In this episode of MarieTV we do have some
adult language, so if you have little ones around grab your headphones now. Hey, it’s Marie Forleo and you are watching
MarieTV, the place to be to create a business and life you love. Now, a few months ago I heard about an acclaimed
filmmaker making a documentary about someone who I love and admire and respect. So if you are someone who’s hungry to make
your life as extraordinary as possible, this show is for you. Toby Robbins is an entrepreneur, best selling
author, philanthropist, and the US’s number one life and business strategist. Author of 5 internationally bestselling books,
Tony has empowered more than 50 million people from a hundred countries through his audio,
video, and life training programs. He’s the subject of the feature documentary
film: Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru, that goes behind the scenes of his seminar Date
with Destiny to give an insider look at how one man can affect millions. Tony, thank you so much for coming back on
the show. My pleasure, great to see you again. Yes. So I loved the film. It was extraordinary. It brought me back to my experience at Date
with Destiny a few years ago. So I wanna ask you, I know you weren’t an
instant yes to… No, I was not. ...having this film happen and it took quite
a bit of time for you to agree to that. First, why did you say yes? What made you switch? And what are you hoping that people take away
from this film? Those are good questions. Well, the man who approached me on it is Joe
Berlinger, who’s, you know, one of the most award winning documentarians. Like, 7 Emmys, 2 Academy Award nominations,
2 Peabody Awards. And I met him and I’d seen the documentary
he did of… the Metallica documentary, I don't know if you’ve seen it. Have you seen that one? I haven’t seen it. It’s brilliant. You see these metal guys that are now coming
of age and they’re trying to figure out how to navigate from where they are to where
they really want to be and their relationships and it’s just brilliantly done. So I met him socially. A mutual friend of ours who created Billions
introduced us. And I just… You mean the show? Yeah, the show Billions. I love that show. Well, do you know Maggie, the coach there? Yes. I’ve… she came to me, interviewed me,
and that’s based on me. Not the sex scenes. Amazing. Not the dominatrix, but the rest of it. It’s almost word for word stuff that I’ve
done with the hedge fund guys that I manage. It’s kind of fun. But, anyway, he introduced me, we met, and
I just felt… Joe was, I think, 50 at the time, having a
50th birthday. And, you know, I know people and I could just
sense here’s this guy that’s done everything including save 3 people’s lives who were
on death row who were innocent. I mean, he spent 2 decades to do it. I just loved his integrity and I think, you
know, I’m 6’7” he’s like, you know… I don't know, 5’6” probably. You know, he’s Jewish, I’m not. He’s by his own description the most negative
human being, cynical because he’s dealt with the worst part of life for so long. New Yorker. You know, I’m probably not. But what we had in common was this absolute
commitment to seeking out and finding the truth and bringing that truth to people. And he’s done it through the medium of documentaries
and I’ve done it through my medium. So I invited him to come to the seminar, because
I just wanted to help him. I didn't have any intention other than that. And he… the first day he wanted to run,
the first hour, because he heard all this music and people so happy it’s like this
is not me. You know, and he’s freaking out. I guess he called his wife is what he told
me later and said, “How do I get out of here without pissing Tony Robbins off? He’s been so nice to me and brought me out
here. I really like him, but I can’t handle this.” And she said, “Honey, stick around for a
few more hours.” And a few hours later, then by the next morning
he was completely… he had an experience that had transformed him. He said that he had had a lot of challenges
in his childhood and I did a process that for everybody is very powerful, but for him
he woke up and opened his eyes after this process, just tears pouring out like he’d
never felt in his life and he felt this huge burden come out of him and he said, “If
this could happen, I’m in for the 6 days. You know, I’ve never experienced anything
like this.” So he then approached me afterwards, thanked
me profusely, and said changed his life but how about we make this a documentary. And he just assumed I’m gonna go, “Heck
yeah, bring the cameras.” And I was like, “Joe, I really respect you
but,” I said, “it’s not the right venue.” Because you know… you know, you’ve been
there. We have cameras but it’s for projections,
so, you know, it’s way back here. A documentary has got the camera, you know,
up here while you're changing your life. I was like… I said it’ll be too disruptive. And plus I couldn’t imagine how you could
take 6 days of 12, 14, 18 hour days and convert that into less than 2 hours and have it have
integrity and really have the spirit of it and actually teach somebody something and
give them an experience. But there’s a reason he’s got all those
incredible awards. He’s just a genius. So he worked on me for 2 years. About every 2, 3 months he’d come work on
me again and I said, “Joe, I love you. I respect you. But no.” And then he finally came up with a great strategy. He said, “How about I’ll come in, I’ll
film it, and if at any time during filming it is really disruptive, you end it, I walk
away, it’s my responsibility, no burden on you.” And I said, “You’re willing to take that
risk, I’m in.” And he was brilliant. The cameras disappeared and people were transformed
and I’m grateful. Second question you asked I guess was what
do I hope comes out of the film? Yeah. I know what comes out of the film because
it’s been in 16 film festivals and I’ve gone to a bunch of them and… to watch people,
to feel people, to see what they’re experiencing. And what I love is, you know, people that
are my fans will love it if it’s black and white and, you know, and I give a few messages,
but… and people, the haters are gonna hate, like… Always. Like what’s her name says, you know, the
singer says. But that middle group, which is most of the
world that thinks they know what I do but really don't, they’ve been so deeply moved
because when you go to a great film, you know, you become the character to some extent. You feel what the character feels. And by doing that, just like when you’re
at the event, you’ve experienced these changes in yourself. And then what my real goal is is, you know,
instead of just witnessing and feeling it, is people get the insights that cause them
to see that, you know, I don't have to settle. I don't have to tolerate that life I have
