The Mel Robbins Podcast

This Conversation Will Change How You Think About Your Entire Life

88 min
Jan 26, 20264 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Mel Robbins interviews acclaimed author and NYU professor Ocean Vong about finding purpose and meaning in life, particularly when struggling with shame, poverty, and feeling lost. Vong shares how language, dignity, and reconnecting with your younger self's original intention can transform your relationship with yourself and create a meaningful life regardless of external circumstances.

Insights
  • Meaningful life is not about proving your value to others, but finding power and dignity in where you are right now, even while hoping for change
  • Shame can be transformed into a propulsive force for growth when you recognize it as an immune system rather than a pathology or failure
  • Language is a tool of control when used by corporations and politicians, but reclaiming deliberate language use returns dignity and agency to individuals
  • Reconnecting with your younger self's original intention (the 'pebble') helps you understand the ripple effect of your life's work and purpose
  • Kindness is empathy in action—it's the concrete way we fulfill our obligation to give ourselves to others through service and grace
Trends
Shift from achievement-focused narratives to dignity-centered storytelling in literature and mediaGrowing recognition of imposter syndrome as an 'immune system' rather than a pathology in high-achieving communitiesIncreased focus on linguistic reclamation as a tool for personal agency and resistance to corporate/political manipulationNormalization of failure and liminal spaces in creative education and professional developmentMovement away from 'rescue narratives' toward authentic representation of working-class and immigrant experiencesEmphasis on intergenerational obligation and family care as a legitimate measure of life successMeditation and Buddhist psychology concepts entering mainstream wellness and professional development discourseRecognition of 'cringe culture' and social media humiliation as a significant mental health barrier for Gen Z
Topics
Language as a tool for reclaiming dignity and resisting manipulationShame transformation and using shame as motivation for personal growthImposter syndrome reframed as an immune system in institutional spacesIntergenerational poverty and class mobility in immigrant familiesPurpose and meaning-making outside traditional success metricsGrief, loss, and finding beauty in hardshipCreative writing and poetry as tools for emotional processingBuddhist psychology and sequential thinking for managing self-hatredKindness and grace as obligations to communityFailure and error as necessary components of innovation and growthSocial media's impact on Gen Z creativity and self-expressionQueer identity and community buildingWorking-class representation in literatureThe 'pebble and ripple' metaphor for understanding life purposeComing down from the mountain: redefining success and returning to community
Companies
JP Morgan Payments
Sponsor providing automated payment solutions and financial efficiency tools across 200+ countries
NYU
Institution where Ocean Vong is a tenured professor of creative writing in the MFA program
Stop & Shop
Local grocery store referenced in Vong's childhood memory about poverty and shame
Amazon
Employer mentioned as where some of Vong's family members work in warehouse positions
Colt
Gun factory in Connecticut where Vong's father worked making screws for Colt Magnum firearms
Barnes and Noble
Bookstore referenced in Vong's childhood understanding of how books are distributed
People
Ocean Vong
Bestselling author, MacArthur Genius Grant recipient, and NYU creative writing professor discussing purpose and dignity
Mel Robbins
Podcast host and author interviewing Ocean Vong about finding meaning and purpose in life
Oprah Winfrey
Selected 'The Emperor of Gladness' for Oprah's Book Club, providing major platform for Vong's work
Emily Dickinson
Poet referenced by Vong as example of transformative literary experience ('my head is taken off')
Toni Morrison
Author whose work Vong copied as a young poet to absorb language and overcome toxic self-talk
Mary Oliver
Poet whose work Vong studied and copied as part of his language reclamation practice
Federico García Lorca
Spanish poet whose work Vong copied as a young writer to learn from masters of language
Simone Weil
Philosopher quoted by Vong on attention as the most generous gift we can give
Quotes
"A meaningful life is not a life that you used to prove to yourself or others that you are valuable. A meaningful life is finding the power and the value where you are."
Ocean Vong
"The hardest thing in the world is to live only once."
Ocean VongOpening line of 'The Emperor of Gladness'
"Language is a strategy that has always been historically used to control people. And so when you realize that, oh, so much of this thing I use every day, when it goes into the hands of corporations and politicians, it's manipulating me, then you realize if I speak and use this material with deliberate attention and intention, then I can reclaim a portion of myself."
Ocean Vong
"When we hold our suffering, we suffer more. When we hold someone else's suffering, we have compassion."
Ocean Vong
"You should try to scare yourself, but don't be scared of yourself. It's important to scare yourself. It's okay to scare yourself, but don't be afraid of yourself."
Ocean Vong
Full Transcript
Hey, it's friend Mal and welcome to the Mal Robbins podcast. Have you ever read something and thought, how did they know exactly what I'm feeling? Well, that's what happened to me when I read the remarkable best-selling book, The Emperor of Gladness by Ocean Von. It is one of my favorite books of all time because Ocean could just put words to emotions and experiences I didn't even know I had. It held up a mirror to the moments I've buried, it softened me in ways I didn't expect, and it reminded me, line by line, the beauty can still exist even in the hardest moments of life. Ocean Von writes like no one else. He just has this ability to capture grief, love, identity, and hardship with a kind of honesty that doesn't just land, it lingers. If your life doesn't look the way you thought it would by now, if you feel stuck, if you've been stretched thin and you're hiding how tired or lost you feel, if you've been quietly wondering, does any of this matter? You are exactly where you need to be right now. This conversation will help you reconnect with yourself. You'll hear what it means to build a meaningful life in the middle of uncertainty, hardship, and struggle. You'll understand that you don't need to become someone else to be worthy, and you'll walk away with a deeper sense of peace, purpose, and permission to be exactly where you are and who you are. Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so excited you're here. It's such an honor to be together and to spend this time with you. And if you're a new listener, you're here because somebody shared this with you. Well, I just want to take a moment and personally welcome you, the Mel Robbins podcast family. If you feel lost in life, today's guest will help you find purpose and meeting. Ocean Vong is a bestselling author and an award-winning poet. His debut novel on Earth were briefly gorgeous, became an instant New York Times bestseller. It earned him the American Book Award, the Mark Twain Award, and the New England Book Award. That same year, he received a MacArthur Genius Grant. He's also the author of two celebrated poetry collections, Night Sky with Exit Wounds, which won the TSLEA prize, and Time is a mother, a finalist for the Griffin poetry prize. His newest novel, The Emperor of Gladness, was chosen as Oprah's Book Club pick and debuted on the New York Times bestseller list. And it's one of the best books I have ever read. I give it to people as a gift over and over and over again. And after I read the book, I started researching more about Ocean and was so moved by some of the things he was sharing in interviews and some of the stuff he was writing about online, I knew that I had to get him here on the podcast. Ocean is currently a tenured professor of creative writing at NYU, where he teaches in the MFA program for poetry and poetics. But what truly sets Ocean apart isn't the accolades. It's the way he writes. He puts words to what the rest of us only feel. And somehow he turns our quietest pain into something meaningful, even beautiful. I cannot wait for you to meet Ocean. So without further ado, please help me welcome Ocean Vaughn to the Mel Robbins podcast. Thank you so much for having me. I am so excited to meet you. I loved your book so much. I've given it to so many people. And I was absolutely honored when you said yes and said that you would come on and talk about purpose and feeling lost and about your work and the themes in your work. So thank you for being here. Oh, thank you so much for for recognizing what I'm trying to do. It's a deep, deep honor to be here and to share with this beautiful audience all around the world about what at the heart of what I'm trying to do. Well, let's talk about that. Let's talk about what is at the heart of what you're trying to do. And if I really listen and take in everything that you will teach me today, how could my life change? I hope people realize that if they don't already, that a meaningful life is not a life that you used to prove to yourself or others that you are valuable. A meaningful life is finding the power and the value where you are. And what I love about