"The Modern World Is In Chaos" - Win The Game Of Life & Outsmart Everybody Else | Robert Greene

2024 ж. 15 Мам.
251 683 Рет қаралды

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In today’s episode of Impact Theory, Dr. Robert Greene is sharing his insights into the interplay between systemic disillusionment, personal fulfillment, and the complex dynamics of human emotions.
Dr. Greene, an astute observer of the human condition, is a figure deeply attuned to the complexities of the mind. Recognized for his unconventional thoughts on human aimlessness, he articulates a perspective that our freedom of choice paradoxically fuels a sense of emptiness - an emptiness that must be filled.
This episode is a deep dive into how pursuing fulfillment through developing valuable skills leads to not just serving oneself but also serving others.
We’re covering:
- Economic and demographic challenges faced by the younger generation
- Embracing life experiences as learning opportunities
- Overcoming cynicism and nihilism
- The beauty of embracing the excitement and enchantment of life
- The power of self-reflection
- Shifting focus from external validation to intrinsic passion
- Dealing with insecurities and emotions for a better understanding of others
- Facing and taking a proactive approach to difficult circumstances
- Maintaining a positive mindset amidst adversity
- The productivity of channeling competitive energy
- The challenge and benefits of introspection and meditation
- Redefining masculinity in the modern world
- The effects of societal influences on male confidence
- Understanding the difference in seduction approaches between genders
- The integral role of negative capability in creativity and breakthroughs
- Recognizing the right moments for change and navigating emotions wisely
- Identifying personal interests and superpowers for motivation
- Evaluating and correcting life paths to align with true passions
- Making career transitions aligned with initial excitements and skills
We also touch on the power of belief and attitude, the importance of facing challenges proactively, and the seductive power of being assertively oneself.
Get ready to redefine masculinity, tackle societal change, and discover the intrinsic power of the individualistic pursuit of life tasks. Today's episode will revolutionize the way we think about our place in an ever-changing world and how we turn adversity into a driving force for fulfillment.
Chapter Markers:
[0:00] Have energy & motivation with purpose
[34:30] The challenges & price of success
[1:17:21] Why life is boring…
[1:49:15] Your desire is your destiny
[2:25:34] Seek power & master it
[3:06:53] What women desire
Powerful Insights From Dr. Robert Greene:
“...you choose things that aren’t right for you, and when you choose things that aren’t right for you, you’re not engaged emotionally and when you’re not engaged emotionally you get bored…”
“The reason you can’t deal with change or you’re not looking at yourself is you have emotional blocks. You’re full of fear.”
“What do you think social media is? It’s an engine of envy. It’s making you continually aware of what other people have and what you don’t have.”
“Everything you do, everything you breathe in is a desire for power.”
“Envy is a huge motivator of people’s behavior now. So the drive to pull other people down is really truly motivated by feelings of envy and inferiority that other people are better than you are.”
“They wanted that fulfillment. And I don't care if they're born poor and they're poverty or they're homeless, they still have that need and they have that capacity to become a master in what they do.”
“What makes you miserable is your self-absorption in many ways.”
“The worst form of therapy is to sit there and talk about your problems. The best form of therapy is to get outside of yourself.”
“Craftsmanship is a high form of intellect in my viewpoint.”
“I just want to get men out of the mode because we are so goddamn analytical that it’s such a problem that reading a book, [...] get the f*ck outta there and pay attention to the person.”
Follow Dr. Robert Greene:
Website: powerseductionandwar.com/
Instagram: / robertgreeneofficial
Twitter: / robertgreene
Follow Me, Tom Bilyeu:
Website: impacttheoryuniversity.com/
X: / tombilyeu
Instagram: / tombilyeu
If you want to dive deeper into my content, search through every episode, find specific topics I've covered, and ask me questions. Go to my Dexa page: dexa.ai/tombilyeu
Themes: Mindset, Finance, World Affairs, Health & Productivity, Future & Tech, Simulation Theory & Physics, Dating & Relationships

Пікірлер
  • WARNING: I will never ask for your contact info in the comments section, that is someone impersonating me!

    @TomBilyeu@TomBilyeuАй бұрын
    • I am so glad that you are taking action against the impersonators!! ❤ I even tried to warn you about it.

      @jeleceroyail6482@jeleceroyail6482Ай бұрын
    • The vocabulary you used around your dating interactions was interesting. Have you had your ego death and found humanity yet?

      @HalfJapMarine@HalfJapMarineАй бұрын
    • Why did this remind me of runescape?

      @oxydoxxo@oxydoxxoАй бұрын
    • Hi. I live in Russia. I really like your channel, but Russia does not understand what you are talking about on the channel. Can I translate your videos and post them on the KZhead channel. So that many people who speak Russian can become a little more human than they are now?

      @NeoTrader_FZ1@NeoTrader_FZ1Ай бұрын
    • The insight that you are missing is humanity. Emotional awareness is something you only think you are tapped into. It goes way deeper. Your lack of empathy is the telltale sign. This isn't "cancel culture". It is an acknowledgment of shame based upbringings and social conditioning. Feeling like you are superior. As a deconstructed Christian Nationalist. Didn't take you for a conservative till you had Jordan Peterson on.

      @HalfJapMarine@HalfJapMarineАй бұрын
  • "The most horrible thing about excuses is that they are valid." What an impactful statement! Love it.

    @genericbotface@genericbotfaceАй бұрын
    • Fuck yeah that really hit home for me

      @VideoVerdict@VideoVerdict29 күн бұрын
  • Green has a pure intellectual gift. With him it’s always “listen and learn”. Pure joy.

