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Episode: #777: Derek Sivers, Philosopher-Entrepreneur — The Greatest Year of His Life
Author: Tim Ferriss: Bestselling Author, Human Guinea Pig
Duration: 02:03:29
Episode Shownotes
Derek Sivers is an author of philosophy and entrepreneurship, known for his surprising, quotable insights and pithy, succinct writing style. Derek’s books (How to Live, Hell Yeah or No, Your Music and People, Anything You Want) and newest projects are at his website: sive.rs. His new book is Useful Not
True.Sponsors:Seed's DS-01® Daily Synbiotic broad spectrum 24-strain probiotic + prebiotic: https://Seed.com/Tim
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(1-year supply of Vitamin D (and 5 free AG1 travel packs) with your first subscription purchase.)*Timestamps:[00:00] Start[07:18] Derek Sivers: A Man who brings his own introduction.[09:25] First mind change: Emirati coffee.[12:34] Second mind change: Ruby to Python.[13:54] Third mind change: Rats.[17:23] Fourth mind change: China.[23:24] Fifth mind change: Dubai.[26:48] Tamashee: Come for the sandals, stay for the culture.[30:52] Cormac McCarthy Writes to the Editor of The Santa Fe New Mexican.[31:47] Shifting perspectives and the value of questioning preconceptions.[51:23] Brian Eno and MusicThoughts.[53:57] John Cage.[56:34] Three glasses.[57:08] Derek’s experimental housing project.[01:03:51] Rich Hickey and practical applications of simplicity.[01:29:20] Tyler Cowen.[01:35:57] Inchword and language learning.[01:46:35] Traveling to inhabit philosophies.[01:54:14] Parting thoughts.*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsorsSign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, Margaret Atwood, Mark Zuckerberg, Peter Thiel, Dr. Gabor Maté, Anne Lamott, Sarah Silverman, Dr. Andrew Huberman, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy
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Summary
In episode #777 of The Tim Ferriss Show, Tim Ferriss interviews Derek Sivers, a philosopher and entrepreneur. Sivers reflects on his journeys through different cultures and emphasizes how questioning assumptions and embracing discomfort can enhance personal growth. He shares pivotal experiences, such as discovering Emirati coffee, transitioning from Ruby to Python programming, and insights gained from travels in China and Dubai. This conversation highlights the significance of simplicity in both life and design, as well as the value of civil disagreements in fostering growth and curiosity. Sivers ultimately presents a guide for approaching life with a fresh mindset.
Go to PodExtra AI's episode page (#777: Derek Sivers, Philosopher-Entrepreneur — The Greatest Year of His Life) to play and view complete AI-processed content: summary, mindmap, topics, takeaways, transcript, keywords and highlights.
Full Transcript
00:00:00 Speaker_03
Well, hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of The Tim Ferriss Show. Thanks so much for tuning in. This time around, we have my good friend Derek Sivers back on the show. He's one of my favorite humans.
00:00:13 Speaker_03
I call him often for advice. He is hilarious. And he will do his own introduction because I am incredibly lazy, or I was feeling. playful and lazy in this conversation. He is a philosopher, programmer, musician, king of sorts.
00:00:30 Speaker_03
That's how I would describe him. It is a very fun conversation. I really enjoyed it.
00:00:34 Speaker_03
And you can find Derek's books, including his latest Useful Not True, which we discuss, at his website, Sivers.com or S-I-V-E.R-S, which is probably just about as confusing to people as Tim.blog.
00:00:47 Speaker_03
If you enjoy this episode, you should go back and listen to the 2015 conversation I did with Derek, the very first one. You can find that at Tim.blog.com slash Derek Sivers.
00:00:57 Speaker_03
And many longtime listeners out of the nearly 800 episodes I've done consider this their favorite or certainly one of their favorites. It is a barn burner of an episode. And now we're going to get to it.
00:01:13 Speaker_03
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00:03:56 Speaker_03
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00:04:12 Speaker_03
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00:06:27 Speaker_03
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00:06:41 Speaker_03
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00:06:56 Speaker_03
At this altitude, I can run flat out for a half mile before my hands start shaking.
00:07:00 Speaker_01
Can I ask you a personal question?
00:07:02 Speaker_00
I'm a cybernetic organism living tissue of a metal endoskeleton.
00:07:18 Speaker_03
For people who don't know who Derek Sivers is, what is the brief overview of Derek?
00:07:26 Speaker_00
Oh, I have to do it, right?
00:07:30 Speaker_01
I was a musician for many years, and then I started selling my music online in 1997 when there was no PayPal and Amazon was just a bookstore. So I started a little thing called CD Baby.
00:07:44 Speaker_01
just to sell my music, but then it grew and became the largest seller of independent music online. And I did that for 10 years till I got sick of it and sold it.
00:07:52 Speaker_01
And then I was a TED speaker for a few years and then kind of threw myself into that completely. And then Seth Godin asked me to write a book. So I wrote a book and then people really liked it. So now I've written five.
00:08:04 Speaker_01
Now I'm a dad in New Zealand thinking philosophically and living my life. How about that?
00:08:11 Speaker_04
I thought you did a great job. Thank you for that. You know, when I can't find a virtual assistant to do work for me, I'll ask my podcast guest to do my job.
00:08:20 Speaker_03
I will also add, number one, people, if you enjoy this conversation, which I'm sure you will, not to apply any pressure to Derek. But I always have so much fun. Go back and listen to the other conversations also, because you'll notice a few things.
00:08:33 Speaker_03
Number one, Derek has one of the most eclectic CVs imaginable. He's worked in traveling circuses. He has played music at pig fairs. He has been an entrepreneur. He has certainly been a philosopher coder.
00:08:49 Speaker_03
and many other things, but also, I would say, overarchingly crafted a life that is uniquely Derek's and frequently tests assumptions and to, I suppose, bucket one of what we're going to discuss today, changes his mind. And
00:09:09 Speaker_03
finds himself zigging when he might have otherwise zagged, or where other people are zagging. And that is part of why I enjoy spending time with Derek, aside from the dashing good looks and wit and charm, of course.
00:09:25 Speaker_03
So let's begin, as we were brainstorming what we might chat about, because we were hoping to catch up, I suggested a few things, we batted a number of things around, and we landed on things you've changed your mind about,
00:09:40 Speaker_03
Things you're fascinated by, people you're studying, not necessarily in that order. So let's start with things you've changed your mind about or on. Where shall we begin?
00:09:51 Speaker_01
I've got five things for you. I'm starting small and getting big. Coffee. I've never liked coffee. Every time I tried coffee I went I don't understand how you people like this.
00:10:04 Speaker_01
And even when I'd be with somebody that knew I didn't like coffee, and we were out somewhere, and they would go, oh my god, this is the best coffee I've ever had in my life here.
00:10:12 Speaker_01
I know you don't like coffee, but if you're ever going to try coffee, this is the one. Try a sip. And I'd say, OK. I'd try to get myself into this mindset. I'm going to like this. I just never liked it.
00:10:25 Speaker_01
So then I was in United Arab Emirates and I was the guest of this Emirati man that we will get to later. And he said, it is Emirati custom you must have the coffee. And I went, oh, sorry, I don't drink coffee. I just, he said, you must have the coffee.
00:10:42 Speaker_00
I said, no, really, I've never liked coffee in my life.
00:10:44 Speaker_01
He goes, my friend, you must have the, it is Emirati custom, you must have the coffee. All right, I took a sip, I was like, oh my God, this is really good. He goes, that is Emirati coffee. I went, no, really, there's something different about this.
00:11:02 Speaker_01
He goes, yes, it's Emirati coffee. I said, is that the one where they make it in the sand? He said, no, no, no, that's Turkish. He said, this is Emirati coffee.
00:11:10 Speaker_01
So, knowing that we were talking today and I was going to mention coffee, I texted him, I said, hey, what was that coffee? Because he said, there are only three places in Dubai that know how to make real Emirati coffee.
00:11:21 Speaker_01
So he told me one, Bateel, B-A-T-E-E-L. If you're in Dubai and you want to try real Emirati coffee, apparently, according to this Emirati, try Bateel in Dubai for real Emirati coffee. I've changed my mind on coffee. I now like at least Emirati coffee.
00:11:39 Speaker_01
There's one.
00:11:40 Speaker_03
Okay, just for definition purposes. All right, you know, I'll hold my follow-ups. There are going to be a couple of follow-ups, including how do you define Emirati? Is that basically a Brahmin in the UAE?
00:11:52 Speaker_01
Sorry, that's what we call people from United Arab Emirates.
00:11:55 Speaker_03
All right, everybody.
00:11:56 Speaker_01
If you are of the lineage, if you were a citizen of United Arab Emirates, you're referred to as Emirati.
00:12:03 Speaker_03
What is the special technique or special ingredient that makes Emirati coffee so miraculous for you?
00:12:09 Speaker_01
Hey, listeners, if you find out what's different about Emirati coffee, please let me know. I went back six months later, same thing. I tried Emirati coffee and I like it.
00:12:18 Speaker_03
Severe social pressure. Oh yeah, that might be the magic ingredient. Severe social pressure. It makes anything taste better. You must have it and it will be disastrous if you don't like it.
00:12:33 Speaker_01
I don't know what it is, but I'm surprised. Okay. Python. So I'm just going to include this because 23 years ago, I learned the Ruby programming language and I became fluent in Ruby. And Ruby and Python are as similar as Portuguese and Spanish.
00:12:47 Speaker_01
But let's say Ruby is Portuguese, where Spanish became more and more and more popular. So when I first learned Ruby, it's like Ruby and Python were kind of side by side.
00:12:58 Speaker_01
Ruby was a little more popular at the time, but then over the years Python just took off and I refused to look at it. I was like, no, I chose Ruby. I speak Ruby. I don't want to learn Python. It's too similar.
00:13:09 Speaker_01
If I'm going to learn another language, it's going to be Lisp or Haskell or something really different. I'm not going to learn Python. No. And so. For years and years, I've been refusing and then just irrationally prejudiced against Python.
00:13:22 Speaker_01
When I was choosing a new language for a new project, I considered everything but Python. And then I realized I had left Python out because of my severe prejudice against it for no good reason.
00:13:31 Speaker_01
So I finally looked at the Python programming language and I went, Oh my God. It's beautiful. It's great. Oh my God. It's wonderful.
00:13:40 Speaker_01
So now I love Python and that just felt amazing in my heart to be like, wow, this thing that I was prejudiced against for 20 years is actually wonderful. How cool. So coffee, Python, number two. Shall I go on?
00:13:54 Speaker_03
Number three. Let's go on.
00:13:56 Speaker_01
Rats. Okay. Rats. I brought a prop. I want to make this a good show.
00:14:00 Speaker_02
For the first time ever appearing.
00:14:06 Speaker_01
are my little pet rats. Okay, if you see on YouTube.
00:14:10 Speaker_03
Look at that. Alright, so we have two rats on video. They're sizable. Yeah.
00:14:14 Speaker_01
Yeah.
00:14:15 Speaker_03
Chunky monkeys.
00:14:17 Speaker_01
They are so cute and they're so wonderful and they're so affectionate. You can't maybe tell because I'm holding them up like they owe me money right now, you know, but So here's the deal. Years ago, I used to kill rats. I hated rats so badly.
00:14:32 Speaker_01
I lived in a basement apartment in Boston that had rats in and around the apartment that would sometimes be blocking my entrance to my apartment as I would come home and I was tired. So I killed many rats with great vengeance. I hated rats.
00:14:46 Speaker_01
And then just a few months ago, my boy said, hey dad, can we get a pet rat? I was like, and I just thought he was kidding. And he said a week later, he said, that really kind of made me sad that you just shot down my idea of the pet rat.
00:15:00 Speaker_01
I said, wait, you were serious? He said, yeah. I went, oh, well, why would you want a nasty, awful rat as a pet? He said, no, they're not nasty and awful. Look. And he showed me some videos that rats are really sweet and they're really wonderful.
00:15:16 Speaker_01
They're smart, they're trainable. You can train them to do little tricks and like pick things out and like go to a wallet and open it up and take money and bring it to you. And, you know, very useful in a crowd. The Thieves Guild.
00:15:26 Speaker_01
This is going to be interesting. The little artful Dodgers. So it's like the difference between a wild rat and a pet rat is like the difference between a wild dog and a poodle. The pet rats are really sweet.
00:15:38 Speaker_01
So no matter what you think of wild rats, don't discount or don't hate on pet rats. They're actually really wonderful and cuddly and they're even clean. They use a litter box. They can control their
00:15:50 Speaker_01
bladder, like a cat, they prefer to go in a litter box and so they're really clean and wonderful. So, oh and wait, the lifespan.
00:15:56 Speaker_01
Their lifespan is two to three years, which as a parent is really wonderful because when a kid says, I want a pet, you don't always want like a 15 year commitment, you know, the kid's going to be away at college and you still got the pet that your kid wanted when they were eight, you know.
00:16:11 Speaker_01
So I like that the lifespan is two to three years, which is, you know, so rats are good pets. And so I love my little rats. We've just got these two boys. But even more than loving the rats, I love that I am now cuddling what I used to kill.
00:16:28 Speaker_01
Like that I now love what I used to hate. It's so sweet. Like I cuddle them, but it's like, God, I used to hate you. This is such a good feeling in my heart that I now love what I used to hate. And you'll see this is the theme of my five things today.
00:16:41 Speaker_03
Ready for the next?
00:16:42 Speaker_01
And what are the names of the two rats? Oh, Cricket and Clover. Cully Clover and Crazy Cricket Climber.
00:16:48 Speaker_03
Do they eat crickets? What do they eat?
00:16:50 Speaker_01
Actually, well, they do love clover, but no, they just kind of eat rat food from the store. They eat anything.
00:16:54 Speaker_01
It's like when you're making food and you've got little leftovers, you've got little bits and crusts or little things that you just give it to the rats and they usually love it. It's great.