that is that you're inviting us to consider that wherever it is that you are, even if you envision some possibility beyond where you may be, that there is a way to feel dignity. There's a way to feel proud of who you are and what you're doing, that there's beauty in the life that you're living right now, even though you may have a hope in your heart that things might change or move in a different direction, that learning how to reclaim that sense of self is really at the heart of your work. A hundred percent and so much of language in our world and our culture has been captured to humiliate us. If we look at advertisements, political campaigns, if we look at emails, corporate messages, we're bombarded by language that terraces down and says, we are not good enough, we are constantly humiliated and debased in the way we experience language. And the work of, I'm already talking about this, the work of poetry and language arts is to reclaim the strangeness and the beauty of language so that the wonder and awe at the heart of it is recycled and reclaimed back to everyday use. Language is a strategy that has always been historically used to control people. And so when you realize that, oh, so much of this thing I use every day, when it goes into the hands of corporations and politicians, it's manipulating me, then you realize if I speak and use this material with deliberate attention and intention, then I can reclaim a portion of myself. And part of that is dignity. And a lot of my work is I'm interested in using language as a way to reconfirm self and communal dignity. What is the word dignity, mean to you? The ability to live without shame and to be proud of parts of your life that people think are failures. Because in my short journey, I've learned that all the struggles that my, me and my family have gone through, they were all also sites of innovation and creative struggle. So to me, I think dignity is about looking at what people have said to you that you should discard and realizing that it's always part of you and being proud of that as, as a process of who you are. So owning all of your parts and not having to walk around with that shame, that to me is what dignity is. And to me, it's like you're told that you got to go up, go up the mountain and there'll be a light that will heal everything. And what I realized was how how long and inefficient realizing that is, you know, it's like when my, I was raised by illiterate women. And because they were illiterate, they knew how powerful reading was. It was like sorcery to them, you know, because it's like, we don't know what it, what it is, but we know how pop, we know the world runs with language. So you have our blessing to go off and figure that out. I never had a mother that forced me to do this so that she said, son, go off and learn what you can. And if you can't, there's always a seat next to me at the nail salon. So you go off and you go get your education. And for me, it took always a long sort of cutest path to be six years to get my undergraduate. I went to four institutions, community college, business school, dropped out, what have you, but you go off and then you tell yourself, and I think this is particularly true of the immigrant and the refugee, but I think it's true for all children of the working poor. You say, you tell yourself, I'm going to go, I'm going to go into that institution, then I'm going to figure it out, then I'm going to come back and give this thing that was locked away inside the university libraries. I'm going to, I'm going to give it to my family and then we're going to find out why we're here and what happened to us. So it's kind of this mining and you realize that knowledge is so inefficient and it takes so long. Meanwhile, destruction is so efficient. You know, our social services are gutted overnight by the stroke of a pen. Entire city blocks could be blown apart by weapons. It will take decades to heal and repair them. Destruction is so darn efficient. I think human beings, one of our worst inventions was that we have found out, we have found the way in the 20th century to make instant ruins. You know, before that ruins took thousands of years to create, but now we can make ruins instantly. And we are still living in the aftermath of that. And I think that's also a metaphor for reparative learning, which is what's so much of class being a class outsider is, right? You're brought up with so much shame. What did growing up and feeling that shame that you feel when you're poor, when you're an outsider in a new country? What did that teach you about how to live in a world that is constantly sending messages that we don't support you, where against you, there's something wrong with you? What did that teach you about life? Shame is so perennial for so much of American life. It's very much true for the poor. I remember, you know, like being in stop and shop, this local grocery store and my mother, like counting how many tomatoes she can afford. And I just think, you're sitting there, you're standing in line. And you're watching the cashier who's not that older than you, look away because we're all in one ecosystem. They're not making that much money. So it's just like poor folks together. But what's unspoken is that that deep shame and none of us knew why or how to, to ameliorate it. And so you're sitting in line and you're watching your mom push two little plum tomatoes back in the conveyor belt. And you're watching this kid who's probably four years old and you look out, look away because he knows, you know, I respect. Again, that dignity, you know, like offering each other a little bit of dignity to look away. I'm sorry. Why are you apologizing? Because I want to be clear and my voice is wobbles. You're very clear. Okay, thank you. And I've had the experience, but only I'm the mother with the kids standing next to me. And I had the line rehearsed for when the credit card would not go through. And I would always cock my head and kind of look surprised and go, that's weird because it just worked at the gas station. And then I'd say, come on kids, let's go out to the car. I've got another card out there, which I didn't. And you don't forget that. Yeah. But everybody knows and nobody knows how to talk about it, how to make it right. And looking away in that moment is a form of respect because you don't want the person who's dealing with that heaviness to feel the weight of your judgment either. And so please don't don't apologize for speaking and telling us the truth of your experience because, you know, for the person who doesn't know you, you're in my opinion, one of the most decorated and awarded writers alive right now, the American Book Award, the Mark Twain Award, the TS Elliott Prize, the New England Book Award, the MacArthur Genius Grant. You are a professor at NYU. And so while your story began growing up in Hartford, Connecticut, immigrating here from Vietnam, your mom and the women around you being illiterate and working in a nail salon, you went on to take back language and write about dignity in the human experience. Gosh, Mel, that's that. Thank you so much for that counter and in that opening. I'm so grateful for that moment of grace because I think one of the things about moving through class systems is that you always assume what you're going to say is going to be not legible. And I feel like, you know, both you and I know it and maybe a lot of your audience is knows too, where you walk into a room and say, well, do I really say it like it is? Or and if I do, are they going to look at me like I'm crazy? Or am I just outside the frame of understanding? And so you try to assume that what you're saying is a breach. So you have to apologize for that breach, right? Oh, I'm sorry, I'm going to go here. But I feel like we need to go here, right? And you gave me such a beautiful moment of grace that I don't really experience in the in the spaces that I now traffic in. But I think there's two types of shame. There's the shame of who you are, which is ontological, you know, people. What does that word mean? And it's a big word. The shame of yourself, right? So people, you know, like for queerness, many people shame us for our for ourself, our ontological presence, our being, which we cannot change. And then there's the shame of action, of conduct, which I think can be really fruitful. You know, there it would be great if a lot of our politicians felt a little bit ashamed, right? Because that means there's recognizing that you can act on it. You can do something. You can repair something. And so I think in many cases, so much of my childhood was about both of those shames, the shame of being poor, which you had no control over, then the shame of being queer, which you have no control over. And then the shame that what you're doing is not enough. So the shame of action is like, Oh, I work so hard, but I'm not feeding my family. I work so hard, but I'm still stuck in this tenement. And you know, my mother told me, I remember she got, she got, we were just talking one day before bed. And I just like to just talk to her before bed. I was like 10 or 11. And she turned to me and she said, I'm so sorry that our family is so stupid. We couldn't make it. It's been 10 years in this country. And other folks have started businesses that are lucrative. They've gone off to Houston and LA, other Vietnamese communities. They bought homes and we can't figure it out. I'm sorry that we're just so dumb. That gets the heart of what it means to be poor is that it's you start to feel that you're not a good person. Because other people could