    @notheotherklaus@notheotherklausАй бұрын
  • I’m in my 50s quit my job , quit drinking, and tolerating toxic people and situations and now I create and live off my land and meditate

    @rustyhardesty9630@rustyhardesty9630Ай бұрын
    • Don’t get sick.

      @janellesamuels3385@janellesamuels338521 күн бұрын
    • Wow! That’s great! Congrats

      @psmithmore@psmithmore19 күн бұрын
    • @@janellesamuels3385we have God’s herbs to heal us!

      @psmithmore@psmithmore19 күн бұрын
    • You are where I want to be, sir.

      @tomlocke3674@tomlocke367418 күн бұрын
    • Brilliant

      @katsinthecradle89@katsinthecradle894 күн бұрын
  • I'm 40, I don't have any answers, my course correction so far has been dropping alcohol and hitting the gym 🤷‍♂️

    @SCHD-DGRO24@SCHD-DGRO24Ай бұрын
    • 576 days no Alcohol Gym always, 46 You’re doing great keep up your effort ✊

      @RealziesCuts@RealziesCutsАй бұрын
    • Are we the same person?

      @izaka268@izaka268Ай бұрын
    • In Qur’an” And I (Allah) created not the jinns and humans except they should worship Me (Alone)” . If you lose your purpose in life, that's what will happen to you.

      @aalmarshad@aalmarshadАй бұрын
    • In Qur’an” And I (Allah) created not the jinns and humans except they should worship Me (Alone)” . If you lose your purpose in life, that's what will happen to you.

      @aalmarshad@aalmarshadАй бұрын
    • ​@aalmarshad What exactly does that even mean? If you don't do what, what will happen to you? Most people don't know their purpose in life, so what will happen?

      @calista1280@calista1280Ай бұрын
  • This guy has recovered from a stroke. What a great comeback 👏👏👏

    @ebert8756@ebert8756Ай бұрын
    • He’s amazing because he makes sense

      @so_ed@so_ed8 күн бұрын
    • I didn't realize how incredibly he is recovering. 👏👏👏

      @xxmsp91@xxmsp917 күн бұрын
  • Yes, LOOKING for meaning in your life is pointless, instead CREATE meaning in your life.

    @AnonymousAccount514@AnonymousAccount514Ай бұрын
    • The gift of life is that life is meaningless. Put another way, the meaning of life is to give life meaning. Create meaning in your life. the meaninglessness is actually a positive as we can get out of it whatever we put into it. Most people are simple THAT unconscious of what they put into ___ and then don't like what they get or judge it. (rather than be the change they wish to see in the world)

      @govcorpwatch@govcorpwatchАй бұрын
  • Robert Greene is a gift to humanity.

    @lemohthepoet@lemohthepoet29 күн бұрын
  • Of course we can change our life’s path in our 50’s and beyond! Robert seems so adamant that we are so set it our ways but I believe the opposite is true and we can have a growth mindset at any age 💪

    @karenking5910@karenking591029 күн бұрын
    • You are both correct if that's what you believe because your beliefs become your reality.

      @mistergarrett8175@mistergarrett817520 күн бұрын
    • He didn't say you couldn't, he said it is difficult and most people don't. I've noticed most people lose mental flexibility from age 40 onwards.. It takes effort to fight this & few do it.

      @elipotter369@elipotter3692 күн бұрын
  • I agree with Robert 100% that our pain is our greatest teacher.

    @hollytaylor9421@hollytaylor9421Ай бұрын
  • Honestly I think no matter how old you are if you haven’t found your purpose you have two choices: you either give up OR you keep changing course, trying new things until you find satisfaction or die trying.

    @citizengab@citizengabАй бұрын
    • Excellently written! Either way you win....if you didn't find the purpose, you enjoyed the trip. Much like the Buddhist thought: "The goal is the path".

      @pedroantoniodacruzferreira1487@pedroantoniodacruzferreira1487Күн бұрын
  • Im a vit flabbergasted at Robert greenes assessment of those over 40, especially 50. There's tons of us, even in our 60's, exploring ways to do what we always wanted to. I'm around lots of people reinventing themselves at an older age. It's amazing. Find that earlier though

    @peachshoes3793@peachshoes3793Ай бұрын
    • He's probably speaking from stats ❤

      @alixhoward592@alixhoward592Ай бұрын
    • Yes, but it’s the exception not the rule

      @CC88811@CC8881129 күн бұрын
    • I was thinking tge sane thing!! 🤔 Perhaps thats a plug at his target market???

      @astrocat88@astrocat8821 күн бұрын
    • You guys are an exception. Like be proud as fck about that. Most, meaning 90% + do not change much AT ALL past 45

      @jakehouser1975@jakehouser197517 күн бұрын
    • ​@@jakehouser1975👏e👏xa👏ctly👏

      @sliski_rysiu_bejbi@sliski_rysiu_bejbi16 күн бұрын
  • I made a course correction when I was 54. Massive change. I would think it would be easier for someone who is older if they can get by their fear of failure and get out of their comfort zone and drop the excuses.

    @Goodbuyhouse@GoodbuyhouseАй бұрын
    • I’m going through the same thing at age 59… What was your big change?

      @carolkonyha1586@carolkonyha1586Ай бұрын
    • Agreed. I found Robert’s take goes against others like Napoleon Hill and how it gets easier in your 40s and 50s due to sexual energy becomes more focused on accomplishments.

      @leejaylisemby@leejaylisembyАй бұрын
    • I think he meant it’s nearly impossible to become a billionaire type of success. There’s no way he meant you cant change your life. At least I hope not anyway.

