The Number One Reason This Generation Is Struggling: Scott Galloway | E190

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 5 тис.

  • @TheDiaryOfACEO
    @TheDiaryOfACEO  2 роки тому +696

    IF YOU COULD DO US A MASSIVE FAVOUR AND LIKE the video 👍🏽 By doing that, you’re helping us out more than you know 🙏🏽 thank you

    • @realdavidpain
      @realdavidpain 2 роки тому +7

      Pro Tip: If you would rename the chapters as questions you will be number 1 with Google, if someone asks the question:
      05:48 What is Scott Galloway's relationship with money?
      ...
      55:51 Has Scott Galloway used to be an asshole?
      ...

    • @archanaharanahalli
      @archanaharanahalli 2 роки тому +2

      Thanks again for doing these amazing podcasts.

    • @hiteck007
      @hiteck007 2 роки тому +10

      Mate your a great Interviewer but that piece of work you interviewed I have a very REPULSIVE feeling towards & would Never work for him if I had a choice. As a boss I had people virtually fighting over being able to work for me over anyone else, which made it real easy to get men & women for a job to be done which made it a low stress site & I virtually never had to get on anyone's case about being slack.. His reflection on things at least it is mostly right about kindness & not being an A-hole boss, I had plenty of those & had ZERO RESPECT for. I see early on in the interview he is Massively Wrong about many very Important things. And one last thing, DRIVING WEDGES INTO PEOPLE IS NOT BEING Patriotic, that is A VICIOUS ACT.

    • @swiftusmaximus5651
      @swiftusmaximus5651 2 роки тому +2

      because they are slapping theyre salami's to internet porn

    • @OviTube21
      @OviTube21 2 роки тому +8

      NOT CONVINCED

  • @jimbowen8973
    @jimbowen8973 Рік тому +156

    So many gems in this, but my favorite was the first thing he started with (when talking about his mom)...."The most important thing in anyone's life is to have someone who is irrationally passionate about your well being." Truth.

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 Рік тому +1

      It can be quite difficult to find that person though especially outside of your family

    • @lucreciaapplewhaite3350
      @lucreciaapplewhaite3350 Рік тому +2

      Totally agree! but what happens when that is ill-received and perceived as infantilizing? I think they are Six love languages, the sixth being CARING which is perhaps the most important because it’s universal and constantly expressed with whomever one interacts.

    • @homosexualbiologicalmale--3
      @homosexualbiologicalmale--3 Рік тому +1

      we dont need others , community is not normal , community causes depression sadness and anger even revenge

    • @rafaelbogdan9307
      @rafaelbogdan9307 Рік тому +2

      "The key to being rich is having resources" OK got it

    • @robertpickering641
      @robertpickering641 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@homosexualbiologicalmaleonly the exact opposite is true though 😂

  • @SuperDB215
    @SuperDB215 2 роки тому +516

    I’m over 40 and I listened to this with my 16 year old son this morning. We both really enjoyed this conversation. Thank you 🙏🏾

    • @reeceanthony
      @reeceanthony 2 роки тому +22

      Top dad

    • @hiteck007
      @hiteck007 2 роки тому +6

      I was a boss too & was disgusted in his VICIOUS methods. I'm REPULSED by him & what he did to people. He at least kind of gets it right by telling some of his mistakes at the end at least but he still even now has a very MEAN SPIRIT hidden not too far underneath, I can't stand these people.

    • @brianfrederick9219
      @brianfrederick9219 2 роки тому +5

      @@hiteck007 what?

    • @hiteck007
      @hiteck007 2 роки тому +6

      @@brianfrederick9219 he admitted he was a Vicious piece of work as a boss to his people working for him & I can see it in his face he still has the mean streak even though he regrets his behavior. He still has a lot of self work to do I think.

    • @donnagreulich2378
      @donnagreulich2378 2 роки тому +5

      @@hiteck007 I've never heard of him before today and know nothing of what he did to anyone. I don't need to know. There are enough meanies I can find on my own.

  • @profundus8946
    @profundus8946 Рік тому +535

    Just wanted to congratulate you on your professionalism. The guest can fully express all their views without interruption,
    it's fresh and relaxing opposed to mainstream interviews. Great job.

    • @massivedamage5677
      @massivedamage5677 Рік тому +2

      Professionalism all the way down to the socks 🥲

    • @profundus8946
      @profundus8946 Рік тому

      Hah, what does that mean?@@massivedamage5677

    • @firsthelix6726
      @firsthelix6726 10 місяців тому

      I like his conversational professionalism, while it's less professional forgetting to put on shoes at least...

    • @siyabongamnisi6761
      @siyabongamnisi6761 8 місяців тому

      ​@@firsthelix6726I don't think he forgot. He's just comfortable chilling with the socks

  • @robinsattahip2376
    @robinsattahip2376 Рік тому +232

    Growing up in California in the 70s was paradise compared to what young people have to face now. I worked from 16 and went to school at night and weekends, eventually becoming an an attorney. Even doing a slow start bought my first new car at 18 and my first house at 22 working as a Sheriff's Deputy. (my father co-signed but I did the payments.) It was easy back then if you were willing to work, young people now have my sympathy, they have nothing to look forward to and it just keeps getting worse.

    • @alexr6114
      @alexr6114 Рік тому +18

      I disagree to some extent. I work at a major univeristy and I have seen kids who can barely pass my course get great jobs at high salaries at major investment firms with GPAs that are a fraction of what mine was decades ago when a C was what most students earned in a class. The reality is that the world is great for a tiny percentage of the students who are the chosen ones for whatever reason. The other students who are just as good or better do not get those few jobs. Yes, you have to work hard once you are hired, but how many people are working two or three jobs to make ends meet now and who may have been doing so for years. The falsehood is in telling college-bound students that a great degree means that you will get a great job. There are probably 100 equally qualified people, if not far more, for everyone of those great jobs. You got it because of your connections or just plain luck of the draw.

    • @donquijotedelamancha3529
      @donquijotedelamancha3529 Рік тому +7

      Nothing to look forward to? Wow, that's so pessimistic and I personally believe inaccurate, too.

    • @fibo12358
      @fibo12358 Рік тому +4

      At 63 not regretting having no children, reflecting on this msg i realize my whole life has been getting my head straight responding to being a wild, ADHD, rebellious teenager who originally had a promising academic career, but I squandered it at time. Time. Lots of spiritual stuff going on, finally finding God, now looking at maybe 20 years remaining. Lifespan, who knows could be less or more. Realizing that deep core issues can steer you like a rudder. If you don't have extreme issues, and or you can get hold of yourself as a young person, get away from p***, directly interact with women, as a man, you can learn to walk in the way you were created. I find myself relating to younger people and a healthy way, but also attracted to women a half or third my age. Trying to make up for lost time? How much success is really to be found in that regard? Seek God, and walking his ways, eternity awaits us all.

    • @quill444
      @quill444 Рік тому +1

      If the price of a typical tattoo or computer or firearm would have been invested in the stock of: Apple, or Amazon, or Nvidia, or Nike, or Home Depot, or Monster Beverage, or any of many dozens and dozens of other, well-known companies when many of the kids today were younger, or if this had been done so over any twenty-year period in the past half century, that one small investment would likely be worth a quarter-of-a-million dollars today. 💲 😮 🌼 - j q t -

    • @theflaca
      @theflaca Рік тому

      Blame Steve Jobs.

  • @MagnumTriumph
    @MagnumTriumph 2 роки тому +924

    When I was 23, both my parents were dead. I have no family. I'd moved around a lot while growing up and ended up settling in a city where I knew no one and found it hard to meet friends.
    I still live and work in that city and earn ok. Having relationships and being part of a social community is just something I've never really considered normal or a god given right. It's actually a fragile thing and not to be taken for granted and difficult to cultivate from scratch if you haven't had it all done for you.

    • @handrim_jewish_soul
      @handrim_jewish_soul 2 роки тому +55

      All the best. Thanks for your openess. Hug from Germany.

    • @mvm4068
      @mvm4068 2 роки тому +34

      Enjoy every day and the relationship with your siblings. Having projects or doing puzzles, planning a trip are all things to look forward to. In my case I rather be by myself. My children are grown and they have their own lives. As a man you have much more time to have a family so don't be in a hury; find someone that your comfortable with that respects you. Life is not simple for anyone. Even getting your groceries from different stores makes a difference. Go to places with activities that interest you so you meet someone you'll share activities with. Don't focus on what you don't have focus on the family you do have. This video is definately useful so informative.

    • @mvm4068
      @mvm4068 2 роки тому +37

      when a woman doesn't wanna date you it is saving you time to find the right one to be in a relationship with. A woman wants someone that she can trust that is not codescending. Just helpful advice from someone old enough to speak the truth and be realistic.

    • @PS-qn4oz
      @PS-qn4oz 2 роки тому +56

      Well said. I'm sorry for your losses....that is rough. Lost my mother at 14, lost my father just before I turned 31. People think if you're an adult, you should be fine without parents. So we get no credit for shouldering all the extra burdens that come with being parentless. No safety net, no nothing.

    • @kiki-yq1fk
      @kiki-yq1fk 2 роки тому +13

      All the best. Hope good things happen to you.

  • @NOCDIB
    @NOCDIB 2 роки тому +482

    The segment about the most important decision you'll ever make is 100% spot on. Your choice of partner is more important than your choice of school or career.

    • @ALCRAN2010
      @ALCRAN2010 2 роки тому +43

      That's because of the three:
      partner, schooling, and career;
      only the first one can destroy
      either of the other two.

    • @NOCDIB
      @NOCDIB 2 роки тому +38

      @@ALCRAN2010 Or, mostly in a woman's case, the right choice for the first one will remove the need for the other two. The commitment of a productive man can secure a woman's life such that her career and education are irrelevant. Women have put love and reproduction on the backburner to their own detriment.

    • @MeMe-ht2hd
      @MeMe-ht2hd 2 роки тому +9

      @@NOCDIB As a female you are spot on.