00:17:05 Speaker_03
I keep them in the kitchen. That's perfect. That's what some folks in South America do with guinea pigs, although the difference is they fatten up the guinea pigs on the table scraps and then they eat the guinea pigs.
00:17:15 Speaker_03
Probably not going to eat cricket and clover, I imagine.
00:17:18 Speaker_01
I won't be eating cricket and clover, but I do like that kind of hang out near the kitchen and give them the scraps. Okay, number four, China. Number four, China. So in 2010, I went to Guilin, China, and then I went to Taipei, Taiwan.
00:17:35 Speaker_01
And at the time, China was rough. I was like, I was walking over rubble. The air was just choking me with its smoke and the sense of oil and everything felt very third world, very rough. And I just thought, okay, that's what China is.
00:17:50 Speaker_01
China, you know, developing economy, it's just rough. And then you go to Taipei, Taiwan, and it just feels like the most refined, first world, beautiful version. It's like Japan, but with Chinese culture.
00:18:03 Speaker_01
And I thought, ah, someday I want to live in Taiwan because that's the really nice part of China.
00:18:10 Speaker_01
So, here we are, 2024, 14 years later, I go to bring my kid on a school holiday to China for his first time and I thought, well, we'll start out rough by going to mainland China and then we'll move on to like the best of the best with the refined culture of Taiwan and Taipei.
00:18:29 Speaker_01
It turned out to be the opposite, that China was wonderful. We went to Shanghai and it was like first world, amazing, refined, silent, because all the vehicles are electric now.
00:18:42 Speaker_01
So that was the very first thing I noticed as soon as I took the train from the airport. We got off in downtown Shanghai. I'm surrounded by a hundred vehicles and I hear nothing. It's just, that's so nice. And I was like, oh my God, this is surreal.
00:18:58 Speaker_01
Like 20 motorbikes went in front of my face, like right there, like three meters away, and I heard none of them. There was just this silent movement. I was like, oh, this is so nice.
00:19:08 Speaker_01
And the people were just so polite and cultured, and it was none of this hacking and spitting that I associated with it before, like the shouting and the spitting, you know?
00:19:17 Speaker_03
Yeah, that's good to hear. I remember the spitting from my visits. A lot of spitting.
00:19:21 Speaker_01
Yeah. And even just transactionally, you have to get Alipay or WeChat on your phone first before you go, like, attach it to your credit card. But then once you're there, all transactions are just beep. Everything is so easy.
00:19:33 Speaker_01
And there are beautiful, like, rental bikes everywhere laid out in perfect color-coded queues. You can just walk up to one and go beep. and step on the bike and then just go where you want to go and you drop it off, you go beep.
00:19:45 Speaker_01
And everything is just so civilized and wonderful. It completely changed my mind about China. And then, I don't want to sound like I'm trashing Taiwan, but it was just interesting.
00:19:59 Speaker_01
that by comparison, then I went to Taipei and I thought, whoa, if China is this nice, imagine how nice Taipei is going to be. And I got there and it was kind of like stinky and trashy and they don't take credit cards or they don't have the apps.
00:20:12 Speaker_01
And so you have to pay cash everywhere. And I'm like, money and paper and coins. And I was like, wow, interesting. And so I met with a Taiwanese woman for lunch that I'd emailed with before. And she's an investor that goes to mainland China often.
00:20:28 Speaker_01
And I mentioned something about this cautiously. I was like, I don't want to trash your home. I didn't say it like that, but I just cautiously said, hi, I noticed something. And she said, I'm glad you noticed. She said, I noticed this too.
00:20:40 Speaker_01
She said, I go to mainland China cities every six to 12 months. And she said, I feel like Taiwan maybe plateaued like 12 years ago. Like we kind of hit first world status and then stayed there.
00:20:53 Speaker_01
Almost like Japan, you know, it's like Japan used to feel futuristic. Now it feels kind of stuck in the nineties, you know, fax machines and stuff.
00:21:00 Speaker_01
And which is kind of cute in a way, like, again, not to knock it, it's just, it feels like it, it got to a certain point and then it said, okay, we're happy here.
00:21:08 Speaker_03
Then it plateaued. Yeah.
00:21:10 Speaker_01
And she said, every time I go to China, she said there's visible, noticeable improvements, like every six months. She said it blows my mind that they just keep improving and keep pushing.
00:21:21 Speaker_01
So I read a book called China's Worldview by David Daokui Li that changed my perception of China's government too. It's really impressive. He's a guy that in but not in China's government.
00:21:37 Speaker_01
And so he kind of is trying to explain the mindset of China's government to outsiders. And it's a beautiful book. I highly recommend if somebody wants to understand China better. China's worldview.
00:21:47 Speaker_03
China's worldview. Just as a sidebar note, your mention of Japan. I love Japan. I've spent time in mainland China and in Taipei. It's time for me to get back to both of those.
00:21:59 Speaker_03
I've spent much more time in Japan, but when people are going to Japan for the first time, they're like, I can't wait to experience this futuristic view 30 years ahead. I typically say, look,
00:22:13 Speaker_03
especially if they're going to stay there for a longer period of time. I say, you're going to love it. And it is 30 to 40% Blade Runner and 60 to 70% DMV. Just like filling out paperwork and triplicates and fax machines.
00:22:32 Speaker_03
it's going to drive you nuts if you actually try to live there on some levels, right? There's so many beautiful things about it.
00:22:38 Speaker_03
But yes, it does have the feeling of having frozen in time, in a sense, as opposed to continued to inflect the way that it was perhaps some time ago. Need to get back to the East, so to speak. It's been a long time. All right, I think you have
00:22:53 Speaker_01
Actually, because of this newfound love, I'm actually going to Shenzhen and Chengdu in a few weeks. Oh, wow. I just want to keep experiencing different Chinese cities.
00:23:04 Speaker_03
Are you going to do any factory tours or see manufacturing there?
00:23:09 Speaker_01
I'm just meeting with people. That's kind of how I travel these days. I tend to go to a place and instead of seeing the sites, I want to meet the people. So I'm meeting with people that I've emailed with over the years.
00:23:19 Speaker_01
I chose those two cities because I know a lot of people there.
00:23:22 Speaker_03
Great, can't wait to hear the report. So I think, I'm no mathematician, but maybe you have one more? Smartass.
00:23:31 Speaker_01
Okay, number five, Dubai. So this is my big one, because when I lived in Singapore, Dubai would often come up, people would compare the two and they would tell me,
00:23:44 Speaker_01
Things about Dubai, about the shopping malls and the millionaire pandering in the Instagram hashtaggy, you look at me kind of crap. And Dubai was in my top ten places I never want to go in my life. Fuck that place. It sounds awful.
00:24:01 Speaker_01
It sounds like everything I hate in one place, you couldn't pay me to go there. But then I have to notice that feeling in myself. And this is gonna be, we'll get to like the theme when we're done with this number five.
00:24:12 Speaker_01
But I had a flight from New Zealand to Europe that it changed planes in Dubai and I looked at that and I went, ugh. And I was like, wait a second, what is this prejudice in me against Dubai?
00:24:24 Speaker_01
It's like saying, I hate artichokes, but I've never tried artichokes, right? Like, I hate Dubai, but I've never been to Dubai. Maybe I should go to Dubai. So instead of making it a three-hour layover, I made it like a three or four-day layover.
00:24:36 Speaker_01
I went, wow, okay, I'm going to Dubai for a few days. So I read a book called City of Gold, which was about the founding of Dubai and the creation of Dubai. And dude, it was so good. It is such a great book.
00:24:50 Speaker_01
Anybody listening to this, if you want a great read, read the book City of Gold about the history of Dubai. It is inspiring the wisdom and the foresight and the boldness it took to make that place happen.
00:25:04 Speaker_01
It was really just like a vision that saw its way through to the end against all odds, right? So super inspiring. Then somebody said, oh, you need to read Arabian Sands by this man named Fessiger. And that gets into like the Arab Bedouin culture.
00:25:19 Speaker_01
It was written in the 1940s or 50s, kind of like a Lawrence of Arabia kind of guy, like from England, but went through the desert and kind of became one with the Bedouin people and got to know the culture and wrote about it.
00:25:31 Speaker_01
So that was really inspiring. And then the United Arab Emirates itself, as I learned more about, so Dubai, you know, is a city in a region inside the United Arab Emirates. It's one of the seven states, the Emirates, in that country.
00:25:45 Speaker_01
So Sheikh Zayed, the guy that was really like the father of the nation, was a really great dude.
00:25:51 Speaker_01
Kind of like when I moved to Singapore and I learned more about Lee Kuan Yew and started to really admire the decisions he made, he became a bit of a role model. Learning about him makes me want to be a better person.
00:26:02 Speaker_01
I just noticed that it actually subtly influences my actions. And so when I'm in Singapore, I feel a little bit infused with the role model. I feel the presence of the role model of Lee Kuan Yew.
00:26:13 Speaker_01
And when I'm in UAE, I feel a little bit inspired by Sheikh Zayed because he was just such a great, generous dude. And also, I think it's interesting that Arab culture gets a really bad rap in the media.
00:26:24 Speaker_01
Like, Hollywood portrayal is usually some white actor with brown makeup being stupid saying, you know, oh, I like this building. I'll buy 10 of them. You know, I think I want a penguin colony in the desert, you know, make it happen.
00:26:37 Speaker_01
And they're kind of portrayed as fools that are too rich. And so getting to know the culture felt like, this is really interesting, I really had the wrong idea about this culture.
00:26:48 Speaker_01
Okay, so as I read these books, City of Gold and Arabian Sands, I have a thing on my website where I always show what I'm reading and I take notes from the books and I put notes on my website.
00:27:00 Speaker_01
And a friend of mine that lives in Muscat, Oman, saw my reading list and he said, what is your interest in this region? I've noticed you're reading books about Middle East. And I told him I'm just really interested in Arab culture.
00:27:12 Speaker_01
And he said, you must meet the man from Tamashi. I said, what? And he goes, go to Tamashi.com, T-A-M-A-S-H-E-E.com. And he said, you will see a shoe store. His name is Muhammad Kazim. He designs sandals.
00:27:28 Speaker_01
But underneath the surface, he's an educator of Arab culture. So the sandals are just like the storefront.
00:27:35 Speaker_03
It's like the pirate shop in San Francisco.
00:27:37 Speaker_01
Oh, I haven't heard this.
00:27:39 Speaker_03
There is a place in San Francisco, it's on Valencia Street, and it is used for now educating kids, writing workshops, things like that.
00:27:49 Speaker_03
But because they couldn't get it zoned in San Francisco, they couldn't get permission for what they actually wanted to do. They had to create a storefront. and then do the teaching in the back.
00:28:00 Speaker_03
And so they created a pirate attire store, and all of the classrooms are in the back. So that was a bit of a digression, especially because I can't even recall the proper name of the writing outlet that is associated with this.
00:28:19 Speaker_03
But Tamashii, shoe store, sandal store on the front end, but it's actually education in disguise.
00:28:27 Speaker_01
Yeah, well at first I thought there was no connection. Then I realized that his sandal designs are actually kind of reflecting Arab traditions and culture through the design of the sandals.
00:28:39 Speaker_01
But it's like his true passion are these cultural trips he does. So if you go to Tamashi.com and you go in the menu, you can click cultural trips and then you'll see. So my friend introduced me to this guy. So I met with him on my trip to Dubai.
00:28:53 Speaker_01
We meet by the creek and he tells me that his grandfather built the first building in Dubai. That was his grandfather. That's how young that city is. And he's just like, yeah, right, basically right over there. That was the very first building in Dubai.
00:29:04 Speaker_01
My grandfather is the one that built it. So I said, can you explain to me something about Arab culture?
00:29:09 Speaker_01
And he said, well, wait, first you got to understand the culture of the people of the desert is very different than the people of the sea, the Arabian coast, and which is very different than the people of the hills.
00:29:22 Speaker_01
I said, OK, well, where's your family from? And he said, well, from the desert. But he said, but, you know, two uncles
00:29:29 Speaker_01
got in a fight and so kind of half the family moved off to Iraq for a while and there was kind of like a split in the family, but then they kind of reunited in Abu Dhabi. And I said, but then Islam came along.
00:29:39 Speaker_01
And I said, wait, hold on, Islam, that was like the year 600. I said, have you been telling me your family history from 2000 years ago? And he goes, well, 1800 years ago, yeah. I said, wait, how the fuck do you know your family history back 1800 years?
00:29:55 Speaker_01
He said, well, we keep good records.
00:29:57 Speaker_02
Whoa.
00:29:59 Speaker_01
Imagine what that does to how you see your life. If you see yourself in this long lineage of 1800 years of recorded family history, like how that affects your dating and whatever choices on where to live. So Mohammed Kazim, this guy is a badass.
00:30:15 Speaker_01
I love this guy. He's such a wealth of information and he communicates it so well. It really helps, by the way, that so he's got a complete American accent.
00:30:23 Speaker_01
He went to college in Boston for six years, like got into finance, came back, worked in finance in Abu Dhabi and then just said, no, my real passion is teaching the Arab cultural traditions that I think have gotten lost in our modern skyscrapers.
00:30:38 Speaker_01
So that's why he made it his passion project. He could have made way more money in finance, but he has this Tamashi.com sandal store, and he teaches Arab culture. And I admire the hell out of this guy.
00:30:48 Speaker_03
That's a really cool Easter egg. All right, so we'll link to that in the show notes. And I also pulled up this word that was on the tip of my tongue, McSweeney's. McSweeney's.net, people can check it out. There's some hilarious writing
00:31:02 Speaker_03
The one that I most recently shared with someone after it was shared with me is that Cormac McCarthy writes to the editor of the Santa Fe New Mexican by John Keenan.
00:31:11 Speaker_03
It's only going to be funny for people who have read some of Cormac McCarthy, like The Road or Blood Meridian, but there's a lot of really good stuff. the outlet.