even if it’s good. I want great and I want magnificent, I want
outstanding and I can do it. And getting people to think about what do
I want for my life today? Not 10 years ago what I thought I wanted. Today. And how do we make that happen? And I think, you know, most people we believe
that change takes forever and if it does happen fast it won’t last. And that’s true most of the time, but when
you actually change the priorities of your nervous system, when you rewire yourself day
in, day out, you know, 5, 6 days in a row and the environments we create, it lasts. You get huge changes. You know it from your own experience. Yeah. But most people don't know it. So when you now witness these changes and
there’s people in this film, as you know, that are in dire straits. And we have people there that are the most
successful in the world and they… they sold their company for 200 million dollars and
they’re bored and they’re looking, what’s the next step? And you’ve got people there that are suicidal
because in a room of 2,500 people there’s always on average in any room of that size,
there’s about a half dozen or a dozen people who are suicidal. So you see these people change, you witness
it, you experience it, you’re inspired by it, and… last night we had a screening on
a rooftop area with it. They do it in a part of the city here, where
there’s 850 people there and people got up afterwards and shared and they were all
so moving. There was one women that had cancer and she
said she felt like she was giving up and she said, “I’ve been crying the whole film. This is giving me the answer. I know what I’m gonna do,” and it just…
it’s inspiring to see that. So normally I have to get up and work 50 or
80 or 100 hours to do that. Here, you know, it could be happening now
because of Netflix starting on Friday in 190 countries translated around the world and
it’s just a great privilege. It’s awesome. I’m so… and that’s why I was so… What’d you think of the film? I loved it. So I got a chance to watch it while I was
just away on vacation in Sicily and… You took a vacation? I took a 2 week vacation. I’m impressed, girl. I’m super… The workaholic took a vacation, ladies and
gentlemen. I think that’s an endorsement for taking
care of yourself. This… it’s a new habit. And I’m, like, totally with it. That’s awesome. And Josh and I actually watched it together
in bed in Salina… Ooh. And we were both like… we loved every minute
of it. And in one of the opening scenes there’s
a gentleman that stands up, young man. Suicidal, yeah. Who was suicidal and, like, your heart stops
when you see that. And so I would love to just take a look at
that clip right now. Let’s have a look. Oh, awesome. ----------
Why were you suicidal? It’s because I can feel very big states
in life but I can go so deep that I don't see a way out. And I’m looking for a way to… to get out
of my body or to hate myself or to… I can’t explain it deep and I don't find
a way out. What makes you hate yourself? Is it the red shoes? What? Is it the red shoes? No. Are you sure? Because they’re fuckin’ red. Don’t you be smiling like that, you’ll
fuck everything up. If you smile like that too much you’ll wanna
stick around. You’ve been so hard on yourself. I love that you have such high standards,
but those aren’t high standards, that’s called perfection. And most people overestimate what they can
do in a year and they underestimate what they can do in 2 or 3 decades. And you haven’t been around long enough
to have those extra 2 or 3 decades. So don't fuck it up. There’s time. And if you’ll give yourself just a little
bit of time and if you’ll be a little more loving to yourself, I think you’re going
to find you’ve got a lot to give. I can fucking feel it. And I know fucking people. And you know I do. That’s right. Thank you. And I know you right now. You feel me? Yes, I do. So you and I are gonna make a deal. I’m gonna show you what to do to reshape
yourself. That would be nice. And we’re gonna make it so you can enjoy
yourself. Are you sure? Not
just when you’re jerking off, other times too. And what you’re gonna do is you’re gonna
remember as long as you live that I don't fucking bullshit. And you’ve seen it, haven’t you? Yes. Do I tell the fucking truth? Even when it’s painful? Even when it’s not sweet? Yes. I’m telling you the truth. You’ve just fucking begun and you’re not
gonna fuck it up. You’re gonna take the time to fully develop
and you’re going to find a way to enjoy a little bit along the way. There you go. Do you feel that? Yes. What was that that just happened? What just happened there when these came down
like that? And you started breathing here too? Start believing you and be open. ----------
So that was extremely powerful. I have 2 questions about it. Yes. First, I want to take you back decades to
when you first started. You have such certainty when you go and have
an intervention with someone that you know you can change their lives. I’m curious, when you first had someone
stand up and say they were suicidal was it in a private client situation, was it in a
seminar? Take me back to what your psychology was when
you first had someone in this state? Well, I learned when I was 17 or 18 I think
it was, I went and learned a series of tools. I learned Gestalt therapy, I learned Ericksonian
hypnosis, I learned neurolinguistic programming. And when I’d be in these classes I was obsessed
because I want to know everything. So when I was done with the class everybody
else would go to dinner and I would sit in that class for another 2 hours and write,
rewrite everything that I heard that I thought was valuable, like every distinction, every
story, every strategy, and then I’d try to figure out how to organize it in a way
where I could use all of those strategies to help so it wasn’t just information in
my brain. And as a result of that, I was… I developed skills other people didn't do
because I did more. Right? And I kind of became the star of the class
because the teacher of the class, John Grinder, left one time and this person went into this
horrific phobic response that led to… you know, a phobic response is uncontrollable
response to a fear. And the facilitator who was there couldn't
handle it. And I was there first time student, I just
stood up and I was like, “Move.” And I just took over. And I did this work with this person and got
them out of suicidal state and then cured their phobia and as a result everybody was
like, you know, jaws were dropping. “How’d you do that?” It wasn’t how I did it, I didn’t have
any more skill than anybody else there. I just… there’s something inside me that
when I see somebody suffering, everything in me shows up and… and over the decades,
and it’s been many decades. 39 years now. Of course I started when I was 2. But sincerely, in 39 years, you know, I’ve