      @ed1658@ed1658Ай бұрын
    • @@leejaylisembygreat point and actually very true

      @ideaswithandrew@ideaswithandrew18 күн бұрын
    • i’ve coursed corrected at 51- it’s harder to sustain the same focus and energy AND you’re more hesitant to taking financial risks because retirement is growing closer and closer. BUT here I am I and wouldn’t have it any other way.

      @melaniemiller1000@melaniemiller100010 күн бұрын
  • My whole family reads Robert’s books and talk about it. Our emotional intelligence went into the next level.

    @ianoctober6625@ianoctober6625Ай бұрын
  • I'm 62 and am wiping the slate clean and starting my life completely over. I'm moving a thousand miles from the country to a city, to a different climate, without a place to live or a job, and to what I hope is better life. I'm doing this all alone, and I still don't know what I want to be when I grow up, but I refuse to accept the lonely just surviving life that I have had. So don't say it's impossible over 50! That was a very cruel thing to say, because a lot of people have dreams of "someday" that were just stomped on. People can reinvent themselves at any age. And Tom, you were right on the money about what makes your wife feel loved. More guys need to learn this, that a woman wants to feel that she is the most important thing in his life. We can forgive a lot of other things if that's true.

    @debbier4319@debbier431922 күн бұрын
    • Debbie, I did similar at 60ys sold up everything, left with one suitcase, from Sydney to London, no job, a place to stay short term and despite all the nay says 'I knew deep inside it would work out' and it did. I loved having minimal stuff for a while, no TV, I felt so free. Things worked out so well, I am living a life I love in a magic part of London and it all, just fell into place. Go for it.

      @katsinthecradle89@katsinthecradle894 күн бұрын
    • He took that comment back & said it was very difficult. In other words, few do it. I noticed at age 40 people losing mental flexibility & most going with it. I chose to actively combat falling in to the ease of inflexibility, but most don't. That's what he has observed.

      @elipotter369@elipotter3692 күн бұрын
  • I feel crushed at 55 having numbed myself from childhood trauma for 45 years to hear that it’s nearly impossible to find my purpose, Oh man! Really? I bought Mastery & another one of your books and now feel is it worth it to read, or am I too late? Am I doomed to be a failure because I’m over 50! I feel I have something to give and love life, feel like I’m living for the first time since I quit what I once numbed myself from, I’m going to read your books and have faith in knowing I have the inner power to live life to the fullest and have so much to give! I hope you are wrong about it being impossible. I love listening to you, very inspiring other than that I’m feeling old, ❤ Tom Great show I’m glad I found you! Cheers

    @delilah006@delilah006Ай бұрын
    • Listen to the message. Do you feel it inside or not? If you do, let it guide you. Forget all that bullshit about age. You do you

      @Gumbo_Calm@Gumbo_CalmАй бұрын
    • Nah , he is only one window on the wall, loads of other perspectives. I became a teacher at 39 and still doing it 12 years later. You do'nt have to be successful to be happy. Meaning and productivity can come from hobbies, and doing hobbies is better than work in my book.

      @76bish@76bishАй бұрын
    • He clarified and said he doesn’t think that change after a certain age is impossible, but he just hasn’t heard of it happening as much. And his word isn’t the end all be all to your life! Just because he hasn’t seen something, that doesn’t mean that it can’t happen. Good luck to you.

      @ri3706@ri3706Ай бұрын
    • ​@@Gumbo_CalmHe literally says if you're 50 or over you're beyond hope. Great message.

      @JohnJohnCrusher@JohnJohnCrusherАй бұрын
    • Thank YOU

      @delilah006@delilah006Ай бұрын
  • robert greene is a global treasure. the man will live forever

    @siyolisegqongwana9013@siyolisegqongwana901328 күн бұрын
  • 56, physically disabled, living outdoors in my truck since I became disabled 10 years ago, havent given up but this video is depressing to me.

    @markcurranjr7366@markcurranjr7366Ай бұрын
    • Stay strong brother Ill pray for you

      @Tokernoph@TokernophАй бұрын
    • Big hug to you

      @theqaz1828@theqaz1828Ай бұрын
    • I feel you, brother

      @ronfick490@ronfick49027 күн бұрын
    • Long as we can breathe there is hope to achieve. So beleive and go for it

      @eliteboxfitness@eliteboxfitness25 күн бұрын
    • Listen to Gary Vee when it comes to age. The founder of KFC didn’t start KFC until 62 :)

      @joaquin67@joaquin6718 күн бұрын
  • I'm 54 and have completely done a life course shift!

    @jennifercrenner4539@jennifercrenner453929 күн бұрын
  • As a truck driver, might take on the comment at 2:36:19 - driving the truck doesn't fulfill ME, but, I have met people that the job does bring fulfillment to. It's a job that is not terribly difficult to do, but is surprisingly difficult to do WELL. I've been told by a number of senior drivers that it commonly takes most folk about 5 years to really get sharp at the job. At 2 and 1/2 years in, I can believe it. It's actually more challenging than I had expected coming in. As a member of Mensa, I had to place in the top 2% of society in a proctored IQ test. So I'm reasonably good at that kind of cognitive processing. Now, being a trucker does not entail solving differential calculus equations - but to perform the task WELL requires an ability to do rudimentary mathematical tasks on the fly, and adjust them as conditions change. How many miles do I have to go? Is it a fixed appointment time? A fixed window? Wide open? Do I have a metropolitan area to get through? What is the traffic likely to be like at the time of day I go through the city? How many hours are on my clock? How much fuel do I have? If I need to fuel, how busy are the truck stops likely to be, and how will that affect my hours of service? And how will all of this impact any subsequent loads after the one I'm working on now? So, there's actually a bit of mental processing to be done, and while it's not cutting-edge, it does require a bit of savvy. Oh, and try backing a trailer into a dock in a crowded yard sometime... I've had many, many servings of humble pie dished up on that particular plate, LOL

    @billythebake@billythebake3 күн бұрын
  • Robert Green : Template of Wisdom of our Generation and yet more to Come .Thank You and Regards.