00:31:22 Speaker_03
I also wanted to mention, because you mentioned Iraq, Iraqi music, traditional music, is some of the most incredibly intricate music I've ever heard using a dulcimer or hammer dulcimer. There are different instruments involved. absolutely spectacular.
00:31:38 Speaker_03
A lot of that has been destroyed, unfortunately, culturally and various teachers and so on due to all of the goings on in Iraq over the last while. But what is the overarching lesson that you take from the five things you have changed your mind on?
00:31:55 Speaker_03
Are there kind of meta lessons that you take from this?
00:31:59 Speaker_01
Yeah, you can see the theme, which is like, I love my rats, but even more it's like I love that I used to hate them and now I don't. And I could have gone on twice as long about Dubai, by the way. The place is amazing.
00:32:12 Speaker_01
It is this cultural melting pot that just warms my heart. Sitting on the second floor of the Dubai mall and watching the whole world go by, just the Nigerians and the...
00:32:22 Speaker_01
I don't know, the Saudis and the Russians and the Chinese and the British just all walking in through in the same place. And it's so amazing. I just, I kind of want to live there.
00:32:32 Speaker_01
But as happy as it makes me, I get this extra happiness of going, wow, I used to hate this place without even knowing it. And I take a sip of this coffee and it's like, wow, for my whole life, I'm 55, I hated coffee. The Python programming.
00:32:48 Speaker_03
But the secret has been held back from you, so now you have to go to Dubai to have the coffee that you like.
00:32:54 Speaker_01
Right. The theme is that if you feel completely averse to something, get to know it better. That whatever you feel yourself leaning away from, try leaning into. If you hate opera, then go learn more about opera.
00:33:11 Speaker_01
And if you hate sports, well then go learn more about sports. It's usually just learning about something. gives you an appreciation for this thing that you used to just dismiss.
00:33:21 Speaker_01
At the end of the year last year, I just thought, God, this has been, I think, maybe the greatest year of my life. I think this is the happiest I have ever been in my whole life.
00:33:31 Speaker_01
And I think the reason why was because I had five major things in one year that I used to hate that now I love. God, this is the greatest joy.
00:33:40 Speaker_03
So major things. So the rats makes it into major things. I like this. I like it.
00:33:45 Speaker_01
Sure. I mean, you know, they're my, they're my
00:33:47 Speaker_03
I'm not minimizing rats. I'm not minimizing rats.
00:33:51 Speaker_01
But even the coffee, even the Python, I'm doing something Python going, wow, I can't believe I hated this for 20 years.
00:33:58 Speaker_03
Well, I suppose they're major in the sense that to the degree you had a fixed position beforehand, these were kind of strong fixed positions of dislike. So that turnaround is very interesting.
00:34:18 Speaker_03
Just a quick thanks to one of our sponsors, and we'll be right back to the show. About three weeks ago, I found myself between 10 and 12,000 feet, going over the continental divide, carrying tons of weight, and I needed all the help I could get.
00:34:30 Speaker_03
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00:34:36 Speaker_03
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00:34:47 Speaker_03
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00:35:35 Speaker_03
Let me ask you this, since in the case of the rats, that was catalyzed by your son bringing up pet rats, Dubai, you had a layover that then prompted you to extend how long you stayed there.
00:35:52 Speaker_03
Python, I'm not sure exactly how that about face came to be, but having experienced the past year, you say to yourself, this is one of the greatest or maybe the greatest year of my life. high levels of happiness.
00:36:04 Speaker_03
I think it's because I had these changes in mind. Are you farming for opportunities to change your mind proactively? Yeah. And if so, how are you doing that?
00:36:17 Speaker_01
I don't have a systematic thing I can share. And not that I'm not sharing it, I just don't have it. But it just made me notice. Now I just need to notice in myself when I'm irrationally averse to something. It can't even be a thought process.
00:36:32 Speaker_01
Sometimes, okay, this is actually in my useful not true book that just came out. This idea that was actually a little bit sparked by you where somebody dismisses
00:36:44 Speaker_01
Everything a person says, it dismisses everything a public figure says because they don't like something about that public figure. Right? Like, oh, I don't like the way he acts on social media, so fuck him. I'm not going to listen to a word he says.
00:36:58 Speaker_01
And that was inspired. I think I told you last time that the first time I encountered that was years and years ago when I saw somebody holding for our work week. And I said, oh wow, great book. And he goes, yeah, the guy's full of himself.
00:37:11 Speaker_01
Here, you want it? He didn't want to read the book because he saw one thing in there that made him think you were full of yourself. So that's it. Fuck this whole thing. Fuck this 400 page book.
00:37:23 Speaker_01
There's nothing in it for me because there's something I don't like about this guy. When I think about that, to me, that's trying to think of people as either true or not true, instead of useful or not useful.
00:37:36 Speaker_01
That's judging the box, not judging the contents inside. And so I think there are many things in my life where I have judged the box. Like, pfft, Python, no. You know, pfft, China, rough. Pfft, Dubai, fuck that place. rats, coffee.
00:37:52 Speaker_01
Sorry, just had to spit all five times. And all of those, I was judging the box. But if you learn a little bit more about it, then you get into the contents. And you go, oh, actually, the contents are wonderful. It was just, I was dismissing the package.
00:38:07 Speaker_03
He probably wrote the first edition where I had that whole chapter on my cock size that ended up being a little over the top. So I took it out for reprints.
00:38:15 Speaker_00
And then he put it into 4-Hour Body.
00:38:18 Speaker_03
It was a bit much. Yeah, then I ended up putting that as an appendix in the four-hour body. So, fair play on his part. I would actually build on that to say that
00:38:30 Speaker_03
I look to my close relationships and I pause and question how I'm thinking about friendships if in every case there isn't something substantial I disagree with each of those friends on. Does that make sense?
00:38:48 Speaker_01
Yes. I love that.
00:38:49 Speaker_03
I really want friends where the differences of opinion bring us closer and make our friendships more valuable, not the other way around.
00:38:59 Speaker_00
Yes.
00:39:00 Speaker_03
If you and your friends agree on pretty much everything, I view that as symptomatic of a problem.
00:39:07 Speaker_01
Okay. I'm so glad you brought this up. Sometimes I wonder about your motivation for continuing these podcasts and how you keep up the enthusiasm for doing this for so long.
00:39:23 Speaker_01
And then I thought, God, wait, you must be immersing yourself in so many diverse worldviews that it made me think about the comparison to investing.
00:39:34 Speaker_01
I was in a situation recently, you've probably had this many times, and I think it's maybe part of why you left California, where you catch yourself in a group of people and everybody agrees with everybody else.
00:39:45 Speaker_01
It's like this group think, even if they're all really smart, but damn it, they all basically agree, this sucks. And I thought about the benefits of diversification when it comes to investing, right?
00:39:56 Speaker_01
So anybody who learns investing 101 learns about having a low correlation between your asset allocations. So your US stocks, international stocks, real estate commodities, bonds, gold, cash, something's risky, something's riskless.
00:40:15 Speaker_01
And the whole idea is they're supposed to have a low correlation. So if one goes down, they won't all go down. And I thought about that in terms of the thought portfolio in our head, any given person.
00:40:29 Speaker_01
So you say it with the friends you have around, but I assume, aren't you then, by knowing your friends so well, when you're in a certain situation, you're thinking about what to do, you don't just have Tim's thoughts.
00:40:44 Speaker_01
you also have this friend's thoughts, and that's friend's thoughts. And it's like, how would this friend of mine approach this? Do you do that actively?
00:40:52 Speaker_03
Oh yeah, I definitely do. And I'll give a real-world example, and I don't know if we want to get into the thick of it, but I was reading some of your writing,
00:41:02 Speaker_03
before we hopped on the phone, and I was taking an ice bath also right before we got on the phone, which I know I am fonder of than you are.
00:41:11 Speaker_03
But I was sitting in the tub, freezing my balls off, and there were certain statements and positions in the writing that got me all riled up. And I was sitting there getting riled up, and thinking about my counter positions.
00:41:30 Speaker_03
And then I thought to myself, well, that's interesting to observe. These feelings coming up, these very strong feelings. Then I thought to myself, this is really good.
00:41:44 Speaker_03
This is good because the feelings are coming up in a strong way, and you're not someone to shy away from a conversation about those things. And what a gift to be able to have civil disagreement with friends. What a fucking treasure that is.
00:42:05 Speaker_03
because we don't have a lot of models for civil disagreement, I would say, at least not in most media or online. It's just not what sells. And I very much want friends who are going to call me on my bullshit or at least take counter positions
00:42:25 Speaker_03
and help me think through things, right? And I think that in your new book, for instance, does a very good job of discussing perspectives and perspective taking and how you can read many things differently from different viewpoints.
00:42:41 Speaker_03
And you want friends who can help you do that so that you don't get trapped in your own thought loops. And furthermore, just on a very practical sense,
00:42:51 Speaker_03
you want to be able to speak truthfully to your friends and you want them to be able to do the same. And if you do that and you talk about a really wide breadth of things, if you never have conflict, one or both of you is probably being dishonest.
00:43:05 Speaker_03
And if you're gonna have some friction in the system, which you probably will if you're really being honest, then you're gonna need to be good at conflict resolution or repair or talking about hard things.
00:43:21 Speaker_03
So that's a very long stream of consciousness that I just let out. But if I look for friends who I can and will disagree with on things, then it becomes my dojo for life overall with people I really care for and love.
00:43:43 Speaker_03
Good God, what an amazing gift and advantage that is.
00:43:48 Speaker_03
So yes, I do that deliberately, and I invite people on the podcast who I suspect or know I will disagree with on a few different levels, and that gives me a chance to interrogate their thinking, but also interrogate my own thinking.
00:44:01 Speaker_01
Love it. I've noticed within myself that when I'm around people that I know agree with me, my inherent curiosity level drops a bit. And when I'm around people that I know don't think like me, my curiosity peaks.
00:44:20 Speaker_01
So when I meet somebody that is like a scientist that is also Hindu, I'm like, oh, oh my God, I have so many questions for you. I was like, can you explain to me how this, okay.
00:44:31 Speaker_01
I'm filled with curiosity to meet somebody that grew up Hindu and still actively has the Hindu beliefs. I want to understand this better. I've read two books about Hinduism. I don't get it still. I have so many questions for you.
00:44:43 Speaker_01
But if I'm around somebody that's like me, I'm like, eh, how you doing? What's up? Yeah, me too. Cool. All right. So I think it's, A deliberate overweighting, if we're going to kind of use a back to like quantitative and investment metaphor.
00:45:00 Speaker_01
I have a whole lifetime of thinking my way. Now I want to overweight learning other ways of thinking. And to me, it's just pure curiosity. There's no debate. There's no like, let's work this out and get to the right answer.
00:45:14 Speaker_01
It's just, no, please tell me this other way of looking at things. Tell me this other way of looking at your family history, 1800 years. Tell me this other way of looking at, I don't know, spirituality, life after death, et cetera. Please.
00:45:26 Speaker_01
I'm so curious because it reminds me that my way of looking at it is not the only way. I love dislodging my first impression. I think our first thought is an obstacle and we have to get past it to realize there are other ways to look at the situation.
00:45:45 Speaker_01
Once you realize that you can get past your first way of looking at something, then you can do that, like, what do you call it, systems 2 thinking, right? Thinking fast and slow. You can go, oh right, okay, hold on, that was my first reaction.
00:45:58 Speaker_01
What are some other ways I could look at this? That's what my whole Useful Not True book is about.
00:46:05 Speaker_03
Yeah, I remember also – I think this was on the podcast in one of our earlier conversations – but I asked you – it was on the podcast, probably the first conversation – I asked you who the first person was you thought of when I gave the word successful.
00:46:23 Speaker_03
And your answer was along the lines of, well, I think answer number one isn't that interesting, because I might say Richard Branson. But really,
00:46:32 Speaker_03
or Elon Musk, but if Richard Branson wanted a life of peace and tranquility and a slower pace, if that were his goal, then he's utterly failing.
00:46:43 Speaker_03
So maybe that isn't success, but perhaps overarchingly – I've used that twice now as an adverb, that's pretty funny, I never use that word – but the question should be, who's the third person you think of when you hear the word successful?
00:46:57 Speaker_01
I'm so impressed that you remember that. It's a long time ago.
00:47:02 Speaker_03
Yeah. And that is an example of what you're talking about, is getting past the first thought. I think the operative word there is thought, right?
00:47:09 Speaker_03
Because just to draw a distinction, for me, I think paying attention to feeling, the first feeling can save you from a lot of pain in the short and the long term. In other words, along the lines of the gift of fear, Gavin DeBecker, et cetera.
00:47:25 Speaker_03
If your system says no, pay very close attention to that. But if you have a inbuilt story, I hate Dubai because A, B, and C, which is very different from I don't feel safe in this airport and I don't know why. Those are two very different things.
00:47:43 Speaker_03
Questioning that first story can pay a lot of incredible dividends.
00:47:47 Speaker_01
Dude, I love this subject so much. To me, it's kind of like the key of life. So often the difference between success and failure is the mindset that leads you to take different actions.
00:48:00 Speaker_01
But if you just look at a situation and you say, that's it, that's what the situation is. I'm not talking about physical things. I mean, declaring something to be a dead end, declaring something to suck.
00:48:12 Speaker_01
These are all things of the mind, and nothing of the mind is necessarily true. Everything that's just in the mind is just one perspective. Physical things are true, sure. There are some physical realities.
00:48:23 Speaker_01
The number of votes cast in an election is a physical reality that an alien or a computer could observe and agree. But all these things of the mind, we're social creatures and we treat them like they are realities.
00:48:37 Speaker_01
Like, hey, that person wronged me and that's just a fact. It's like, that's not just a fact. That's one way of looking at it. And you might be a lot happier and a lot more successful if you realize that that's just one way of looking at it.
