Hello you savages. Watch the full episode with Dr K here: ruclips.net/video/TH0U2D90l-o/видео.html! Get up to 32% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at livemomentous.com/modernwisdom
I think it's good to say "no, I don't understand" or "what's that?". To not know is the 1st step. If you never admit to not knowing or understanding, you will not even try to find out.
I agree with this statement. Personally I’m so paralyzed by the results that I end up not doing anything at all. This is kind of a problem of becoming too cognitive. We need to sometimes think less and do more. Life is all about balancing acts
Would you say that someone who hates themselves is a narcissist? Since they are really thinking about themselves and comparing themselves a lot and beating themselves down all the time? Basically they think of themselves a lot
at the start he asks does that make sense? and chris just says no. idk why but i loved that tiny moment of just being completely honest despite it being a slightly awkward deviation from the default yes people give.
@@midwinter78 I'm pretty sure this is standard Eastern Buddhist/ Hindu doctrine. Given that's his bias, I think it's more likely he got it from that than Hume.
I really like Dr. K's perspectives. He is a real life monk practicing psychology xD "You can try your best, and do the thing, but you cannot control the result". Like mama never shamed me if I didn't get an A; she just asked "did you really try your best?" or "could you have done better?" Put the focus on the doing and methodology. If you focus on the results alone, your children will learn to cheat their ways through life, and that's not what good parenting is about.
I'm a fairly secularist person Dr. K is about the only one that I can listen talk about spirituality in a way that even skeptical self is like "alright, that actually makes sense, you might be on to something"
Dr. K pretty much summed up Ecclesiastes. You can't control anything, and the best things are the simple pleasures. The sun on your face, a good meal, time with your loved ones. Things that you can't control and are not promised. No amount of money, followers, work, or pleasure would make your life fulfilling in of itself
Or Epictetus "Some things are in our control and others not. Things in our control are opinion, pursuit, desire, aversion, and, in a word, whatever are our own actions. Things not in our control are body, property, reputation, command, and, in one word, whatever are not our actions. The things in our control are by nature free, unrestrained, unhindered; but those not in our control are weak, slavish, restrained, belonging to others. Remember, then, that if you suppose that things which are slavish by nature are also free, and that what belongs to others is your own, then you will be hindered. You will lament, you will be disturbed, and you will find fault both with gods and men. But if you suppose that only to be your own which is your own, and what belongs to others such as it really is, then no one will ever compel you or restrain you. Further, you will find fault with no one or accuse no one. You will do nothing against your will. No one will hurt you, you will have no enemies, and you not be harmed."
And a lot of the times when i don't understand something Chris hasn't too, and he is brave enough and humble enough to ask for clarification, man i love that. And when he brings down the conversations to practical everyday actions with questions like: "Okay so what should a ... do in order to ..." . Such a great interviewer.
We already completely accept the clouds in the sky at face value whether they rain or not. Accept yourself in the exact same way that you accept the clouds and your accomplishments quickly become irrelevant. Stop putting conditions on self-love. You always have been good enough and always will be.
Except the clouds in the sky have a visible, physical, real presence in the world. I can look up at the clouds in the sky and accept them because they really do exist, and if I needed more proof all I would need to do is physically feel the rain. After all, rain itself is formed within the aforementioned clouds. While it is a pretty combination of words, the metaphor rings hollow due to the physical and objective truth of the cloud’s existence, as compared to the intangible and completely subjective and interpretive nature of one’s emotion.
I absolutely love how these podcasts are bringing such fantastic insights and inspiration to the masses. I think Chris has cracked the code of what the internet is truly good for.
@@laurapavone3513 There have been 450million views on this channel. I don't know what a single "mass" would be, but I'd say there's at least 2 in there. 😉
My rule has been: Focus on the behaviour, not the result. I've found it to be helpful and inevitably practicing the behaviour gets me the initially desired result.
I love Dr. K but I HAVE to point out despite how much of a joy it is to listen to him speak, the quality of the audio, the video, and the set here are all so absolutely stunning and such a joy to experience I almost couldn't even pay attention to Dr. K's words for appreciating the effort. This is a beautiful video. Kudos and bravo! I'm glad you're in the position to be able to pour the resources you have into the art, and, as a viewer, thank you so much for doing so! It's obvious how passionate you are for this creation!
Good conversation. The problem is that outcomes are often the measuring stick of your actions' effectiveness. If you do your best but always fail, what does it say about you? Dr. K. is essentially asking people to believe in themselves and to remain open to possibilities. This is good advice, but it is a bit easier to be self-confident when you've already achieved some measure of success yourself, like he did.
I am still learning this thing myself. But to me, there is a hidden layer to all this. Where do you draw the line in blaming yourself or not. If your action leads to a direct outcome that you can control, then you should take accountability. But if it is not, especially given the circumstance, then you should be compassionate to yourself. This applies to you being seen or not seen, judged or not judged, liked or not liked.
If you _believe_ you are making the right actions but always fail, you have space to reconsider your actions. Then you can reflect and change course if need be. Then confidence grows as you realise you're on the right course of action. Is there something in particular you're confused about?
