship, and I. I’d love to compare notes on all of these amazing things, but I think what we’re doing here is really bringing people to a more same way of living and viewing To know something means that that something is dead. You never know your partner. You can never know them because they’re always changing their living organism. They’re taking in new information. They have so many dimensions, but.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:09  We think we do. It’s that looking again, looking more closely. And in Zen, we would say not knowing is most intimate. And I love that idea, because when you don’t know something, you give it your attention. And that’s where intimacy arises. When you know something, you stop looking.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:26  Your intimacy fades.

Prince E.A. 00:52:28  That’s it. Love it. Wow.

Eric Zimmer 00:52:31  Well, we are near the end of our time. Any sort of last thing you’d like to leave listeners with based on where your heart and mind is right now?

Prince E.A. 00:52:39  I think from what we spoke about, if somebody’s listening, maybe just one person is kind of aligned or feels something about what we said to really go into deep with your full heart. And we talked a lot about space. We talked a lot about silence and meditation, and one of my favorite quotes is from Rumi. He says, silence is the language of God. All else is poor. Translation.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:07  That’s a beautiful place to leave it. Thank you so much. This has been deeply enjoyable. I’m so glad to have gotten to have you on.

Prince E.A. 00:53:13  So much fun. Thank you so much for having me. Let’s do it again. Yeah, in the sauna maybe.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:18  Okay. Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend.

Eric Zimmer 00:53:28  Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the one You Feed community.

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