00:48:50 Speaker_01
It's not true. It's just a perspective. It's just a thought. And there's another way of seeing that. And that other way of seeing it might lead to actions that would be much more effective for you. Yeah, for sure.
00:49:03 Speaker_03
And I think your new book pairs well with Byron Cady's The Work, which focuses on a lot of what we're discussing. And I was going to say, in addition to what we've already covered, that the content is different from the mindset.
00:49:21 Speaker_03
And what I mean by that is You've crafted a very Path of Derek life for yourself, and you've made some very unorthodox decisions, some of which I think are frankly sometimes cuckoo bananas. Thank you. You're welcome.
00:49:37 Speaker_03
If I don't agree, even if I wouldn't replicate the decision, hearing you explain why you did it and how you navigated that, the lenses through which you viewed this scenario,
00:49:51 Speaker_03
has allowed me to learn things that I can apply to totally different circumstances. And that's really valuable. You might not make the same house as someone else, but learning how to use the carpentry tools that they used to build that house
00:50:07 Speaker_03
could actually really, really, really aid you in a lot of disparate scenarios. So that's how I've also thought about it.
00:50:15 Speaker_01
I so often try to get people to devalue the example, but value the theme, the process. Like you just said, that too many people focus on the example that you give them. It's like, try to forget the example and look for the process.
00:50:30 Speaker_01
So thanks for saying that. I do that with everything.
00:50:34 Speaker_01
There's a person that we could talk about here if you want later, but he's a computer programmer, but he gets up and gives a talk about computer programming that I see the theme in what he's talking about.
00:50:45 Speaker_01
I'm like, okay, well, forget the code for a second. That's a brilliant theme. It's fun to be able to do that.
00:50:53 Speaker_03
Let's pause. This might be a good segue. Is that part of the next bucket of people you're studying? Or things you're fascinated by. Where would you like to go next? Because this might be a good segue.
00:51:08 Speaker_01
Yeah, it's funny. You actually jumped to the last thing I was going to mention. You brought up this diversified portfolio of perspectives. So that was one of the things I wanted to talk about today, and you didn't even know that. Oh, amazing.
00:51:21 Speaker_01
Look at that. I did not. That was great. Yeah, let's talk about, okay, you asked me in advance, people I'm studying. So let's do them in reverse order since we already brought up Rich Hickey. So R-I-C-H-H-I-C-K-E-Y.
00:51:36 Speaker_01
Wait a second, before we switch to that, have you ever met Brian Eno, the record producer?
00:51:41 Speaker_03
I have not met Brian Eno, but I have his Oblique Strategies part set. I was just reading about how he ended up coining the term ambient music in the hospital because he couldn't get up and change the volume.
00:51:57 Speaker_03
He ended up listening to very, very low volume music a friend had put on for him. I'm fascinated by Brian Eno, but I've never met him.
00:52:06 Speaker_01
Brian Eno's one of these guys that his thought process is fascinating. I don't love his music, I like his music, I don't love it, but I love his thought process.
00:52:18 Speaker_01
By the way, if you go to the website musicthoughts.com, that's my love letter to Brian Eno and John Cage and some of these music thinkers.
00:52:24 Speaker_01
I made that website in 1999, and it's a collection of inspiring quotes from Brian Eno, John Cage, and a bunch of other musicians. Yep, musicthoughts.com.
00:52:35 Speaker_01
It's totally non-commercial, I'm not going to make a penny off of anybody looking at it, so I'm not trying to pitch it, but I'm just saying it's a collection of Brian Eno's philosophies on music and thoughts on music that I would read these quotes to inspire me as I was making music and kind of knock my thinking kind of like the Oblique Strategies cards to shift my thinking into something different.
00:52:58 Speaker_01
And so even just reading his interviews, One thing he said is, his job as a record producer is to have strong opinions in the studio.
00:53:08 Speaker_01
So that if he's in there producing a record by U2, and the guys are fighting about whether to have a guitar solo or not, whether it should be a loud guitar solo or a quiet guitar solo,
00:53:19 Speaker_01
He said, well, my job then would be to say, well, how about we have no guitar at all in this song? And the band members go, what? Are you crazy? No, this song needs guitar. No, Brian, we absolutely need guitar. And he goes, all right, happy I could help.
00:53:32 Speaker_01
By you disagreeing with me, I just helped you solidify your position. So that's my job here. So on the other hand, if you would have said, oh, yeah, okay, no guitar, that's a good idea. Great, glad I could help. I'm not saying my opinions are right.
00:53:47 Speaker_01
I'm just trying to help you respond. I love that.
00:53:52 Speaker_03
You're providing a foil. Yeah. Yeah, you're providing a foil. That's musicthoughts.com. Quick question on, was it John Cage you mentioned?
00:54:02 Speaker_02
Yeah.
00:54:02 Speaker_03
So I was first exposed to John Cage in a documentary, a friend of mine named Steve Jang was involved with.
00:54:10 Speaker_03
Nam June Paik, Moon is the Oldest TV, which is about Nam June Paik, this amazing pioneer in experimental art, performance art, many different media. And he was inspired by John Cage.
00:54:24 Speaker_03
Now, I know very little about John Cage, but I did get to see a segment of a performance that he did, which caused like 90% of the audience to leave. just like the most agonizingly uncomfortable, I would say, noise to listen to.
00:54:39 Speaker_03
That is my sole exposure to John Cage, but I've heard him invoked as this figurehead of great influence, and I'm basing my impression of him only on that, what I would just say is awful, performance that I saw part of in this documentary.
00:54:56 Speaker_03
How would you sell John Cage, or why is he interesting?
00:55:02 Speaker_01
I'm no expert, but let's just say he questioned things that hadn't been questioned before. A lot of modern art, the kind where people look at it and go, what? That's it? It's a seesaw over the border between US and Mexico? You call that art?
00:55:21 Speaker_01
I could do that. And it's like, yeah, but you didn't. Somebody looked at that border between US and Mexico and said, I think we could put a seesaw over that. And in a way, that's a beautiful statement. It's not about the brushstrokes on canvas.
00:55:35 Speaker_01
It's about the statement. So I think John Cage was doing that with music. He was questioning the core of what is this anyway?
00:55:42 Speaker_01
And so that's why I think his most famous piece is called Four Minutes and Thirty-Three Seconds, which is just four minutes and thirty-three seconds of silence.
00:55:49 Speaker_01
The point was, hey, listen to the room around you for four minutes and thirty-three seconds. There are sounds going on here already. I mean, I think that was his point. Maybe he stayed mute on it. I don't know.
00:55:59 Speaker_03
Okay, so is it fair to say that he's interesting to you for the same reason that Brian, you know, in the producer capacity is interesting as a provocateur of sorts, like an instigator of new thinking?
00:56:12 Speaker_01
Yeah, I want to emulate his thought process, even if I don't love his end results. Well, you said it first. That's why I love that you beat me to this.
00:56:22 Speaker_01
Your friends, you may not want to live my life here with my, whatever, three glasses and two rats, but you like some of my thought process.
00:56:35 Speaker_00
People keep emailing me about that. Hey, I heard your podcast with Tim Ferriss. Three glasses, huh?
00:56:41 Speaker_03
So let me explain that for people who don't have the content. You should get a third rat just so you have the same number of rats that you have glasses. But when I visited you in New Zealand, I was like, hey, do you mind if I have a glass of water?
00:56:50 Speaker_03
No, no, knock yourself out. Where are the glasses? Oh, they're in the cabinet. And I went and I saw three glasses, all of different, dramatically different sizes. And I was like, what happens if you have more than three people over here?
00:57:02 Speaker_03
Like, oh, let's buy some more glasses. I was like, well, actually, that kind of makes a certain elegant sense. So those are the three glasses.
00:57:08 Speaker_01
All right, you know what? On that note, do you want to hear? I am building my dream home right now. Can you imagine where this is going? Just 20 minutes north of Wellington, I bought a piece of land where I'm building my dream home.
00:57:22 Speaker_01
It is a four by eight meter rectangle with nothing inside. No toilet, no kitchen, no nothing. Because I thought every house I've lived in came with its default shit. And I adapted myself to its default shit.
00:57:37 Speaker_01
Like, well, that's just where the bathroom is. That's just the size of the living room. That's just what it is. And I've always had to adapt myself so I've never experienced the process of making the place adapt to me through practice, not in theory.
00:57:53 Speaker_01
So I thought, if I just start with a 4 by 8 meter well-insulated rectangle, then over time we'll see what I need.
00:58:01 Speaker_03
Wait, did you say 4 by 8? 4 by 8 meters is the whole house.
00:58:07 Speaker_01
Sorry, it's actually two. So it's a 4 by 12? Okay, got it. No, 4 by 14 meter rectangle, that's the two bedroom place where I'll sleep with my kid, and then next to it is a 4 by 8 where I spend all of my waking hours. Okay, got it.
00:58:22 Speaker_01
So it's the sleeping house and the waking house. And my kid actually gets his own 4 by 8 meter cube to experiment with. And the whole idea is to see what you need. So I'm starting with no bathroom, no kitchen.
00:58:35 Speaker_01
I'm just gonna put a little induction hob outside and an outhouse. And then I'll see if that's okay with me. Or if I find through experience that I really want a bathroom inside.
00:58:46 Speaker_01
Okay, well now I know from experience not just because it's the default setting. So I'm trying to start from scratch and this is my dream house because of the process that it will allow me to have.
00:58:58 Speaker_03
Okay. This is a very mundane question, but I'm curious. Generally, if you're going to have a kitchen or a bathroom or something, you would have the piping or the power and so on put in a certain place. As it stands, that is not the case.
00:59:15 Speaker_03
You might have to do a fair amount of demo or deconstructing your house to add any of these things internally.
00:59:25 Speaker_01
I got this tip from Stuart Brand, wrote a brilliant book that everyone should read, anyone who's smart that is, called How Buildings Learn.
00:59:35 Speaker_01
How Buildings Learn by Stuart Brand, you should try to get the paper book because it's just laid out in such a way that you kind of need the paper book.
00:59:42 Speaker_01
He goes through this analytical thing about buildings and he said this is a reason why you should never hide your wires and pipes, just keep the infrastructure on the outside so that it's easier to change. He has a beautiful
00:59:55 Speaker_01
line in there, it's almost the opening point, he says, all buildings are predictions, and all predictions are wrong. So therefore, the less predictive you can make your building, the better.
01:00:08 Speaker_01
That's why I'm just getting this rectangle, all pipes and wires will just be exposed, nothing buried, so that I can quickly change them, I can always see where they are. I'm very much following Stuart Brand's philosophy.
01:00:22 Speaker_03
Stuart Brand is a smart, fascinating man. Just a quick pitch for Stuart Brand. So I met Stuart through Kevin Kelly.
01:00:28 Speaker_03
Now Kevin Kelly, founding editor of Wired Magazine, fascinating, genius, bizarre guy, has an Amish beard, but he's a technology futurist, built his own house by hand, spends more time in China than probably anyone I know,
01:00:44 Speaker_03
He's just an eclectic combination of all sorts of things. And the title of my podcast with him way back in the day was The Real World's Most Interesting Man in the World, or something like that.
01:00:56 Speaker_03
And in the midst of the conversation with Kevin, or maybe speaking offline, he said, if you really want the person I consider to be the most interesting man in the world, it's Stuart Brand.
01:01:07 Speaker_03
I had Stuart on the podcast a number of years ago, and boy, oh boy, you want to talk about a polymath, he's something else.
01:01:14 Speaker_03
All right, so you've preserved the optionality with the possibility of putting things on the outside rather than on the inside in terms of support infrastructure. And how do you see yourself using a space with nothing inside?
01:01:32 Speaker_01
I don't know. See, that would be a prediction. I'm trying to not predict. I'm just gonna show up. It'll be ready in a few months and then I'll start living there and we'll see what happens. That's all I know.
01:01:41 Speaker_03
Okay. Is it gonna be totally empty? Are you gonna have some desks, a chair? I mean, are you gonna have anything at all? Are you just gonna sit on the floor and be like, what do I require at this moment?
01:01:51 Speaker_01
I'm bringing a mattress to start, and then over time I'll notice if I wish I had a desk here, then I'll get a desk there. So I'll add things as I feel that I really, really need them.
01:02:03 Speaker_01
Again, I highly recommend in How Buildings Learn, he kind of goes into this about the best spaces are just rectangles.
01:02:10 Speaker_01
The best places are the ones that are easy to alter so that if you suddenly decide, he talks about this MIT building where people are just allowed to bash a hole in the wall because it wasn't some beautifully architecturally designed masterpiece.
01:02:22 Speaker_01
It was something thrown together quickly in World War II and people love that building because if they do need to bash a hole in the wall or run some wires through, they can just do it because it's a trashy old building and because of that it's such a creative space.
01:02:33 Speaker_01
The places that are award-winning are often the ones that are the most hated by their residents. They might win the award for the architect. That's true. But because they're award winning, they're inflexible. They're sacred.
01:02:45 Speaker_01
I mean, talk to people who live in a Frank Lloyd Wright home now, and it's like, ugh, you know, living in a masterpiece museum. Can't change a single screw or anything because it's the way he wanted it.
01:02:56 Speaker_03
So practical recommendation, I would say if you're going to be sitting on the floor a lot, if you're not accustomed to doing that, just so you don't end up with all sorts of orthopedic issues, I would start doing Turkish get-ups and getting accustomed to sitting on the floor and getting up a lot.
01:03:11 Speaker_01
I'll probably get a good chair almost right away, but I just want to make sure that I release it.
01:03:16 Speaker_03
So your body's ready for the rectangle. All right, fascinating. Another example. I'll let you be the first monkey shot into space on this particular type of home design. I can't wait to learn so many things.
01:03:29 Speaker_01
You experiment with some things I don't want to experiment with, and I'll experiment with things that you don't want to experiment with. I'll renounce my US citizenship and let you know how it goes.