There's no such thing as failure or success, just actions, if you're doing what you love and that gives your life meaning, that's what's important. You have to choose whether you pursue personal fulfilment or economical success, two very different things andrarely they go hand in hand
Thinker1985 wrote, _"The problem is that outcomes are often the measuring stick of your actions' effectiveness."_ The **imposed** measuring stick. This is a crucial distinction. Just because someone may resort to this or that outcome as a measure, doesn't mean that it's a sensible or relevant metric. Think: _"If you do your best but always fail, what does that say about you?"_ Perhaps nothing at all. Suppose I work out 3x a week and I'm doing the very best that I can, but despite my most conscientious efforts, I gain little or no muscle. What does that say about me? Nothing. It may point to a biological dysfunction of which I'm unaware, in which case it would say something about my body, but not about me per se. Think: _"Dr. K. is essentially asking people to believe in themselves..."_ I don't get this sense about his perspective. My understanding is that he's asking people to realize that 'who they are' is not in any legitimate way attached to the outcome of 'what they do'. There can be some correlations that may, or may not, strongly suggest causation but for the most part... we do what we do for a reason, and that reason needs to be detached from the outcome -- at least to the degree that if we get what we were hoping for, or if we don't, the outcome says absolutely nothing about our worth. Think: _"...it is a bit easier to be self-confident hen you've already achieved some measure of success"_ Except that this is circular reasoning. 'Success' is not something you can control. That's the point he keeps returning to. So to address your take on this: you're imposing 'success' as the metric by which you measure your self-worth. Dr. K. is saying not to do this because, as he noted, if your sense of worth is tied to outcomes that you cannot control, you're never going to be a happy, fulfilled, contented human being. Offering my perspective here in the hope that you'll find something therein helpful to your understanding of all this. Cheers!
“We always choose what we do, but we never choose what we feel. The more we try to control what we feel, the less choice we have in what we do.” Artem Boytsov
I liked how Chris is trying to do something different. This podcast is not only educational anymore it's also entertainment. Sometimes it feels like I am watching a movie. I would love it if he brought that unreal thing, mad to shoot movies and games❤❤❤
After watching the "making of" video, it's awesome watching the result. It's so beautiful. You and your team are spoiling us! How will I ever watch a normal podcast anymore?
Really insightful conversation on self-worth and accomplishments. Entrepreneurs often face burnout by tying their identity too closely to their business success. A helpful strategy is to schedule regular non-work related activities that bring joy and fulfillment, reinforcing that your value isn't solely linked to your work achievements.
I really love this guy. He is absolutely doing what he should be. I get so much clarity and I feel like I’m choosing the right path. He is affirming what I may know already but I’m not sure of. Great clarity
"The majority of people suffering in life comes from their sense of identity" Goddamn I feel like hearing this gave me eureka. Wow. Dr K, the work you do is truly so moving and inspiring.
You have the best guests cause you're the best host. All your questions make each conversation the richest to watch and hear in the media. Greetings from Mexico.
Self esteem is generally how you view yourself as compared to others, especially in a social situation. Educate yourself well, take opportunities to travel, and hone your public speaking and debate skills. Its just a muscle that needs to be trained like any other. The hard part: getting started and staying at it.
The hardest thing is staying at something, i agree with that so much, even starting is a little easier in my opinion .😅 Why do you think public speaking and debating skills are important? Should someone prioritize them over other skills?
Chris, because you remain real, humble and OK to be vulnerable it takes these interviews to another level and is a cornerstone of why Modern Wisdom is blowing up. Dr K going into his Indian accent is a classic MW moment. P.S. How fun is that Camaro SS!
Dr. K is one of the few RUclips creators who talk about self-efficacy and self-actualization from a truly balanced and holistic perspective as opposed to the "grindset" bs.
God chooses imperfect people to do his perfect work. Dr. K’s relatable struggles made him into who he is and gave him the gift of empowering other imperfect people to become the best versions of themselves.
You know the Man is brilliant, when after he's made a statement, and the exact question you're asking yourself is what he addressses, Mad respect to him
This crossed my feed at a funny time as the zen book I'm reading just went into passages on the core concept of this discussion. "A man rings like a cracked bell when he thinks and acts with a split mind - one part standing aside to interfere with the other, to control, to condemn, to admire. The illusion of the split comes from the mind's attempt to be both itself and it's idea of itself, from a fatal confusion of fact with symbol. The mind must stop trying to act upon itself, upon its stream of experience, from the standpoint of the idea of itself which we call the ego." - The Way of Zen, Pg. 134 We have ideas and beliefs, but we are not those ideas and visions of what we should be. We simply are what experiences the present.
Chris Williamson and JRE feel like the only straightforward and honest podcasters. Like, dr K asks something and Chris says it doesn't make sense. Ah a good conversation.
I only don’t love who I am because I’m not doing the things that the person I want to be would do. I’m not aligned with who I want to be, so until I make progress, I’m likely to continue feeling that way.
You are judging yourself against the person you want to be, not who you are today. Like the Dr says, you are only in control of what *you* do, so do as much as you can every day to feel happy with your actions. But be realistic with yourself. If you are not Usain Bolt, you can’t break the 100M world record. You can only take the actions that you can take; you can’t decide the outcomes of those actions
Also consider the opposite: things you're doing that you DON'T want to be. Sometimes we have more immediate control over stopping something negative. It might even free some space for the positive things that might have been obstructed.
When I was little, I was taught ego was bad. Then I grew up and experienced lots of trauma as an adult, I also experienced a shattered ego because of the trauma (poop coping). What I learned after many years is that an ego isn't a bad thing, it gets you up in the morning, so to speak. Its a beautiful thing in balance. That ability to witness a bad outcome and take a knee just 1 day and move on, is also ego. I enjoy the doctor's view, even if I don't agree with all of it.