had so many experiences that nothing is going to surprise me now. There’s… there’s only a limited number
of patterns human beings have and our patterns will make us angry or sad or suicidal or they’ll
make us passionate or grateful or full of awe and beauty and love. And I know what those patterns are, so I have
certainty because it’s like, you know, tying your shoes. People say, “How do you get up and speak
for 50 hours without any notes?” Well, I’ve done it a few million times. And so, you know, I’m confident tying my
shoes because I’ve done it so much. I might still have to stick my tongue out
to the side, some… I’m a little… I’m anchored to how I learned originally. But my point sincerely is it’s not like
I’m so superhuman. It’s like when you see someone who’s the
best in the world at what they do, they’re being rewarded in public for what they’ve
practiced millions of times in private. And so I keep making… I haven’t stopped. I keep learning, expanding, making new distinctions. I mean, I get… I 2, 3 times a year I look for something to
make me grow. The last thing I did, it’s crazy. I finished a Date with Destiny in Australia,
I was exhausted, 7 days and nights, 6 days and nights. Really 10 because I work with my trainers
before that. And I flew straight home because the only
opening in my schedule was not a vacation time. I went for 6 days to this place in Sedona,
Arizona where they put 180 electrodes on your brain, it takes like an hour to put them on,
they put you in a room for 14 hours that’s pitch black and there is… it’s cold as
hell, it’s kind of what my seminars probably feel like for some people initially. And you learn how to turn on the alpha part
of your brain which, of course, not only makes you really happy but you can solve anything
in an alpha state. And so… and it’s hard and there’s these
sounds that are coming out of your brain because you’ve got this amplification, but, I mean,
I do that… the first day I wanted to say who do I have to kill to get out of this? You know, because it’s like I’m exhausted
and this is so painful. But I stick with it because I know if I can
develop that skill, I’m just gonna have that much more impact with people. So for me, I’ve built the certainty by decades
of producing the result, but in the very beginning it was just this person is hurting and I’ve
got to do something. And that core aspect of me hasn’t changed
to this day as it was back then, but I was fortunate enough to succeed and figure things
out and you build on success. Yes. And it’s not that I’ve never failed. I’ve failed plenty of times. But not… if I fail with somebody I just
do something else. If that fails I do something else. It’s like I always say to people, how long
do you give your average child to learn how to walk before you cut them off and say, “You’re
not a walker.” “My kid is gonna keep trying until we learn
to walk.” That’s why everybody walks. So I just keep changing until I find the way. That’s really fascinating. I love the other thing that I’ve witnessed
you do in an intervention and it’s so much fun and you've done it here too, is you will
break someone’s pattern with humor. Yes. Or with some kind of shock that gets them
present or laughing or just kind of bewildered in a sense where they’re out of the habitual… Like you saw with that man, he’s suicidal. I’ve got to break this pattern because in
that state he’s not gonna create any solutions. Right? So, you know, I look for something and in
this case it was his red shoes. I play off of it. It was awesome. Do you have anything, like is there something
like that that we can do for ourselves? You know, for someone watching if they find
themselves, “Wow, I always seem to go into this funk,” or, “I always seem to get
myself into this state.” Is there a way that we can break our own patterns
that can be helpful? There is. I think the first step is the awareness that
it is a pattern, that it is not you. It’s really hard to change yourself, it’s
easy to change a pattern. But when you’ve lived a pattern so often
we get the illusion that that’s me, that I’m, you know, a person that puts things
off, you know, I’m a procrastinator or I’m, you know, not aggressive or whatever it is. And we have all these aspects of our life,
some of which are more developed than others but they’re in there. So I think being aware of the pattern, its
limit is step one and then step two is breaking it. But people can break their pattern easily,
they just don't not only because they’re in it but because most people have never decided
to say, “I’m not going to tolerate this in myself anymore.” So awareness is step one, step two is raising
the standard and going, “This just isn’t me. This is not what I stand for. This is not good for my kids. This is not good for my husband or wife. This is not good for… it’s not good for
me.” And then putting a line in the sand that says
this ends here now. And then how to break your pattern, there's
a million ways to break your pattern. I mean, you know, I do things off the cuff. One woman I had, she was so depressed and
so messed up and suicidal. I said, “Stand up.” I said, “You have a new phrase I want you
to do. I want you to do this 5 times. I am… thank God I’m not a cockroach in
Bulgaria.” I mean, I just pull shit outta my… nowhere. Right? And she said, “What?” I said, “Scream it!” And so in the beginning she’s like… and
at the end of the time she’s screaming and she’s laughing I’m not a cockroach…
thank God I’m not a cockroach in Bulgaria. Now she’s changed. Now we can go on to make the change. Because all lasting change happens in an altered
state. See, most of us think of hypnosis like people
say, “You can’t hypnotize me,” and they’re usually in a trance when they’re telling
me that. I don't hypnotize anybody. I dehypnotize them. We’ve been hypnotized by our culture to
settle for things. We’ve been hypnotized by our past to think
of ourselves as being limited when we’re not. And so what I really try to do is I alter
people’s state because in an altered state you’ll do a… just knowing, most of us
know what doesn't work and what works. Most of us know when we’re screwing up. Most of us know what we should do, but we
don't do it. And the reason is because in that state of
mind you’re not going to. If you want I can go on a rant on my highest
level mission right now. Yes, please. Ok, ok. So for decades my obsession has been, you
know, what makes the difference in people. Right? Why do some people, you give them everything,
love, joy, tremendous education, economic well being, and they end up going in and out
of rehab all day long. How many actors, actresses, wealthy people
have you seen do this? It’s sad. And then there are people that life has just
beat the hell out of. Right? It’s been… people have gone through physical