afford to give, right? The heroes in our public discourse are the one, the entrepreneur, the one second, donate and give and rescue children and rescue the people. But when you don't, when you every day, you don't have enough to even be the hero of your family, then you start to feel like you're the villain of your community. And so when I was a kid in that moment by my mother's bed, and in that moment by the grocery store, seeing to the day I die, I'll see those plum tomatoes roll back on this dirty conveyor belt. You realize, I told myself, I'm, I'm going to use the shame and it's going to propel me to understand it. So shame became my propulsive force. I was like, I'm going to use this to to as wind to find out because this can't be, there has to be a route to all this. What would you say to somebody who's listening right now and is in that place where they are feeling a tremendous amount of shame and feeling very lost, whether it is because of very similar life experiences that you've had, or maybe it's somebody who's feeling a lot of shame because their marriage blew up, or they got a health diagnosis and they're having a lot of trouble really just getting through the day, or they've really made some terrible decisions in their life. They're beating themselves over the things in the past. What do you want to say to that person about how to really think about where they're at and how to shift their relationship with themselves? Yeah, for me, as a as a writer, it all begins with language. You know, often when we talk to each other, we use fluff language to get by, you know, how's the weather, how about them Patriots, you know, what's going on, how so and so and and, and, sometimes we don't answer that question. We say yes, though it's just a muscle memory. How you do it? Great, good. And I think giving yourself permission to break, to break the norm of hiding and using language to off the skate and just say, I'm not okay. Or changing the question, when was the last time you fell joy? Now you're in a different linguistic space and you realize that people actually really hunger for that, but they don't want to burden you with that. And they don't we don't have the words to open the doors. We only have the words to move outside the doors. And so when the words change, so disruptions in linguistic patterns, which is what poetry and novels do, right? Could their disruptions. We don't pick up a novel to confirm what we know. We pick it up to learn something new. In a way, we're disrupting ourselves. Oh, it's so cool. Yeah. I never even thought about that. But you're right. Because I didn't pick up the emperor of gladness because I thought I knew everything was in there. I picked it up to be transported and to use your word to disrupt my day to day life and open myself up to something different. Yeah. Is there some recommendation that you would have if you're trying to disrupt the language you use around yourself? And you find yourself saying, I'm not enough. It's never going to work out. I'm not good enough. Yeah. Yeah. Well, my very rudimentary practice when I was a young poet and I still do this is right, just copy down your favorite poems and your favorite texts. Because now you're in someone else's head. So I would do that with Ferdinand Garcia-Lorca, Tony Morrison, Mary Oliver, you know, and when I'm stuck and when my language is running my life and it's toxic, I can just take another poet that I would just open up the book, put it in my journal and just copy and feel, you know, that's that's the beautiful thing about language. It's that it's it's the most democratic tool we have. Because everyone can use it. I want to make sure that as the person's listening to you or they're watching on YouTube that I highlight this tool that you spoke about and I want to expand it a little because you gave us this offering that I think is really important to make sure the person as you're listening that you really get that you could do this. You said that, you know, if you're really feeling a sense of shame or if you are using your own words against yourself, I am not good enough. I have failed. I will never amount to anything. I'm not smart. Whatever those words are that you beat yourself up with, you said one tool is that you would open up a line from one of your favorite poems and then you would write that line and trace those letters and you start to then basically borrow those words in order to override and to teach yourself a new language. And one of the things I want to say that I think people do instinctually is a lot of people save quotes they see online. And that's another way to do exactly what you're talking about that if you are stuck with really self-defeating language and you know you're beating yourself up, if there are famous quotes, if there are lines from a book, if there is something that has lifted you up or you've saved in a little folder somewhere on your phone, you could do exactly what you just said, which is write that out every day and as you're tracing the shape of those letters, really imagine that those are the words that you say to yourself. Yeah, it's like secular prayer. Yes. Right. It's a form of prayer that you choose. You get to curate a kind of bibliography or Bible for yourself, right? And you don't have to be religious to do it. And in fact, this is what the early monks did. They would trace and replicate Psalms and the Bible by hand, right? And so that was kind of a meditative practice and also imagine visualization, imagine the people around you, right? Using the the the laying even just saying that I hope my sister has a good day, recenters us because there's in Buddhism, we have this idea in Buddhist psychology, we have this idea called sequential thinking and is that in Buddhist psychology, we do not believe that you actually feel two things at once. One can only hold one emotion at a time. So it's like holding a ball. If you're holding the ball of hatred and whether it's for others or self-hatred, the only way to have another thought is to put down that ball. You can't just grab another, right? You have to put down that ball and then hold something else. And in meditation practice, we usually do a check-in with ourselves and often, particularly nowadays, I sit down and something in me said, this is going to be a bad session. I can't do it. My knees hurt, my ankles hurt. There's too much going on in the world that email bothering me. I really got to get back, you know, to that. There's so much and it's all about, I'm holding my own suffering. And what we do in Buddhism is that we start to displace our suffering with other people's suffering. So we start to think about the people closest to us and then we radiate outwards. Oh, my brother's having a bad day today. I remember now, he's really struggling. My brother works retail at a sporting good store and, you know, it's a wage work. You know, sometimes it's hard. People yell at him. And he's, he, he goes, it's very stressful job. And so I'm holding him in all of a sudden, it's really, I don't know why to say this. But when we hold our suffering, we suffer more. When we hold someone else's suffering, we have compassion. It's amazing. Why? I would love someone much smarter than I to figure that out. But that's always the case. It's very hard to continue to suffer when you're holding someone else's suffering because it's something like love starts to come out of that. And sometimes I can't do it. Some day I'm like, I just don't have enough to go there. And but just even saying that word, the phrase, I hope, you know, the people in my community can find safety. I'm going to work towards that. I'm going to work towards securing their safety. And then you start to, all of a sudden, you visualize what you can do, how you can volunteer, how you can help. And all of a sudden, you remove your, and when you come back, because it's all cycle, you come back to yourself. And you say, gosh, I don't know how to pick up that ball anymore. I see it. I see self hatred. I see envy. I see bitterness. I see self loading. It's all there, but I can't really pick it up before it was stuck. It was glued to my palms. But for some reason, moving outward has cleansed. And now I can't pick it up if I wanted to. It's so effective and it's so simple. As you were talking and explaining this, I just did it. So I won't. So my mom and dad just lost a very, very good friend. And it was very sudden and really tragic thing that happened. And the second you started talking about your sister, I thought, oh, I hope my mom and dad are having an okay day today. I hope that they are surrounded by friends today. I hope that their heartache is getting the support. And then I thought, oh, I need to call them as soon as we're done talking. And everything that was self centered disappeared from my mind. And there is this big expansion that happened. And as you're listening or watching, I want you to think about somebody that you love, that you really do hope with all of your heart that they are having a good day, that they are getting the support that they need. And if you if you truly step into this invitation, I think you will feel exactly what oceans talking about, that somehow there was something you were holding inside yourself, even in the subconscious. But when you direct that attention and focus outward, something expands and lightens inside of you. Because you can only hold one thing. Because you can only hold one thing. You know, I want to ask you a question because I loved your New York Times blockbuster best-selling profound novel, The Emperor of Gladness. And when I