All you can do is to do or engage in certain conditions that will promote good outcomes (good as they ought to, as our nature do). I love his talk in the Diary of a CEO, to sleep you don't sleep you just manipulate the conditions that will put you in the state of sleeping. Guess this is the same in farming as well as training ourselves whenever dealing with the unknown or chaos
I feel like people make a big deal about everything. RUclips made everything too big and gave people anxiety. Just do what you know you have to to achieve.
I often feel this way. If I had a time machine and went back in time, took the same actions as Bill Gates, I still may not be successful or as successful. This culture that believes enough "hustle" will make you rich and or famous, needs to temper this reality with the knowledge that actions do not always equal the desired result.
10:42 trying to summarise between the lines here: You sleep better at night (and have higher self worth), if at the end of the day you can convince yourself that you've tried your best.
It doesn't matter whether a person has no self worth (most people do not), an inflated sense of self worth, or anything in between. Life is to be gotten on with; to be endured until we finally make our escape. None of us asked for this ridiculous existence we call the human experience. None of us has any choice in when, where, or how we check out - okay, if we're doing something stupid, we shouldn't be surprised, but other than that. It's just avoidance of pain and a marathon until the end. There's no real meaning or purpose to life, which is probably the meaning and/or purpose to life. We exist; we make the best of it, and then we clock out.
I had a discussion with someone recently about the question at 11:45, "What if you could have done something else?". My answer was this: "If you could have, you would have." Doesn't mean that you can't learn from your mistakes, but speaking about for example the doctor who works with children who have cancer, if a kid dies, and you could have done something else, you would have. If you fail a class and you could have done better, you would have. If you hurt someone's feelings and you could have done something different, you would have. I have yet to come across a situation in which this concept isn't applicable.
I liked Alex hormozi’s goal setting method where you have a outcome you want and a hypothesis of how a will lead to b, and then your actual goal is the list of actions and tactics that yiu 100% control that make up the inputs of A that then lead to the hypothesized outputs of B. And so you basically just judge your self on the execution of inputs you can control but not on outputs but you reevaluate your hypothesis every quarter or so, and iterate from there but you can always this way be like “I’m crushing it and making progress” even when the out come dosent work. He also said it’s better to go in the direction of the cheese in general than to set the goal to reach the cheese only. Cuz maybe it got moved and you can’t see in a dark room
The trouble I always run into when I start to dissolve the ego is: why do anything? It's a continuum, and one I start marching down. So instead I tirelessly pursue success. And I achieve everything I want for the most part, but it doesn't change much. Except I can measure some aspects like money and titles which feels comforting. Not even good, but comforting.
Focus on your actions & not the Outcome - Bhagwad Gita
7 месяцев назад+3
You can’t control the extern results, but you may influence them alot. Because you do a great job. If you refuse to accept that your help give you additional value, just because you are afraid of your own perception for the bad days, you make a decision based on fear. Not good. And if you make your choices to avoid surfering, and you try always to control your mind and emotion, you lose the game of life. Surfering is part of the game, it is sometimes a door from where the new you emerge. Don’t kill your humanity by fear of life
Yes. You will have those feelings anyway. They are part of the human experience, and they should be. But when you learn this way of thinking as described in the video, those feelings don't control you. You can observe yourself suffering, and have compassion. And then, you can move forward. We can have a positive influence on other people, but we can't control it. Sometimes we do it when we don't realize. Sometimes we can put in a lot of effort, but the other person actually needs something else, or someone else. You shouldn't tie your selfworth to the outcome. Because both positive and negative outcomes will happen, and then your selfworth gets thrown around.
7 месяцев назад
Thanks for your answer:) In my perspective, there is a time (we can hope) where you will be on the top of the wave, surfing easyly with life. Because you have success, because you reach your goals. Probably it won’t last, and their will be lot of up and downs.. but I think we should enjoy this moment and also realize what we have accomplished. The Ego has succeeded! If it was aligned with your passion, with your higher self, well done! And you should be proud of what you have done. And inevitably it gives you more confidence in your intuition, in your strenght. So in my perspective, be free to nurture your esteem with it (but not only) and just know that the game is not finished. There will be down times, know it, embrace it, and know what you’re capable. It will give you more ressource when times becomes harder..
In Bhagvad gita krishna says that " you do the action and surrender the result of that action to me." He means do not take pride or feel ashamed of the result as they both incur bad karma. Which will become an obstacle in attaining salvation.
What is the right answer if someone ask us who are you aside from our name, profession , status etc? What is an ego in simple term ? Great background 👍
Free will in this context is Synonymous with ego. It implies that there is independent separate “center” that “controls” and drives who you are. While the buddhist and non-dualistic concepts he refers to here such as “Sunyata” and what would be called “dependent origination” or “Mutual arising” (think Yin Yang), are telling you that there is no central separate “you” that drives you around (that’s just ego), just as we say scientifically that there is no organism that is Separate/independent of it’s environment. This “free will” you call “you” is the idea you buy/form/believe about yourself (ego) enveloped by the backdrop of your awareness and consciousness that contains all of your “real” as well as “imagined/believed” experience. That’s my understanding anyway.
@@Beeso If for whatever reason you start reflecting on your ego, like most of us here. You feel like you've more understanding of your behaviour, choices, and consequently you're making choices which bolster a sense of satisfaction or growth. Couldn't that proof free will, as in being able to make the choices they want to be making. Or shouldn't I call that free will?