    • @Christina-oq4td
      @Christina-oq4td 2 роки тому +70

      @@NOCDIB It’s not quite that simple. As a wife of nearly 35 years, homeschooling mother of 9 beautiful children, and, of course, homemaker…..a woman places herself in one of thee most vulnerable places ever! Her whole life becomes controlled by another person….where she lives…as in what country, city, living quarters….what means she is given to care for, feed, educate, and nurture her family…..while she balances keeping her husband happy and her children well loved and cared for and progressing forward. It is a given that many of her own needs will be tossed aside….the need for sleep, self time, affirmation of her work or accomplishments (since she is completely at her husband’s mercy for words and show of appreciation for her labors) and often completely losing her own sense of self and suffering through spousal neglect and awful sex! Get real! The man has the upper hand and too many walk away leaving her holding the bag, picking up the pieces in the lives of their children and solely finishing the work of raising them to maturity the best she can with a sudden loss of resources. Unfortunately, I have watched as many women who’ve been home 20 plus years and sacrificed their career and subsequent retirement funds, end up working at the corner pharmacy for $10 an hour trying to feed her children and keep a roof over their heads because her husband ran off with a 24 year old for some pipe dream he had and it didn’t last six months!!! I’ve been one of the lucky ones. My home is still together, my children are prospering. But if I was on the outside looking in, I’d say, “No way!” What young woman would want this?

    • @juneelle370
      @juneelle370 2 роки тому +2

      Exactly. In a capitalistic and sexist society, whoever holds the MONEY holds the POWER. If you set down your bag, you (and your children) could be in BIG TROUBLE. That’s what the purple purse project is about. You always need money to walk away and a way to sustain yourself and your children just in case. “You never really know a man until you marry him.” is a saying for a reason. You never know what someone will do with power after he encourages you to put yourself (and therefore your kids too) in a vulnerable position. Keep that mother bear for yourself and your children out of hibernation! And vet vet vet as much as you can before marriage but even that’s not a guarantee because you can’t control people’s spiritual character and choices! Thanks for writing what you did. My sister is going through it.

  • @AaroHuttunen
    @AaroHuttunen 2 роки тому +1706

    "There is nothing wrong with asking someone for a coffee. It is not a problem to show interest." So simple but still so powerful. For most, this first step may be the hardest, the fear of rejection is real. Awesome episode.

    • @evan12697
      @evan12697 2 роки тому +2

      It’s not even the fear of rejection anymore, its the fear or retaliation. How is that going to get spun later? It’s a fear propped up by twitter psychos but it keeps seeping itself into daily life for a lot of young men

    • @lidiarona4335
      @lidiarona4335 2 роки тому +75

      And when the rejection is served, the truth is this: it is not about me, it is about them.

    • @GěNx3000
      @GěNx3000 2 роки тому +63

      Powerful words indeed. It took a couple of brain tumors and some painful moments in my life to realize this. Now I have no problem chatting with the people around me. It’s amazing how good it feels to lose the fear of rejection. Be it rejection from friends and family or strangers, I lost that fear or at least 95% of the time, 5% is because I am still human. 🎃

    • @ADobbin1
      @ADobbin1 2 роки тому +65

      There wouldn't be if it weren't for metoo and social media. Now its a mine field.

    • @proudatheist2042
      @proudatheist2042 2 роки тому +9

      @@lidiarona4335 sometimes, but not always.

  • @user540000
    @user540000 Рік тому +98

    This guy is a good interviewer, he lets people talk and doesnt interrupt or argue /debate with them.

    • @firsthelix6726
      @firsthelix6726 10 місяців тому +1

      That's true, unlike Bilyeu who notoriously likes to drive the conversation towards himself and his wife all the time. This guy here is so altruistic that he even forgot to put on shoes when filming the show...

    • @PrinceGucci94
      @PrinceGucci94 3 місяці тому

      He's brilliant one of the best interviewers I have seen in a while

    • @lifeseries7944
      @lifeseries7944 2 місяці тому +1

      I agree. I love his voice, too.

    • @jehjey7626
      @jehjey7626 18 днів тому

      I agree. This is the main reason I am listening to these podcasts. The topics are interesting but a hyper, confrontational style would have made me leave. I feel like I can breathe.

  • @thetricksterpill
    @thetricksterpill Рік тому +514

    I'm a 26 yr old wage slaving Incel and these kinds of videos I've been listening to during my boring job, are waking me up to do more in life

    • @captainalex157
      @captainalex157 Рік тому +76

      Stop wanking (too much) if you still do it, hit the gym, look into meditation and youll be on your way brother

    • @sparkius30
      @sparkius30 Рік тому +63

      It’s very wise to realize one’s shortcomings and to work on improving yourself. I was a 20 year opiate addict, and after just 4 years clean, I own a home, have a career, marriage, and I have all my kids under my roof. You can do it bro. Just don’t be an asshole. Kindness is cool.

    • @paradimebeats
      @paradimebeats Рік тому +63

      So I'd say the first step is to stop referring to yourself as an "Incel". That's not gonna attract women.

    • @thetricksterpill
      @thetricksterpill Рік тому +42

      @@paradimebeats It's an honest reality that I accepted, but doesn't mean I'm giving up on life. I only say that behind closed doors, why would I say that in front of someone? we're considered terrorists already lol

    • @chase6672
      @chase6672 Рік тому +27

      First, stop
      Calling yourself an incel

  • @EricaYE6
    @EricaYE6 Рік тому +307

    I love how the host allows the guest to speak without interrupting him. Great job! I'll check out more of your channel.

  • @nathyncostello7514
    @nathyncostello7514 2 роки тому +164

    This podcast was so interesting. I’m 45 and recently really struggled with the recognition that financially I am not where I expected to be following a divorce. To hear someone else express that as such a difficult time made me feel a sense of calm and patience

    • @TheLiverpoolDelta
      @TheLiverpoolDelta 2 роки тому +2

      If you like this guy, check out Andrew Tate. He says the same message but isn't a left wing corporate psychopath and actually means what he says.

    • @tomcolton5662
      @tomcolton5662 2 роки тому +3

      45-55 reported least happiness.

    • @rokyericksonroks
      @rokyericksonroks 2 роки тому +2

      @Jason MP Yes, I think it actually does. You don’t to impress anyone or prove anything. Just do the best you can and trust that the pieces will come together. I think they will.

    • @QuartuvLarry
      @QuartuvLarry 2 роки тому +4

      44 and just about depleted of assets. There’s nothing to look forward to

    • @baraka629
      @baraka629 2 роки тому +1

      Your own fault for falling for the marriage scam.

  • @kortyEdna825
    @kortyEdna825 3 місяці тому +502

    The current market/economy is unnecessarily tougher for boomers/senior citizens, I’m used to just buying and holding assets which doesn’t seem applicable to the current rollercoaster market plus inflation is catching up with my portfolio. I’m really worried about survival after retirement.

    • @carssimplified2195
      @carssimplified2195 3 місяці тому +4

      Just buy and invest in Gold or other reliable stock , the government has failed us and we cant keep living like this.

    • @KaurKhangura
      @KaurKhangura 3 місяці тому +3

      Yes, gold is a great investment and a good bet against the devaluating dollar, been holding some for awhile now, I’m grateful my adviser’s moment by moment changes in the market are lightening quick, cos who know how much losses I would’ve had by now.

    • @Justinmeyer1000
      @Justinmeyer1000 3 місяці тому +3

      I envy you, I’m still trying to recover from losses I incurred in 2021/2022, who is this investment adviser you work with, I’m intrigued and I could use some quality guidance

    • @KaurKhangura
      @KaurKhangura 3 місяці тому +3

      My CFA ‘’Aileen Gertrude Tippy” , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.

    • @Justinmeyer1000
      @Justinmeyer1000 3 місяці тому +4

      Thanks a lot for this suggestion. I needed this myself, I looked her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.

  • @capnsugoi1303
    @capnsugoi1303 Рік тому +1193

    As 23 year old who’s not doing all that great, this man makes me feel seen.

    • @Changeworld408
      @Changeworld408 Рік тому +43

      our economic succes has become so important and fewer people are thriving in the rat race matrix. the problem is we value ourselves based on our economic survival or success.
      Would you say a stray dog is less valuable being than a dog living in a mansion and being owned by one celebrety. Don't give in. i know how hard it can be when you start believing that you are unworthy for not being successful in this crazy culture(gabor mate has written a wonderfull book explainng this) I do not buy into this guy's explenation of depression being a disease you catch. when you ask if people are feeling happy most of the time they will not catch depression. it is how hopefull you are of being happy in the future and the less you like yr life or think it will improve the higher you will feel down chronically. depression is a wrong term. You feel down temporary or long time.

    • @yoursubconscious
      @yoursubconscious Рік тому +81

      as a 39 yr. old who has been in your shoes. You will be fine as long as you just try. That's the "magic". Believe it or not.

    • @angelawilliamson6765
      @angelawilliamson6765 Рік тому +25

      Volunteer if you can find some time can find something that you feel strongly about, doing for others develops a feeling of purpose & can help towards you feeling good about your self. It is pretty hard growing yourself up & finding other people who are wanting to reach heart in a similar position. good luck 👍🏼

    • @gerardo9052
      @gerardo9052 Рік тому +16

      Do not follow Scott's advice

    • @just2comment2
      @just2comment2 Рік тому +22

      I had a bit of a depression break down at 26, im still here at 55. Seek help, get advice from wherever you can. Don't think that the darkness and bad times stay forever.

  • @northofyou33
    @northofyou33 Рік тому +439

    I graduated from UCLA with a 3.89 GPA at a time when the acceptance rate was about 10%. I was very motivated, but not in business. I was motivated by academia. Thanks to the corporatization of academia, I barely made enough money to survive. I moved to another country so that I could have a life instead of work for three different universities, and never have enough money or time to live a life. The US is a brutal country.

    • @josebro352
      @josebro352 Рік тому +38

      Congratulations! The US is a terrible place and you're better off for leaving. I wish I could. I always wanted to live in New Zealand. Hopefully someday. Peace.

    • @boxelder9147
      @boxelder9147 Рік тому +18

      It's awful here. I've never experienced living in another country so I base that assessment on absolutely nothing. Visiting places and living in them are quite different. I'm 56 years old. Single, never married, no kids, just retired. Not living huge by any means. Will eventually need to work again. Will stay out of corporate/gov arena more than likely.

    • @myfriendgoo2816
      @myfriendgoo2816 Рік тому +38

      Costs in the U.S. are way too high, especially on the 3Hs (housing, health care, higher education). You'll hear from some commentators about how TVs or flights are so much cheaper than 50 years ago, but they're just trying to mislead you because it doesn't offset the 3Hs.

    • @rayjay6769
      @rayjay6769 Рік тому +13

      Very much so, and is getting consistently worse! I have friends from other countries that tell me how they work to live and not live to work, even having siestas in the middle of the day. I can't imagine it, although that would really be nice.