opened up the first page to chapter one, and I read the first sentence, I thought if I ever meet Ocean, I want to ask you about what this means. And the sentence is, the hardest thing in the world is to live only once. What does that mean? You have to make account. What does it mean to live and owe something to the people you love? Your obligation to them, to your community. And to live with that kind of care. Because the other side of that is, you only live once, enjoy it, mash it all, and look where it's gotten us. Ecological despair, corporate greed, fundering, our environment, our planet, just for profit. That's a lot of yellow. Another side of yellow is that, well, if you only live once, how do you live in a generative way? How do you live with care and consideration with the meditative practice you just did? You don't have to be a monk and sit there and go home and do chanting. You can, you can actually do it while listening to someone talk, right? I want to unpack this even deeper. The hardest thing in the world is to live only once. And you said to you, that means you have to make account. And what I would love to hear you talk a little bit about, because never asked anybody this question. But as a professor, I bet you are witness, front and center, to this sense of pressure and urgency that is not only inside your students, but it is 1,000% inside every character in your book. But this pressure that I think is almost universal, to make something of yourself, to make your life count. And for somebody who's listening right now, who heard you say, oh, well, you have to make it count. And they now feel like, but I'm not ocean. Like I'm still, I'm stagnant. I'm working in this restaurant job. I didn't expect I would be here. It doesn't feel like it's counting at all. Yeah, yeah, yeah. What would you say to the person that's in that space? Because I think the pressure you feel to want it to count is a really good sign of this sense inside you. Yeah. That there is something more for you. Does that make sense? Absolutely. Absolutely. And I think for me, there's two, you know, there's the, there's what society counts. And often because we don't know any better, we're told that we are, it's almost like a download, society downloads the set of values into us. And then we say, well, I need to get a good job. I need to get out of here. Right. And that's why like, there's novel, there's no escape plot. These are working poor people. They remain so. But it doesn't mean that their lives are doomed. You know, I reject this idea that a story about down and out poor people or is only valuable if they can escape it. Because there's plenty of films, plenty of novels about that. And I think as Americans, we fetishize rescue. I think there are more Americans rescued in American films than actual Americans. You know, and yet it feels good to watch that movie. Oh gosh, look at they rose out of it. And then there's the other, there's the other part. There's an alternative count, which is your obligation to yourself and your life and your community, regards of what that means when the CV in the social standards and what have you. And I think what I learned working in fast food and the tobacco farms growing up and what I wrote about is that in those spaces, there's something really, really humbling and powerful is that if you walk into NYU where I now work, if you walk into a doctor's office, a dentist's office, a law office, everybody who's there worked and wanted to be there. They might not like their job. Fine. But they all deliberately worked to get there. But the folks in the in the fast food restaurant, they never want to be there. That's not the final goal. They are deferring something else. Right. What's so humbling and powerful about that is that everybody you know, you see, you realize there's another dream. And when you work enough hours, it becomes really, it looms large and you start to really want to find a ways to find out that dream. You know, you know, you have these kind of probing conversations. What do you do before this? What do you do after that? You know, in my class, all of a sudden, these spaces open up in these restaurants and corporations that were not meant to be there. They're kind of subversive utterances. And so to me, I think what I mean by the hardest thing in the world is to live only once is that to live according to your values, again, dignity. And what you owe to yourself, your family and your community, however that means to you, and wrestling yourself away from the standards of ultimate success. So what have you? You know, like I am lucky to be a successful author and a professor. But I live in New England still because nine of my family members still live there. They're all refugees. They came with me. I don't have enough generational wealth to liberate them from the working poor. So my family still work at Amazon, warehouses, nail salons. And I'm there. You know, I've had job offers in lovely places, Paris, Germany. I said, as soon as they come inside, there's no way. Because I got to take my aunt to her doctor's appointment. I got to do her taxes. I have to help my cousin go into a psych ward once in a while. Right. So and that's not a burden to me. And I want to make that clear. You know, that's a privilege. I get to. It's a privilege to be able to sacrifice. I get to help them. Because when I was growing up, you need your two extracted chaos. You know, you get to call a loan shark. We have to call a grocery store to borrow money from God knows who you don't ask don't tell. Right. And just to get like little things done is so it was like the end of the world when those things happen. And now I can my every emergency of my family had I can take care of. And I'm proud of that. And to me, if that's what I'm done doing with my one life that I'm given, then I'm really, really proud of that. And I think having the courage to break away from the social expectations of count and then reallining what counts for you. It's hard work though. It took me 20 years. And I like, this is still new to me. This is a new feeling, right? I don't want to folks to have this understanding that I just like I've always had this. Like I'm developing it as we speak. I am so blown away. And thank you. Thank you ocean for sharing that and thank you for being here. I need to take a quick break even though I don't want to take a break from this conversation. So I can give a chance for our sponsors to share a few words. And I also want to give you a chance. A chance to share this conversation. And the wisdom that ocean is unpacking for us with other people in your life who need to hear this. And there are four people that I've been thinking about as we've been talking for the last couple minutes that I am going to be sharing this with right now. And don't go anywhere. There is so much more wisdom that we're going to unpack with Ocean Von when we return. Stay with me. JP Morgan Payments helps you drive efficiency with automated payments and intelligent algorithms across 200 countries and territories. That's automation driven finance. That's JP Morgan Payments. JP Morgan Internal Data 2024 Copyright 2025 JP Morgan Chase & Company All Rights Reserve JP Morgan Chase Bank and a member FDIC. Deposit's held non-US branches are not FDIC insured, non-deposit products are not FDIC insured. This is not a legal commitment for credit or services. Availability varies. Eligibility determined by JP Morgan Chase is at jpmorgan.com slash payments disclosure for details. Welcome back at your buddy Mel Robbins and you and I have the honor of sitting with one of the most acclaimed literary figures and writers alive today bestselling author and professor Ocean Von. And we're talking about how to find purpose, meaning and the quiet strength to keep going if you're feeling lost in life. So ocean. What I'd love to have you do is if you could speak directly to the person who's really resonating because I know so many people will and maybe they're in the job and they thought they'd only work at the restaurant for two or three years. And they're just getting by and they're starting to feel that dream of a different life slipping away. What do you want them to know? I think for me you have a myth of yourself and you know what, the myth for myself was to be a business person because that's just what I thought more money was. So like when I was 15, I thought I was working in a tobacco farm for cash. It made it was a no uncle Sam no taxation under the table 9.50 an hour way better than minimum wage, which is 7.15 and it was so interesting. We lived in a hud housing section eight and my mother sat me down one day said, son, you I crunched the numbers and you need to get a job. You're about to be 16, but you got just work at McDonald's. So can you imagine like what happened to like American dream upward mobility, do what you want, follow your destiny, right? I'm like, what? Excuse me. And she's like no, no, no, like you can't even be the manager. Like you need to just be minimum wage because if you make any more, we'll be kicked out and we won't be able to afford an apartment on the open market. So upward mobility can harm, can render you homeless. And then it clicked. I said, oh, no wonder every other teenager in my neighborhood is a drug dealer because if you're a child to a single mom and there were daughters and sons and in that too, if you're a child to a single mother and you want to help her out to get a job, if you get too much money, you're going to lose your housing. So what are you going to do? Sell weed on the side, get cash, put it on the