@@tonywoutrs Possibly, you could call that whatever you want. Usually that is simply referred to as awareness or mindfulness. I think the concept of “Free Will” as what pertains to spiritual or philosophical discussion dips more into the religious notion of a separate “self” or “soul” that is supposedly your “real”/ “higher you”, while it could very be just another abstraction (ego presenting itself as “higher”). Ego does one of two things; either inflates itself or defends itself. Alan watts always pointed out the futility of actively trying (by force of will) to get rid of your ego because you would be trying to “kill your ego WITH your ego” and you could potentially (and very easily) delude yourself into thinking that when ego has simply “escaped to a higher level” much like thieves attempt to escape from the police by running to the next level or floor. All you have to do is know what your ego is by simply watching it. Then forget about it and be as present and attentive with whatever you are doing.
@@Beeso Okay yea, I know what you mean. I was indeed moreso thinking in the context of self help, rather than the religious portrayal of it. Just calling it awareness or mindfulness might indeed be more fitting to avoid getting into semantics. As for your last remark: Do you mean we should forget about the ego because it's a distraction if it's too much reflected upon?
@@tonywoutrs Potentially, Yes. There is a level of discernment here and that is where all the “living”, growing, learning and maturing is. Reflection, contemplation and introspection in themselves are not the problem, getting hypnotized by our thoughts about life and living, even ourselves at the expense of actually living through all our experiences (both good, bad uncomfortable and painful) is. That is overthinking/rumination where we fall in the trap of attempting to escape or “solve” difficulties in life that can’t be “solved” by any amount of thought, instead we get trapped in cycle of a dissociated, numbing, self-separating vicious cycle, unconsciously sleep walking through life, then we end up in depression; that is something Dr.K has talked about extensively, never getting out of that infamous “default mode network” you become detached from reality. And I’ll use this quote to drive the point through: “A person who thinks all the time has nothing to think about except thoughts. So, he loses touch with reality, and lives in a world of illusions. By thoughts, I mean specifically, chatter in the skull”. And I’ll also point to the observable fact that whenever you are truly engaged with something or someone you have no “sense of self”. So just look to balance things outs. Be free to feel all you feelings and just watch your thoughts like they were clouds in the sky and more importantly just live, do what you have to do, do the things that really interest you and talk and engage with people without ulterior motives.
Amazing production. The mandalorian tech really adds Up to the podcast. You have inspired me to make a video about you, which i just published. I Hope you like It!
Hello you savages. Watch the full episode with Dr K here: ruclips.net/video/TH0U2D90l-o/видео.html! Get up to 32% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at livemomentous.com/modernwisdom
Can't wait for the full episode!
Alan Watts spoke about this experience (of waking up) at great length, should check out some of his lectures
Wish it was monday right now
4:19 how cool is that shot :O
Looks like a movie 🔥🔥🔥🔥
- Does that make sense?
- No.
Such a good interviewer
Yeah I loved that too😂
The world would be a better place if more people were willing to admit "I don't know"
And he probably did understand, but did a favour for people like myself
🗿
I think it's good to say "no, I don't understand" or "what's that?".
To not know is the 1st step. If you never admit to not knowing or understanding, you will not even try to find out.
Dr. K is the best thing that happened to the internet in years.
To me and others is the therapist that help us who cannot have a therapist for some reason or financially cannot afford it
@AuroraOctane you mean Jiddu?
Fr
Totally Agree
Facts ❤
My worth is my action, not the result of my action
I agree with this statement. Personally I’m so paralyzed by the results that I end up not doing anything at all. This is kind of a problem of becoming too cognitive. We need to sometimes think less and do more. Life is all about balancing acts
Someone call the police … because I’m stealing this.
Also my responsibility is my action, not the result of my action
He didn't say that.
Humility is not thinking less of yourself, it is thinking of yourself less. Humility is the highest of virtues as it breaks the ego and self obsession
I'd like to add, self love is also thinking of yourself in the right moments where you matter
@@spikeboy101 agreed. It's about the proportion to which we apply.
Very well put
Would you say that someone who hates themselves is a narcissist? Since they are really thinking about themselves and comparing themselves a lot and beating themselves down all the time? Basically they think of themselves a lot
@@tree490 oftentimes people that are self consumed have some narcissistic traits. That's not the same as Narcissistic Personality Disorder.
at the start he asks does that make sense? and chris just says no.
idk why but i loved that tiny moment of just being completely honest despite it being a slightly awkward deviation from the default yes people give.
“You are the bundle of sensory experiences that lives your life.”
I like this wording.
I think this is cribbed from Hume.
@@midwinter78 I'm pretty sure this is standard Eastern Buddhist/ Hindu doctrine. Given that's his bias, I think it's more likely he got it from that than Hume.
Buddha defined the sense of self as this first before Hume
I really like Dr. K's perspectives. He is a real life monk practicing psychology xD "You can try your best, and do the thing, but you cannot control the result". Like mama never shamed me if I didn't get an A; she just asked "did you really try your best?" or "could you have done better?" Put the focus on the doing and methodology. If you focus on the results alone, your children will learn to cheat their ways through life, and that's not what good parenting is about.
Dr K is astonishingly wise person combining scientific and spiritual knowledge. What a great person to look up to in todays world.
I wholeheartedly agree
Me too. I hope Dr K will have a life full of blessings.