abuse, sexual abuse, emotional, spiritual abuse, and many of those people rather than
being broken become so hungry, so driven because they don't want anybody else to experience
that, I’m an example of that, that they become masterful in things. Right? But along the way I was like, ok, so what
am I really about? I said, I’m really… my real mission is
to help people get what they really want and help them have what I would call, you know,
you might say I wanna lose weight, I wanna make more money, you know, I wanna have a
better relationship, but what people really want is an extraordinary life, a magnificent
life, which to me is life on your terms. Not Tony’s terms, not your friend’s terms,
not your… not even your spouse’s terms. Like, what is going to light you up in this
life? And once people know what that is you need
two skills to get there. One I’ve taught for decades, the science
of achievement. And, you know, you know me well enough and
I know you well enough that we both have been obsessive about finding the strategies that
can help people get the result they want faster than they ever have. And you’re brilliant at it and I’m really
good at it and we have a lot of friends that are really good at it. But most people can figure that out. We can help them do it faster. And I think that’s a great service and I
love being able to do that and I love knowing answers that can help people so quickly. But the… it’s a science to achieve, meaning
if you’re… if you look around, and, you know, I wrote a book, I think you know, about
a year ago. I spent 4 years on it and I wanted to answer
the question, how do I help people financially in a world where most people are suffering? Especially with the markets in turmoil. And I thought, I don't have those answers. I have some answers. The people with the best answers, the ones
you should go, go. If you want to achieve something, find somebody
getting the result you want and model them. Success leaves clues, go find out. Right? My original teacher Jim Rohn taught me that. I never forgot it. So I went out and interviewed 50 of the smartest
financial people in the world. Everybody from Warren Buffett, Carl Icahn
and I found the common patterns. If you live by these patterns, you’ll have
more than enough money. You may not be a billionaire, but you’ll
have more than enough money. If you violate these rules, the science, you’re
gonna have too much month at the end of the money, you’re gonna be stressed out. Same thing with your body. We’re all biochemically unique, but there
are rules you and I both know scientifically that if we violate them our energy drops and
we’re going to have disease, if we align with them, high energy. So that’s the science of achievement. Get there quicker, how do you do it? One, obsess about what you want. Right? Focus on it continuously, have so much emotion
about it that you take massive action. Keep changing your approach, model somebody
really great, and then with some grace… takes some grace too. Yeah. Some call it luck. Some call it God. If you do the first 3 steps, that fourth step
usually kicks you over. But the more important lesson and the one
that I’m obsessed by getting into people’s minds, I really appreciate you planting the
seed with everybody, the one that’ll change your life more is the art of fulfillment. And I say the art of fulfillment because what
will turn you on, excite you, fulfill you is gonna be different than this man here who
I know is your friend behind the camera, and this beautiful lady here. It doesn't matter how close we are, we all
still are fulfilled by slightly different things. And so what I really want is I believe that
success without fulfillment is the ultimate failure and I really want people to be fulfilled
even more so because billionaires, that sounds ridiculous, but they’re a dime a dozen. Now, that’s an exaggeration meaning lots
of people become billionaires. What’s a hell of a lot more rare is someone
who loves life every single day and stays happy when it doesn't go their way. There’s nothing worse than an angry rich
man, an angry rich woman. You want to slap them, you know. Like, they have every benefit in life, but
that’s what the human mind does. The human brain is 2 million years old and
this is not designed to make you happy. It’s designed to make you survive. And survival, it does it by fear. So what the brain does is looks for what do
I need to fight or flight from? And so it’s always looking for what’s
wrong and our minds can take us over unless your heart is what’s running you. So what I try to do is show people how to
shift that and I try to do it two ways. One is I jolt them. One way you can do that is about two years
ago, you know, we lost what I consider to be a national treasure, Robin Williams. Yes. How much did you enjoy or love Robin Williams? He was incredible. And I broke… when I heard that news, it
was just like everything stopped and it was devastating to think also that he took his
life. Well, if you think about it, here’s a guy… I met him once, I was at a TED talk and he
loved it. And it was my birthday and he came and he
stood in a restaurant, surprised me, and started singing happy birthday to me as a Jewish woman,
as a Russian, all these things. He was such a beautiful soul and I’ve never
lost to suicide and I had no idea that years later that’s where he’d be and he never
reached out to me. So… but here’s why I bring it up. Here’s a man that was a master of the science
of achievement. He knew how to take whatever he envisioned
and make it real. He wanted to have his own TV show, everyone
told him it was impossible. He did it. He wanted the number one show, Mork and Mindy,
he did it. He wanted a beautiful family, he did it. He wanted to make more money than he could
ever spend, he did it. He wanted to make movies, he did it. He wanted to make movies and win an Academy
Award for not being funny, his number one skill, and he did it. Right? He wanted to make the whole world laugh and
he did it. And he didn't just kill himself, he hung himself
in his own home. Now, I’ve spent the last year I was in China,
Beijing, I was in Japan, I was in Brazil, I was in Australia, I’ve been in Toronto. Everywhere I’ve gone I’ve asked people
this question [inaudible]. I say, “Tell me something, how many of you
love this man? Don't raise your hand if you like him.” 95% of the room all over the world, every
country I’ve been to, says they loved him. I said, was he a master of the science of
achievement? Clearly he was. So what happened? How does a man kill himself, leave millions
of people, maybe hundreds of millions of people, around the world that loved him, but more
importantly his own family, his children and his wife? The reason is because he suffered. He suffered, he used drugs, used alcohol as
a way to try to escape suffering. And if you would’ve asked me a year and