    • @mchaeltebo786
      @mchaeltebo786 Рік тому +15

      Sadly, there isn't alot of money in being an intellectual.

  • @becbec3541
    @becbec3541 Рік тому +524

    Something which has become very apparent to me in the last couple of years is how much our society has encouraged and conditioned us to strive to live “independently” from our families.
    Not only is this ideal presented as aspirational, those who don’t manage to achieve this goal are looked down upon.
    Examples being young people fixated on moving out of the family home, with those who “still” live at home being seen as having failed, and the majority of elder people now living in care or retirement homes instead of with family because they “don’t want to be a burden”.
    I am absolutely convinced that this trend has caused a large part of the pandemic of loneliness, depression, suicide, cognitive illnesses (such as Alzheimer’s and dementia) as well as many physical conditions that we are now facing.
    These issues do not seem to be as prevalent in societies where people live in larger more traditional family groups and communities.
    One thing that a lot of people said to me when I had my son two years ago was “it takes a village to raise a child”. Well, I think this saying can be extended to many of the things that we have to deal with in life but for a lot of us that village does not exist to the degree we need and online communication is not an adequate solution.
    I feel that the future of our society in many ways will be driven by us reverting back to living, working, shopping and socialising in more local community groups.

    • @briansbrian771
      @briansbrian771 Рік тому +6

      Great advice

    • @briansbrian771
      @briansbrian771 Рік тому

      great

    • @ninimacs2244
      @ninimacs2244 Рік тому +26

      i completely agree! I still live at home at 25, i have graduated university and work in a job and i don't have a partner right now. i live at home because the housing maket in my country (Germany) is insane, food prices have doubled in the last year and electric / heating / water bill have also risen, while my paycheck stayed pretty much the same. living at home saves me money, gives me a sense of security and i have my family around me all the time. i just think it is so funny how erveryone says 'family/ friends is the most important thing' but can't wait to get away from their own family :D also in the last three years there was a big amount of time when it was illegal to meet other people outside of your home, so if you were living alone, you were alone 24/7 because most of the time you even had to work alone at home (thanks covid)

    • @pinkmonkeypants
      @pinkmonkeypants Рік тому +21

      I think you're right, and I think there is an agenda behind why this is being pushed.

    • @TigerBoyX15
      @TigerBoyX15 Рік тому +8

      Good point...thing is people move away from their Town and Families far away for Work and Relationship.....

  • @thecuriousquest
    @thecuriousquest Рік тому +392

    You can only understand what its like to be a certain age when you are that age.
    You can only understand what it's like to be you and live your own life.
    These are great thought provoking insights in this interview.

    • @susannnico
      @susannnico Рік тому +1

      That's so true. but if i may ask, do you trade all by yourself?

    • @lailaalfaddil7389
      @lailaalfaddil7389 Рік тому

      How can this person, ROCHELLE DUNGCA-SCHREIBER be reached please..

    • @lailaalfaddil7389
      @lailaalfaddil7389 Рік тому

      Wow! I just looked up this person out of curiosity and I'm super impressed with her qualifications. Thanks for sharing.

    • @vegetossgss1114
      @vegetossgss1114 Рік тому

      one world: HYPERGAMY (induced by social networks)

    • @jeffjohnson5053
      @jeffjohnson5053 Рік тому

      I have traveled to 14 countries around the world. And the US is the country with the MOST social SAFETY NETS. Americans are just so bubble wrapped, there are sooooo many social welfare programs, free food stamps, free housing, free phones, free health care. Everything is FREE FREE FREE. It is no wonder Americans are soooo NOT MOTIVIATED!! Since everything is free, why bother trying to better yourself, or start a business to make money. Even when calling any US companies, the customer service reps are always kissing up to Americans. ...You all should trying calling any companies in Russia, china, India, South America. It is YOU who will have to do all the kissing up the government officials and to the companies. And yes, you will have to bribe them, to get anything done!!

  • @holaizzy
    @holaizzy Рік тому +196

    "You feel like you're walking around without a limb"
    Some of the most accurate words I've heard so far to describe the feeling I've experienced since the day I lost my son last year.
    Rest easy till we meet again, son. I love you.
    Johnathan ♾️ 27

    • @softlinkhub4976
      @softlinkhub4976 Рік тому +9

      sorry about losing your son. God grant you whatever you desire

    • @cloud.architect.1
      @cloud.architect.1 Рік тому +11

      Sorry for your loss. Thank you for being brave to share.

    • @phelps1485
      @phelps1485 Рік тому +1

      Sorry for your loss, I can't even imagine.

    • @damlabulbul4728
      @damlabulbul4728 Рік тому

      Sorry for your loss🤍

    • @jesusgonzales1088
      @jesusgonzales1088 Рік тому

      That was a powerful comment, my condolences.

  • @dakotadedreu1451
    @dakotadedreu1451 2 роки тому +62

    This man's words are EVERYTHING! So eloquently worded and full of valuable insight, his presence is truly refreshing🤗

    • @yuriimarshalofficial
      @yuriimarshalofficial 2 роки тому

      I don't know really why his speech is fresh for you, that's all obvious. Kind of how to avoid social degradation is so insightful...

  • @missshroom5512
    @missshroom5512 2 роки тому +1220

    I think the reason life gets better after 45 is because reproductive hormones falls to the way side. You kinda turn back into who were before puberty but with wisdom. If we could be honest about these changes and not make them some bad evil thing that there would be a lot happier people. Just like puberty was a ..process….so is changing back to your old self…

    • @beatrixsullivan7086
      @beatrixsullivan7086 2 роки тому +53

      I totally agree. Thank you for sharing your insight.

    • @meredithheath5272
      @meredithheath5272 2 роки тому +2

      💯💯💯💯💗💞💓👍👍👍💎

    • @27pugsly
      @27pugsly 2 роки тому +132

      After 45 u just don’t give a shit what people think u just live your life the way you want to !

    • @mindingmybusiness6309
      @mindingmybusiness6309 2 роки тому +4

      Indeed|

    • @garynicolson9341
      @garynicolson9341 2 роки тому +26

      Could this also be a bad thing? I mean why do older people jump onto hormone replacement therapy in order to feel youthful again

  • @kevintunstall6418
    @kevintunstall6418 Рік тому +23

    I’m 58 and relate to much of what he says although my childhood was trauma ridden and I learned to be street smart very early and I have a few life mantras that saved me from people who pulled me back from the brink. ‘If it’s to be it’s up to me’ is one ‘No one is coming to save you so save yourself is another ‘ and last but not least ‘No other success can compensate for failure in the home’. I’ve cobbled together a life on this and underpinned it with trying to be kind as my early years were brutal and I never wanted my kids to experience this due to my negligence. You get older and appreciate things more deeply for sure. Great episode.

  • @gusmcmanus6159
    @gusmcmanus6159 Рік тому +235

    Yes! I’m a 28yo male and growing up I entirely believed that expressing romantic interest in a girl was bad and unwanted. (Needless to say I have some real regrets) I was obviously scared which didn’t help, but I received the message repeatedly from trusted adults. This was before the cyber-pc culture even existed, I can’t imagine how it feels now.

    • @scott1294
      @scott1294 Рік тому +60

      I hear you and feel the same. My whole life beat into me from media to respect women, don't do anything that will make them uncomfortable, don't touch, etc which has lead me too not be aggressive enough by women's standards or desires for dating.

    • @gusmcmanus6159
      @gusmcmanus6159 Рік тому +52

      @@scott1294 I do think respecting women is important. I think the mistake that guys like us make is internalizing the opinion that our desire is unwanted. We heard the message somewhere. Maybe our mother figures suffered abuse, maybe they were caught up in a cultural ideal that demonized masculine assertiveness, maybe we were just scared. It ultimately doesn’t matter. The truth is, everyone wants to be desired, desire is nothing to be embarrassed about. Reclaiming your desire and creating the world you want is the important part. That’s what women are attracted to and that’s what men respect. The catch is, you have to consider the whole world you are creating. If you go down the dark-psychology rabbit hole, you will just be spreading a ton of unnecessary pain and it probably won’t work anyway because there’s a lot to misinterpret there which will just cause you more pain. If you’re overbearing and needy, you’re sending the message that you need a lot from them and no one wants that regardless of gender. The world I want to create is direct and respectful. I now approach when I’m interested (and feeling brave) and gracefully accept a “no” when I get one and move on. It’s terrifying but it gets easier every time and I’m surrounded more and more by quality people who reciprocate that behavior. My world is getting better.

    • @scott1294
      @scott1294 Рік тому

      @@gusmcmanus6159 I knew the women desire men, more specific confident masculine males but those years of being told to not make women uncomfortable take a while to deprogram. I didn't mean, to not respect girls or males, just not care what they think but still be considerate and kind to people.
      For me, I am almost too kind, and I do it because I want to but think for women it comes off as nice guy. Either way I have worked on myself to not care what they think in terms of the approach. I now have a mindset of abundance instead of scarcity which helps with confidence thinking there are other girls to ask if this one encounter doesn't work out. I keep that mindset all the time now and it is working. Scarcity mindset made me put too much importance on approach or date and tense up and not let natural flow occur.
      I watched lots of YT videos including how to make a great app profile and took very good pics which has resulted in lots of dates and many likes on dating app that I haven't even got to checking all of them out yet.
      One other thing I have noticed, I am old school and I prefer to call instead of texting all the time. The girls I have dated have all mentioned that I am the only one calling and talking for 1/2-2 hours which builds great emotional intimacy, texting just isn't the same,

    • @gusmcmanus6159
      @gusmcmanus6159 Рік тому +4

      @@scott1294 that’s awesome man, I’m glad we were both able to find some light. I’ll give that phone call thing a try, sounds like a great idea ✌️

    • @PsyQonaut
      @PsyQonaut Рік тому +13

      Almost 28 and it just feels more depressing. I have had some really really harsh rejections and it gets difficult to approach women confidently with that thought in the back of your head where you know you're going to get shit on

  • @cohesian1
    @cohesian1 2 роки тому +440

    It is so weird seeming to be one of the few males under 30, married for 5 years, with a kid and not dying financially. I moved to where I needed to, to make enough money for my family. It may be a frozen hell, but I can provide for my family. I think if I hadn’t met my wife in Highschool and married in my early 20s I could have been one of those disaffected young men, I almost did anyway. But having responsibilities and stepping up to the task is what saved me from myself.
    Welcome to my Tedx talk 😅

    • @NatasaSusic10
      @NatasaSusic10 2 роки тому +4

      What?