I'm a fairly secularist person
Dr. K is about the only one that I can listen talk about spirituality in a way that even skeptical self is like "alright, that actually makes sense, you might be on to something"
Alternate video title “Dr. K calmly explains the essence of the Bhagavat Gita without ever directly mentioning it”
I can feel him physically holding back the word Karma xD
or stoicism
oppenheimer reference
@@CDragonGDr K and Oppenheimer
2 reasons I got in the mood to learn Sanskrit
@@tonywoutrswhy Oppenheimer?
simple man. see dr. k, i click.
i'm the same
This man is a treasure fr
exactly :D
Dr. K pretty much summed up Ecclesiastes. You can't control anything, and the best things are the simple pleasures. The sun on your face, a good meal, time with your loved ones. Things that you can't control and are not promised. No amount of money, followers, work, or pleasure would make your life fulfilling in of itself
Was thinking the same thing😌
Meaningless, meaningless, like chasing the wind…
he learnt this from Bhagavat Gita " karma karte ja phal ki chinta mat kro " your dharma is actions stop thinking about rewards of your work
@@GE0attack sorry I don’t know if this is what you meant but what does Ecclesiastes have to do with earning a reward?
Or Epictetus "Some things are in our control and others not. Things in our control are opinion, pursuit, desire, aversion, and, in a word, whatever are our own actions. Things not in our control are body, property, reputation, command, and, in one word, whatever are not our actions. The things in our control are by nature free, unrestrained, unhindered; but those not in our control are weak, slavish, restrained, belonging to others. Remember, then, that if you suppose that things which are slavish by nature are also free, and that what belongs to others is your own, then you will be hindered. You will lament, you will be disturbed, and you will find fault both with gods and men. But if you suppose that only to be your own which is your own, and what belongs to others such as it really is, then no one will ever compel you or restrain you. Further, you will find fault with no one or accuse no one. You will do nothing against your will. No one will hurt you, you will have no enemies, and you not be harmed."
This podcast really has evolved, Chris asks the best questions every time, the exact ones I hope he would ask.
And a lot of the times when i don't understand something Chris hasn't too, and he is brave enough and humble enough to ask for clarification, man i love that.
And when he brings down the conversations to practical everyday actions with questions like: "Okay so what should a ... do in order to ..." . Such a great interviewer.
We already completely accept the clouds in the sky at face value whether they rain or not. Accept yourself in the exact same way that you accept the clouds and your accomplishments quickly become irrelevant. Stop putting conditions on self-love. You always have been good enough and always will be.
That's the most beautiful way of putting into perspective this subject I have ever read.
Except the clouds in the sky have a visible, physical, real presence in the world. I can look up at the clouds in the sky and accept them because they really do exist, and if I needed more proof all I would need to do is physically feel the rain. After all, rain itself is formed within the aforementioned clouds. While it is a pretty combination of words, the metaphor rings hollow due to the physical and objective truth of the cloud’s existence, as compared to the intangible and completely subjective and interpretive nature of one’s emotion.
I absolutely love how these podcasts are bringing such fantastic insights and inspiration to the masses. I think Chris has cracked the code of what the internet is truly good for.
Masses? 😂
@@laurapavone3513 There have been 450million views on this channel. I don't know what a single "mass" would be, but I'd say there's at least 2 in there. 😉
My rule has been:
Focus on the behaviour, not the result. I've found it to be helpful and inevitably practicing the behaviour gets me the initially desired result.
One of the most important videos on youtube.
If everyone understood this concept, people would experience a lot less distress.
This is powerful. This is the shit that makes sense to me and truly helps me. Re-shaping the way I see things in a deep and intellectual way.
Dr. K is such a blessing. His insight in human existence combined with spirituality is extremely valuable, and we need it more than ever!
I love Dr. K but I HAVE to point out despite how much of a joy it is to listen to him speak, the quality of the audio, the video, and the set here are all so absolutely stunning and such a joy to experience I almost couldn't even pay attention to Dr. K's words for appreciating the effort. This is a beautiful video. Kudos and bravo! I'm glad you're in the position to be able to pour the resources you have into the art, and, as a viewer, thank you so much for doing so! It's obvious how passionate you are for this creation!
This background of this view is just sublime. Your videos and quality have truly gone to the next level
Well done Chris and team
Good conversation. The problem is that outcomes are often the measuring stick of your actions' effectiveness. If you do your best but always fail, what does it say about you?
Dr. K. is essentially asking people to believe in themselves and to remain open to possibilities. This is good advice, but it is a bit easier to be self-confident when you've already achieved some measure of success yourself, like he did.
I am still learning this thing myself. But to me, there is a hidden layer to all this. Where do you draw the line in blaming yourself or not. If your action leads to a direct outcome that you can control, then you should take accountability. But if it is not, especially given the circumstance, then you should be compassionate to yourself. This applies to you being seen or not seen, judged or not judged, liked or not liked.
If you _believe_ you are making the right actions but always fail, you have space to reconsider your actions. Then you can reflect and change course if need be. Then confidence grows as you realise you're on the right course of action.
Is there something in particular you're confused about?
There's no such thing as failure or success, just actions, if you're doing what you love and that gives your life meaning, that's what's important.
You have to choose whether you pursue personal fulfilment or economical success, two very different things andrarely they go hand in hand
Thinker1985 wrote, _"The problem is that outcomes are often the measuring stick of your actions' effectiveness."_
The **imposed** measuring stick. This is a crucial distinction. Just because someone may resort to this or that outcome as a measure, doesn't mean that it's a sensible or relevant metric.