    @addisuengida5698@addisuengida5698Ай бұрын
  • I absolutely love these, and well as the books. Changed my whole perspective on life and attitude. Glad to be seeing this at 20yo

    @BradleyJP03@BradleyJP036 күн бұрын
  • This is the content I like to see, not the fear-mongering I've been seeing on this channel lately. Thanks!

    @zachricemusic@zachricemusicАй бұрын
    • Pretty sure it's a Reality Check...

      @calista1280@calista1280Ай бұрын
    • @@calista1280Agreed. We can all use more awareness

      @greg6811@greg6811Ай бұрын
  • I never comment, but I have literally watched everything you have put out for years now. I just want to say thank you for the unparalleled content and for your A+ lineup up of guests. Thank you for sharing your own and Lisa's personal journeys and for sharing your thoughts and opinions. I have mad respect for everything you have accomplished, and so much if your content resonates deeply with me. Thanks and keep being awesome! 🙏💕

    @livingfreeandhealthyjennif4971@livingfreeandhealthyjennif4971Ай бұрын
  • Thanks for telling me that my life's effectively over at 51 Robert , cheerful start to the weekend 👍

    @bobmathews9072@bobmathews9072Ай бұрын
    • You are what you beleive. Don't forget

      @eliteboxfitness@eliteboxfitness25 күн бұрын
    • Don't accept it. It's not true. Speaking from experience, and not only mine.

      @jaqhare@jaqhare12 күн бұрын
    • 🤣🤣🤣it's not over at all, mine started at 60 and just keeps getting better

      @katsinthecradle89@katsinthecradle894 күн бұрын
    • He took that back. He said it's difficult- most don't. It's up to us to choose out path.

      @elipotter369@elipotter3692 күн бұрын
  • I could listen to Robert Greene talk all day 🙌🏾 Truly an icon living. Tom, you are the Seductive Interviewer by Mr. Greene standards: Top Tier In the Moment 👑 Thank you for having him on once again!

    @aohamer@aohamer6 күн бұрын
  • I'm 50,simple guy and sick person .I Love my wife very much , working everyday for my daily needs .Leaving in slum area ,sometimes I'm sad and dreaming everyday trying to help and share my Love and Faith to others😔I'am trying to fix everything ❤️🙏

    @donatocayurin4994@donatocayurin49949 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for this conversation both of you! Thank you sincerely to Mr. Greene for the legacy of work and the resonating intention behind his legacy. The example of aligning purpose and one's life contribution is a worthwhile cross to bear.

    @Golgibaby@GolgibabyАй бұрын
  • I agree when Robert says that if one is always getting credits or praises. We turn to fall into a comfort zone and forget about learning to develop our own personal growth

    @LucasMufundisi@LucasMufundisiАй бұрын
  • The way history repeats itself in financial markets is quite intriguing. Artur Grandi's book gives a clear formula for stabilizing investments and suggests areas for investment, like cryptocurrencies.

    @NatiaMaisuradze-ey5iq@NatiaMaisuradze-ey5iqАй бұрын
    • LOL... no it doesn't. It's a scam.

      @groob33@groob3328 күн бұрын
  • I’m praying this information will be shared so much ! Very good information! I am grateful that I have access to your channel! Greatest guest!❤

    @Jamamaw55@Jamamaw5529 күн бұрын
  • loved the new parts, will have to watch again a few times, grow wiser, remind myself after I forget again, etc. T hank you for compiling!

    @az_spain@az_spainАй бұрын
  • A living legend walks amongst us in the form of Robert Greene

    @Gee0121@Gee012125 күн бұрын
  • Great show Robert. Your guests always amaze me. Your so much braver than I in making public such intimate details about your personal life. I think it's one of the reasons people are so obviously interested in your show. You and your guests bring more value to the possibilities in life than anyone I know. Looking back to the many shows I've watched, I find it incredible how varied the subjects are too. Your open mindedness and candid manner in which you interview your guests is superb brother.. Thank you so much for all you do. I only hope you never give in to corporate TV networks, who I'm sure only see dollar signs when they see what your doing. Have you had offers yet for your own show on nationally syndicated TV networks? They'd be fools to have not made some offers yet.

    @NOSUBSCRIBERSWANTED@NOSUBSCRIBERSWANTEDАй бұрын
  • I loved his book. Mr Green is pure genius. Thanks for this high caliber premium guest.

    @Guanaalex@GuanaalexАй бұрын
  • If you are aware of what you can accomplish in life, you will learn. I totally agree with Robert. I did that many times for me in the past and I succeeded many times because I knew my personality code.

    @Starboard528@Starboard528Ай бұрын
  • I love how Robert changes his shirt mid podcast. Flexx

    @GavinCee@GavinCeeАй бұрын
    • Or they just cut old videos together instead of creating content . . .

      @gholizadehanzabi@gholizadehanzabiАй бұрын
    • ​@@gholizadehanzabi ooh, cynicism...

      @calista1280@calista1280Ай бұрын
    • He mentioned early on that he was tired, I'm thinking they might have filmed this at two different times.

      @_tripsa@_tripsaАй бұрын
    • @_tripsa This is old. I've seen this all before - search for his other appearances. They do it regularly, if I had to guess it's 40% new content and 60% reposts, but it's been a lot worse recently, more like 80/20.

      @gholizadehanzabi@gholizadehanzabiАй бұрын
    • Obviously the man optimizes his content. But doesn’t the value still deliver? Stats don’t lie, my guy.