    • @Faydid
      @Faydid 2 роки тому +10

      Haha. I respect it

    • @nicolenicole319
      @nicolenicole319 2 роки тому +30

      Keep up the strong family values & work ethic .. well done 👍

    • @TheC0mmentSection
      @TheC0mmentSection 2 роки тому +35

      Don’t ever walk away from it and practice gratitude when times get tough, it’s a shit show out there.

    • @joeskeptical4762
      @joeskeptical4762 2 роки тому +4

      *Alaska?*

  • @scunny
    @scunny 2 роки тому +223

    I'm 34 and it's in this year I've taken so many small moments in, reading a book with my kids, looking out my window in to the street at whatever is there, cooking dinner for my family and watching them enjoy it.
    It's not alway easy to stop and find gratitude in 'just being' but if you manage to do it where you can it really does wonders for your wellbeing.

    • @AC-mp7cx
      @AC-mp7cx 2 роки тому +11

      I think this video criticized Andrew Tate SO wrongly. Let's be honest.
      Scott seems smart and all but he must not do his research. Andrew Tate tells men all the time that IT IS their fault if they can't find women.
      It's the quote un quote blue pilled mentality that tells men "just be you", in spite of the fact that, that doesn't work at all.
      Andrew Tates entire message is you must change and be better. He just doesn't absolve women of any wrong doing either, and is actually equal.

    • @hiteck007
      @hiteck007 2 роки тому +2

      Good job mate, keep it up.

    • @hiteck007
      @hiteck007 2 роки тому +4

      @@AC-mp7cx I agree, No research done at all. Go to the "Better Bachelor" channel he's done all the research & I know he's right. And what's worse is the information applies to Every western nation. I'm in australia & we got the same Mega dramas here with women only wanting the Top 5% of Men Exclusively and the rest are totally INVISIBLE to them & it's also a Statistically Proven Fact. I won't put up with women's sick attitudes & me being single for 3 Decades is Not my fault, it's theirs with their Gold Digging throw away attitude

    • @brianfrederick9219
      @brianfrederick9219 2 роки тому +4

      I'm 33 and have spent the entire year doing exactly the same. It's hard to show how much I've grown but I feel it in my soul more and more every day. So glad it's not just me waking up to real joy instead of chasing highs sold by the world.

    • @hiteck007
      @hiteck007 2 роки тому +2

      @E I guess your one of the lucky / unlucky ones. The statistics are not on the man's side of having a long term relationship at that age. I'm too old to bother anymore. Woman are only good for a Quickie these days if their into that & then you goto watch out for STD's, narr it's just not worth it.

  • @puqorganicapparel4172
    @puqorganicapparel4172 Рік тому +15

    Lost a parent a year ago tomorrow. I saw in your business Q and A that you said inspiring people was your motivation. This episode helped me immeasurably

  • @robertcece6972
    @robertcece6972 2 роки тому +76

    I just turned 40. Lost my dad last year. Was taking vitamins and working out to boost my mood, then wound up with a horrible, horrible case of B6 poisoning. Levels of 1022. Tinnitus, insomnia, visual snow, depression, paranoia, vomiting... then got covid 3 times. Like I got uppercutted 5 times in a row in the span of 2 yrs. While trying to keep my business afloat & take care of my mom. Its suppose to take 1 full yr to heal from this. I'm 5 months in. Still feel sick half my days but am feeling so much better overall. Like I'm waking up from a coma. Really I just wanna stop being hard on myself. Telling myself nonstop I should be making more, have a wife & kids by now. On the bright side my dad was a great father. Best I could've asked for. And thankfully I still have a great mom. And great brothers. A family who cares about me. We have to find what is important. What we are greatful for. Take the swings to the chin. Then put your chin up, chest out & try to get on the best you can.

    • @lovinreginald
      @lovinreginald 2 роки тому +2

      How'd you overdose the B6?

    • @hberg539
      @hberg539 2 роки тому +3

      How are you healing from this?

    • @raci179
      @raci179 2 роки тому +4

      Did you take the covid vaccines?

    • @majesticmoto
      @majesticmoto 2 роки тому +7

      @@raci179 my thoughts too.

    • @luciantempest1291
      @luciantempest1291 2 роки тому +1

      Celery juice, a whole bunch every day. It works it heals

  • @phelps1485
    @phelps1485 Рік тому +139

    Man this guy is brutally honest, no bullshit. He seems very authentic and genuine! Never heard of him.

    • @fernandoraphael95
      @fernandoraphael95 Рік тому +5

      Now you have. You *had* never heard of him

    • @phelps1485
      @phelps1485 Рік тому +3

      @@fernandoraphael95 Are you correcting my grammar?

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Рік тому

      He's infected with leftism and woke. We need to grab one of those defibrillators the woke medics are installing everywhere and see if we can shock the woke out of him. Ask him to say "Climate Change" or "Conspiracy Theory", then give him a jolt.

    • @roserevancroix2308
      @roserevancroix2308 Рік тому +1

      Aha but being honest is not the same as being right - they are too seperate things.
      Being honest just means telling others how you feel. The problem is that the world does not revolve around your feelings.
      The world doesn't care how you feel so being honest doesn't really do that much as you think it does. We live in a world where money is king - that is the world we have created, so if you have money you can do anything, money is king, not honesty.

  • @Remember-Death
    @Remember-Death 2 роки тому +199

    "To Be Wealthy In America, Is To Be Loved."
    --Scott Galloway

  • @heryogi_25
    @heryogi_25 Рік тому +12

    This is hands down my favorite talk on this channel. Bravo, truly. This has shed so much light and insight. Cheers to growth!

  • @dianebairstow45
    @dianebairstow45 Рік тому +152

    I was very impressed when Scott talked about praising his team. Praise is one of the best motivators there is. I worked at a fairly low paying job for years because I felt appreciated. Everybody on the team loved our boss. Being praised is an incentive to work harder, being criticized makes you want to quit.

    • @reubenmorris487
      @reubenmorris487 Рік тому +7

      If we keep criticizing bad management, will that make them quit and STOP ruining companies?

    • @misanthrophex
      @misanthrophex Рік тому +1

      Some people, including me, actually don't like being praised at all.

    • @vegetossgss1114
      @vegetossgss1114 Рік тому

      one world: HYPERGAMY (induced by social networks)

    • @keepcreationprocess
      @keepcreationprocess Рік тому

      Being respected and being appreciated....

    • @marrrweee
      @marrrweee 11 місяців тому

      I personally agree with you but with the caveat that praise (from your superior professionally or in life generally) without strong respect and trust in their opinion just makes you lazy.

  • @Porelcaminitoyotellevare
    @Porelcaminitoyotellevare Рік тому +109

    "America is a kind of generous place is you have money , its a rapacious violent place if you dont have money" what a quote!

    • @stankssmile5865
      @stankssmile5865 Рік тому +1

      And people don't concentrate enough to be worthy of any job above minimum wage crying and self victimising themselves

    • @Porelcaminitoyotellevare
      @Porelcaminitoyotellevare Рік тому +14

      @@stankssmile5865 jajajajajaj hahahahaha bahhhhh the problem are not individual is systemic.

    • @Porelcaminitoyotellevare
      @Porelcaminitoyotellevare Рік тому +3

      @@kas1843 Mass media and the wealthy celebrities praised such kind of lifestyle for decades. If liberalism and capitalism are making people stupid and easy to fall into mindless hedonistic consumerism, is not just a poor population fault.

    • @MohamedAhmed-ms9eu
      @MohamedAhmed-ms9eu Рік тому +2

      @@Porelcaminitoyotellevare He is acting as if we don't have billion-dollar advertising/marketing firms spending millions on research on how to manipulate people into consumer culture.

    • @tartarianking1232
      @tartarianking1232 5 місяців тому

      ​@@stankssmile5865people need to be able to live and breathe to be able to chase education.

  • @bossman674
    @bossman674 2 роки тому +39

    His examples of losing a parent and having a kid are the most accurate things I’ve heard on all of your podcasts... very powerful, and from experience, very very true.

  • @warriorhealer
    @warriorhealer Рік тому +38

    He was very spot on on the dynamics of the modern dating apps. It used to be more like 80/20. Now it's getting to a point where it's 90/10 or even 95/5.

  • @naping
    @naping 2 роки тому +16

    I very rarely see people so aware of what is going on around them, and so compasionate yet direct.

  • @GornubiusFlux
    @GornubiusFlux 2 роки тому +193

    I think the key to avoiding a feeling of mundaneness as you get to that 25-45 range is to live a simple, minimal life when you're 18-24, or whenever you are truly financially independent. Cook all your own food, have a routine you can stick to, don't buy meaningless crap, etc. It's boring as hell to cook your own meals, not drink too often, go to bed early etc, but you get used to it. The earlier you start, the sooner you get through the refractory period of despising mundaneness. You forget what vices (i.e. going out, takeaways, buying nice things) are like, so when you do it once in a while, you really appreciate it. Works for me at least.

    • @TomPrior16
      @TomPrior16 2 роки тому +10

      Totally agree

    • @TomPrior16
      @TomPrior16 2 роки тому +28

      Kind of disciplining yourself and conditioning yourself to be happy with less external input

    • @lookupjackkruseonyoutube
      @lookupjackkruseonyoutube 2 роки тому +10

      Currently living that life myself. Cheers y’all

    • @alfiewashere.695
      @alfiewashere.695 2 роки тому +4

      Spot on!

    • @loverofhumanity
      @loverofhumanity 2 роки тому

      Idk tbh I think we get anehdonia because our biology wants us to reproduce. I genuinely think you will necessarily get into that mundane life as you get older and there is nothing you can do about it. You're not biologically meant to be single without children at 25-45. You're a full adult passing by his youth.

  • @nickfisherNF
    @nickfisherNF 2 роки тому +36

    WOW I really resonate with your story Prof G. I'm 44 and made it and lost it twice. Going for round 3 in my 'happier' years. I also lost my dad at 33 and my mom at 41.Thank you for this talk.

    • @bogusmogus9551
      @bogusmogus9551 Рік тому

      Covid did it for my business the last time out of five

  • @Chery869
    @Chery869 Рік тому +19

    This guy gets it. Life is hard for young men in America 🇺🇸

    • @nwatson2773
      @nwatson2773 Рік тому +3

      Life is hard is you are poor

  • @achaney
    @achaney 2 роки тому +34

    I'm sorry, but I don't know the interviewer's name, but of the episodes I've seen, he is literally one of the best interviewers I've ever had the pleasure to watch. Just brilliant how he gets people to open up so quickly and share things we've never heard from his guests. But let's not overlook Professor Galloway. He is one of the most brutally honest and well thought out observers of the human male condition. Two greats, one interview. Brilliant.