mattress, mom pays the light bill with her checks. You take her to the grocery store. And I have seen folks do that and I don't condone drug drug dealer. I've seen folks do that and move out and move on and have and stop that and have relatively economically successful lives. I've seen folks do that and end up in jail and die. So it's just a complete crapshoot. And so I went into the farm as a way to help my mother. But I had this myth that I would go out and be the one who has a degree. I was going to study international marketing and really be the superhero by family. And then I got to the school in New York to study and I studied for just four weeks before I dropped out and at all that myth of who I am to myself crumbled. And I often say this and not in any tongue in cheekway, it said, I became a writer out of failure. And more so, I became a writer out of shame. I could have went home to my mom and said, mom, I tried. I can't do it. I'm not cut out to go to chase JP Morgan, like all my colleagues are with their suits. I don't have a suit. We have one suit. It's called a funeral suit. That's all I had. I didn't even bring it. I was optimistic going to New York because I'm not going to bring my funeral suit. I went to another funeral. So that's all I had. You know, and I didn't even conceive that you had to wear a suit for an interst. I saw so out of place that I just I felt like a fool. And I didn't have the wisdom I had now. I couldn't show up to that place and just see how much of an outsider I was. So I dropped out and I roamed the streets, couch surfing, doing open mics. And someone would say, why don't you just go home? And if I went home, my mom would say, sit on down. I say, if you see that the nail salon pick up the filer, let's get to work. But I didn't do that because I was too ashamed to go to her and say, I failed you. I'm the only one that knows English. I'm the only one that can read. I'm the only one that could potentially have a college degree. And I'm going to come back empty handed. I could not live with my cell. So I stayed in the city. I stayed in Penn station for two weeks trying to figure things out. Meaning you actually slept in Penn station. Yeah. It right under mask our garden. It was the warmest place. But Penn station is open 24 hours and you can stay near the Long Island Railroad. And you know, eventually I became a student at Brooklyn College. And I pursued a degree literature. But it was because I was too ashamed. I would prefer to be homeless. Then go home and say, ma, all your dreams. Because I knew she had, I knew even though she said, don't worry about it. I knew she had dreams for me. I couldn't face her and say, all that is over. So shame is a powerful thing. If you can transform your shame into action and then motivation, it could be the foundation for you to alter your sense of self. What would you say to a student that came to your office hours? And you know, Professor Vaughn, I am so full of shame. I do not belong here. I have really screwed up. And the shame is not motivating them in a positive direction. It is drilling them into a hole. So if you had a student sitting in your office hours, he was really pummeling themselves with shame. What would you say to them every semester? Every semester? Oh my goodness, especially in the creative arts. We have students who come from all over the world. You know, some of the most exciting work in Anglophonic literature right now is coming out of India and Nigeria. And I have a lot of students from India and Nigeria and boy, you know, imposter syndrome runs very, very deep. And here they are in NYU. They're following their dreams. Meanwhile, these are the students, the most successful ones. They're like ticking the boxes of their dreams. You know, they're not dropping out. That nothing has gone awry and they still feel this. And I relate to that immensely. So for me, I told them, I said, look, I share the same shame and doubt that you do. But you believe, I have a sense that you believe that there is a kind of comfort and agreeability to being in the center of power, right, in institution. That's what people, normal people have. They don't feel like they're imposter. They feel like they belong here, that they should be here. But I told them, I said, the day that I feel that I belong in institutional power is the day my creativity dies. I never want to feel comfortable here. And we turn that into a pathology. We say, you are ill, you have a syndrome. But I refuse to believe that. To me, it's an immune system. I have imposter immune system. What does that mean in past your immune system? It means that when I'm in the center, I don't believe that being in the center alone is anything valuable or dignified. You have to still have conduct. You still have to have a behavior and ethics. And also that when you realize you go into these spaces and you realize actually, what I learned back there in my hometown that I thought I was escaping from was much more useful for me than what I'm seeing here. That the charade of power and belonging is truly a hallucination. It was, there's people who feel comfortable here because they have been given this path, their parents gave them this path, their grandparents gave them this path, that they were following a trajectory that was carved for them. So of course they feel like they belong. But do you really want that? Do you want that path for yourself? Because that's also the denial of your own creativity. You need that kind of friction, that vigilance. Well, I think what you're getting at is applicable to anybody. Yeah. Because let's say you get a divorce and now you're single and your friend group disappears. And as you start to insert yourself into other social groups or you sealed friends, you will feel that separateness and you will feel that sense of I don't belong here. And if I listen very closely, what you're saying is that that separateness and that friction is a very important and necessary ingredient to you being able to do the work, to grow into or to be the person you're supposed to be. Whether it's the friendships you've outgrown or the places that you are never going to quite feel like you belong in or the work you need to do to build the skills so that you don't even think about it anymore because you now have the skills to belong. Yeah. And so I think it's applicable to all of us. I'm wondering if there's one thing that you would recommend to begin seeing the beauty in your life even if you're really struggling right now, especially if they've just, they've related to a lot of the various things that you've gone through. What would the one step forward you would want somebody to take? At the end of my semester and every class, I have my students do something very simple and I do it as well. And it's, it's, you'd be surprised that many of them have never done it. And I, what I do is I tell them, think about your intention. Why are you here? Why did you sacrifice so much? And I tell them, go back to that person that first found this art. The person who read a poem and said, just like Emily Dickinson said, my head is taken off, right? And then decided that they want to do that for other people write a work that transforms and affects people's life that way. Maybe it was just two years ago, maybe it was 10 years ago, maybe they were just seven or 20. Go back, find that person and collaborate with that person, bring that person into the room. Because often in our linear progress in professional life, we often think our older self is not smart enough, naive, leave them, leave them back there. But bringing that person in the room and asking that person, how are you so strong? And how is that intention so powerful that you didn't even know how to get here? You didn't know how to get in, why you? But you sent me, you, my younger self sent me here, like that little pebble in the pond, I am the ripple. You are the pebble. I'm the ripple that I have come from you. So I need you. When I am inundated by the pressure, when I'm asking, why am I doing this? What is it for? What's the point? Why am I in this rat race? When I'm about to give up, when I'm fading, I need to bring, so I tell them every time you write, every morning you wake up, bring that person, have them sit right now, could they know more than you do? They got you here without even knowing what a professor is, without knowing what the New Yorker is, without knowing what a, you know, what a seat curriculum detail is, right? They just had that boom. And you are on the journey. They said, so what you need to do is say, thank you to that person. So at the end of the class, I tell all my students, at the kind of three, you say, thank you to yourself, allowed. And you need to say that every day, because no one else is going to say that for you, for this journey. So we close, one, two, three. Thank you, Ocean. And it's an amazing thing. Thank you, Ocean. Thank you now. Saying that to yourself, I am the ripple, you are the pebble. I felt this huge chill when you said that, this idea that your younger self was the pebble, that had an intention, whether your president or not to it, that set in motion this ripple, that created the you that you are today. If the person listening does not know what their intention is, they do not know what age or what scene of their life that pebble was cast, is there anything that they can do that could help them find that center of intention to begin with? I think paying attention to the world and yourself. And again, seeing what you owe eventually, you know, Simone Veil says, the most generous thing we can ever give