01:03:38 Speaker_01
I'll build my dream home of a four by eight rectangle, let you know how it goes.
01:03:44 Speaker_03
Yeah, you gotta divvy it up. I mean, the redundancy in experimentation is kind of, I don't want to say pointless, but it's more fun to have people doing different things. Other people you are studying. All right. Or things you're fascinated by.
01:03:56 Speaker_03
We can hop around, depends on where you want to go.
01:03:59 Speaker_01
I already started. Rich Hickey.
01:04:01 Speaker_03
Oh, that's right. You mentioned him. I wrote him down because I was left dangling and I was like, who is this Rich Hickey?
01:04:07 Speaker_01
So Rich Hickey is, he's a programmer, he's the inventor of a programming language called Clojure. C-L-O-J-U-R-E. He's actually one of my number one picks for somebody that I would like to get on your show.
01:04:19 Speaker_01
Like if we did a co-hosting kind of thing and I were to get somebody on, actually I already emailed him. He didn't reply, but maybe. Hey, if anybody knows Rich Hickey and if he's interested, nudge, nudge, nudge.
01:04:32 Speaker_01
He did a brilliant talk, if you search YouTube for either simple versus easy, or I think the name of the video on YouTube is called Simplicity Matters.
01:04:43 Speaker_01
Here's his point, and I actually jotted down these notes so I could try to bang out his point quickly and then we'll talk about it. And keep in mind, everything I'm about to say, he's just talking about programming.
01:04:54 Speaker_01
He's speaking to a room of programmers. He said, we mistake simple and easy. We think that simple means easy and easy means simple. But he said they're two different things. The word complex
01:05:07 Speaker_01
If you look at the definition, it actually comes from the word complect, which is to braid things together. So if something is complected, it means it's intertwined with other things.
01:05:17 Speaker_01
And so the adjective complex means that something is bound to other things. Whereas simple comes from simplex, which means it is not bound to other things. It stands alone. Easy, the root of that means that something is near at hand.
01:05:33 Speaker_01
It's something you already know how to do. It's within your realm. So, easy and hard are subjective. But simple and complex are very objective things that we can look at. Something is simple, stands alone, is complex, fits bound other things.
01:05:50 Speaker_01
And he said, here's where it gets tricky. is that it can be very easy to make something very complex.
01:05:58 Speaker_01
So he says, you could just type gem install hairball, and with typing three words on a computer, you can install a massive framework, whether it's Ruby on Rails or WordPress.
01:06:09 Speaker_01
And if you start using that, well, wow, you are now complected with a huge complicated system that you're intertwined with.
01:06:17 Speaker_01
And so now everything I say after this, this is my take on his analysis, but it's really easy in life to say, OK, yeah, let's get married or to have unprotected sex and get pregnant and have a baby. That's easy. Adopt a dog. Hiring people.
01:06:36 Speaker_01
You can have a problem and think, all right, well, I've got some money and I'm overwhelmed. I'm going to get a consultant to like hire 10 people. OK, great. Now I've got 10 employees. Phew. That was easy to take some work off my plate.
01:06:46 Speaker_01
But your life is now objectively complex. You are complected with these other people and their needs and their time schedules and their desires. Handing off parts of your business to say this is hard.
01:07:02 Speaker_01
I'm just going to hand off my billing or my something or my this or my scheduling to these apps or these subscription services. That was easy to just hand it off. But now your business is very complected with these other services.
01:07:19 Speaker_01
So hence my rant on our last conversation over scotch at my house about tech independence. His point is, it can be really hard to make something simple.
01:07:34 Speaker_01
It can be much harder to do something that is objectively simple, that stands alone, that isn't dependent on other things. It can be harder to make that. But it's ultimately usually a better choice because
01:07:47 Speaker_01
It's more maintainable, it's easier to change, it's easier to stop and start, it's simpler, even if it's harder to make.
01:07:54 Speaker_01
So the point in his thinking is to beware of the objective measure of complexity, or beware of complexity which can be objectively measured. and aim for doing the simpler thing, even if it's harder.
01:08:08 Speaker_01
In my take, I think you can make simple things easier just by learning more, say, about the fundamentals of something, instead of just adopting somebody else's high-level solution.
01:08:19 Speaker_01
You can just spend a little time learning about the core underneath it, about the fundamentals. And then you can forget norms. You could forget what others do, what others think. And you can just get to the real essence of what you need.
01:08:33 Speaker_01
I'm not just talking programming now. I'm just being like in life.
01:08:35 Speaker_03
What would be an example of that?
01:08:37 Speaker_01
Okay. My four by eight house. It's like, really? I just need a shelter where it's temperature controlled. So it's really well insulated.
01:08:47 Speaker_01
I do need a mattress to sleep on and I do need a place I can work, but to me, those are the, Oh, and I do need a little food. To me, these are the core things of a shelter. But even, say, with friendships.
01:09:00 Speaker_01
Do I need to live in the same place with my friends? Well, not necessarily. My dear friends, my best friends, are often far, far away. I don't need to move to a place that has all of my friends if I can reach them on the phone.
01:09:13 Speaker_01
I'm very often, talk about just the thought process, I very often find myself asking like, well what's the real outcome I'm after? What's the real point of this? And once I figure that out, well then what's the most direct route to that outcome?
01:09:27 Speaker_01
Never mind what other people do, what the norms are. What do I think is the most direct route to that outcome? And then try to keep it simple along the way and be very wary of dependencies and entangling myself with other things. That's my take.
01:09:42 Speaker_03
Could you give another example or two of how you implement that in your life? Sure. Or how you might? Because I know there are more examples.
01:09:53 Speaker_01
The next two might be less relatable, because it's writing and programming. CB.
01:09:57 Speaker_04
Less relatable than the 4 by 8 meter box.
01:09:59 Speaker_01
RL.
01:10:00 Speaker_00
Because I know everybody wants to live in a cube. CB.
01:10:01 Speaker_04
With nothing inside. RL.
01:10:04 Speaker_01
So, I mean, well first, here's a good question to strip away some things. Ask yourself, would I still do this if nobody knew?
01:10:15 Speaker_01
There might be a lot of things in our actions that we do because we like the way it would look to others, because it would be impressive to others. That's the first thing to just strip away when you're beginning this thought process.
01:10:27 Speaker_01
It's like, if I were to never tell anybody and nobody were to ever know, would I still do this thing? Okay, well then that might just be the decoration. Okay, so two examples. Programming-wise, I'm constantly asking this when I'm building something.
01:10:42 Speaker_01
It's just, I need to get this calendar entry into this database with this time. Do I need a whole bunch of JavaScript? Do I need a bunch of CSS and things flying around? Do I need fading graphics? No, I just need this thing there.
01:11:00 Speaker_01
What's the most direct way to get that calendar entry into that database? So that's like a programming example. Writing-wise, my last two books, How to Live and Useful Not True, I'm spending most of my time reducing.
01:11:16 Speaker_01
My rough draft, I always spew out everything I have to say on the subject. And then I spend a thousand hours, every single word going, is that word necessary? Wait a second, is that whole sentence necessary?
01:11:30 Speaker_01
Wait, can the point still be communicated without that sentence? If it can, okay, let me try to get rid of that sentence and see if the point still comes across. Actually, does the point come across without this entire chapter? Oh my God, it still does.
01:11:42 Speaker_01
Therefore, I don't need this chapter. One of the most useful things that happened recently is a few months ago, an organization in Australia paid me to come give a talk. And I said, what do you want me to talk about? They said anything.
01:11:57 Speaker_01
I said, how about my next book called Useful Not True? They said sure. So it was a room of very successful, very effective people. And I had one hour on stage to communicate the whole idea of my next book. And at the time, the book was still in process.
01:12:14 Speaker_01
And that was so helpful because I noticed that there were a few things on stage, even though I had it in my notes, I skipped over it. And I thought, okay, well, actually, we don't need to do that. Okay, let's get to the next point.
01:12:25 Speaker_01
And so later when I was back home, I thought, wow, I just skipped over that whole point on stage. So why do I think it's worth killing trees to print that point? Apparently it's not. Cool. This is now the shortest book I've ever written.
01:12:38 Speaker_01
I'm very proud of that fact. I compressed this 400 pages down to I think it's 102 pages or something.
01:12:46 Speaker_01
So those are two examples where I'm constantly asking like what's the most direct way to just get rid of what I really want, get the outcome, skipping the usual fanfare.
01:12:57 Speaker_03
How do you think about first order simplicity versus complexity versus second order, third order, and planning. And the reason I'm asking that is, you strike me as someone who prizes freedom, independence, simplicity, all very highly.
01:13:21 Speaker_03
But I imagine there could be cases where looking at the first decision and the first order effects, you might think, well, it's much simpler for me to do X, to renounce my US citizenship, to build a box, to do everything myself instead of taking on these cloud services for accounting and so on.
01:13:43 Speaker_03
But there are levels of second, third order complexities that ultimately make it kind of net-net more complex than doing the slightly more complex thing up front. Does that make sense?
01:13:57 Speaker_01
Almost.
01:13:58 Speaker_03
I guess I'm wondering how practically people might think about simplifying but not oversimplifying and then shooting yourself in the foot in the long term. I'll give you an example.
01:14:12 Speaker_03
I know people who have moved to Puerto Rico to trim taxes substantially. But in the process, they viewed that as the most direct route to reducing taxes.
01:14:25 Speaker_03
Therefore, they can do X, Y, and Z over time with more income or preserved capital gain, whatever it might be. However, in the process of doing that,
01:14:34 Speaker_03
They've created all of this lifestyle complexity and applied a lot of constraints to what they can or cannot do. The tax tales wagging the dog, and instead of money serving life, now life is serving money.
01:14:50 Speaker_03
They've put themselves in a topsy-turvy, upside-down situation. If you were to look at it from first principles, two years later, you're like, wow, that was really bungled. And that's not true for everybody in Puerto Rico.
01:15:04 Speaker_03
I'm not trying to make it sound like that.
01:15:05 Speaker_03
But I have seen those types of examples where the thing that seemed simple and straightforward at the outset ended up producing a lot of ripple effects that produced not just complexity, but complexity that was hard to undo.
01:15:20 Speaker_01
Great example.
01:15:22 Speaker_03
How do you think about that kind of risk mitigation?
01:15:26 Speaker_01
By the way, my two little examples of that, a few years ago, Tony Robbins had a Money Master the Game book. I was like, oh, wow, Tony hasn't put out a book in like 20 years. I wonder how this is going to be.
01:15:37 Speaker_01
And in it, he's giving these prescriptions for extremely complex like insurance things that you could set. I was like, oh, wow, that's objectively complex. And another example is in Neil Strauss's book called Emergency. I'll never forget this point.
01:15:55 Speaker_01
He said that he's off at one of these nomad, sovereign individual, I'm beholden to no country kind of events, and he meets this guy that is bragging to him about his setup.
01:16:06 Speaker_01
He's like, I got my income coming here, but then all expenses go here, but then I've got a trust and this, but I'm the non-managing member of the trust, which is held by this and that. And in the end, he's going to save 30% taxes.
01:16:19 Speaker_01
And Neil said, wouldn't it just be a lot easier or make a lot more sense to just work 30% harder? Or like to just make 30% more money? Said that's a ton of work just to save 30%. Said it's not that much harder to just go make 30% more.
01:16:35 Speaker_01
And dude, when I read that, I love that thought process. So I think that I know that your podcast and the Titans and all that is often about how do we use the wisdom of others to avoid making these mistakes ourselves.
01:16:56 Speaker_01
But some of these things maybe you just have to, I don't know, I think for some of these things I'm willing to throw myself in and feel the pain to see if I've done it wrong.
01:17:04 Speaker_03
I know we're improv jazzing here, so let's keep going.
01:17:07 Speaker_03
This thought just occurred to me, because when I hear you talk about code and programming, I mean, there's a poetry to it, and there's an economy to it that is, seems, I'm not a programmer, but I do write, there seems to be something intrinsically rewarding to you about that.
01:17:26 Speaker_03
presentation of elegance.
01:17:28 Speaker_03
And I'm wondering, in the case of following Stewart Brand's principles and building this box, or doing certain things that seem to me optimized for freedom, independence, is there, even if it ends up face-planting, is there something that you find beautiful and redeeming just about taking the simple approach, even if the outcome is suboptimal?
01:17:56 Speaker_01
It's related. It's finding out in fact instead of just in theory. We can sit at home and wonder what it might be like to do such and such, but at some point you just gotta throw yourself in and go try it.
01:18:10 Speaker_01
And if you try moving to Puerto Rico and you hate it, well, now you know. It was worth a try, maybe. And now you know in fact that that doesn't work for you.
01:18:21 Speaker_01
That's maybe the how buildings learn idea is don't predict that you will want to sink in that spot. Put yourself into that spot first. Live without a sink for a while. And eventually you'll get a good feeling for where the sink needs to be.
01:18:37 Speaker_01
In fact, not in theory. And so I think I do this with my life is I'm willing to mess up happily because I will know that then I found out in fact that that doesn't work for me.
01:18:54 Speaker_01
And maybe this is coming from the core of the fact that I'm a really happy person. And so I feel that my base level is up here. I can take some big knocks. You can take a hit.
01:19:04 Speaker_01
And I think a lot of the crazy shit I've done, I did marry somebody that I hardly knew after a few months because fuck it, let's see what happens.
01:19:13 Speaker_01
In fact, you and I have never talked about that directly, but do you know the mindset I was in at the time? I had just sold my company.
01:19:20 Speaker_01
I had a ton of money and I felt like I need to change my trajectory because my first impulse after selling my company was literally the next day I set up my next company. And I thought, I'm going to move to Silicon Valley. I'm going to do this thing.
01:19:36 Speaker_01
I'm going to stay on the same trajectory. And I did that for a few months, but then I caught myself. going, wait, I want a full life. I don't want to stay on the same trajectory. I want to shake shit up.