  • @s.m.4198
    @s.m.4198 Рік тому +54

    As a mom of a 20 year old son, I am so thankful you both. ❤❤❤❤ real tears

    • @ricardo9013
      @ricardo9013 Рік тому +4

      I'm a 28 year old male, I'd be dead or in jail if it wasn't for my mother. Life is difficult for young boys it's good you care

  • @George-du9bf
    @George-du9bf 2 роки тому +90

    Fascinating episode with seriously important messages. As a 24 year old male this is the stuff you need to hear. Cheers Steven

    • @danielplainview6527
      @danielplainview6527 2 роки тому

      Careful. He’s 100% off the mark on a few things for which he presents as undeniable. He doesn’t understand those subjects, but he seems to have emotional ties to his opinions about them. E.g. “stolen elections”, “climate change,” etc.

    • @George-du9bf
      @George-du9bf 2 роки тому +3

      @@danielplainview6527 Just because he may not, in your opinion, know as much about certain topics as he claims, it does not invalidate his other points on masculinity and human social interaction for example

    • @danielplainview6527
      @danielplainview6527 2 роки тому +1

      @@George-du9bf I don’t disagree. It’s just that most people have a difficult time sussing that out - the may properly articulate one topic, while only sounding insightful about another for which they are way off the mark.

    • @George-du9bf
      @George-du9bf Рік тому

      @@strategichuman3742 okay mate, keep wanking off into a Kleenex 👍🏼

  • @opadennis
    @opadennis Рік тому +3

    Excellent interview! You listened and let Scott give complete his answers. Galloway is honest, shares his faults and failures and in so doing helps us be honest with ourselves.

  • @rocknrollspartacus
    @rocknrollspartacus Рік тому +86

    I've watched this interview everyday the past week and it's incredibly enlightening. Both of you gentleman are very thoughtful, intelligent and inspiring. Thank you.

    • @vegetossgss1114
      @vegetossgss1114 Рік тому +2

      one world: HYPERGAMY (induced by social networks)

    • @rocknrollspartacus
      @rocknrollspartacus Рік тому

      @@vegetossgss1114 that is sad, its like we're living in medieval times where a Prince or Princess was married off for alliances. I just looked up that term and under the "See Also" part, "Gold Digging" was one of the terms that it is synonymous with. Goodbye to romance. 💘

    • @maxkho00
      @maxkho00 Рік тому

      ​@@vegetossgss1114I find it refreshing to see a self-described progressive acknowledge the existence of hypergamy and the value of masculinity. Most progressives I've encountered are strongly opposed to the idea that there is a hypergamy, calling this view a sexist myth. It's not often that you find a progressive with a sense of nuance.

    • @Browningate
      @Browningate 11 місяців тому

      How'd you find the time to do that? I've tried to watch it for an entire week, but only got through a few segments.

    • @rocknrollspartacus
      @rocknrollspartacus 11 місяців тому

      @@Browningate i didn't watch the entire thing every time

  • @jaysandhu7146
    @jaysandhu7146 2 роки тому +154

    The best way to think about rejection that helped me is… if you and a girl don’t get along, it’s just a misalignment of beliefs and values, not necessarily rejection. Just put yourself out there and if you’re worth something and feel good about yourself, someone will not reject you. At a certain point it’s a numbers game.

    • @colexovitch
      @colexovitch 2 роки тому +26

      People today are deeply afraid of rejection. I don't get.... Rejection is just a natural part of life. I always ask for what I want, and if it's a NO then so be it. At least I asked and had the balls to put myself out there. people have become extremely fragile, soft, and narcissistic. Their whole identity is a few good moments put together on social media, it is essentially a house of cards. If people would put down the video games, social media, eat a cleaner diet, and go to the gym to get in shape they would feel 100xs more confident and happier with themselves.

    • @kevin15776
      @kevin15776 2 роки тому +18

      But a very depressing numbers game. Why keep playing a game you never win?? Forget women and focus on yourself. Let women fend for themselves out there.

    • @KJ_SC
      @KJ_SC 2 роки тому +27

      more often than not women reject men for much shallower reasons than "beliefs and values". You give them way too much credit.

    • @vytallicaq.6881
      @vytallicaq.6881 2 роки тому +9

      I don't think a positive frame of mind is going to help in every case. In many cases, it only helps initially. Many people don't have popular characteristics, so they are rejected every time. That makes your future seem pretty bleak. I knew 2 guys who committed suicide when their girlfriends dumped them. It took them a long time to find someone they liked, since all the others they liked, refused to take the time to get to know them. When they lost the one girl who did take the time, they were devastated. They thought they had lost their one chance at love, because they had been rejected so many times before. People don't have to have sex with everyone they meet, but if they have some free time, they should at least take the time to get to know the people they aren't immediately attracted to. That would at least give the rejected ones the feeling that they have a chance, to one day find love. You can recover from being rejected. Even if you are rejected 9 times out of 10. But you CAN'T recover without that 10th person. Everyone needs SOME acceptance from those they like.

    • @di3486
      @di3486 2 роки тому +8

      If you are worth something? Well I guess i am not worth anything. I am a woman and I experienced nothing but rejection for the first 30 years of my life. Eventually I met another nerd like me and I was finally not rejected.

  • @kdjourney51
    @kdjourney51 Рік тому +20

    Very candid. Using real words instead of theater…. So glad he is educating young adults.

  • @rrickarr
    @rrickarr Рік тому +7

    I really appreciate your honesty (7:07) where you mention that people who are wealthy are often not honest about how they ended up that way. They make out that it was just doing what they were passionate about. The honesty about the difference people live according to whether they are wealthy or poor is so refreshing. I also like the fact that you mentioned that being your bare essentials---being a white male really did help.

  • @jamesluvdigital6383
    @jamesluvdigital6383 2 роки тому +66

    Watching this and just thinking wow... Scott's ability to decipher social behaviours and articulate in such a way that it encourages and empowers the viewers. Great guest!

  • @nancylpr
    @nancylpr Рік тому +45

    I lost my mom when I was six years old. It ruined the trajectory of my life. Everything happened out of sequence. I had no guide, no advocate, I was an inconvenient leftover. You speak the truth.

    • @johnwehunt4305
      @johnwehunt4305 Рік тому

      Girl, this is life in this fallen world. Best to seek and work hard at making up the deficit. You willbe stronger from it.

    • @nancylpr
      @nancylpr Рік тому +6

      @@johnwehunt4305, you only think you know.

    • @stelmosfire11
      @stelmosfire11 Рік тому +19

      @@johnwehunt4305 Your objectivity is alarming. Strength may be a by-product of loss and grief but it will never make up for the loss of a parent at such a young age. Grow some empathy.

    • @perrycoffey5410
      @perrycoffey5410 Рік тому +3

      Damn sorry too hear this i lost my mom at 15 hope your doing better somehow

    • @chaneldiane8611
      @chaneldiane8611 Рік тому +2

      I lost my mother at 12. I just started feeling like i matter at 33. I was always beautiful , kind and smart but felt so worthless all because I never had the validating love of a mother. I sympathise with you. Be strong for yourself and mother yourself. Love and light 💡

  • @Francis-of8cw
    @Francis-of8cw 2 роки тому +83

    I can totally get he still thinks negatively of himself. Growing up without a dad present. Losing your mother early. The love we recieve from parents and family throughout our youth is something we carry with is our whole life. It sounds like he has had a lonely, hard life and he just made the most of it. I can relate!

    • @irenemax3574
      @irenemax3574 2 роки тому +3

      Yes Francis, I think the same. I'm enjoying the conversation but I have to keep pausing because his vibe is weighty and sad, and that makes me want to click away, but curiosity keeps me pausing to read a few comments, back to listen to some more (whilst trying not to glance at the screen: his kyphosis makes me sad).

    • @GELIinfluencing
      @GELIinfluencing Рік тому

      R1

    • @perrycoffey5410
      @perrycoffey5410 Рік тому

      I can relate as well I never meet my dad and lost my mom at 15, it just sucks ass lol

  • @MarcaoPT
    @MarcaoPT Рік тому +15

    Rarely I have agreed so much with a podcast guest as with Scott.
    What an enlightened personality. It made me a die-hard fan of him.

    • @contessajones5619
      @contessajones5619 Рік тому +1

      He’s delusional to think his kids at NYU represent most of their generation. It’s NYU with an acceptance rate of 13%! It’s not public high school in Alabama.
      For a professor who has good insight, it was a lame idiotic comment.

    • @MarcaoPT
      @MarcaoPT Рік тому

      @@contessajones5619 If the only thing you have to say about a person a single mishap or flaw, I guess you must have come directly from heaven, as I assume you must be perfect.
      Wish you the best for the rest of your life.

  • @ima1flirt
    @ima1flirt 2 роки тому +134

    This man just dismantled us millennials and gen zs to the t, like I’m perfectly self aware of what’s going on in our generation but his simple commentary on we lack on a generation due to social media was needed. Especially with the top 10% of attractive social users get all the love, I’m definitely the top 50% as it’s always been a hit and miss but I get there but I definitely seen the bottom percentage get no love at all. That’s why we need to get out there and be more present in society, create connection. I wanna meet my wife in a shopping centre not on instagram lol. Great guest

    • @melinda6768
      @melinda6768 2 роки тому +25

      Hi there, early millennial here. Coming from a place of encouragement and Not sure which gen you identify with, but from my perspective if you were coming of age in the 90's early 00's before the social media boom we have today, we had chat rooms then myspace. Meeting (decent) people was a challenge then. Attractiveness standards were pretty high in person because of magazines, TV and rampant body dismorphia expected of females and males. It seems to have gotten worse. It's gotta be 10 times harder now 😞 and I am sympathetic to anyone trying to navigate that mess because no group has it any easier. I remember everyone seemed obsessed with bars, raves, partying, drinking and all the things that come along with such events while living it up on an unreliable paycheck or two (when I started/was dating). Meanwhile, I was searching and hoping for a loving husband early on and most would consider me attractive. People would actually scoff when I said dating was hard for me. I'd get the "you're being ridiculous, what person wouldn't want you speech". When getting down to the why when people didn't want anything serious. Most didn't want a long-term relationship because they didn't feel they were where they needed to be financially, college debt and needed more time making money...including myself buying into that narrative at one point in my 20's.
      I met my husband at 30 while he was working a shift making minimum wage at a grocery chain. He approached me. First thing I noticed was his work ethic. He worked hard with passion and charisma. The same way I function with work. I just wanted a decent, loving person in my life. We hit it off.
      We struggled financially for a while living in crappy apartments caring for our child. We made it through.
      It wasn't until recently, better paid jobs and living situation came along after we were married. So I'd say advice for anyone just because someone isn't making what you think they should make, or you aren't where you think you should be financially, doesn't mean the potential isn't there to be comfortable eventually. Struggle, grit and maturity sometimes shows what partners are made of.
      I hope you meet someone wonderful one day, and I would highly recommend at a shopping center! not social media.