Think: _"If you do your best but always fail, what does that say about you?"_
Perhaps nothing at all. Suppose I work out 3x a week and I'm doing the very best that I can, but despite my most conscientious efforts, I gain little or no muscle. What does that say about me? Nothing. It may point to a biological dysfunction of which I'm unaware, in which case it would say something about my body, but not about me per se.
Think: _"Dr. K. is essentially asking people to believe in themselves..."_
I don't get this sense about his perspective. My understanding is that he's asking people to realize that 'who they are' is not in any legitimate way attached to the outcome of 'what they do'. There can be some correlations that may, or may not, strongly suggest causation but for the most part... we do what we do for a reason, and that reason needs to be detached from the outcome -- at least to the degree that if we get what we were hoping for, or if we don't, the outcome says absolutely nothing about our worth.
Think: _"...it is a bit easier to be self-confident hen you've already achieved some measure of success"_
Except that this is circular reasoning. 'Success' is not something you can control. That's the point he keeps returning to. So to address your take on this: you're imposing 'success' as the metric by which you measure your self-worth. Dr. K. is saying not to do this because, as he noted, if your sense of worth is tied to outcomes that you cannot control, you're never going to be a happy, fulfilled, contented human being.
Offering my perspective here in the hope that you'll find something therein helpful to your understanding of all this. Cheers!
“We always choose what we do, but we never choose what we feel.
The more we try to control what we feel, the less choice we have in what we do.”
Artem Boytsov
He's absolutely spot on about this
I liked how Chris is trying to do something different. This podcast is not only educational anymore it's also entertainment. Sometimes it feels like I am watching a movie. I would love it if he brought that unreal thing, mad to shoot movies and games❤❤❤
After watching the "making of" video, it's awesome watching the result. It's so beautiful. You and your team are spoiling us! How will I ever watch a normal podcast anymore?
Really insightful conversation on self-worth and accomplishments. Entrepreneurs often face burnout by tying their identity too closely to their business success. A helpful strategy is to schedule regular non-work related activities that bring joy and fulfillment, reinforcing that your value isn't solely linked to your work achievements.
I really love this guy. He is absolutely doing what he should be. I get so much clarity and I feel like I’m choosing the right path. He is affirming what I may know already but I’m not sure of. Great clarity
The studio is so 🔥🔥🔥hard work paid off, feels like im watching National Geographic episode 😮
"The majority of people suffering in life comes from their sense of identity" Goddamn I feel like hearing this gave me eureka. Wow. Dr K, the work you do is truly so moving and inspiring.
This is gonna be one of the best episodes yet
You have the best guests cause you're the best host. All your questions make each conversation the richest to watch and hear in the media. Greetings from Mexico.
Self esteem is generally how you view yourself as compared to others, especially in a social situation. Educate yourself well, take opportunities to travel, and hone your public speaking and debate skills. Its just a muscle that needs to be trained like any other. The hard part: getting started and staying at it.
The hardest thing is staying at something, i agree with that so much, even starting is a little easier in my opinion .😅
Why do you think public speaking and debating skills are important? Should someone prioritize them over other skills?
“A judgment by your mind is not reality” I know a lot of people who would benefit from hearing that quote.
I've never been so motivated yet calm at the same time.
Dr. K is one of the most eloquent speakers ive ever heard
If anyone's reading this your good enough and you will always be good enough there's no rule book to being a human
Chris, because you remain real, humble and OK to be vulnerable it takes these interviews to another level and is a cornerstone of why Modern Wisdom is blowing up. Dr K going into his Indian accent is a classic MW moment.
P.S. How fun is that Camaro SS!
Majority of sufferings in our life comes from a sense of identity that we have imagined in our mind
Can't wait for the full interview. New setup looks great btw.
Dr. K is one of the few RUclips creators who talk about self-efficacy and self-actualization from a truly balanced and holistic perspective as opposed to the "grindset" bs.
Coolest podcast set up I’ve ever seen
I live that this is completely against the new age "visualization"
It's annoying how straight forward and simple it is, ask them out, be authentic, just let go of the outcome
Beautiful to watch Chris. Great to listen 🙌
God chooses imperfect people to do his perfect work. Dr. K’s relatable struggles made him into who he is and gave him the gift of empowering other imperfect people to become the best versions of themselves.
This is how life-changing podcasts sound like ❤
You know the Man is brilliant, when after he's made a statement, and the exact question you're asking yourself is what he addressses, Mad respect to him
This crossed my feed at a funny time as the zen book I'm reading just went into passages on the core concept of this discussion.
"A man rings like a cracked bell when he thinks and acts with a split mind - one part standing aside to interfere with the other, to control, to condemn, to admire. The illusion of the split comes from the mind's attempt to be both itself and it's idea of itself, from a fatal confusion of fact with symbol. The mind must stop trying to act upon itself, upon its stream of experience, from the standpoint of the idea of itself which we call the ego."
- The Way of Zen, Pg. 134
We have ideas and beliefs, but we are not those ideas and visions of what we should be. We simply are what experiences the present.
Wow, this set is stunning! Great fit for Dr K…
This was very powerful and eye opening. Thank you Chris.
On an unrelated note, the video capture here is incredible. Just wish you would upload it in HDR.
Detaching your acomlisments from your self worth can truly be a double edged sword.Although
never could think of any high achiever doing it
Dr.K u r amazing 🙏🙏thanks for this knowledge
Chris Williamson and JRE feel like the only straightforward and honest podcasters. Like, dr K asks something and Chris says it doesn't make sense.
Ah a good conversation.