a half ago, we’ve been friends for a while, do you suffer? I mean, suffer, I’d be like what are you
talking about? Right? I have the most magnificent life, you know,
I’ve got 18 companies, we do 5 billion in sales and 7 different industries. I have a mission that I love as much as I
possibly can. I have 4 beautiful children, I have an incredible
wife, I have total freedom. And I would be totally authentic in telling
you all of that. But I wouldn’t use the word suffering just
like achievers don't think they have fear. Yeah. And you know, I’ve shared with you before,
like, stress is the achiever word for fear. I’ve never fearful, I’m just stressed. Well, if I follow your stress it’ll take
me to your fear. So what I found is I suffered because suffering,
there’s only 2 states you can live in. Two types. Beautiful states of being, happiness would
be one, but if you just try to be happy all the time it’s not real. You know, some people smile so much their
face hurts. It’s a beautiful thing, but our nervous
system needs variety in our nervous system. So think of it this way, beautiful states
could be awe, it could be love, it could be passion, it could be a courageous moment,
it could be being driven, it could be happy. But in those states no one has to tell you
what to do and you always treat yourself and others in the right way and no one has to
tell you to because in that state you just do the right thing. Those states. The other states we can live in are suffering
states. And I have a good friend named Christian and
I was in India with him and we’re having this discussion. He goes, “You know, you talk about peak
states and, you know, lousy states.” He goes, “I look at those as suffering and
beautiful states.” And so I was like, “So suffering would be
frustration, anger, overwhelm, stress, worry, loneliness, depression. There’s a range of them.” And I would… I wasn’t depressed, but I would be of course
pissed off or frustrated or overwhelmed at times and I just, that’s part of life. Right. Here’s what I believe today, that’s not
part of life. That’s the mind that if you don't manage
it, you can have everyone loving you, you can have the most beautiful family, you can
have 20 Academy Awards, you can have all the money you can spend, and you’re still going
to be in pain. So my invitation to those viewers who are
watching this, and to you as a dear friend, is to raise the bar on what we call suffering
so you see it for what it is and to realize that you can free yourself from it. And it’s not some ethereal, spiritual thing
from India to do that, it’s just I think life is too short to suffer. And so I realize my happiness was really cheap. And, you know, let me explain. I’d be happy all the time, but then I would
leave my happiness as soon as, you know, this little device would go off because when you’ve
got 1,200 employees on 3 continents, what are the chance that someone is screwing up
right now? Always gonna be happening. There’s always gonna be something that you
can get upset over or there’s the opportunity to get stressed, to get angry, get pissed,
to be like, “Ugh.” Or worried or concerned or… there’s varying
levels, right? Totally. All forms of suffering. So I was like if I’m willing to give my
happiness up for that because I think everything has to be a certain way, I think people have
to behave a certain way so that we can change the world, all this internal pressure that
I have to make everything perfect all the time, help everybody, you know, before I die. Whatever is in the back of my head there. And what I began to realize is I’m not living
when I let this take that away. This should be one of additional tools to
maybe to connect me at times, but… and so now when that stuff happens I just let it
go. And that… for an achiever, that’s the
hardest thought in your mind. Everything is a breakthrough. Right? But problems need energy to live. And some things, you just don't give them
an energy, they’re much easier to solve. Plus it’s easier to solve something in a
beautiful state than in a pissed off, freaked out state. Now, some of us get pissed off and speeds
us up and, you know, we find the answers, but there’s a better way. There’s a more elegant way. There’s a most… more beautiful way to
live. Yes. And I think you embody a good portion of this,
but I’d be willing to bet since you're human that you have suffering states. Oh, man. Of course I do. What do you go through? It’d be good for people who follow you to
see that vulnerability in you as well, and I’d love you to share it. I just wrote about this last week because
I… when I was in Sicily. So, you know, again, taking vacations is a
new habit for me and when we were there I really got to see and I wrote a little bit
about this, was how wound up I get and how irritated I get with Josh over stupid shit
that doesn't matter. Exactly right. And… and it was so cool because it was so
great because I was not only watching your film… Yes. And you know how much I love and appreciate
your work and I consider myself a lifelong student. I’m always looking to learn and grow. And I really… it was almost like an out
of body experience where I was starting to see, wow, these are some of the patterns that
I have that I get in our intimacy… like, I will stop the intimacy because I need to
control everything including his state and my state and how… like, it was so awesome. And it was amazing the healing that could…
that happened just out of slowing down and just out of being willing to look and not
needing to be right. And also getting really… Do you want to be right or do you want to
be in love? Yes. Those are your choices. And being really honest and having a level
of discussion, you know, for Josh and I where I was like, “Hey, this is how I feel. This is what happens,” but it wasn’t being
delivered through this angry, combative state. Yeah. It was actually a discussion and we had curious
moments of how can we take better care of each other. That’s beautiful. And so… So deep in the relationship, doesn't it? Because as deep and as beautiful as your relationship
may be, there’s another level. Always. Because when you’re not suffering, there’s
nothing in the way. Because everyone is a great communicator when
things are going well. Yes. But when people get pissed off, frustrated,
fearful, worried, everybody’s a shitty communicator then. And bad communication creates bad relationships. Yeah. And so we were having this really fun time
on the trip going, ok, here’s another opportunity to peel the onion where we would catch ourselves
going into a habitual friction point and we would slow it down. It’s a pattern. Totally. And we’d slow it down and him… both of
us, we’re great jokers and we… comedy is, like, just a part of our lives. That’s one of your patterns. That’s beautiful. Yes. And so we had a chance to do that and by the