01:19:47 Speaker_01
So I very deliberately did what we might call the George Costanza principle, which is... Do the opposite. Do the opposite of all of my impulses. Every time I felt yes, everything in me said yes, I would say no out loud.
01:20:02 Speaker_01
And everything in me says no, I say yes out loud as a way of deliberately shaking shit up. And so I was dating this woman for a few months and we had no great connection.
01:20:13 Speaker_01
And she said, oh, well, I can't travel to California with you unless we get married. And everything in me says, oh, hell no, don't do that. That's stupid. I don't want to marry this person. So I said, Yes, let's do that. And so we got married.
01:20:29 Speaker_01
And I kept doing that in every way. I deliberately fucked up my life and made a bunch of crazy fucking decisions and some of them worked out great and some of them didn't. And I'm so happy that I did that.
01:20:44 Speaker_01
Like in some ways I could say that that's my biggest regret or biggest mistake, but in other ways, It was wonderful. It deliberately sent me on a different trajectory, and I'm glad I did it.
01:20:55 Speaker_03
That it definitely will. So, for people who don't have any of the connective tissue here to figure out how to orient themselves to this, people are going to want to know, right? Cliffhanger. So, how did that turn out?
01:21:09 Speaker_03
Everything in me says no, so I said, yes, let's get married. Let's do that.
01:21:13 Speaker_00
The marriage was awful. No, that was terrible.
01:21:17 Speaker_01
And we knew it literally like days later. Like, oops, we made a big mistake. Yeah, that was instantly a big mistake. And that's fine, because we knew in fact then that it was a big mistake, not just in theory. I could have walked away from that going,
01:21:33 Speaker_01
oh, God, remember that woman that wanted me to marry her and I said no? God, I wonder what would have happened. Well, now I get to find out.
01:21:40 Speaker_03
I did it. Now, hold on a second, though. I'm going to push on this a little bit. We could use this logic to be a reverse George Costanza. For every decision we think is bad, we could turn around and say yes to, right?
01:21:53 Speaker_03
But as a life strategy, I don't see you continuing that. So you don't know for a fact that the awful idea would have been awful. But I mean, there has to be a point at which you think about self-preservation and time as a finite currency.
01:22:08 Speaker_03
So you're like, well, when would you apply that versus when would you not apply it? Because you could apply it everywhere indefinitely. Certain things are one-way doors and some are two-way doors. For instance, getting a pet rat, lower cost,
01:22:26 Speaker_03
more reversible, let's just say, than maybe giving up your US citizenship, right? That is a little harder to control Z. Yeah, I cannot undo that. Yeah.
01:22:38 Speaker_03
So moving forward for you, having learned everything that you've learned, when do you play the George Costanza strategy versus not, right?
01:22:48 Speaker_03
Because there are lots of things we can't over-effect unless we make the right or the wrong or the good or the bad decision, but you can't make all decisions. So what do you do?
01:22:58 Speaker_01
You know, long ago, when I said the hell yeah or no thing, and… It's going to be in your gravestone.
01:23:06 Speaker_00
Yeah.
01:23:10 Speaker_01
Hell yeah, or here I am. Here he lays. So some people emailed me after that, After that was on your show and they said, hey man, I like this hell yeah or no thing. I'm using it for everything. I just got out of college. I'm getting a bunch of offers.
01:23:25 Speaker_01
I'm like, I'm not feeling hell yeah about any of them. I'm dating and just like, I'm not hell yeah about any of you. And I go, wait, wait, wait, wait, hold on. Everything does not become a nail because you're holding this hammer.
01:23:36 Speaker_01
This is a tool for a specific situation when you're overwhelmed with options. You have to have the wisdom to know when to use this tool. You don't use it on everything always. So same thing with this going against your instincts.
01:23:50 Speaker_01
Of course, you don't use it on everything always, but that was a specific time in my life when I wanted to deliberately change my trajectory.
01:24:00 Speaker_01
I wanted to go against my normal way of doing things and deliberately introduce some randomness and variety into my life.
01:24:07 Speaker_03
Right. It's not your default.
01:24:09 Speaker_01
Right. But let's look at, you know, I mentioned Dubai earlier. Everything in me said, fuck that place. And then I caught myself feeling that. And I thought, OK, wait, hold on. This is a good time to use this tool. My impulse is saying no.
01:24:25 Speaker_01
I'm going to try saying yes. I'm going to go get to know this thing. Because that sounds to me like that would be a learning, growing experience to try it. That's a good example of integrating this into your life. But then say, like, if
01:24:38 Speaker_01
Maybe you do hit a situation where it's like nothing is working out, you've been an idiot your whole life, you just got fired, you were just dumped by your romantic partner, it's skid row.
01:24:49 Speaker_01
Maybe it's a really good time to go against all your natural impulses since it's pretty clear that your defaults We're set wrong.
01:24:57 Speaker_03
Not working. Yeah, they're not working very well.
01:25:02 Speaker_01
I like integrating it. Maybe it's the question is like, is this going to be a learning, growing experience for me? I like leaning into discomfort. Whatever scares you, go do it.
01:25:13 Speaker_03
All right, so I have quite a few follow-up questions. We can take them in many different directions. So we've covered Rich Hickey, Clojure, knock-knock. We'll see if anyone lets him know he appeared on the show.
01:25:26 Speaker_03
And I also want to ask you a question we can cut from the conversation if we need to, but since Dubai has come up repeatedly.
01:25:34 Speaker_00
That's a great lead-in. I love that. this may be too risky for anybody's ears, but here we go.
01:25:39 Speaker_03
Do taxes fit into this at all?
01:25:40 Speaker_03
Is this like people who move to Nashville or Austin, and they're like, oh, the barbecue and the music, and they will dance and dance and dance until you corner them with a broomstick, and then they're like, yeah, okay, fine.
01:25:52 Speaker_03
Yeah, the taxes is also, it's a thing. Is Dubai one of those or no?
01:25:59 Speaker_04
Not at all.
01:25:59 Speaker_01
I mean, I had to ask myself that. That's like one of those things, okay, when you ask yourself, would I still be doing this thing if nobody knew about it? I got an email from a guy once that was just like, hey man, I want to travel the whole world.
01:26:14 Speaker_01
I'm going to visit every country in the world. Do you have any suggestions for me? I said, yeah, don't bring a camera and don't tell anyone that you're doing this. Is it still appealing to you now? Yeah, probably not. Okay.
01:26:27 Speaker_01
So anytime, say Dubai, for example, I was like, Whoa, this place is fascinating. Oh my God, I think I want to live here. I was like, would I still live here if the taxes were like 50%? I was like, yeah, like that has, that's moot to me.
01:26:41 Speaker_01
I mean, look, I'm living in New Zealand where, yeah, my income tax right now is 45%. I pay a ton of taxes, but it's worth it to me. I love it here. I don't care. So that thing I mentioned in Neil Strauss's book, Emergency, That sentence hit me hard.
01:26:58 Speaker_01
When I first sold Seedy Baby, that was 2008, there were some things I was thinking at the time. I was like, oh wow, I just got mega millions. How can I pay less taxes?
01:27:10 Speaker_01
And it was literally like the month before or month after I sold Seedy Baby that I read that book, Emergency. And I saw that sentence and I went, whoa, that is a great point.
01:27:23 Speaker_01
Don't jump through hoops to save taxes, jump through a hoop to go make more money. That's the growth choice. Anyway, that's the thought process that leads you to make growing decisions, not shrinking decisions.
01:27:37 Speaker_03
about to sell or have just sold CD Baby, you form a new company the next day. You're planning on moving to Silicon Valley and you see yourself moving on that track and you decide to throw a Costanza curveball in and mix things up. Why?
01:27:54 Speaker_03
Like what was the fear or the hazard you're trying to avoid by following that path? Was it doing something thoughtlessly and repeating what you've done before? That it wasn't intentional? What was it?
01:28:09 Speaker_01
I want to live a full life. At the end of my life, I want to look back and go, wow, I did a bunch of different things. I tried a bunch of different ways of living. I followed this philosophy for a while. I followed that one. I tried this. I tried that.
01:28:23 Speaker_01
I lived here. I lived there. That to me is my definition of a full life. My previous book called How to Live was 27 conflicting philosophies. And one weird answer. And the whole idea was that it's 27 chapters.
01:28:43 Speaker_01
Each one disagrees with the rest, but each one has a strong opinion of saying, here's how to live. Now live for the future. Then the next one's like, here's how to live. Live only for the present.
01:28:53 Speaker_01
And the next one's like, here's how to live, you know, leave a legacy. And these are all valid ways of living. And my definition of a full life is I want to experience the different approaches to life.
01:29:04 Speaker_01
I want to have the diversified portfolio of thought and of experiences. So, that was it. I just felt like if I was to create a new company the next day and move to Silicon Valley, I'd just be doing more of the same shit I've already done.
01:29:17 Speaker_03
Yeah, makes sense. Makes perfect sense. Who else do you have on your list of people you're studying?
01:29:23 Speaker_01
Alright, Tyler Cowen. Just a few days ago, in an article on Bloomberg.com called, Who was Bitcoin's Satoshi? So we still don't know who is Satoshi, the inventor of Bitcoin.
01:29:38 Speaker_01
And, you know, there's this law of headlines that if it ends in a question mark, the answer is usually no, you know. So when I first saw the headline, I thought that the answer was going to be, it doesn't matter.
01:29:52 Speaker_01
It doesn't matter who Satoshi is, forget it. And oh my god, Tyler Cowen took it somewhere else. Like even if you would have asked me, by the way, hey Derek, I'm going to give you an hour alone in a room to think about one question.
01:30:04 Speaker_01
Does it matter who is Satoshi, the inventor of Bitcoin? Even after an hour, I think my answer would have been, of course not. And I would have sat there for an hour just going, no. No, no. Tyler Cowen took it the opposite way.
01:30:18 Speaker_01
I jotted down his points, but it's a masterpiece in this kind of if-then knock-on thinking. So he said, okay, if we find out that Satoshi is dead, that the inventor of Bitcoin is dead,
01:30:34 Speaker_01
then that's a good thing because it means Bitcoin will be more safe because it won't be open to future alteration. The person can't tarnish the reputation of it.
01:30:45 Speaker_01
You know, say like Elon Musk and Twitter kind of like, you know, by continuing to be there can tarnish the reputation of something. Sorry, I shouldn't have gone there. Satoshi can't come back and change the rules for the worst.
01:30:57 Speaker_01
And then he even said, this is why all religions have dead founders, is because the founder can't stay in and tarnish the reputation of the religion. So I went, okay, good point. If Satoshi's dead, that is good for Bitcoin.
01:31:13 Speaker_01
It can stay as is and won't get tarnished.
01:31:16 Speaker_01
And he said, so there's a chance that Satoshi is an older guy from this previous movement around e-gold that was generally seen as like a failed project, that a bunch of people were into this idea of e-gold and it didn't work out.
01:31:30 Speaker_01
If Satoshi is somebody from that group, then that means that even projects that look like they've failed can create great things. So we should maybe think more highly or be less dismissive of projects that seem to be failing.
01:31:46 Speaker_01
Because who knows what they will lead to. He said there's a chance that Satoshi is this person, I forget their name, but he said that would have been 21 years old and in grad school at the time of inventing Bitcoin.
01:31:59 Speaker_01
He said, if that's true, that means we should raise our perception of what young busy people can do, that they can do more than we realize. This guy, while in grad school, also invented Bitcoin.
01:32:10 Speaker_01
And he said, if Satoshi is still alive, that means, oh by the way, we should say for you, I assume people know, but maybe not, that whoever is Satoshi has hundreds, okay let's say at least tens of billions of dollars in Bitcoin, that all he'd have to do, whoever
01:32:29 Speaker_01
Satoshi is, would have to just take it. It's already there in the account, in the public record that we can see. So Satoshi is one of the richest people on earth, whoever Satoshi is.
01:32:39 Speaker_01
So he said, if Satoshi's still living, that means that some people don't want to be billionaires or just have incredible self-restraint.
01:32:47 Speaker_01
Like maybe, upon realizing what he created, he destroyed the key, destroyed the password so that he could not take those billions of dollars, you know, to protect himself from that. There's a chance that Satoshi is a pseudonym for a group of people.
01:33:01 Speaker_01
If that's true, it means a group of people can keep secrets way better than we expected. Which means that conspiracy theories are more likely to be true about anything in general, about UFOs, about JFK or whatever.
01:33:16 Speaker_01
This group of people is Satoshi and they could have hundreds of billions of dollars or tens of billions of dollars but they are choosing not to and they are all keeping the secret. That's amazing and we should regard secrecy more higher than we can.
01:33:29 Speaker_01
So that's the end of the bullet points. I read this one little Bloomberg article and my jaw dropped. I went, oh my god, this is the kind of thinking I aspire to.
01:33:39 Speaker_01
That is some amazing lateral creative, I don't know, what kind of thinking do you call that? But that's what I want to do more of.
01:33:47 Speaker_03
Love it. Yeah, Tyler's incredible. I highly recommend people check him out. That's a really good Tyler example. Cowan, C-O-W-E-N. Definitely recommend people check him out. Also, past podcast guests.
01:33:59 Speaker_01
Yeah, that was a great one. Previously to this, one of my favorite points of his is he said that restaurants are better in places of high income inequality. Why? Because these are places that have both rich customers and low paid staff.
01:34:15 Speaker_01
So somebody can afford to run a great restaurant because there are enough people that will pay because there are rich people around. but there are enough low-income people that we can have a good amount of staff.
01:34:26 Speaker_01
They said that's why the best restaurants are in places of high income inequality. Whoa, that's again a brilliant connection.
01:34:32 Speaker_03
That's interesting. I would also add to that that a lot of folks who want to dedicate themselves to a craft or an art are depending on the industry, but frequently not going to be well-paid for that.
01:34:48 Speaker_03
Let's just call it volitionally poorly paid in some cases.