    • @ima1flirt
      @ima1flirt 2 роки тому +8

      @@melinda6768 nah appreciate your thoughts , I’m a 90 baby and your right every generation had its difficulties. And it’s definitely comes down to me again not being ready due financial blah blah but the more I look at it, it’s like when am I ever going to be ready ? So I definitely acknowledge that struggle comes regardless it’s best to do it with someone who has the same values and vision as you. But it so hard nowadays to meet someone’s girls got so much options and even the not most attractive girl will even give you the side eye as social media lol but Yh I’m just going to be more social and less distracted about the future as we’re already fucked anyways 😂

    • @mrbillhilly343
      @mrbillhilly343 2 роки тому +1

      Does this man realize, Millennials don't have sex because they're afraid of being "metoo WOLF'd!" when they ask somebody out for a date. Oh & the Baby Boomers who raised us abnormalized hormones, banned us from having relationships by telling us we were "too young for love" & to focus on careers & other meaningless garbage. When Millennials tried to get married young, we were ostracized, gaslighted & our relationships were sabotaged by our Baby Boomer parents who thought they knew better & wanted us to go to university & wait until we were in our 40s before we started dating & getting married. Now, we're full of anxiety... Oh, but at-least we have expensive property & a university degree; never-mind we're single, lonely & have had ZERO practice at relationships. But, at-least I've been able to retire at 35 years of age. Can't spend my money when I don't have a girlfriend.

    • @zeppelin0110
      @zeppelin0110 2 роки тому +5

      @@melinda6768 Thanks for sharing that story. I have a feeling there are fewer women these days who would take the time to appreciate the character of someone who is working at a grocery store. Your life is so much better for it!

    • @kilimarshal2397
      @kilimarshal2397 2 роки тому +2

      i am 30 still alone. i hate my life. two women rejected me and both lairs cruel. Women have easier time finding freaken partner . We need made equal by punishing women for cruelty emotionally. I am kind, I had more money these women and its messed up. I had sex last 12 months but not very much fuck feminist. they want call throwing beer bottle during argument with gf.

  • @maryanncrody4867
    @maryanncrody4867 Рік тому +310

    I was made fun of so much in school and came home to a mentally ill mother and alcoholic father. I am 68 years old now and the horrors of life were all perpetrated by the people around d me. During vivid lock down I discovered how much I love being alone. So I respectfully disagree. Because in my experience most people are horrible. I experience peace for the first time in my long life. I read I think I pray I write I as so stressed out before being around others. If people are horrible we are better off alone..

    • @cantgame4now152
      @cantgame4now152 Рік тому +30

      People aren't horrible, you just had a bad experience. There are many good people out there, and pretty much you are one of them, and it all comes down to what you do with this 'good' in you.
      Everyone talks about people being bad and all, but what are you?

    • @lucindabreeding
      @lucindabreeding Рік тому +24

      I believe you, and I am so sorry the people who were supposed to care for you hurt you.

    • @stankssmile5865
      @stankssmile5865 Рік тому +14

      You're voicing 99% of what all normal economically and skill wise average people say, the jealous others have ruined life for us.

    • @stintza
      @stintza Рік тому +16

      if i was your friend when you were younger i woulda whooped your bullies asses. sorry you had to experience that

    • @mikewizoski7593
      @mikewizoski7593 Рік тому +27

      People are horrible but I’m glad you have more peace, I hope you get to enjoy the rest of your life , I had a similar experience to your life.

  • @KiwaXo
    @KiwaXo 2 роки тому +268

    My mental health and point of view is genuinely better off thanks to this channel. Appreciate all your hard work and efforts man🙏🏽🖤

    • @TheDiaryOfACEO
      @TheDiaryOfACEO  2 роки тому +23

      Thank you 🙏🏽❤

    • @SSD92_x
      @SSD92_x 2 роки тому

      Stop obsessing about your mental health,it’s not that fragile

    • @AC-mp7cx
      @AC-mp7cx 2 роки тому +7

      I think this video criticized Andrew Tate SO wrongly. Let's be honest.
      Scott seems smart and all but he must not do his research. Andrew Tate tells men all the time that IT IS their fault if they can't find women.
      It's the quote un quote blue pilled mentality that tells men "just be you", in spite of the fact that, that doesn't work at all.
      Andrew Tates entire message is you must change and be better. He just doesn't absolve women of any wrong doing either, and is actually equal.

    • @dakotadedreu1451
      @dakotadedreu1451 2 роки тому

      Right tho? Epic content!🥰

    • @gregoriousgilbert519
      @gregoriousgilbert519 2 роки тому +4

      My mental health is better without negative people around me. dont need their crap projected onto me.. "I can assume I am not one of them...

  • @10_door_tycoon
    @10_door_tycoon Рік тому +40

    I’m a black man who was born and raised in California and this man Scott Galloway 100,000,000% gets it. His childhood and where he is now is eerily close to my own. From the Universities he attended, to the entrepreneurial struggles, to what fueled the drive to partake on that hard entrepreneurial mission, to taking care of his mom which I started doing in my teens. He’s also right about the residual effects of being isolated.

    • @kamrudkd
      @kamrudkd Рік тому

      California (Califor-nia).....the name comes from Califa or Khalifa... Khalifa is an Arabic name meaning land of islamic rule...lol how many ppl know this fact.

  • @nicolehsu2485
    @nicolehsu2485 2 роки тому +20

    This is my favorite podcast episode so far -- couldn't just play this in the background, I had to sit down and watch to make sure I was getting every bit of knowledge I could from this conversation.

  • @markostojanovic7193
    @markostojanovic7193 2 роки тому +56

    This is probably the best birthday gift I could've gotten from somebody who doesn't know me - thank you, Steven. If somebody wants to watch a single podcast this year, it should be this episode. So many insights, so clear and concise. Btw, amazing guests and amazing interviews on this channel in general. I have such a warm memory of listening to this podcast on my way to work/gym alone in the car while my wife to be was in US. Damn it if it doesn't add at least 1% to my becoming an entrepreneur. Warm regards from Serbia, keep up the amazing work. :)
    P.S. 'Western' podcasts should never underestimate how much impact they have on the climate and view-of-life of the educated ppl in a bit more 'Eastern' parts of the world. Never forget that! Much love.

    • @AC-mp7cx
      @AC-mp7cx 2 роки тому +1

      I think this video criticized Andrew Tate SO wrongly. Let's be honest.
      Scott seems smart and all but he must not do his research. Andrew Tate tells men all the time that IT IS their fault if they can't find women.
      It's the quote un quote blue pilled mentality that tells men "just be you", in spite of the fact that, that doesn't work at all.
      Andrew Tates entire message is you must change and be better. He just doesn't absolve women of any wrong doing either, and is actually equal.

    • @juneelle370
      @juneelle370 2 роки тому +1

      Andrew Tate teachers red pill pornography “philosophy”. There is terrible toxicity against women and relationships in general. Men taught to lie and decisive, cheat and steal. I’m all for channels that teach men LOVING game and self-improvement/self-esteem--but they are RARE. We need more men who are actually helping men build loving and lasting relationships with their partner and children!

  • @calebjohnson4910
    @calebjohnson4910 Рік тому +36

    Awesome episode, it’s so good when people are so open and vulnerable with their experiences and their journey. I relate so much to time flying past.. I’m only 29 so I’m glad that I caught on relatively early.. Hearing him talk about not laughing or crying out aloud for so long.. That really hit home for me! I started working full time when I was just 15.. And it feels like since then I haven’t laughed or cried uncontrollably.. When you let your life become busy and mundane you really do fall out of touch with your emotions..
    How lucky I feel that there is a platform like this for me to hear other peoples stories and how they’ve overcome and dealt with the adversities in their own life!

  • @beingintrinsic
    @beingintrinsic Рік тому +7

    Another HIGH QUALITY conversation. Everything Scott said was as astonishing as it was accurate and deeply attuned to the pressures and structures of our time and how the ego and spirit respond. Medicinal message.

  • @hwway4488
    @hwway4488 Рік тому +34

    Being isolated has been terrible for me but the people I have been around have been many times worse, we should be able to retreat from the kinds of people this world has created, reinforced, rewarded

  • @erickarostran1569
    @erickarostran1569 Рік тому +72

    What a great episode! I especially appreciated the lessons learned and how kindness is so underrated in our "progress-driven" world.

  • @minagica
    @minagica 2 роки тому +105

    Quiet quitting is because companies are mismanaging us and are actually breaking down our internal motivation. I didn't quiet quit, I was just driven to my limit and I struggled to squeeze out the minimum from myself by the end (we had layoffs this spring because they moved most of our jobs to the Philippines). They insisted on stats, even if the stats lied because people were cheating but the figures couldn't reflect that, and on motivating us with bonuses when I am just not motivated by more money, I wouldn't even log my overtime even in times when they would pay it (my team was salaried). I was motivated by making a difference and being thorough but I kept being told, effectively, to just be faster instead. Now I have a lot of trouble task switching, so becoming faster at the work we were doing wasn't an option for me. Anyhoo, I learned a lot, I'm grateful for that, worked on an amazing team with fantastic people, but I'm also glad it's over because the life has been squeezed out of me to the point I'm still recovering

    • @melindagibson6358
      @melindagibson6358 Рік тому +11

      I totally feel this. I’m normally super motivated and enthusiastic at and about my work, but I feel I haven’t had a good manager in years. It’s very demotivating. Helping clients is what keeps me going but I feel very despondent about other things at work.