end of the trip we were like, oh my God, we feel like we’re new humans. That’s awesome. It was… but to your point, it’s like they’re… I love finding these ways. I get excited to find my patterns because
I really do believe in everything that you just shared and there’s no reason for us… I was saying it to, I don't know, Louise,
I think it was you behind when I was getting dressed. Or Greg, actually. You were asking, you’re like, what really
did you discover? And I was telling him the same thing. There’s always this other level. So I know where you’re going. I think the most important thing for this
so that people practically apply it as I hear you applying it 100% and I’m not surprised
based on who you are. But I think it really comes down to measuring
it. You know, you can’t manage something you
don't measure. If you’re in business and you don't measure
your numbers, you’re gonna be out of business. You may not care about that, but you have
to. Otherwise you can’t run it. It’s also true with your personal life,
it’s also true with your emotional life. So we… my wife Sage and I, we are… and
my family all have come up with this approach in the last year and a half, we call it our
90 second rule. And it’s not you have 90 seconds to get
your shit together. Like if we were together and you’re my friend
and you’re suffering, I’m not gonna do something and make you wrong or say, “You’ve
got 90 seconds.” I just say, “you know, I don't know if you’re
feeling some stress or some pain right now, but I’m here for you if I can help.” But, you know, there’s a choice. Once we know there’s a choice. And so in 90 seconds since no one is pressuring
you, what we really realize is all the stuff that was stressing that you just thought you
were believing in in those moments. Like believing he had to be this way or he
shouldn't do this or you should do something different. And whenever we should all over ourselves,
whenever we judge someone or ourselves, it doesn't make it better. So what I’ve done is just like… have you
ever thought, “I wanna kill this son of a bitch.”? Of course. And I know he feels the same. Yeah. And so you haven’t loved until you’ve
had that thought. Right? So but when I tell people this, you have that
thought but you didn't kill anybody because you didn't believe the thought. Thoughts… when people think I’m having
these thoughts, you’re not having these thoughts. These thoughts have been around for millions
of years. The millions of years that you’re an asshole,
I hate you, or you should do something different, I should do something different. Those thoughts have been around in the ether. If I would have told you 100 years ago we
were gonna have a little device that was this size and you could push a button and talk
to someone on the other side of the earth because it would capture invisible waves and
bring it into this box, you’d say you’re insane. If you said you were going to go to the moon
and back you were a lunatic. Thoughts are vibration. They’ve been around forever. This is not corny bullshit, it’s the truth. And when you change the way you use your body
in some way, down, excited, cranking, it’s like turning the channel on the TV. Turn one channel and what you’re gonna bring
down is invisible waves of a horror story. Turn another one, it’s a comedy. Another one, it’s a romance. So when you learn to trigger this and you
realize your thoughts are not your thoughts, what I’ve become humored by is a thought
goes by that used to stress me out, I go, “Oh, look. Another thought going by. Look at that little thing. Isn’t that interesting? Isn’t that fascinating? I’m not letting… I’m not believing this. I know it’s bullshit. I know what matters is this, not all that
other bullshit. And I’m committed to living in a beautiful
state for me and those that I love.” And the more you do it, you build muscle and
it becomes easier and… in the beginning it should’ve been the 4 day rule, or the
4 hour rule to be more accurate probably. Because we don't only have days, but we have
some bad half days, I’ll tell you that. Some bad evenings at times. And now it’s like… I wouldn't say it’s effortless because things
show up, but it doesn't last. And that freedom is what most people are looking
for who are sitting and meditating because I love meditation. I do a little meditation process myself in
the mornings, but you meditate, you’re in a great state, and then shit happens and the
mind takes over and meditation is gone. If you’ve gotta keep meditating all the
time, you don't have a life. So meditation is a nice set point, but what
I’ve decided is that benefit of the meditation is I use that energy to slice through anything
that will make me or others that I care about really unhappy by understanding the truth. And here’s the truth. All of your upsets in that situation, correct
me if I’m wrong, were based on expectations you had for him and for you. Of course. And the problem with expectations is they
put you in a box, they put the people you love in a box. And we can’t help but have expectations,
it’s what the mind does. But you can free yourself by expectations
when you trade your expectations for appreciation. I always tell people, trade your expectation
for appreciation and that moment your whole life changes. So I’m on my way, I’m fortunate enough
now to have my own private jet, it was an unbelievable gift, but most of my life I chartered
or when I went overseas it was too expensive, right. So, you know, you’ll fly to Australia, I
now have an intercontinental jet I can do it. But in those I’d take the plane. I’d go on Qantas Airlines and the stress
in getting on Qantas Airlines, the stress, what used to make me stress was like, “Oh,
my God. We’ve got 14 hours and I’m disconnected
to all the companies and people need to talk to me and all that stuff.” Because, you know, commercially in the US
you’re connected to the internet, but Australia weren’t. So one time I get on the plane a few years
ago and they announce, “We have internet,” and it was like God had descended into the
plane. People are cheering, people are, like, high
fiving, it was just the most… “Thank God we’re connected to Instagram
for 14 hours.” You know, it was just the silliest thing that
we are as humans today because, you know, we don't feel like we can live without this
stuff. And… and I was just like them. I was like, “Oh, this is the greatest thing.” And within 15 minutes you can predict what
happened, right? Didn’t work. Didn't start again the whole 14 hours and
people were like, “This is bullshit,” and this… and people were angry. 15 minutes earlier it was a miracle, now it’s
already an expectation. That’s our lives today. We live in a world where we expect so much