      @tybetts9851@tybetts985129 күн бұрын
  • love the robert greene interviews

    @Nali7890@Nali7890Ай бұрын
  • Love your show and love your guests. I must say it is exhausting hearing how great of a relationship you and your wife have in all of your episodes.

    @nickkelso8564@nickkelso856428 күн бұрын
  • At 45 I joined the army as a combat engineer. I have been on tour, learned a lot of new skills and have a job that pays me to stay fit. If you are brave and give it a shot, who knows how much you could accomplish

    @jasonforsyth2157@jasonforsyth215721 күн бұрын
  • Omg so much identification. I just been through the worst time of my life. Watching this has helped me to stay strong. Thanks

    @heatherwatts8791@heatherwatts879121 күн бұрын
  • Great interviwew,very important insights. Very interesting perspectives. Opens the mind to explore more about us human beings.🎉

    @emilymazengwe8450@emilymazengwe84506 күн бұрын
  • Just as Robert Greene says, I simply follow my inner drive to play the piano all day long and expand my knowledge of composition, and I've been doing this for about two years now, just all day long. It's so much fun, and I know it's the purpose of my life

    @googlekopfkind@googlekopfkindАй бұрын
  • That is one the greatest interviews….thank you so much🌟🙏👍🌟🙏👍🌟🙏👍🌟

    @SuriyaWetzler@SuriyaWetzler24 күн бұрын
  • Thanks for this

    @TechNeil11@TechNeil119 күн бұрын
  • I think this is the first time I hear you Tom talking about a mistake and I really appreciate it

    @yare1324@yare132422 күн бұрын
  • This spoke to me on so many levels thank you

    @hersheyballard1408@hersheyballard140817 күн бұрын
  • I had my awakening on my 5th mushroom journey. 42 years old. Though my life compared to many was privileged. It wasn't without traumas. Extremely anxious, pessimistic, thinking in a scarcity mentality. Consumed with worries about the future. Wishing for death. In 4 years, i did 5 mushroom journies. On the fifth, i felt that i was reborn! But a mature man, not a child. The medicine (my subconscious) spoke to me finally. You might hear something or read it countless times. But when it comes from a clear voice from within, it has a very profound effect. I realized that whatever i feel, that's completely me. NO ONE AND NO EVENT can dictate how i feel unless i agree to feel that way. I agree to play a role in this theater called life. If i feel down, sad, anxious, it's all me. I want (or my ego wants) to live the drama. To play the character. I came out with a resolve. Determination. A clear mind. I broke the viscious cycles. I look and find beauty and perfection in the beautiful blue sky! In the sense of a sweet cool breeze touching my skin. I never appreciated the beauty of nature. I never stood for myself. Now i do. I feel like a mountain. Im united with life. I dont fear death. I dont run away to alcohol. I dont run away to cigarettes any more. If i feel anxious (cant compare to my previous panic attacks) i go on a walk and enjoy the breeze. I cant explain how profound and life changing psilocybin was. The first 4 times i had great trips with amazing visuals but not the deep experience i hear others have. Im usually very resilient to chemical influence. It wasn't untill the fifth time when i had my mind open to my reality.

    @rammul7801@rammul780123 күн бұрын
  • Knowledge supports growth.

    @Jahguaar@JahguaarАй бұрын
  • Awesome eye-opener person, Robert Greene.

    @ShohruxXudoyberdiyev0513@ShohruxXudoyberdiyev0513Ай бұрын
  • Thank you ❤🎉

    @BVoigt@BVoigtАй бұрын
  • Sometimes age and the perspective it gives you is exactly what you need for course correction.

    @racheljackson2748@racheljackson274820 күн бұрын
    • Absolutely. That and the realization that you've got a limited to break free and do be your true self.

      @jaqhare@jaqhare12 күн бұрын
  • 1:01:00 GWAD Dam.. I am going through this right now. Only after hearing his, let’s not do this unless it means something fail. Do I understand why his wife and my wife won’t me to stop working, while still wanting me to be a success. They want me to make them feel like they are more important than my work. While I think, the reason I work so hard is because I want to be a success for them. I’m bastardising the principles and way over simplifying the situation. But yeah i think I learned something.

    @xmanhall360@xmanhall36018 күн бұрын
  • An interesting analysis of how our perspectives and situations change as we get older. But the reality I've seen in my many years on this Earth is that life isn't a linear path and you're always having to adapt to succeed. When you're young and idealistic, the older people around you don't think like you. When you're old and set in your ways, the younger people around you don't think like you. If you're politics don't align with the majority, you're again at a disadvantage. You choose a career path, are sold on a college education, then graduate and are right back to work at the coffee shop because you didn't actually learn how to do anything of value for others. You work hard in an industry but never really fit in with the people who are mostly attracted to that industry, or the industry changes -- when doesn't it change? -- your skills just not as in high demand after so long, or you get fed up with keeping up. The only advantage to being young is that you have a lot of time to burn to figure things out. Assuming you're young, single, with no responsibilities, and that's a pretty big assumption. Have a kid, things change. Ditto for a sick parent or sibling, or you yourself have some disability, or any number of "life" events and situations where you can't live that overhyped carefree do-nothing life. Shit happens to everyone. The "halcyon" days of our youth are generally exaggerated and overrated. There is nothing great about being young, having no skills, no experience, and no confidence. The only advantage is that you're too dumb to know better, so life "appears" a whole lot better than it is, than when you get older and see how screwed up everything really is, and how dumb kids really are, how dumb we all were.

    @mr.mithmoth@mr.mithmothАй бұрын
    • Beautifully stated!