is attention. And I think paying attention to the world often, we think it's about giving attention. But in fact, we are also discovering ourselves when we look carefully at the world. And I never knew I was going to be, you know, when I was growing up, it was factory worker, nail salon, the army, job corps, right, or long haul trucker, those were the things or jail, right? Those were the things that was available and what was happening around me. And so I never, no one ever said you can be a professor. In fact, I didn't even know poets or something, you could become. I thought it was like preordained by the government. I thought like the president signs like a list, you get in the mail and say, you get to be a poet, then they give you a cabin in Vermont. You go there, you scribble away, then you send your piles of paper to Barnes and Noble. And they go out on the back, they make a book and they wheel out a card of books. How would how else would it happen? And so the idea that one could be a poet is a complete journey of failure, of objection, of shame. And so I'm 37, half of my life have been in nowhereland, absolute loss, absolute objection. And I would never have told you that I was going to be a professor or write books, you know, to me, I am miraculously in the whipped cream of my life. And I've been in it for 20 years. I've been able to do what I love, but it was not a life that I thought I could afford in any sense of the word. So the pebble, if I'm really like, I just felt like I should say, the pebble is though that deep intention buried within you, to be in the whipped cream of your life, to know the truth that there is something that is meant for you, that there is power, that there's dignity, that there's beauty and the sense that you were going to figure it out. And it was something much more materially fundamental in that I wanted to take care of my family. I knew I was the only one. I looked, you know, I looked long and hard at their life and I said, all right, they've been in the factories. I mean, I went back to that moment with me and me and my mom at her bedside when I was 10. And when she said, I'm sorry, we're so stupid. That was the pebble. I didn't know it then. So it wasn't be a poet. I say that to my students because we're in poetry class, right? It gets too existential beyond that, right? But for me, that was the pebble. It was whatever I was going to do to take care of my mother and my brother and my aunts, that was what I was going to do. And when I realized that I could take care of my mother and be an academic and a poet, then that was when it was like seven gear. I became kind of ruthless in my pursuit of my craft because I knew it was something that would then support my family. That was my motivation. So now I say, oh, I was given that. My objection was a motivating factor. Without them, I don't think I would have worked as hard. I would not work as hard for myself. I'll tell you that, Mel. I would not study as hard. I would not read as much books. I would not write as many drafts without the pressure knowing that they really depended on me to get them a better life. Thank you for sharing that because it was so helpful to see that your pebble actually wasn't this epiphany. I want to be an artist or a poet. That your pebble was something so much more deeply connected to your value of taking care of your family. And that shifted for me the way I think about I am the ripple and my former self is the pebble. The intention is the power and it's there. And I really, I got a lot out of that story. Thank you. Thank you. I know we could talk for hours, but I have to take a quick pause so I can give our sponsors a chance to share a few words with you as you're listening. And if what ocean is sharing with you is resonating with you, it's stirring something inside you. Don't keep that to yourself. Share this episode with somebody in your life who deserved inspiration, who deserves support in finding purpose, meaning, and the strength that they need to keep going, especially when life is really hard. And when we come back, we're going to go even deeper. I know you don't think that's possible, but it is. So stay with us because ocean and I are going to be waiting for you when we come back. JP Morgan Payments helps you drive efficiency with automated payments and intelligent algorithms across 200 countries and territories. That's automation driven finance. That's JP Morgan Payments. JP Morgan Internal Data 2024 Copyright 2025 JP Morgan Chase & Company All Rights Reserve. JP Morgan Chase Bank and a member FDIC. Deposit's held non-US branches are not FDIC insured, non-deposit products are not FDIC insured. This is not a legal commitment for credit or services. Availability varies. Eligibility determined by JP Morgan Chase. Visit jpmorgan.com slash payments disclosure for details. Welcome back at your buddy Mel Robbins. And today you and I are spending time learning from and being inspired by one of the most acclaimed writers alive today, Professor Ocean and he's here teaching us how to find purpose and meaning even when you feel lost in life. So Ocean, I have this question I've been waiting to ask you because you've been a professor for 11 years now. What is the thing that's really holding your students back more than anything right now from being themselves? The fear of humiliation. We call it cringe culture. We can call it you know fear, authorial hesitation, whatever you want to call it. I've had the great luxury of being a professor only to Gen Z. My entire career has been educating Gen Z from the very oldest now to the very youngest. I've watched this generation grow and I've watched the horrible public precarity that they have to navigate. You know when I was a kid in the 90s, you do something silly and your class makes fun of you. Worst case your school makes fun of you and then after summer break, all is forgotten right and then you kind of cleanse by the amnesia of summertime. But now you do something out of the norm as much many children are inclined to do. Your kids, your brain is developing. You can be filmed without your permission. And a week later, an entire country that you have never stepped into is laughing at you. And then years later, you become a meme, a symbol that is completely extracted from your personhood. So the meme is one of the most brutal realities of our 21st century mode of communication because it transforms a human being with a historical life and a personality into a communication object, into a sign, which now serves somebody in a group chat. So by the time I get them, I teach a graduate program. So they're 22, 23 and we get the ones who have already committed themselves to art practice. So we get the ones that are kind of professionalizing. But without fail, every year at the first day of class, you can see by the body language in the room, how deeply beaten down and afraid my students are for being a poet. So I tell them that the classroom is a laboratory of failure. This is a place to fail. This is a place to be embarrassed. And I'm not going to critique you for the first few weeks. And we're not going to critique each other. We are a culture obsessed with static truths. We have an award for a bud and another award for rose, rosebud, rose. But there are infinite moments in between. There's a moment where the rose just starts to tear. And if you zoom in and you don't even know what you're looking at, it's still a part of it, but we don't have a word for that. And to me, so much of life actually exists in this liminal monstrous, undefinable space in between the two definitions of rosebud and rose. And so I tell them, I said, you are now in the space between the rosebud and the rose. That's what these 14 weeks are. We don't have a word for that. Sorry. It doesn't matter though. So normalizing the idea of failure as a necessary procedure of growing as a human being and not using judgment as a punishing tool of progress. What a lot of students want from the classroom is a factory. They've been taught that. I'm going to go to NYU. I'm going to feed my weak poems into the NYU factory. And a professor and my peers are going to fix everything. It's all about this false idea that if I just keep working, a finished brand new T model Ford poem will come out the end of it. And it's a completely false fantasy. So it's introducing to them the larger reality that all of this will come through error and errancy. But in fact, error and errancy is part of being alive. And not only that, but part of innovation. That's the daring, daringness. And when I set that up as the re-reelaborate that as the what the classroom is for, you see the body light was changed. You know, and I'm like, oh, there you are. There you are. What I love so much about your work and about the way that you think and the way that you talk about your experience is you have this unique ability to dig deep into these subtle moments in people's lives. And I feel like you've got this ability to really normalize what is a experience that so many people feel but don't have the words to describe. And the message that your work carries in it is the opportunity for all of us to not only create that space for ourselves wherever you are right now because being in a moment in your life where you don't feel like it's going anywhere. And you are feeling like this is really what it's going to be. Am I really making my life count especially as you get older? Yeah. I think everybody's had that experience. And imagine being raised by someone like that. Imagine being surrounded and in multiply, if you're in a community