Grad school taught me this lol. Came in having something to prove, left with realizing that game is just a game, it doesn't define my worth.
I only don’t love who I am because I’m not doing the things that the person I want to be would do. I’m not aligned with who I want to be, so until I make progress, I’m likely to continue feeling that way.
You are judging yourself against the person you want to be, not who you are today. Like the Dr says, you are only in control of what *you* do, so do as much as you can every day to feel happy with your actions. But be realistic with yourself. If you are not Usain Bolt, you can’t break the 100M world record. You can only take the actions that you can take; you can’t decide the outcomes of those actions
Also consider the opposite: things you're doing that you DON'T want to be. Sometimes we have more immediate control over stopping something negative. It might even free some space for the positive things that might have been obstructed.
You can sleep at peace when you've given it your all .... but ofc external outcomes determine results in the end
The production set looking crazy!
Dr K is the best of us.
When I was little, I was taught ego was bad. Then I grew up and experienced lots of trauma as an adult, I also experienced a shattered ego because of the trauma (poop coping). What I learned after many years is that an ego isn't a bad thing, it gets you up in the morning, so to speak. Its a beautiful thing in balance. That ability to witness a bad outcome and take a knee just 1 day and move on, is also ego. I enjoy the doctor's view, even if I don't agree with all of it.
Absolutely loved this. Thank you thank you
All you can do is to do or engage in certain conditions that will promote good outcomes (good as they ought to, as our nature do). I love his talk in the Diary of a CEO, to sleep you don't sleep you just manipulate the conditions that will put you in the state of sleeping. Guess this is the same in farming as well as training ourselves whenever dealing with the unknown or chaos
Truth spoken 👏
I feel like people make a big deal about everything. RUclips made everything too big and gave people anxiety. Just do what you know you have to to achieve.
Thank you for this.
Dr. K:” Can you control me?”
**Pulls out a VooDoo Doll** Chris:” Yes.”
haha, that's a great one. if i had coffe in my mouth i would have spat it : )
Fantastic - also love the virtual set idea including risk snd execution 👌👌👌👌
A therapist, a psychiatrist and a neurologist walked into a bar... how can we get Jordan Peterson, Dr. K and Andrew Huberman into a podcast!!
What a great talk and scene!
Need more relaxation, I appreciate the tips.
Now I need to focus for a bit so I can remember them.
Thank you both very much, fan of both of you.
Great convo and set atmosphere
I often feel this way. If I had a time machine and went back in time, took the same actions as Bill Gates, I still may not be successful or as successful. This culture that believes enough "hustle" will make you rich and or famous, needs to temper this reality with the knowledge that actions do not always equal the desired result.
10:42 trying to summarise between the lines here:
You sleep better at night (and have higher self worth), if at the end of the day you can convince yourself that you've tried your best.
It doesn't matter whether a person has no self worth (most people do not), an inflated sense of self worth, or anything in between.
Life is to be gotten on with; to be endured until we finally make our escape.
None of us asked for this ridiculous existence we call the human experience. None of us has any choice in when, where, or how we check out - okay, if we're doing something stupid, we shouldn't be surprised, but other than that.
It's just avoidance of pain and a marathon until the end.
There's no real meaning or purpose to life, which is probably the meaning and/or purpose to life. We exist; we make the best of it, and then we clock out.
I had a discussion with someone recently about the question at 11:45, "What if you could have done something else?". My answer was this: "If you could have, you would have." Doesn't mean that you can't learn from your mistakes, but speaking about for example the doctor who works with children who have cancer, if a kid dies, and you could have done something else, you would have. If you fail a class and you could have done better, you would have. If you hurt someone's feelings and you could have done something different, you would have. I have yet to come across a situation in which this concept isn't applicable.
Whoa Chris, digging the new forest surround 👀
I liked Alex hormozi’s goal setting method where you have a outcome you want and a hypothesis of how a will lead to b, and then your actual goal is the list of actions and tactics that yiu 100% control that make up the inputs of A that then lead to the hypothesized outputs of B. And so you basically just judge your self on the execution of inputs you can control but not on outputs but you reevaluate your hypothesis every quarter or so, and iterate from there but you can always this way be like “I’m crushing it and making progress” even when the out come dosent work. He also said it’s better to go in the direction of the cheese in general than to set the goal to reach the cheese only. Cuz maybe it got moved and you can’t see in a dark room
This is Fcking Gold!!❤
The trouble I always run into when I start to dissolve the ego is: why do anything? It's a continuum, and one I start marching down. So instead I tirelessly pursue success. And I achieve everything I want for the most part, but it doesn't change much. Except I can measure some aspects like money and titles which feels comforting. Not even good, but comforting.
He addresses that at the end. Compassion and love compels
@@Yuvraj. Thanks! I'll give that more thought and maybe even revisit that section
@@pirotrav your welcome! I hope you do, because embodying love in the little things helps me live every day with a smile on my face.
7:33 correct way of sitting
Compassion IS soft- in the way that carbon is softer than iron. But if you put them both together, you get steel.
Aka "Focus on the process not the results" :-)
Thank you for making this video ❤
Focus on your actions & not the Outcome - Bhagwad Gita
You can’t control the extern results, but you may influence them alot. Because you do a great job. If you refuse to accept that your help give you additional value, just because you are afraid of your own perception for the bad days, you make a decision based on fear. Not good.
And if you make your choices to avoid surfering, and you try always to control your mind and emotion, you lose the game of life.