      @Heeeyyyyou@HeeeyyyyouАй бұрын
    • 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻 Great comment. Every experience gives you new insights and clarity, so why look at any of it as a mistake? And new experiences, environments and times changing are all inevitable- so you live and grow. I know people in their 70s that are still actively evolving and inspired by the new. Absolutely not impossible or hard.

      @eatingthesystemblog@eatingthesystemblogАй бұрын
  • Thank you Dr Green

    @elena-251@elena-25129 күн бұрын
  • Great Episode I know that Empty feeling its like you get everything you need and then your like now what do i do something feels like something is missing in my Life... Sadhguru has a lot of good advice on seeing life in a better way

    @basketofpuppys@basketofpuppysАй бұрын
    • Try Eckhart Tolle, he's been in deep despair and shows us the way to control what we think and how to slow down to observe the world around us and be very aware in order to find Peace of Mind.

      @calista1280@calista1280Ай бұрын
  • Stabbing myself with my stiletto over this... what a major downer, I usually can push past negativity, but this is hopeless...LOL😂😂😂 I value all my moments too much to look at time as wasted. Geez, breathe the air...it's beautiful. Mr. Bilyeu, you have such monumental value and I almost always listen in wonderment Thank you for letting sour grapes have a moment, but I have no more time to give this person. There's infinite ways to fail...or you can see that you won the rarest lotto ticket...you're here! Have a beautiful day... to the guest, I'm not sure if you know this, but you're so negative. You can learn so much from Tom.. Even your vocabulary skews negative.

    @jenniferbryn@jenniferbryn28 күн бұрын
    • I'm soo confused. did we watch the same thing? I feel the opposite. Tom was the one saying oh if I f* up im an idot where as the other guy was like it's all part of the path and its what we need for our journey..Tom as also harping on the negativity and wouldnt let it go

      @alessandravictoriaASMR@alessandravictoriaASMR19 күн бұрын
    • Nothing is wasted. Time that you feel has been lost, has taught you something, which you can now use.

      @jaqhare@jaqhare12 күн бұрын
    • Did you type this sober or am I on the moon I'm so confused

      @blaisebuilda564@blaisebuilda5644 күн бұрын
  • Robert Greene is incredibly intelligent

    @Shisha.CPT.@Shisha.CPT.4 күн бұрын
  • Thank you

    @SaintAnthonyIV@SaintAnthonyIV10 күн бұрын
  • Great pod

    @CeSarLeoDeGenero@CeSarLeoDeGenero3 күн бұрын
  • Our holes are to be filled by creating the one groove with our global community.

    @kenelkind1857@kenelkind1857Ай бұрын
  • Great show 👏🏿

    @CryptoGuy14@CryptoGuy14Ай бұрын
  • Tom, I am glad that you did not accept this " It happenned for a reason", structure. I also reject this. Great, honest interview. Thank you.

    @keviliciousatyourservice9510@keviliciousatyourservice9510Ай бұрын
    • Robert isn’t saying that, though he’s saying that in order to realize and manifest your destiny one of the first steps is understanding the unique steps you took to get there. Usually, it’s our failures that are the unique things that make us so great. Those are the learning lessons not the success.

      @BA-ve7xp@BA-ve7xpАй бұрын
    • @@BA-ve7xp I understood the conversation. And it was a good conversation. I have my own opinion on that particular outlook, that the author was stating, regarding mistakes and/or misfortune, and it is different than his opinion. If you do not disagree with even one single thing any one person says in a three-hour long, detailed and nuanced conversation, then this should scare you, because the probability of this occurring if you were actually thinking the entire time, is low.

      @keviliciousatyourservice9510@keviliciousatyourservice9510Ай бұрын
  • So i paused at the women discussion to wright this. I spent almost 30 years of my Life listening to the girls around me following their Description of what they want before I gave the old mens advise a try. All i can tell you is 1) forget what women say a men should be 2) if you cant figure it out for yourself go for Status, money the Big Car and the expensive watch 3) DO WHATEVER YOU DO but for gods sake dont consider what women (the one you are into) May think of it. Yes its old, yes it Sounds outdated but it is true: all you need to be to attract women is being a man. Say what you think, stand by yourself dont give in for sex or the expection of it. Thats it.

    @armundschiach@armundschiachАй бұрын
  • First minute in the podcast and I want to cry already... ok let's go...

    @alvarapio@alvarapioАй бұрын
    • They have meds to help with that.

      @ChannelSyxx@ChannelSyxxАй бұрын
    • ​@@ChannelSyxx Those meds have way too many side effects...😮

      @PauloAdriano-zo2ng@PauloAdriano-zo2ng24 күн бұрын
  • I agree Tom👍🏽

    @carlajackson4660@carlajackson4660Ай бұрын
  • I went to a motivation workshop the other day. No one showed ed up. Iain w in england. Best wishes to you all x

    @transferdatathreewally24@transferdatathreewally247 күн бұрын
  • Robert Greene is phenomenal for giving perspective! Imagine going through the Black Plague. We have it good for only going through Covid

    @greg6811@greg6811Ай бұрын
  • Robert is a genius

    @health-news-today@health-news-today8 күн бұрын
  • Yall were basically saying the same thing!!!!! I love the back and forth tho bc it made me understand it even more lol

    @shugashay21@shugashay2128 күн бұрын
  • At 3:17.00 Tom's body language changed. Tom changed the topic because Robert found something in Tom that almost got him to cry. A self realization. What I'm guessing is Tom didn't have the best relationship with his mother. What Tom may not realize is Robert realized Tom was using the art of distraction to move on. You can read people without even talking to them. I had to learn this because of my father.