01:34:55 Speaker_03
I'm thinking of, in this particular case, San Francisco and East Bay, where a lot of restaurants in San Francisco, a lot of restaurants in different places, but as the price of living went up in San Francisco, a lot of the best
01:35:08 Speaker_03
restaurateurs, meaning I should say chefs, a lot of the best chefs, a lot of the best line cooks, a lot of the best massage therapists. A lot of these people could no longer afford to be there, had to move to the East Bay.
01:35:19 Speaker_03
And I would say that led to a decline in the quality of all of the goods I just mentioned and services. So that would also make sense.
01:35:28 Speaker_03
If you want access to the artists, they're not going to be in the most expensive areas typically, unless it's like a Jeff Koons or someone.
01:35:36 Speaker_01
I haven't been to Pittsburgh lately but I heard that that happened with some of the, a lot of the best chefs from New York City went to Pittsburgh and that now Pittsburgh is hotter than you'd expect.
01:35:47 Speaker_03
I can see that. I can totally see it. All right, Tyler, anybody else on the list of people you're learning from or people you're studying?
01:35:54 Speaker_01
Those are my two. That, Tyler, it's because they're specific things.
01:35:57 Speaker_03
I love it. All right, so I think we have one more category. We'll see how many we get to, but I heard a sharp inhale. Where should we go?
01:36:09 Speaker_01
inchword, inchword.com, I-N-C-H-W-O-R-D.com. This is actually a bit of a call out.
01:36:16 Speaker_01
I don't usually do this, but I would like to hear from translators, that if you're a translator, contact me, because I've got a lot of paying work, because I'm really interested in the subject of translations that are always improving.
01:36:34 Speaker_01
Well, not always, at a certain point you call it, maybe you call it a release, But you know, as a writer, the first time you write a sentence is not always the best.
01:36:43 Speaker_01
You improve it the second or third time, and at any given sentence we see in your books, that might be the fourth time you've improved that sentence, maybe over the course of months. There's always room for improvement.
01:36:55 Speaker_01
When somebody makes a translation of one of your books,
01:36:59 Speaker_01
The incentives are a little off now because the translator's incentive, as long as they're not translating the Bible or something, their incentive is mostly just get it done, good enough, get paid.
01:37:11 Speaker_01
The publisher's incentive, the publisher who publishes the translation, their incentive is hire a translator that will make a good enough translation for a low enough price that we can get this out in the market now and make a profit selling it.
01:37:26 Speaker_01
But my incentive as the writer that sweated over these words for years and really crafted it almost like song lyrics, Like, I have a different incentive.
01:37:37 Speaker_01
If I'm going to have a translation of this book out in the world, I want it to be great and really, really great, which means my incentive is to work closely with the translator to make sure that what they're doing is the best it can be and that it's communicating what I intended.
01:37:54 Speaker_03
How do you do that in a language you don't speak?
01:37:57 Speaker_01
I don't know. That's my question. So this is the, I don't have the answer, but I'm fascinated with the problem. So, so far, the best idea is what I'm putting at inchword.com, which is this idea of incremental improvement.
01:38:10 Speaker_03
Oh, so this is your website.
01:38:12 Speaker_01
Yeah, I made it.
01:38:13 Speaker_03
It's my little passion.
01:38:16 Speaker_01
So it's this idea where once I call up something done, whether it's an article or a book, I put every sentence into its own entry in the database. And then I pass it to a computer that does the first round of a bad translation.
01:38:29 Speaker_01
So now we have a starting point. So now if you're the first translator to come through and translate the automatic translation into your language, Let's say that's a low bar, that's low-hanging fruit, so let's say that will pay 50 cents per sentence.
01:38:44 Speaker_01
But now, if you've done one round of improvements over the computer translation, and now somebody else comes through and says, hmm, I can improve that further, that sentence, not the whole thing, that sentence, I can improve that one.
01:38:56 Speaker_01
Now that'll pay like a dollar per sentence if it's an improved. And now say two different people have improved it twice, and now a third person looks at that and says, hmm, I'd know how to improve that better.
01:39:07 Speaker_01
Okay, well now you can make, say, $2 per sentence to improve it better. The stakes are getting higher for improving it. There are incentives now to make it as good as can be. How do you know if it's been improved?
01:39:20 Speaker_01
So yes, how do we know it's a better translation? So then we have readers who, reviewers, readers, whatever you want to call them, that are paid a little something to just read through and judge.
01:39:32 Speaker_01
And at any given sentence where an improvement has been made, both sentences are shown in random order and they have to vote for which one they feel is the better sentence.
01:39:42 Speaker_01
in that case, when a majority votes that that sentence is better than its chosen, and that's when the translator gets paid. So a translator can't get money just for coming in and spewing crap.
01:39:52 Speaker_01
They only get paid when the readers believe that that was a better translation.
01:39:55 Speaker_01
Anyway, I'm not saying this is the final answer, but I think it's a fascinating problem that I'm willing to spend money on because I'm incentivized to have the best translation of my works out there. That's it.
01:40:07 Speaker_03
If they are a good translator, how do you incentivize them to go first, knowing that someone might come along and make substantially more money by doing the fourth or fifth iteration? Or is that not a problem?
01:40:22 Speaker_01
I don't know. So you just asked a great question. Thank you.
01:40:28 Speaker_03
You're welcome.
01:40:29 Speaker_01
That question is kind of the answer. That's a really good thing to ask. I don't know. I mean, I know nothing about this. I'm not fluent in any other language. But you've probably seen this effect.
01:40:39 Speaker_01
Whenever you start to learn another language, doesn't it make you look at your English more closely? Oh, 100%.
01:40:46 Speaker_03
That's part of the fun. It makes you look at the whole world differently depending on how divergent the language is from your native language, in this case English for us. Oh, yeah. So, so, so interesting.
01:40:59 Speaker_03
I was just trying to help somebody with their approach to Japanese yesterday. And my first thought was, if you have like three or four weeks, maybe you go to South Korea first and try to pick up Korean because the reading is so much easier.
01:41:16 Speaker_03
So perhaps you could learn the basics of Korean, which isn't identical to Japanese, but the grammar is very, very, very, very similar.
01:41:26 Speaker_03
And then you go back to Japan with your newfound knowledge of the grammar without the handicap that slows you down of having to learn three writing systems – hiragana, katagana, and kanji.
01:41:38 Speaker_03
And I don't know if that's a good approach, but it was the first time it had occurred to me, and I was like, huh, I wonder if that actually would be helpful, or, kind of like Python and Ruby, would it just be confusing as fuck?
01:41:51 Speaker_03
Because now you're like, learn Portuguese and Spanish at the same time, and you just get scrambled. It's possible that it would be the latter.
01:41:59 Speaker_01
Okay, do you remember Benny Lewis? Fluent in three months, Benny Lewis?
01:42:03 Speaker_03
Sure. Yeah, the Irish polyglot, I think, was the nickname.
01:42:08 Speaker_01
Yeah. Benny recommends Esperanto for that same thing that you just said. He said because objectively Esperanto is the easiest language to learn, that's why it was invented in 1888 by Zamenhof to be easy to learn.
01:42:24 Speaker_01
Therefore, if you've never spoken a second language before, go learn some Esperanto first. Get used to having a conversation that's not in your native tongue, and then go learn your target language.
01:42:35 Speaker_03
I wonder if that's too much of a lift. Have you done it?
01:42:38 Speaker_01
Well, I will report I did it. I became fluent in Esperanto about six years ago, on Benny's advice, and I regret it.
01:42:52 Speaker_03
It's like less useful than Klingon, at least in communicating with others, right?
01:42:57 Speaker_01
Actually, I think Esperanto is hippie Klingon. I went to the annual Esperanto conference in Seoul, Korea, and it was a bunch of like 60 year olds in tie dyes singing about world peace, kind of like, you know, Woodstock 1969 revisited.
01:43:17 Speaker_01
They're all singing like, oh, the world would have perfect harmony if we all just followed the ways of Zamenhof and had the one world language.
01:43:23 Speaker_01
And even though I had spent six months learning this language, I got to the event and I went, I don't like you people. I stopped on that day. I was like, I don't want to speak this language anymore. Okay. So talk about like, you know, the Ruby Python.
01:43:42 Speaker_01
I never learned any Spanish my whole life. Even though I grew up in America, I just thought now Spanish is too similar to English. If I'm going to learn another language, I want it to be Chinese or Arabic or something very different.
01:43:53 Speaker_01
So I never learned any Spanish, but just two months ago, I went to South America for my first time. And so I spent like a month learning Pimsleur basic Spanish. And Tim was like, oh my God, this is a great language. This is amazing. This is fascinating.
01:44:10 Speaker_03
It is.
01:44:10 Speaker_01
And also it is so easy that I went, damn it, Benny, shouldn't have learned Esperanto for six months. I should have learned Spanish.
01:44:19 Speaker_00
It's just as easy.
01:44:21 Speaker_01
And it would have been more useful. Anyway, I like that you brought up the Korean thing.
01:44:25 Speaker_01
I think it is proven to be a good technique to do the easier language first to help you disconnect, or like you say, to help you understand the grammar, and then do the difficult one.
01:44:35 Speaker_01
But it does help, I guess, if it's Korean or a language that people actually use.
01:44:42 Speaker_03
Yeah, Spanish is a great language for people who are curious about Korean and just how brilliantly the writing system is designed. It's a point of national pride, and it is not something that was out of the box.
01:44:58 Speaker_03
It was something that was developed long after Korea had first adopted Chinese writing, much like the Japanese.
01:45:08 Speaker_03
There is a cartoon online, and it is something like How to Learn to Read Korean in 15 Minutes or How to Read Korean in 15 Minutes, and it's a comic book. You can find it
01:45:19 Speaker_03
And literally, it might not be 15 minutes, but within two or three hours, you can learn Korean well enough that you can read anything in Korean.
01:45:26 Speaker_03
You will not understand a damn thing that you're reading, but you will be able to sound out phonetically roughly what it is, which is great fun. And well enough that if you're
01:45:40 Speaker_03
as I was a few weeks ago in an Uber, and you see the Uber app is set to Korean, you could say, you know, thank you, or have a nice day, or how are you in Korean, and blow that in the back. How did you know?
01:45:53 Speaker_03
And you'd be like, well, it's Korean on the app. Oh my God. If you want some cheap applause that'll make somebody's day, that's an easy way to go.
01:46:00 Speaker_00
You know, it's funny, it fits right in. You remember your whole, like, hey, here's how to learn how to spin a pen with your fingers.
01:46:06 Speaker_01
Like, here's some things you can learn in 15 minutes. Like the old, like, Tim Ferriss 1.0, South by Southwest.
01:46:12 Speaker_03
Yeah, exactly.
01:46:14 Speaker_01
Speak Korean in 15 minutes.
01:46:16 Speaker_03
Also, courtesy of Japan, for sure. This is what all the kids used to do in class, and now I have something that will endlessly distract and annoy everyone who sees it from an airplane or something. Thanks, Japan. All right. What else do you have?
01:46:33 Speaker_03
Derek, anything else in that top hat?
01:46:35 Speaker_01
I'll just say this quickly. I love this little phrase. I realized when I was like digging into my incentives why I do things. I travel to inhabit philosophies. You can hear about life in Brazil or life in Japan.
01:46:49 Speaker_01
But it's a different thing to be there in it. But I think there's some philosophies, whether it's Stoicism or Hedonism, that we can just do from a chair by just sitting and changing our thought process.
01:47:02 Speaker_01
But, you know, Brazilianism, Japanism, Arabianism, I don't know, Parisianism, these are kind of like philosophies. The way that people live in places are kind of living philosophies that I want to experience
01:47:18 Speaker_01
what it's like because I want to think that way.
01:47:20 Speaker_01
So I would really like to go there, live as close as I can to being like a local, learn the language, live that life according to that way, to inhabit, embody this way of living in order to feel the actual physical results, the actions of living that philosophy.
01:47:40 Speaker_01
And I thought, this is actually the reason I travel. not to look at things or take pictures or post them to impress people. I travel to inhabit philosophies. CB.
01:47:51 Speaker_03
I love that. What are you finding of the philosophy? What is the philosophy of the UAE or Dubai?
01:47:59 Speaker_03
Recognizing that the cultures are very different depending if they're by the hills or the water or the desert, but how would you try to express that philosophy?
01:48:09 Speaker_01
Easy? Generosity. That's the thing when I said that Sheikh Zayed, who founded it, Bedouin culture underneath it, and then, say, Emirati culture or Arabian-Arab culture, generosity is by far the number one.
01:48:26 Speaker_01
If you read this book, Arabian Sands, by Fetchadjir, he has all these stories of when he'd be out in the desert on the camels with his little crew of six guys, And they only have like this much food left, like nothing.
01:48:39 Speaker_01
And their tummies are grumbling and they're starving. It's funny that I just said tummies, that was cute.
01:48:44 Speaker_04
I just noted that for myself.
01:48:47 Speaker_01
When's my bedtime story, dad? And also, my little rats here, I love kissing their little tummies. Anyway, okay, so. But then if somebody would approach them, you know, like, oh, hello, my friend, whatever.
01:48:59 Speaker_01
He said, as soon as somebody approaches, that's it. We're not going to eat today because this is the way. You give whatever you've got. So anybody, a stranger approaches, you say, hello, friend, come sit with us here. No, have some soup. Don't worry.
01:49:12 Speaker_01
We're not hungry. We've eaten enough. This is for you now. Come sit with us. When I went to Dubai that first time, somebody I had met once from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, we met briefly in Oxford. He was the only person I knew that lived in the region.
01:49:27 Speaker_01
So I emailed him saying, hey, man, I'm going to Dubai for my first time. Are you going to be around? And he said, my friend, he said, cancel your hotel reservation.
01:49:35 Speaker_01
He said, you're going to stay at my home in the Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world. You're going to stay. I have an apartment in the Burj Khalifa. Stay at my home. You're my guest. I said, wow, that would be great.