Surfering is part of the game, it is sometimes a door from where the new you emerge.
Don’t kill your humanity by fear of life
Yes. You will have those feelings anyway. They are part of the human experience, and they should be. But when you learn this way of thinking as described in the video, those feelings don't control you. You can observe yourself suffering, and have compassion. And then, you can move forward.
We can have a positive influence on other people, but we can't control it. Sometimes we do it when we don't realize. Sometimes we can put in a lot of effort, but the other person actually needs something else, or someone else. You shouldn't tie your selfworth to the outcome. Because both positive and negative outcomes will happen, and then your selfworth gets thrown around.
Thanks for your answer:)
In my perspective, there is a time (we can hope) where you will be on the top of the wave, surfing easyly with life. Because you have success, because you reach your goals. Probably it won’t last, and their will be lot of up and downs.. but I think we should enjoy this moment and also realize what we have accomplished. The Ego has succeeded! If it was aligned with your passion, with your higher self, well done! And you should be proud of what you have done. And inevitably it gives you more confidence in your intuition, in your strenght. So in my perspective, be free to nurture your esteem with it (but not only) and just know that the game is not finished. There will be down times, know it, embrace it, and know what you’re capable. It will give you more ressource when times becomes harder..
Do the next right thing.
And remember that’s what “karma” means. Doing.
17 minutes of pure gold
Amazing love Dr K content always ❤🎉
man i love these videos. you guys are legends. the part about needing to piss really spoke to me as i'm homeless
In Bhagvad gita krishna says that " you do the action and surrender the result of that action to me." He means do not take pride or feel ashamed of the result as they both incur bad karma. Which will become an obstacle in attaining salvation.
This is astonishing....
I looooove this Dr my gosh!
What is the right answer if someone ask us who are you aside from our name, profession , status etc? What is an ego in simple term ?
Great background 👍
I love Dr k podcast 👍🏻
I'm so curious what Dr K thinks about free will if we have it or not, surprised no one asked him yet.
Free will in this context is Synonymous with ego. It implies that there is independent separate “center” that “controls” and drives who you are.
While the buddhist and non-dualistic concepts he refers to here such as “Sunyata” and what would be called “dependent origination” or “Mutual arising” (think Yin Yang), are telling you that there is no central separate “you” that drives you around (that’s just ego), just as we say scientifically that there is no organism that is Separate/independent of it’s environment.
This “free will” you call “you” is the idea you buy/form/believe about yourself (ego) enveloped by the backdrop of your awareness and consciousness that contains all of your “real” as well as “imagined/believed” experience.
That’s my understanding anyway.
@@Beeso
If for whatever reason you start reflecting on your ego, like most of us here.
You feel like you've more understanding of your behaviour, choices, and consequently you're making choices which bolster a sense of satisfaction or growth.
Couldn't that proof free will, as in being able to make the choices they want to be making. Or shouldn't I call that free will?
@@tonywoutrs Possibly, you could call that whatever you want. Usually that is simply referred to as awareness or mindfulness.
I think the concept of “Free Will” as what pertains to spiritual or philosophical discussion dips more into the religious notion of a separate “self” or “soul” that is supposedly your “real”/ “higher you”, while it could very be just another abstraction (ego presenting itself as “higher”).
Ego does one of two things; either inflates itself or defends itself. Alan watts always pointed out the futility of actively trying (by force of will) to get rid of your ego because you would be trying to “kill your ego WITH your ego” and you could potentially (and very easily) delude yourself into thinking that when ego has simply “escaped to a higher level” much like thieves attempt to escape from the police by running to the next level or floor.
All you have to do is know what your ego is by simply watching it. Then forget about it and be as present and attentive with whatever you are doing.
@@Beeso Okay yea, I know what you mean. I was indeed moreso thinking in the context of self help, rather than the religious portrayal of it. Just calling it awareness or mindfulness might indeed be more fitting to avoid getting into semantics.
As for your last remark: Do you mean we should forget about the ego because it's a distraction if it's too much reflected upon?
@@tonywoutrs Potentially, Yes. There is a level of discernment here and that is where all the “living”, growing, learning and maturing is.
Reflection, contemplation and introspection in themselves are not the problem, getting hypnotized by our thoughts about life and living, even ourselves at the expense of actually living through all our experiences (both good, bad uncomfortable and painful) is. That is overthinking/rumination where we fall in the trap of attempting to escape or “solve” difficulties in life that can’t be “solved” by any amount of thought, instead we get trapped in cycle of a dissociated, numbing, self-separating vicious cycle, unconsciously sleep walking through life, then we end up in depression; that is something Dr.K has talked about extensively, never getting out of that infamous “default mode network” you become detached from reality.
And I’ll use this quote to drive the point through: “A person who thinks all the time has nothing to think about except thoughts. So, he loses touch with reality, and lives in a world of illusions. By thoughts, I mean specifically, chatter in the skull”.
And I’ll also point to the observable fact that whenever you are truly engaged with something or someone you have no “sense of self”. So just look to balance things outs. Be free to feel all you feelings and just watch your thoughts like they were clouds in the sky and more importantly just live, do what you have to do, do the things that really interest you and talk and engage with people without ulterior motives.
looks so lush !
2:39 "You dont control that all you control is what you do."
Suddenly, Phenomenalism seems a lot more plausible to me now
Amazing production. The mandalorian tech really adds Up to the podcast. You have inspired me to make a video about you, which i just published. I Hope you like It!
Which mountain are u guys sitting on? The back drop looks lit.