    • @Lord_Winston
      @Lord_Winston Рік тому +3

      Correct, recruitment process is broken

    • @yodie26
      @yodie26 Рік тому +7

      Same for me. I was happy to get laid off because the work/life balance was awful. I worked 60-75 hr weeks due to attrition and I did the work of 3 people daily. I became my own boss so I won’t have to answer to bad management and corporate bureaucracies.

    • @zos8085
      @zos8085 Рік тому

      No. Companies are employing consultants in a race to the bottom. They force customers to jump hoops. I file small claims cases for each time-wasting maneuver, especially overseas call centres with staff who cannot escalate nor understand ' Your inability to escalate this means I will file a legal case in my local jurisdiction'. Thank you for being clear you cannot resolve this.

    • @gabrielcaleb9277
      @gabrielcaleb9277 Рік тому +1

      Hello from France Agnes ( a french name actually..,) try to find the true story written by Dan Johnston . In french it s called " more precious than money...or silver... ( Same word in french ) it might encourage you ) ✌️🌷

  • @jeromenjuki2054
    @jeromenjuki2054 Рік тому +22

    As someone who feel they are essentially starting their life again at 30 after an end to a long-term relationship, this conversation is top tier.

  • @taghazoutmoon5031
    @taghazoutmoon5031 2 роки тому +6

    i find the soberness and seriousness of this guest so attractive. he's so authentic and real and pragmatic.

  • @patty3451
    @patty3451 2 роки тому +16

    What I love about Scott Galloway is his growth, and his reflection on the importance of being kind.

    • @bogusmogus9551
      @bogusmogus9551 Рік тому

      I think Galloway is wrong about that answer.
      If he was, as he says 'kinder' when younger, he wouldn't have got anywhere near as successful as he has. He would have been a doormat. The very sort of guy he was talking about yes, the bottom 46%. Because he was mean and brutal got him where he is. Otherwise he wouldn't have been anything now. He is succesful. He is just guilty now and has the luxury of reflection.
      The guy conradicts himself on every statement he makes.

    • @theresamcgallicher
      @theresamcgallicher Рік тому

      @@bogusmogus9551 My husband is the kindest person I know, and he is no doormat. The two things are not mutually exclusive.

    • @bogusmogus9551
      @bogusmogus9551 Рік тому +1

      @@theresamcgallicher Thanks. Probably why at 54 years old I have never been married or engaged even and why I have failed at life.

    • @theresamcgallicher
      @theresamcgallicher Рік тому +1

      @@bogusmogus9551 If you are getting up and breathing every day, and interacting with people like me, then you have not failed at iife! Don't compare your inside to someone else's outside!

    • @bogusmogus9551
      @bogusmogus9551 Рік тому

      @@theresamcgallicher But I'm not 😞

  • @coke8077
    @coke8077 Рік тому +122

    I’m so glad I’m still in a youth program like Boy Scouts. Without it my life wouldn’t be as fun and social as it is now. Bringing young kids together is so important, even if a lot of people (especially people my age) stigmatize it as “nerdy”, “weird”, or “pointless” when it is really so important.

    • @mochamommyATX
      @mochamommyATX Рік тому +8

      I agree with you. I have lifelibg friends from Youth Sports/programs.

    • @jamesmachado8874
      @jamesmachado8874 Рік тому +1

      I never regretted one day I spent with my son in the Boy Scouts. It is an incredible organization.

    • @bettycarolan6663
      @bettycarolan6663 Рік тому

      Good on you! 👍

  • @brimstonebull
    @brimstonebull Рік тому +21

    Life was easiest for Steven. The way it was setup, during his youth and his coming of age, is now gone. Myself, at 41, had it less easy than he did, and anyone in their 20s right now has it much worse. And this trend will continue. There is no longer a way to work yourself out of poverty. The game is rigged against those without, designed to keep them without, and tweaked to reward those who do not need those rewards any more. Good luck everyone.

    • @VicInNocal
      @VicInNocal Рік тому

      We've reverted back to a kind of feudalism where millions of sheep just accept the superiority of others who lord over them as "just the way it is", as they hand over half of their earnings to the State.

    • @marrrweee
      @marrrweee 11 місяців тому +2

      As a 26 yo witnessing firsthand the experience of my parents and living my own, your statement is extremely accurate.

  • @redflag4255
    @redflag4255 2 роки тому +23

    Being Irrationally passionate about personal well being sounds like something I need in my life, thanks for this interview.

  • @sarahbyrne8501
    @sarahbyrne8501 Рік тому +58

    At fifty I’m only starting to live.
    This life has so much beauty… let the pain go.
    He’s so right.

  • @theaugustusuwi
    @theaugustusuwi Рік тому +14

    This guy seems like a honest real person.. refreshing and educational

  • @olenatrotsiuk4130
    @olenatrotsiuk4130 Рік тому +2

    I am 52 and I am smiling. Thank you for this kind reminder ❤️☺️

  • @4merhr
    @4merhr Рік тому +10

    Getting older is bittersweet. It brings to focus what you are truly made of. It also helps you shed all the silliness in your head, thinking you are the center of this world. I'm not, "you" are. I've found joy is helping give substance to others.

  • @HappinessTheBrand
    @HappinessTheBrand 2 роки тому +36

    Interesting, because 0-25 were my saddest years ☹️ I believe 30-40 are going to be some of my happiest years 🙂 because I'm prioritizing it.

  • @monahritcu9383
    @monahritcu9383 2 роки тому +58

    Best episode, best guest ever! The man is a legend. Ironically, time flew away listening to this episode. The man speaks so so truthfully about everything human for all time. ❤️

    • @AC-mp7cx
      @AC-mp7cx 2 роки тому +2

      I think this video criticized Andrew Tate SO wrongly. Let's be honest.
      Scott seems smart and all but he must not do his research. Andrew Tate tells men all the time that IT IS their fault if they can't find women.
      It's the quote un quote blue pilled mentality that tells men "just be you", in spite of the fact that, that doesn't work at all.
      Andrew Tates entire message is you must change and be better. He just doesn't absolve women of any wrong doing either, and is actually equal.

    • @pjabber5679
      @pjabber5679 2 роки тому

      He's a cvck who panders to vvomen, ironically who are also the most abusive types of men.

    • @danielplainview6527
      @danielplainview6527 2 роки тому

      Meh. He makes some reasonable observations, but is way off on some critical stuff for which he seems overly passionate about.
      You can see the points where his mind switches from reason to emotion.

    • @privatelending6801
      @privatelending6801 2 роки тому

      @E Exactly. Tate is good for the young. Inexperienced

    • @monahritcu9383
      @monahritcu9383 2 роки тому

      @@danielplainview6527 more than 70% of the people using yt don't ever think "yeah they say so cause they're thinking through their emotions"... People watch and process it as is. And for those with less critical thinking this episode is exactly what they need to hear.

  • @karanmahil4069
    @karanmahil4069 Рік тому +8

    Old Ryan Reynolds knows his shit, thanks for sharing man 🙌🏾

  • @BrianDeCosta
    @BrianDeCosta 2 роки тому +18

    Scott is probably my favorite thinker I've discovered this year. He's got that no-BS dad energy

  • @devnerdgirl4638
    @devnerdgirl4638 Рік тому +39

    When I, some lady, was online dating in college I assumed everyone my age was also a broke college student and that was fine because I knew eventually that would change. I met my husband that way and he’s by far my favorite person in the world and I consider myself very lucky. He picked me up in his rusty loud piece of shit car, lived with his mother, but we were inseparable since day one of meeting. Now we’re relatively well off, but we certainly didn’t start that way.

    • @SuspiriaX
      @SuspiriaX Рік тому +2

      @Just Chill just chill ok

    • @SuspiriaX
      @SuspiriaX Рік тому

      @DevNerdGirl Would you have dated 34 year old no job no resume but passionately and persistently working on starting up a biz?

    • @sweJEverywhere
      @sweJEverywhere Рік тому

      @@justchill5628 prolly fake

    • @Janon743
      @Janon743 Рік тому

      Congratulations to you! You met him through online dating? Just out of curiosity may I ask where?

  • @Wiggy8
    @Wiggy8 Рік тому +43

    The most important part of your life is who you partner with. VERY IMPORTANT! The stress and disappointment I went through really impacted my health, and overall my life.

    • @tarynrowe5067
      @tarynrowe5067 Рік тому +3

      You are not alone!

    • @ernestoberger7589
      @ernestoberger7589 Рік тому

      Yes, women are not suited for long-term relationships anymore. Research proves it. Estimates say that around half of them will be single by 2030. Studies also show they cheat more. Women lose interest in relationships way faster than men. Then, they start to blame the men for the problems without taking any responsibility. About 80% of divorces are filed by women.

  • @FizzyGravy
    @FizzyGravy Рік тому +5

    One of the most enlightening podcasts I have heard in a long time

  • @kn7615
    @kn7615 Рік тому +23

    Steven, you are one of the BEST interviewers I have ever seen, because you ask profound, compelling, clear questions...and then you LISTEN. So very rare in ANY of these formats, on any platform. The result is deep fascination, many "ah-ha's," strong reluctance to step away, notes taken, emailing friends to pass the link and fangrrrling this interview and your channel ~ THANK YOU!

  • @truthtellah7195
    @truthtellah7195 Рік тому +38

    For me the best episode yet. Hadn't heard of Scott before but boy is he on the money. Nice work guys!

  • @avila7739
    @avila7739 2 роки тому +14

    I saw a young man out in public wearing a bright red sweatshirt with Bold Black words saying "Never Catch Feelings"
    This is tearable for men of these days to have a belief that you should be dry in your auric field.
    This is Slowly Zombifiing a segment of our youth!

    • @irenemax3574
      @irenemax3574 2 роки тому +5

      Never Catch Feelings is a humorous shirt logo which actually announces, "I'm a sensitive emotionally intelligent man just longing to fall in love with the woman who responds to my shirt words".
      I love your "tearable" as a misspelling of "terrible"!
      Tearable: def. Capable of invoking a lachrymose response.

    • @ChrisDragotta
      @ChrisDragotta Рік тому

      Love is expensive.