    @derickderidder7785@derickderidder77858 күн бұрын
  • I really liked a lot of things that Robert said, but the way that he presents everything as though he has figured it all out begin to grate on me.

    @InfoSeekerOO7@InfoSeekerOO725 күн бұрын
  • Except for physical death I have seen nearly all the bad sides of life nothing more can be thrown at me❤❤🎉🎉

    @shankarbalakrishnan2360@shankarbalakrishnan23602 күн бұрын
  • Omg you are so unique and honest

    @heatherwatts8791@heatherwatts879121 күн бұрын
  • it would be awsome if tom did not go on long monologs all the time. we are here to hear about robert

    @manfrominternet@manfrominternetАй бұрын
  • 59:50 bookmark 01:39:15

    @nixoledenise3421@nixoledenise3421Ай бұрын
  • 46:00 " I HAVE TO GO THROUGH ALL THAT ??" .... yes lmaoooo no hezzie

    @maybej774@maybej7745 күн бұрын
  • Great talk

    @andrewgrant1740@andrewgrant174022 күн бұрын
  • Tom you crack me up! "Within my sexual market value...I don't want to oversell this." lmaooo 😂

    @EMSCNM@EMSCNM6 күн бұрын
  • All he was saying was that things you’ve been through in life made you who you are today

    @joveezus1347@joveezus13477 күн бұрын
  • I've stopped drinking alcohol now for 15 months now not a drop 💧 🎉

    @Pengman47@Pengman472 күн бұрын
  • Great! Wonder how many people relate to having gone the wrong path.

    @helloworldcsofficial@helloworldcsofficialАй бұрын
  • It's good to be thoughtful. It enriches life. I figured out reality reflects artificial law, too, not only natural law. Being objective is helpful in not taking injuries too personally.

    @adamjonmonroe7188@adamjonmonroe7188Ай бұрын
  • Is this a replay or a new interview? The masses need to know

    @carloshoyos9502@carloshoyos9502Ай бұрын
    • Stitched together old ones

      @CalvinGroover@CalvinGrooverАй бұрын
    • The masses? Or you?

      @user-hx1sd5nm1g@user-hx1sd5nm1gАй бұрын
    • @@user-hx1sd5nm1g Each of us is the masses, it's fractal. If you want to know, others likely do too. Your curiosity is representative of the whole and your own.

      @govcorpwatch@govcorpwatchАй бұрын
  • I love your talk, especially 1:48 ❤️ than at this point Im now (being 66) what is tripping me up. What builds strength is resistance 😅.

    @BVoigt@BVoigt18 күн бұрын
  • Entering my 30s this year. Robert Greene convinced me to permanently quit Facebook and Twitter, get off social media completely. Since taking this advice my mental health has improved dramatically. As a Millennial or Generation Z or whatever you want to call my age demographic, in my more immature years I would harbor significant resentment toward the cohort of "Baby Boomers" as I called them, or the generation born from 1946 to 1964 during the mid-20th century baby boom. The older I get, the more empathy I have for them. For example, as many reasons as I might have to ex-communicate my biological father from my life, a Baby Boomer, who was woefully absent during the entirety of my childhood and who I only first met as a 20-year old, I prefer to stay on speaking terms with him. This is because I realize now my Dad had an unusually difficult childhood himself, to put it mildly, having been raised by a man deeply traumatized by the events of the Second World War in Germany before he migrated to Canada. Whatever happened to him in that war broke my paternal grandfather as a person. Everybody's story is different, but I suspect Robert Greene (along with many of his peers) were raised under similar circumstances by parents deeply scarred by World War 2. It was a tremendous cultural and civilizational setback when Europe was that theatre of war. Even though both my biological parents are Baby Boomers, as a Millennial, the neat thing about growing up in the era I did, is that I really kind of consider myself a cultural child of Generation X, the people born between mid-1960s to the late 1970s. This is mostly possible because of modern technology like television and internet, which gives Millennials greater access to information and entertainment. We can "choose" our virtual parents or role models in a way that would have been impossible for most people who came before us, having not grown up with the same technology we did. For whatever reason, as a generalization, people apart of Generation X seem far more relatable to me than Baby Boomers. Maybe this is because of how quickly the world changes over decades. Baby Boomers seem like dinosaurs to me, albeit dinosaurs I am increasingly empathetic and less judgmental toward.

    @jamesklamut3602@jamesklamut3602Ай бұрын
  • Needed this! Ty❤ Lord please be preparing me for a better life. Jesus please give me strength. I seem to bear the weight of the world on my shoulders as a single mom, I often face challenges that can seem insurmountable especially with raising two children with special needs. I’m trying to balance everything but Lord I’m struggling to make ends meet, to pay bills, and to put food on the table for my children. Jesus hear my prayers and please continue to give me strength.😭

    @ChildofGod98765@ChildofGod98765Ай бұрын
  • We keep equating success with financial success. This is where we are wrong.

    @SilverStrategist@SilverStrategist7 күн бұрын
  • abstinence is a key tool for longevity.