like that or a family, everything you said multiplied by eight or nine, everyone around you feels the same way, right? And the the the the deep resentment, the deep sadness, but also like again, like my stab dad wore a stand-in-eye. He worked at a place called stand-in-eye. He made a screw his whole life for like 30 years. He made the screw that went into gas pumps. And that company shut down. It went overseas. So he's uneducated refugee from Vietnam. He spent seven days in a boat and when a refugee camp then came to a cartford met my mother. And he spent 30 years making a screw. Now he doesn't make a screw anymore. What does he do? You know, so he goes to work at Colt, which is a gun factory in also in Connecticut, Newington. And he makes a smaller screw that goes into the Colt Magnum and gas pumps and guns. It's the most quintessential American story. Every day after work, he hung up his uniform in our living room on a thumbtack because we we didn't own it. So we could not put anything on the walls. We couldn't paint it. We had to get permission. It's a bureaucratic nightmare just to paint your walls. He hung his his his shirt there because on the right chest is that nope NGOC, his name with the diacritic stitched in beautiful blue thread. And every time someone come over, he would point to that. I said, I work a standard on. I have health care. That's how low the bar was, right? It's like, and we're still feeling that bar. It's a big thing to say, I have health care. It's a big thing to say, I have a salary. It's a big thing to say, I'm I belong to a place with a uniform. They believe in me enough to give me a uniform of my name on it. I looked at that for years, similar to how you describe your family in the farm. And I saw that. I told myself, that can't be my American life. This man works from 3 p.m. to 12 a.m. I never see him. I look into his room. I see a tough black hair out of this blanket. That can't be me. But if you asked him, how did you spend your American life? He's retired now. He would have said, that is his absolute triumph. That was he he locked out. Right? He would tell us this. He said, he would convince me to go work. And he said, God, it's amazing. This is it. Not everybody get and he's wasn't wrong. He was not wrong. So I think that's why I wrote this book because I think everyone around me wanted stories about poor people who got out of their situation so that the reader feels good. I just was not interested in writing a novel where like to make rich people feel good about poor people. Right? Or you know, it's all worth it or creating poverty porn to build sympathy. I said, no, this is just American life. And in fact, we want the story of escape. Our history books are filled with stories of escape of revolutions of people who overthrew things. But history itself is predominantly people who are stuck. Stuck in marriages they never want to be in. Stuck in wars. They did not choose to fight in stuck in coal mines. Right? They never thought they'd be in. And some of them, you know, stuck in lives. They never chose. None of us are chosen to be born. But we stay. We stay around because we realize there's love here. That's what I'm interested in. None of us chose to be here. None of my characters chose to be here. But they stay because they discover love. And it doesn't make poverty better. It doesn't make it even tolerable. But it gives your life a kind of significance when you realize that you are, if nothing else, if nothing else, nothing improves, which for the most part in this book, spoiler alert, nothing much does, you are still capable of giving and receiving love. And that's no small thing. To me, it's a, it's a huge significant part of one's life, especially after watching my mother die. You know, when she was, we knew it was terminal. She spent months bedridden, breast cancer, most likely from all the chemicals she breathed. It has eaten into her spine, stage four, metastatic, into her brain, you know, she, from diagnosis to death was seven months. And when I asked what do you want? What do you need? What was your life? She just told me the smallest moments. I remember when we used to go get chicken nuggets after work and we sit in the parking lot. That was nice. I didn't even remember that. That's completely her memory. And then when she said it, I said, oh yeah. Gosh, I haven't thought about it all this time. I couldn't believe she held that. It was such an edifying moment. 2019, I started this book in 2020, seven weeks after she died. And I thought, oh gosh, it's not about the big things. It's not. It's about eating freaking chicken nuggets in a McDonald's parking lot with your son. And I thought if, if I am a writer worthy of my salt, I have to use what I've learned and my skill and talent to hold that. Let me, if nothing else, in my one life, the hardest thing is to live only once. Let me use what I've developed all these decades to make that shareable with a reader because I just wasn't seeing it in the media that I was told I should consume. Well, it absolutely comes through. Thank you. It absolutely comes through. And it reminded me of a lot of periods in my life where I was rushing through it, hoping to get somewhere else. And it helped me slow down and like really reflect and what was right there. Sometimes you need the other person to say it because you don't know. Yes. And how incredible if, if my only like contribution to your beautiful podcast is just to get people to change the way they say hello. That would be amazing. You pick up a phone and instead of saying, hi, how are you? Good, good, good. Just say, hey, was the last thing that made you joyful? I wish I knew that a lot sooner. I would have very different conversations with my mother in and the friends I lost, you know, to the overdoses and suicide. I would do it all over, but, you know, you learn things so slow. But every time we pick up the phone, we have the opportunity to switch the gears. It's always in our hands because we're just holding one at a time, one feeling at a time. Well, I also think that this is an enormous invitation to ask yourself that question. When was the last time that you felt joyful? So I play in a queer basketball league with my brother. I'm trying to imagine that, by the way. Yeah, it could be hard. It's hard for me to imagine until I'm there. I'm thinking. So I immediately went to costumes and of course, and I was thinking of the scene in the book, which is one of my favorite scenes where one of the characters, BJ, has this dream of becoming a regional champion in wrestling. Yeah. And everybody piles into a car and goes to her match and things go horribly, you know, but you feel the love of friendship. Yeah. As they surround her in this moment where she's basically humiliated. Yeah. And so I thought of costumes and the energy. Yeah. It's very similar. Yeah. Hopefully not a lot of humiliation. Oh, well, depends depends, you know, joyful humiliation. There's all we have the body humbles you, especially at 37. But I play in this league with my brother. And I've always feel so much joy because I never thought that you could participate in a very competitive, historically, very competitive cut through like in my I grew up with like street ball and one mixed tapes, skateboarding culture. And it was like, it was beautiful, but it was also like filled with hyper-masculine aggression and toxicity. And being in a queer. And when I say queer, I mean like, you know, all genders, all bodies, all experiences, all hair colors, like hats, bring it like cost like you're on it. You got the right image. Like it's, you know, we look like a beautiful athletic carnival. And it's amazing. And I look forward to every Sunday. A beautiful athletic carnival. That is a mouthful of amazingness. That's all I'm gonna say. Tell that to the NBA. But just moving my body next to my brother felt so much joy. And I think it's I'm proud of him. You know, I think he's the one that I go to first. When I do that meditation. It's my brother okay. You know, he's always we're 10 years apart. So I'm like a weird gay brother father, you know. But you embrace it. You don't, it's not a nuclear family. What's a nuclear family? It's just family. It's what you owe. To me, like this book is about who owes who what? And I what do these characters do for each other? They they pile into a van off the clock and they go watch their manager wrestle at a bar to catastrophic you know, results. And then they say you're still our manager. Because that's what I witnessed. You know, and that's what we remember. You know, if we're lucky, if we are so lucky, we will get a death bet. A lot of people don't get a death bet. And when we get that death bet, we will remember these moments when people were kind to us when they offered us grace and attention. And I want to just what a miracle to have the technology of the sentence put that in a book and then just throw it in the world and say, do you get it? Do you get where I'm coming from? And then unbeknownst to me so many people saying me too. So do you think the thing that you owe one another is kindness and grace and attention? All three kindness, grace and attention. Absolutely. Because kindness is thrown around a lot, right? It's like, oh, be kind, be kind. But what I love about it, I love kindness even more than the other word that gets trafficked a lot, which is empathy. Because empathy can still be static. In a way, it could also be dangerous and let render us complacent. To me, kindness is such a powerful testament to what it means for us to act on our debt to each other. Kindness is now