because so much is available to us that we’re missing out on the joy. So my goal is real simple. I want to live the happiest human life humanly
possible because I know in that state I’m better for every human I can serve, including
myself. Life’s too short to suffer. And so I’ve made a decision and I created
a bunch of tools to help people shift out of that suffering real fast so they know how
to do it. But the essence of it is I stop, I breathe
in my heart, slow it down, same thing, slow it down, see the thought go by, get a little
curious about it, don't let it connect me, and I breathe in my heart. As I’m feeling that, then I start to think
about what can I appreciate, because there’s always something wrong and what’s wrong
is always about, so is what’s right. And all you’ve got to do is look for it
and find it. And when you find it and it’s real, it’s
not some affirmation, it’s not some positive bullshit, it’s I really do appreciate this,
I’m really connected to this, I’m finding joy in this moment. That’s my job. When you do that again and again and again,
it gets… it’s a positive addiction. And then as great as the life I’ve had has
been and all the people I’ve helped, the liberation that creates is the liberation
that most spiritual teachers are talking about, but it’s pragmatic. You don't have to go live in a cave to do
it. You’re living your life like you and I do
and helping people and living your life with your family, but you’re getting the rewards
now, not some day. So it… it’s like trying to describe what
a rose smells like to someone who’s not, you know, smelled it or tasted it yet. And my hope is that I can hook you into really
considering making the most important decision of your life, which is I will not suffer anymore. If it comes up, end it within 90 seconds. Maybe in the beginning it takes me 20 minutes,
but I’m gonna get better and better until I am that. It isn’t phony, it isn’t fake, it isn’t
placating, it’s just knowing that life is so beautiful and rich and I’m not gonna
miss out on it. And it’s changed my life, it’s my passion. I adore you and I think you’re clearly you’re
one of the people in the world… the reason I wanted to do this too and, you know, we’re
not… usually we shoot MarieTV and we do it on these, like, little chunks because we
batch everything. But when this came in I was like I have to
talk with Tony because every time I talk with you I feel like I get more grounded in myself. Oh, you’re very kind. I love that you’re already doing this with
your man and if you take it… if you measure it more now. Yeah. And if you not only measure it more, but you
reward yourself for the little victories, as beautiful as your life is, I can promise
you even for you it will be even more. And that would make me very happy because
I care deeply about you because I know you care about so many people. Thank you. I want to continue on with an idea that you
talk about in the film called the idea of each one teach one and how this work can spread. And I know we’re doing a bit of that right
now. What does that idea mean to you? Well, every time I do something I’m always
trying to figure out how do I produce leverage out of this? How do I scale this? How do I help more people with this? And so, you know, that’s why I do the videos
and pieces that I do of that nature because in the modern world we can scale that way. That’s why we made this documentary so people… I can only see 2,500 in an intimate setting
like that where I read everybody’s form, you know, 20 pages beforehand for days and
days and days. I can only do so many, but I can have millions
of people get a taste of that, make changes. Right? Yeah. So… but I think when you look at each one
teach one, I think what it really means to me is every time I go there if I can penetrate
this person’s life and really get them to shift where they own it, where they don't
just make the change but they understand how they did it and why they did it, then that
person can now go out and do that with their family or their friends and then you get this
gigantic multiplied effect. Otherwise you’re limited to what you can
physically do with the hours in the day. And I’m able to do a lot, you know, I get,
you know, 8, 10 thousand people at my Unleash the Power Within events now, which is exciting. But, you know, the challenge is like we go
to cities and there aren’t… some cities they don't have more than 10 thousand
seats. Right? You’re just at your max, so I had to look
at it and say how do we do more? So I’m doing everything I can to empower
each individual to not only make their own changes, but then go back and take those and
help someone else. I love it. And, you know, we have so many folks in the
helping profession who watch the show. I know that, a lot of coaches. A lot of coaches, teachers, everyone. And even folks that aren’t necessarily in
those professions but they have a desire. Yeah. In their heart. They want to have a great life and they want
to do everything that they can to help someone else. One of the key questions that I’ve seen
you ask in interventions multiple times and it’s always fascinating because I see you
disarm people and it gets them thinking in this new way. And I’m curious if this question, if we
ask it now if people in the audience at home can find value for themselves. I’ll hear you ask, whose love did you crave
more? Your mother or your father? Can you speak a little bit to that line of
questioning and what it can help someone discover? Let me say why I ask the question. Everything you and I do as human beings we
do based on a set of beliefs, a set of values, a set of rules. We have a set of expectations, we have a projection
of how people should treat us, about how we should be, about what our body should be like
or how we should be doing financially at this stage of our life. And so all those beliefs and values and rules
I know how to find those with precision, but as a general you can just call them your blueprint. Ok? Where does the blueprint come that tells you
you should feel bad about doing something or not doing something or good about it? It comes first when you’re first born. You’re wide open as a baby. What can you feel? What can you do? You can do anything. You can go to the bathroom in your pants and
you’ll still be loved. Try that when you’re 50, see if it works
for you. You can do anything and you’re gonna be
loved. Right? But then gradually, very quickly, the oxytocin
in your mother, and perhaps in your father as well, that makes her love you even though
you look like a lizard as a child when you’re a brand new baby and you’ve got no teeth
and you’re fat and you’re still loved, the oxytocin wears off. When it wears off, fear enters our body. Because suddenly someone else used to put
all their needs behind ours make us first, that’s how we survive. Right? Now I’ve gotta behave a certain, I’ve