    @eddiemontgomery7088@eddiemontgomery70889 күн бұрын
  • I have recently enjoyed thinking about the paradox of destiny, as a kind of "universal predetermination", actually I am ok with it being both pre-destined and depending on our actions, hence this is considered a paradox. I find it presumptuous to try and understand the universe and more so "existence" itself, from our own limited form. Our current context as physical human beings, implies limited senses and brain processing capacities. I'm pretty sure, actually myself I am certain, that we do have other forms of perception built into us, such that can be activated, and which connect us back to a extradimensional, infinite, universal roots/origin. Actually I think we need to practice mindfulness, while erradicating assumptions we have made as we grew up, having bodies, our own personal brain and a limited scope of choice of action (highly influenced by auto-pilot instincts), to me doesn't define us as totally autonomous entities, but this is only tangent to the point. I think I share Robert's feeling/understanding of this, however, within the same dual nature of choice vs concatenated predetermined or conditioned "choices" we make; Tom's enfasis on cause=consequence is probably more practical for most of us. The only time when one can really appreciate a certain "predetermination" of events, is when you look back, and specially over uggly situations, into a current time when everything is ok, it can feel rewarding to realiseyou weren't "doomed" to be in a depressed state, but it gave you some learning or a step to climb up and above it. We may all appreciate this predetermination paradox on our death bed, I think then we may fully grasp and understand it, perhaps then we realise that all we ever where was, whatever we are realising at that moment we are or arent. I don't think we will be experiencing the same usual version of ourselves beyond this life, obviously. Hence should we feel anything at all (in spite of scepticism, my own experience invites me to thing we will), from a more universal "mindframe"/context, beyond our own selves, perhaps we get the paradox. Hopefully at that point we don't carry on with trying to be something and focus on just being and witnessing existence as such, let go and honour the hype of existing. I think a good tool for understanding things can actually be admitting to ourselves the limits of our own capacity for understanding them. Maybe we just need to wait to experience them, and perhaps we can evolve to do so before we actually leave the context of our physical "senses". This is probably the objective of most if not all "spiritual paths" or religious traditions. However these can also be constraining, specially if they are to translate as yet another form of identity, putting imagery to our beliefs may interfere with us perceiving the reality of those very beliefs! I do like the debate, and find it also interesting to navigate thoughts on how different traditions, religions, and science itself, can merge if we crash the fixed "images" of reality we have individually or collectively made of them in our minds. This is limiting in my opinion, it is more expanding to admit that we have a limited context of understanding, but reality stretches far beyond the most sophisticated understanding or imagination we can conceive of it. Infinitely beyond in fact if I am to be scientific about it, just because, or infinitely-infinitely beyond, to be redundant, but still mathematically logical. So basically we can't understand our own existence or reality around us, but do have to be very careful to what we make of it. To me, the statement that we don't know if there is a plan or not (destiny vs self determination debate), is mostly a question of "intuition", given that most things in the reality which we can perceive, do seem meticulously and intrinsiquely designed and planned to perfection. From a molecular/wavelenght level, to whole independent organisms and dimensions like thought, or mathematical patterns being present throughout it all, even linking up, time, physical laws, and spatial concepts, like "the dance of Venus" observation shows us. Hm, on the other hand, time itself, is questionable isn't it? At least it is limited to our perception of it, isn't it true that according to our focus, we perceive time differently? and I always questioned something I saw about how flies see in slo-motion, and couldn't get my head around it, still cant! But time, I guess is more questionable to me than the notion that existence , or limiting the scope to this universe, the universe, does have some predetermination element to it, I'm kind of certain about that. There must be some theory of relativity 3.0 coming along soon hopefully that may give us more insight on these topics, though traditional science. I'm sorry for the random essay on this topic. I should try to write a book instead of jamming this comment section with abstract thought. Thank you for the space of thought, insights and debate.

    @az_spain@az_spainАй бұрын
  • To Tom’s point where he says “people aren’t *meant* to do something”. I would say 1) Not *everyone* is necessarily “meant” to do something - however some are. Like, Lebron James. He was meant to play basketball. This was a specific gift and he has used it to have an impact on and off the court (his haters not withstanding). The same can be said for all kinds of other gifts that people have in any number of facets. 2) Others may not be as gifted at anything as Lebron is at basketball - but they are at least “good” at things and have particular interests. Those are the factors that should guide them in finding out what to do with their lives - rather than following money, what other people suggest, etc.

    @rfreeze@rfreeze13 күн бұрын
  • I dont know if anyone will read this but this is what causes depression in my opinion. WE SEE SO MUCH GOING ON AND POWERLESS TO HELP WHICH MAKES US USELESS WHICH CAUSES DEPRESSION? Just a theory

    @yehoapwi7670@yehoapwi7670Ай бұрын
  • Im 56 and I take offense to being too old for this...50 is the new 30! I'm open minded enough to set a course correction and follow a new path!

    @DeniseonDemand@DeniseonDemand3 күн бұрын
    • He didn't say we were all that way. It's true most get inflexible with age - "most" doesn't equal all

      @elipotter369@elipotter3692 күн бұрын
  • Interesting debate at 45:20, Robert emphasizing that genetics and upbringing is influential on how see yourself on valuable and purpose. Whereas the the podcaster believes that we are total control of our destiny and life’s trajectory. I agree with Robert. genetics and upbringing is hard for people to separate from their identity.

    @brownies2001@brownies200113 күн бұрын
  • I'm loving this interview with the back-n-fourth between Tom and Robert, disagreements and funny moments.

    @warrenhurley5787@warrenhurley578719 күн бұрын
  • Wow, the first sentences describe the last 35 years of my life that I am trying so hard to course correct now at 47. Spot on! I’ve wasted my life.

    @FinnAstraeus@FinnAstraeus15 күн бұрын
  • I dont believe negative thoughts control your life your will power controls your life

    @Grayman627@Grayman6275 күн бұрын
  • I respect your so hard Tom. 😅 Just had to say that.

    @jeleceroyail6482@jeleceroyail6482Ай бұрын
  • Laws of Human Nature changed my life

    @thedudebneasy4928@thedudebneasy492816 күн бұрын
  • The author Tom wanted to remember the name is EDITH EVA EGER . Amazing book and person 🙏🏻🤩🥰🙏🏻

    @ligiasommers@ligiasommersАй бұрын
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