empathy, via action. And a lot of times growing up, we knew there was we're not going to get anything back right away. Because we couldn't, you know, the characters in this book don't have anything to really give each other but each other. You know, there was a line from, I believe it's the Bible, I read it's a religious tag. I don't know if it's the work of St. Augustine or the Bible where the line was we are given ourselves. That is the gift of life is that we get our we are given thisness. And I, you know, I'm not a Christian but I really love that idea that, oh, I'm taught by this country that I'm out I need more. I need to go on and grab more. But this goodness, myself was already this invaluable gift. And then to then gift myself to others through service and kindness. I love that statement given to ourselves because, you know, a lot of people are searching for purpose. And I've always thought purpose is when you recognize that you've been given to yourself. But your purpose is then to give yourself to other people in service and kindness to give other people the dignity and grace that you have to give. Yeah. Embatty as an endgame is a trap. It's about how it can be put into action. Embatty is a procedure into the solution that we all really hope for. You have shared so much today. And one of the things that I would love to ask you is for the person who's listening who wants to build a meaningful life, one that has room for joy, for connection, for dignity, for grace. What do you hope they take from this conversation today and from your work? I hope people realize that if they don't already, that a meaningful life is not a life that you used to prove to yourself or others that you are valuable. A meaningful life is finding the power and the value where you are. And I say this, and I know for some, it might sound like a bunch of, you know, hullabaloo. But I say this as someone who, if nothing else, I'm someone who has trespassed these class layers by no plan of my own. You know, I came, I went from the projects as a refugee and now I'm in billionaires mansions begging for funding for my students. So now I see a whole different world. And I say this because I think it's easy to to fall into the trap of, oh, my achievements are me. They're just what I do, right? And to me, it's like you're told that you got to go up, go up the mountain and there'll be a light that will heal everything. And that's what you're told as a little kid. And it's interesting because like being from the working poor, we were so naive. Our parents were so naive about education and professionalization because they were never part of it. So they thought it was a panacea. They actually gave it more credence than it deserves. That I think and just get you there. The there will take care of itself. And little did they know that there's nepotism, greed, payoffs, nefarious shenanigans. And in a way, it was just another wasteland. And that's been my experience. You go up the mountain and then there's a plateau and then there's an awards ceremony. And then you look around and say, oh, gosh, there's a lot of skeletons here. It's just smoldering. And then they said, oh, no, no, there's another, another level, right this way. Keep on working. And you get up that one, he's, okay, maybe I see things differently from up there. And you get up to that platform and you say, oh, my gosh, it's a graveyard. There's just there's bitterness, envy, jealousy, hatred, pettiness, everything. I thought I was escaping down there. It's still here, but I, but even here, there's nowhere else to go. You know, you see that you go up or you get pushed off, right? And eventually, I realized that it wasn't about going all the way up. It's about using that as a way to build a life for yourself. And then coming back down. How do you come back down from the mountain? My whole life changed in the past five years, realizing that because I'm like any American, I was told, go on, move on up, go, go, go, go, get them. Get them. One award, great. That will launch you know, like these are strategic that you get at award. Now you can apply to a 10-year track job. Yeah. Then you then you have to do service. You go to your deans and look at all the awards I got. Can I get a raise? You know, then can I get a load off my T-Jex? I can do research. Can I get research fun? So all these are cheated. They're not nothing. But then eventually you look around and said, when is it going to end? And now I realized, if I don't come off this mountain and find my people, my brother, my aunts, my family, I'm going to be in, I'm going to be buried up there. And that was the most liberating thing. You can go into these spaces now. And I say, I don't belong here, but I have work to do here. I love the visual and the metaphor of coming down the mountain. Yeah. Because for me, it feels like grounding back into ourselves. And into the things that are truly meaningful that we take for granted, into the beauty that is right in front of your life instead of thinking that more of anything other than what you said, if you have safety and if you can pay your bills and you have something that you can wake up and do that adds a little value to your life, even if that means you wake up and you drive your grandmother to her doctor's appointment, then where you are you have enough. And if you can start there, you actually are grounded into your values. And that's where your power is because you know who you are when you can do that. So I love the metaphor of like dropping down. Do you feel that's where you are now? Oh, 100%. Yeah. 100%. Like everybody always asks me, oh my gosh, you know, the book and the podcast and the this and you know, what's more, and I'm like, more. Yeah. Like I have more than I ever thought I would ever have. I want more time. I want to be present with the people I love. My parents are getting older. I'd like to spend more time with them and they don't live near me. I, I, I am more certain of what's important in life because all the things that you see right now happened after I almost lost everything that was important. Yeah. And you don't forget what it's like to roll two tomatoes back across a dirty grocery store conveyor belt. And you don't forget what it's like to think that your family's about to be torn apart or you're about to lose the house or whatever. And so I, I am more certain of who I am and what matters and that gift that you have been given ourselves during this lifetime, that it's the most powerful place you could possibly be. And so I got so much out of your, your book. I have loved meeting you and talking to you and ocean, man. What are your parting words? You should try to, to scare yourself, but don't be scared of yourself. It's important to scare yourself. It's okay to scare yourself, but don't be afraid of yourself. And I think we can talk a lot about ambition and craft, but the core of it is a daringness. Try risk. Don't be afraid to be humiliated. Don't be scared of yourself. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for your beautiful and life-changing work. Thank you for writing. Thank you for everything that you are doing to help us find joy, even in those moments where we are deeply struggling. Your work really matters. It's made a huge impact on me. And I know that our conversation today is going to make an enormous impact on the person who's listening right now and who they share it with. I'm so, so honored. Thank you. I hope so too. Thank you so much. You're welcome. And I also want to thank you. Thank you for taking the time to listen to our conversation today. Thank you for watching on YouTube. I am certain that you are as moved by what we discussed as I am. And I just wanted to tell you in case no one else tells you today, as your friend, I love you, I believe in you, and I believe in your ability to create a better life. And I hope one of the things that you'll really take away from this is that you already have a beautiful life. You already have so much that you can be joyful about. You have so much that you can be thankful for. And when you hold space for that joy, when you hold grace for yourself, your life instantly becomes a little better exactly where you are. Alrighty, I'll see you in the very next episode. I'll be waiting to welcome you in the moment you hit play. I'm so excited. Brian, you ready on? Okay. How are you feeling? Good. I'm good. Oh great. You seem really good. Thank you. I'm so happy you're here. Me too. I feel even better now meeting everybody. Okay, you ready? Okay, here we go. But I don't know what the word abjection is. It took me a while. That's a no one. Object, cation, abject, abject, abjection. Oh my god. I play in a queer basketball league with my brother. I'm trying to imagine that, by the way. And so you can look at your enemy one day. And I'm not that great at I think some of the mums save you got there. I'm like, my god. I'm gotten a little glimpses. I think the mums are much better than us. Thank you for that. Thank you. All right, awesome. Oh, and one more thing. And no, this is not a blooper. This is the legal language. You know, what the lawyer's right and what I need to read to you. This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes. I'm just your friend. I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist or other qualified professional. Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode. There used to be very little visibility and control in treasury. Today, JP Morgan payments delivers real-time dashboards and control at your fingertips. 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