01:49:45 Speaker_01
I said, it'll be so good to see you again. And he said, no, no, I won't be there. He said, I live in Riyadh, but my uncle will get you from the airport and just give you the keys. My home is your home. Stay as long as you want. So I did.
01:49:54 Speaker_01
I stayed in the Burj Khalifa a few days. This generosity runs so deep. It's hospitality. It's generosity. And you understand why. that you're in the harsh environment of the desert. Everybody's living a harsh life.
01:50:07 Speaker_01
When you meet somebody that's traveling and passing, it's like, oh, come in, come in here, have some, don't even need to tell us your name or who you are, your tribe or nothing.
01:50:15 Speaker_01
Just come in, my guest, please have whatever you want, my food, take a bed, stay as long as you want. And that's so deep in the culture that yes, I would like to inhabit that philosophy.
01:50:30 Speaker_01
Now that I've been on the receiving end of that hospitality, part of me kind of wants to have a home near the Dubai airport and make that my main home base.
01:50:41 Speaker_01
And for whenever I'm not there and I'm traveling, to just open it up for any of my friends in the world. Like, please, you're coming through, please stay at my home. Like, I want to return that generosity.
01:50:49 Speaker_04
Is it going to be a six by eight foot cube?
01:50:53 Speaker_01
Touche.
01:50:54 Speaker_04
Come, my home. Everything I have is yours. Wait, Derek. Quick text, where's the bathroom? Oh no, there's no bathroom.
01:51:01 Speaker_00
Oh no, my friend. Question whether you truly need it or not. You will find out.
01:51:10 Speaker_04
Let me know where you think the sink should be. I'll be a bad Emirati.
01:51:14 Speaker_00
I'll be fired.
01:51:19 Speaker_03
How is understanding that Dubai is an international city for a lot of different reasons, you could get by on English almost certainly, how is your Arabic coming? Have you started tackling that?
01:51:32 Speaker_01
I haven't spent more time in Dubai yet. I'm planning on going back very soon and getting to know more people and spending more time there and considering it as a place I really might want to live because I've just noticed
01:51:42 Speaker_01
Throughout my life, I grew up in a suburb of Chicago, then I moved to downtown Boston, then I moved to New York City in the middle of it, and it was like, oh yes, this multiculturalism, this feels more representative of the real world to me.
01:51:57 Speaker_01
Then when I went back to my hometown in Hinsdale, Illinois, it's like, everybody's white, this is weird. You know, it's like, I like places that are multicultural because it feels like I'm more in the real world, right?
01:52:10 Speaker_01
So I thought New York, like I've also lived in London, I moved to Singapore, I lived in Singapore for years. I thought I had been in the most multicultural places in the world. No.
01:52:19 Speaker_01
I looked up statistically, New York, London, Singapore, they're all about 35 or so, 30 to 35 percent foreign-born population. Dubai is like 90 plus percent foreign-born population. Everybody is from everywhere.
01:52:34 Speaker_01
And so when I got there, it was like anthropology jackpot.
01:52:38 Speaker_00
I was like, ah, this is amazing. Everybody's from everywhere.
01:52:41 Speaker_01
I could get into any taxi driver, you know, anybody. You can just ask anybody you see, where are you from? And you're going to get a different answer all the time. I'm from Cameroon. What are you doing here? I love languages.
01:52:52 Speaker_01
I said, okay, what does that mean? He said, well, I love languages. I thought, where can I get paid to learn languages? I said, I'll move to Dubai. I'll drive a taxi and I can get paid to learn languages. I said, did it work?
01:53:03 Speaker_01
He said, my friend, I can speak eight languages now. I've been here 18 months. I can converse with people in eight languages. He said, everybody that gets into my taxi I just talk with people all day long. He said, I speak Urdu, Hindi, Arabic.
01:53:17 Speaker_01
I think he grew up with French. He said, I'm speaking to you in English. He said, I couldn't speak English 18 months ago. Now look at me. And he said, I'm getting paid to learn languages. This is amazing. And I turned to somebody else.
01:53:27 Speaker_01
I'm like, where are you from? She's like, I'm from Nairobi.
01:53:30 Speaker_01
she had the most beautiful accent and we got into a long conversation about Nairobi and I just thought this is what I want like just by being in Dubai the whole world comes through there and you meet so many people from all over the place oh god this is what a beautiful place anyway.
01:53:44 Speaker_03
It's like living in the cantina in Star Wars that's fun.
01:53:48 Speaker_01
You said it first!" That's what I usually say. It's like, Dubai is the bar in Star Wars. It's the cantina.
01:53:55 Speaker_01
Everybody comes from all over the world to this spot to kind of do their shady dealings, but oh my god, if you're an amateur anthropologist like me, it's heaven.
01:54:04 Speaker_03
Well, I'm excited that you're excited, man. It's fun to see. And I hope to break some bread in person in the not too distant future. What fun. Always fun to hang, man. Always great fun.
01:54:14 Speaker_03
Is there anything that you would like to say, anything you'd like to point people to, mention, anything at all before we pop off and land the plane?
01:54:26 Speaker_01
These guys have been sleeping by my feet the whole time we've been talking.
01:54:30 Speaker_03
Oh, adorable.
01:54:31 Speaker_01
They're really good little pets. If you don't wash your hands after you cook, then you just let them lick your fingers. Oh, he's licking me right now. It's really sweet the way they lick. They never, ever, ever bite. They're very gentle.
01:54:44 Speaker_03
Unlike my hamsters I had when I was a kid. They were biters.
01:54:47 Speaker_01
Yes! Yeah, same. I had gerbils. They were nasty. Anyway, I don't know. Well, you know, my usual call out. I really enjoy the people that I've met through your podcast. So, hey, anybody listened to this all the way through? I truly enjoy my email inbox.
01:55:02 Speaker_01
I spend about 90 minutes a day just answering emails and I really like it. So send me an email, say hello, introduce yourself, especially if you're a translator or if you live in Dubai or you found anything here fascinating.
01:55:14 Speaker_03
Do you want them to do the detective work of finding the email address? Is that the hurdle?
01:55:18 Speaker_01
Oh, sorry. Go to my website. Just go to S-I-V-E dot R-S. There's a big contact me here link.
01:55:24 Speaker_03
S-I-V-E dot R-S. That's a pretty low hurdle. If they can't clear that, then they have other problems. All right, man. Well, thanks for taking the time, as always. Really appreciate it.
01:55:38 Speaker_01
Sorry I missed you in England.
01:55:41 Speaker_03
Yeah, next time. We'll both get our knees repaired and then we'll meet up for another walk and talk.
01:55:47 Speaker_01
I might ask you some tips on meniscus stuff.
01:55:50 Speaker_03
Oh boy. Yeah, we'll talk about the knee repair. For everybody listening, go to Tim.blogs.com slash podcast.
01:55:56 Speaker_03
I'll link to everything we talked about, all the books, City of Gold, China's Worldview, all of these various things, the figures and places, musicians and so on.
01:56:07 Speaker_01
Oh, and I should say that Useful Not True is only through my website. It's not, fuck Amazon, it's not on Amazon. I put it on my website only. So don't go to Amazon and look for it and email me and ask why it's not there, because I don't like them.
01:56:18 Speaker_01
So go to Sivers.com.
01:56:22 Speaker_03
Go to Sivers.com or S-I-V-E dot R-S. I guess those go to the same place. And you can find all things about Derek. And until next time, be a bit kinder than is necessary, not just to others, but also to yourself. And thanks for tuning in.
01:56:39 Speaker_03
Hey guys, this is Tim again. Just one more thing before you take off, and that is Five Bullet Friday. Would you enjoy getting a short email from me every Friday that provides a little fun before the weekend?
01:56:50 Speaker_03
Between one and a half and two million people subscribe to my free newsletter, my super short newsletter called Five Bullet Friday. Easy to sign up, easy to cancel. It is basically a half page
01:57:01 Speaker_03
that I send out every Friday to share the coolest things I've found or discovered or have started exploring over that week. It's kind of like my diary of cool things.
01:57:09 Speaker_03
It often includes articles I'm reading, books I'm reading, albums perhaps, gadgets, gizmos, all sorts of tech tricks and so on that get sent to me by my friends, including a lot of podcast guests.
01:57:21 Speaker_03
And these strange, esoteric things end up in my field, and then I test them, and then I share them with you. So, if that sounds fun, again, it's very short, a little tiny bite of goodness before you head off for the weekend, something to think about.
01:57:36 Speaker_03
If you'd like to try it out, just go to tim.blog slash friday, type that into your browser, tim.blog slash friday, drop in your email, and you'll get the very next one. Thanks for listening.
01:57:47 Speaker_03
Way back in the day, in 2010, I published a book called The 4-Hour Body, which I probably started writing in 2008. And in that book, I recommended many, many, many things. First generation continuous glucose monitor.
01:58:04 Speaker_03
and cold exposure and all sorts of things that have been tested by people from NASA and all over the place. And one thing in that book was athletic greens. I did not get paid to include it. I was using it.
01:58:17 Speaker_03
That's how long I've been using what is now known as AG1. AG1 is my all-in-one nutritional insurance, and I just packed up, for instance, to go off the grid for a while.
01:58:28 Speaker_03
And the last thing I left out on my countertop to remember to take, I'm not making this up, I'm looking right in front of me, is travel packets of AG1.
01:58:38 Speaker_03
So rather than taking multiple pills or products to cover your mental clarity, gut health, immune health, energy, and so on, you can support these areas through one daily scoop of AG1, which tastes great even with water.
01:58:49 Speaker_03
I always just have it with water. I usually take it first thing in the morning, and it takes me less than two minutes in total. Honestly, it takes me less than a minute. I just put it in a shaker bottle, shake it up, and I'm done.
01:58:59 Speaker_03
AG-1 bolsters my digestion and nutrient absorption by including ingredients optimized to support a healthy gut in every scoop. AG-1 in single-serve travel packs, which I mentioned earlier, also makes for the perfect travel companion.
01:59:13 Speaker_03
I'll actually be going totally off the grid, but these things are
01:59:23 Speaker_03
After consuming this product for more than a decade, I chose to invest in AG1 in 2021 as I trust their no-compromise approach to ingredient sourcing and appreciate their focus on continuously improving one formula.
01:59:34 Speaker_03
They go above and beyond by testing for 950 or so contaminants and impurities compared to the industry standard of 10. AG1 is also tested for heavy metals and 500 various pesticides and herbicides. I've started paying a lot of attention to pesticides.
01:59:50 Speaker_03
That's a story for another time. To make sure you're consuming only the good stuff. AG1 is also NSF certified for sport. That means if you're an athlete, you can take it. The certification process is exhaustive.
02:00:02 Speaker_03
and involves the testing and verification of each ingredient and every finished batch of AG1. So they take testing very seriously. There's no better time than today to start a new healthy habit. And this is an easy one.
02:00:15 Speaker_03
Wake up, water in the shaker bottle, AG1, boom.
02:00:19 Speaker_03
And right now, every week of November, AG1 will be running a special Black Friday offer for a free gift with your first subscription, which is in addition to the welcome kit with five AG1 travel packs and a bottle of vitamin B3 plus K2.
02:00:32 Speaker_03
So make sure to check out drinkag1.com slash tim to see what gift you can get this week. That's drinkag1.com slash tim to start your holiday season off on a healthier note while supplies last.
02:00:46 Speaker_03
I've been fascinated by the microbiome and probiotics, as well as prebiotics, for decades, but products never quite live up to the hype. I've tried so many dozens and there are a host of problems.
02:01:01 Speaker_03
Now, things are starting to change, and that includes this episode's sponsor, Seed's DS01 Daily Symbiotic.
02:01:08 Speaker_03
Now it turns out that this product, Seeds DS01, was recommended to me many months ago by a PhD microbiologist, so I started using it well before their team ever reached out to me about sponsorship.
02:01:20 Speaker_03
Which is kind of ideal, because I used it unbitten, so to speak, came in fresh. Since then, it has become a daily staple and one of the few supplements I travel with. I have it in a suitcase literally about 10 feet from me right now. It goes with me.
02:01:35 Speaker_03
I've always been very skeptical of most probiotics due to the lack of science behind them and the fact that many do not survive digestion to begin with. Many of them are shipped Dead. D-O-A.
02:01:46 Speaker_03
But after incorporating two capsules of Seed's D-S-O-1 into my morning routine, I have noticed improved digestion and improved overall health. Seem to be a bunch of different cascading effects.
02:01:56 Speaker_03
Based on some reports, I'm hoping it will also have an effect on my lipid profile, but that is definitely TBD. So why is Seed's D-S-O-1 so effective? What makes it different?
02:02:06 Speaker_03
For one, it is a 2-in-1 probiotic and prebiotic formulated with 24 clinically and scientifically studied strains that have systemic benefits in and beyond the gut.
02:02:16 Speaker_03
That's all well and good, but if the probiotic strains don't make it to the right place, in other words, your colon, they're not as effective.
02:02:22 Speaker_03
So Seed developed a proprietary capsule-in-capsule delivery system that survives digestion and delivers a precision release of the live and viable probiotics to the colon, which is exactly where you want them to go to do the work.
02:02:35 Speaker_03
I've been impressed with Seed's dedication to science-backed engineering, with completed gold standard trials that have been subjected to peer review and published in leading scientific journals, a standard you very rarely see from companies who develop supplements.
02:02:48 Speaker_03
If you've ever thought about probiotics, but haven't known where to start, this is my current vote for great gut health. You can start here. It costs less than $2 a day. That is the DSO1. And now you can get 25% off your first month with code 25TIM.
02:03:02 Speaker_03
And that is 25% off of your first month of Seed's DSO1 at seed.com slash TIM using code 25TIM, all put together. That's seed.com slash TIM. And if you forget it, you will see the coupon code on that page. One more time, seed.com slash Tim, code 2510.