    • @toddmitchell2125
      @toddmitchell2125 7 місяців тому

      ​@@irenemax3574 Maybe Tearable as in able have or invoke tears...ie crying?
      The English language...crazy stuff. :-)

  • @kakhead23
    @kakhead23 Рік тому +9

    I was in a dark place when I stumbled across this video, and this gave me a lot of perspective . What an amazing talk. Thank you

    • @InMyBrz
      @InMyBrz Рік тому

      the new Jordan Peterson

  • @dandass6879
    @dandass6879 2 роки тому +19

    This conversation really hit home for me. The age I am (37) and the stage of life I’m at, founder of a company, buying our first home, first child on the way. It felt like Scott was sharing wisdom having literally gone through all of those stages. And helping me understand that it feels tough for everyone, but keep going, and here’s what else I would have done…
    Thank you for this conversation and your show over all 😊🙏🏾🤙🏾

  • @dhender499
    @dhender499 2 роки тому +24

    I had never heard of this guy or you, either. I stumbled upon this based on other videos I had taken an interest in. This is pure gold. Meant to be watched over and over again.

    • @CazHbokbok
      @CazHbokbok Рік тому +3

      Agreed I feel like I need to watch this every week to maintain its impact.

  • @user-zc5xe2sf4q
    @user-zc5xe2sf4q Рік тому +42

    The only thing that sucks about this episode is that it's not 5 hours long. Really enjoyed this!

  • @tahirisaid2693
    @tahirisaid2693 11 місяців тому +145

    Building wealth involves developing good habits like regularly putting money away in intervals for solid investments. Instead of trying to predict and prognosticate the stability of the market and precisely when the change is going to happen, a better strategy is simply having a portfolio that’s well prepared for any eventually, that’s how some folks' been averaging 150K every 7week these past 4months according to Bloomberg.

    • @georgestone0123
      @georgestone0123 11 місяців тому

      The professionals presently control the market since they not only have the essential business strategy but also have access to inside information that the general public is not aware of..

  • @BeingUndone
    @BeingUndone 2 роки тому +13

    This is what depth and clarity look like! Your content is HIGH VALUE, WELL BALANCED and THOUGHTFUL. Your contribution to this world helps to build rather than tear down or sow seeds of division. Compelling indeed! Sincerely insightful guest, the manner with which he projected himself read AUTHENTICITY!

  • @jenniferpowell23
    @jenniferpowell23 Рік тому +640

    I must say you are an inspiration because I started up investing and trading as a scared investor who doesn’t want to lose money, glad to say I’m very profitable now and bought my first house through it

  • @thokozanimkhize7617
    @thokozanimkhize7617 2 роки тому +40

    I feel like the only way to instill grit in anyone is for them to go through some kind of hardship/s. But i also feel like it needs to happen early in life and not late. I find our generation just doesn't know how or have the will to persevere and life, in my opinion, is so much more difficult now. We live in a society that promotes self centeredness and has desensitized everyone to things that previously reminded you that you are alive and that people matter or having a community matters. We're lonelier and sadder and we just don't know how to deal with this

    • @visionvixxen
      @visionvixxen 2 роки тому

      You said it ALL!

    • @pellaxestorba4836
      @pellaxestorba4836 2 роки тому

      Fact is, that the government IS in conspiracy with dark organizations against humanity in general.
      To conquer and enslave humanity THE YOUNG MEN must be neutralised.
      Because young men tend to naturally become the resistance to sinister organizations that target the regular people.
      Men also represent the danger of becoming successful FATHERS who raise many children who look like their fathers.
      Children that INHERIT the land and family possessions of the nation.
      So THAT is why men are ENCOURAGED by society and feminists to become feminised, sedated by p####graphy, drugs, videogames, nutflux, etc etc ...INTOXICATED into ineffectivity...POISONED.
      This is also why females are both subliminally and also not so subliminally encouraged to hate men.
      Women are encouraged to discriminate against men.
      THIS IS ESPECIALLY TRUE OF YOUNG WOMEN OF EUROPEAN HERITAGE.
      To SPECIFICALLY target young MEN of EUROPEAN heritage.
      EUROPE IS IN THE CROSSHAIRS OF THE ENEMIES OF HUMANITY.
      JUST ASK YOURSELF WHO RULES THE USA.
      THAT IS THE ENEMY OF HUMANITY.
      BECAUSE THE devil-god THEY SLAVE FOR...
      ...IS THE ARCHENEMY OF CHRIST THE SON OF GOD.
      ""If they have hated me; they will also hate you.""
      ---Jesus

    • @saharagold
      @saharagold 2 роки тому

      True. Working in family business from age of 8, instilled in me work ethic, losing my mother at a younger age made me grow up fast and be very responsible looking after a family. To the point I can't relate much to moocher types who still have their parents looking after them in their 40s and 50s. Biggest turnoff is soft cock men. No balls. Massive turnoff. Nothing to do with income either. No wonder so many women are on their own.

    • @theyellowhouse3569
      @theyellowhouse3569 2 роки тому +1

      I’m 49 and it’s only in the last 3 years that I’ve delved into finding out who I truly am. I listen to podcasts. Block out most of the main media news. I do a bit if meditation. Love breath work. Gratitude everyday day when I wake up. I feel like such a different person. It’s one of the main advantages of social media for me. Learning how to do all this myself. We learn from the downs in this rollercoaster of life. It is possible to be happier. Peace

    • @pellaxestorba4836
      @pellaxestorba4836 2 роки тому +1

      @@theyellowhouse3569
      God bless you.
      You are a searcher.
      We should ALL be searchers.
      And equally important:
      When we find THE truth... that Pearl of Great Price... we must be willing to sell every single thing we have to purchase it, like the merchant did in the parable once told by Jesus almost two thousand years ago.
      The pearl is the kingdom of heaven.
      Many search for truth only to reject it, because the truth tells them they must sell everything they think they own to have it and give their lives to The Father and trust Him completely.
      Pride is a subtle wealth.
      And a wealthy man cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven.
      Only little children may enter.
      Even little children within old and grown up bodies.
      Much love.

  • @marissadower-morgan3313
    @marissadower-morgan3313 Рік тому +3

    Needing and focusing on making money , dose not make you materialistic . If you grew up with very little money ( No choices or opportunities handed to you ) , you understand . It's all about survival .

  • @GTACopper
    @GTACopper 2 роки тому +18

    Was not expecting it but this is one of the most interesting and intellectually stimulating podcasts you have done

  • @FreckledGemini
    @FreckledGemini 2 роки тому +47

    ❤️ this guy! Jordan Peterson has always made sense to me and I respect him for his messages. But THIS dude…he is speaking of healthy habits and life changes in terms that waaaay more people will understand and hopefully implement. Sad but true. He is needed!! You’re a gem Steven.

  • @MrShinobi797
    @MrShinobi797 2 роки тому +66

    I LIKE this guy. He's pragmatic to the core... Socially and Emotionally Intelligent. Great interview 👍

  • @MegaHelloKitty4
    @MegaHelloKitty4 Рік тому +4

    This podcast/guest is such a good mediator for how life was back in the day, vs how life is today.

  • @john_hansbrough
    @john_hansbrough 2 роки тому +11

    I can't trace back how I found this conversation but it was so good, I'm relistening to it. As a 32 year old guy, this was all really fascinating and helpful to hear. Great stuff!!

  • @colleenanne360
    @colleenanne360 Рік тому +65

    He didn't laugh out loud for 14 years. That's wild. Really makes me appreciate my own life. It's hard for me to think of a day in the past 10 years I haven't laughed out loud.

    • @gabrielcaleb9277
      @gabrielcaleb9277 Рік тому

      Wonderful 😊🌷

    • @gabrielcaleb9277
      @gabrielcaleb9277 Рік тому +3

      A merry heart doeth good as medecine

    • @minitea4315
      @minitea4315 Рік тому +5

      What makes me laugh out loud: spending time with my kids, having riotous good fun. One of them is 21. So glad he still lives at home with us.

    • @deniseisaacs3042
      @deniseisaacs3042 Рік тому

      You are blessed to have that 🙏🏽

    • @gabrielcaleb9277
      @gabrielcaleb9277 Рік тому +1

      @@deniseisaacs3042 you can have it too..
      Jesus has the best sense of humor...He made it ask Him ✨🌷✌️

  • @dmerls8571
    @dmerls8571 2 роки тому +74

    This is better than 99.99% of people trying to give advice to people (especially young men). I need to forward this to my 23 y/o nephew.

    • @williamlevy6964
      @williamlevy6964 2 роки тому

      Your 23 y/o son doesn't need to listen to you. You can't turn them into submissive, docile women or make them "gay" you sickos. Look in the mirror and learn that you're the follower not the leader so stfu and follow those who know better.

  • @ferdinandgleinser2681
    @ferdinandgleinser2681 Рік тому +2

    @53:53 "Loosing someone and Gaining someone" That hit home really hard as it happened to me within just 3 weeks. He is absolutely right about what he is saying. Your are a 100% different person afterwards, as you could never have imagined yourself.

  • @eveforamerica1152
    @eveforamerica1152 2 роки тому +64

    I really enjoyed this. I grew up poor (no electricity or plumbing poor). I’ve built a small empire. My success, I believe, was 90% grit. It has been challenging for me to pass on my humble values to my children, but overall, I am very pleased with their integrity, genuine love for others, and their work ethic. Most of all, I am grateful they believe in Jesus.

    • @eveforamerica1152
      @eveforamerica1152 2 роки тому

      Oh no. You just lost me at climate change 😫

    • @berylcomar
      @berylcomar 2 роки тому +4

      Is it enough, do you think, to believe in Jesus? I see so many critical, sonically and radical unkind people who say they believe in Jesus.
      Or is it more important to walk the talk like Jesus

    • @Alejandr-io3oe
      @Alejandr-io3oe 2 роки тому +2

      Amen!🙏🙏

    • @paulbogle8161
      @paulbogle8161 2 роки тому

      @@berylcomar believing is an action not a thought. A bit like loving. You know that people can say they love you and not, so why is that not the case with belief. Words mean nothing

    • @berylcomar
      @berylcomar 2 роки тому +1

      @@paulbogle8161 look at the middle word in the word BELIEFS.
      It’s LIE
      And the middle word of lie is ... I
      I Lie
      Beliefs are lies we tell ourselves, good and bad, negative and healthy, socially conditioned and changeable.
      There are very few truths
      As for love, it’s a nominalisation ( can’t put it in a wheelbarrow) and different for everyone: for some conditional, others unconditional, existent or non existent .... or brainwashing. Hhhhh

  • @NM-rz5iq
    @NM-rz5iq 2 роки тому +15

    A breath of fresh air. Loved the episode, everyone in all ages should hear this 💯

  • @privateequityguy
    @privateequityguy 2 роки тому +20

    To everyone who has started or is thinking of starting their own business: *Believe in yourself and never give up.* If you can work 8 hours for someone else. You can work 2 hours for yourself.