got to be a certain way to get their love or attention? And human beings, our survival is dependent
upon someone else caring for us at that stage. We can’t take care of ourselves like an
animal that has horns or beaks or, you know, or claws or camouflage to hide. Our competitive advantage is love. And so when you look at that you go, ok, well,
where does my model of what I should and shouldn’t do come from? Why do I have all this stress that says I
have to work all the time and I have to do all of this all the time? It comes from the source of love in your life
that starts to teach you how you need to be to have that significance and love when they
oxytocin wears off and they’re not loving you 24/7 for no reason. And so I asked people, whose love did you
crave most? Not who do you love more, whose love did you
crave more? Your mother or father? Assuming they’re alive. Or your grandmother if your father wasn’t
alive or whoever is with you. And who was it for you? My dad. Cool. That makes sense to me. Tell me, who did you have to be for your father? And don't… I know you won’t edit intellectually, but
just tell me the first thought that comes to your mind. I had to be…? Like, cheerful and a hard worker. Ok, cheerful and a hard worker. I had to be…? Fun and entertaining. Ok. Now, I want you to notice her face even. Fun. It’s that forced fun even when it isn’t
fun that makes it inauthentic. And you’re an authentic person, but I have
to be up, I have to be those things. What else did you have to be for your father? Well, he… my dad, who’s amazing and still
alive and I love him, he didn't ever demand much from me, but because he worked so much
I always kind of wanted to get his attention. So I didn’t feel like he made demands of
me, but those were all the kind of things that I tried to do to get… find connection
with him. That’s right. So it was implied. He didn't ask it of you, but it was implied
by his behavior. So many times people don't say things and
many times we misinterpret what people want from us, but we believe it at that stage and
it shapes our life. So you’re supposed to be happy, cheerful,
you have to be a hard worker, you’ve got, I assume, probably smart. Is that true? Yeah. Yes, right? You have to be successful, was that one? Yeah. And you’re all those things. Yeah. Pretty cool. Your dad gave you a beautiful gift. However, with every gift comes a limitation
and the limitation, they have to be all those things all the time has also produced in you
stress. Now, you handle it incredibly well and I’m
not placating you. You know how I feel about you. And now just feel about you as a friend, but
how much I respect you. So you’ve constantly done that and a lot
of that came from what your father imprinted with you. Absolutely. But there are places where you’re not so
happy, where you’re not so positive. There are places where you’re not feeling
that smile, you know, the glee smile. And to have to do that or feel bad about yourself
because unconsciously your belief is if I don't do that I won’t be loved, and that’s
the oxygen of my life by the most important source. So what happens is we believe… like, mine
was my mom. So my mom, I had to be strong, I had to support
her when I was a boy, a little child. I had to go to the grocery store starting
at 5 and get the food and make the meal. I had to go to the pharmacist and convince
him to give her more valium because she lost hers, not knowing she was just abusing the
drug. I mean, I became very resourceful because
I wanted to please my mom, I wanted to make her happy, I had to be a good boy, I had to
always be nice, I had to be quiet when I was supposed to be, you can imagine how hard that
was for me. But I had to do all those things. Right? And I became all those things. But I’m also an intense mother you know
what. I’m also a committed crazy son of a bitch. And those weren’t things my mom wanted,
but I had to be those for her. So what I do, I pretend they’re not there. I convince myself I’m not like that. So I’ll give you one simplistic example,
might be helpful. I am obsessed with being a giver. Not positioning so, I don't give a shit if
people know it, it’s who I am. It’s how I feel good about me. My mom implanted that. It’s a beautiful gift. But when you always have to be a giver, I
had no money and I’d take people to lunch and I’d order an iced tea. I was starving, but because I had to be the
giver. I had to buy the lunch for them. I had no money, but I would do it. Always having to. And as a result, in my early years in business
I kept attracting people that took advantage, stole from me, did things. And I would be so upset, what’s going on
here? And what it was is it matched me. I needed to give, so people who were willing
to receive showed up and they would take everything they had. And one day I had a man, I’ll never forget,
I went to get the check, this was early in my life and career, financially at least. And he was a very wealthy guy and I picked
his brain. And I went to go get the check, right? He’s worth a billion times more than I was. And he grabbed the check away and he physically
smacked my hand. Like, hard enough that it hurt. It jolted me. He broke my pattern, right? And I’m like, “What the hell?” He goes, “Are you trying to steal away all
my joy of buying lunch for you? Are you that selfish that you’re going to
take away that… try and take that joy? I’m not going to let you do it. I’m buying lunch.” And I remember staring at him and I was so
shocked. He did such a good job of doing what he…
he put me in an altered state. Right? Just shocked me. And I was like, “Wow, I never even thought
about it that I’m taking by being the giver.” And so what I began to realize is I don't
want to be a taker. I hate that aspect that shows up in so many
people. But if I don't allow people to give then I’ve
robbed them of the gift that I have. And so… it’s so ironic because now in
my life I’ve learned to receive because everywhere I go, I show up at a restaurant
someone sends over a note thanking me. They bought me lunch, they bought me dinner. Where were you people when I was broke? Like, I could've used it then. I don't need it. But now I let them do it and I come and express
gratitude. Some people are really cool, they don't even
tell me who they are. The waiter will say they won’t tell you
who they are, they just… you’ve changed their life, they don't want to interrupt you. Such an unbelievably classy thing, but I really,
I want to thank them. But I’ve learned to just take it in and
know that it’s giving them a gift like I have. My wife loves to sleep, my wife loves to eat. I don't sleep, I don't eat. Right? So why am I telling you this? Because those are my patterns. Her patterns are different. And because I’ve loved her I’ve learned
to, like, stay in bed a little longer, I’ve learned to eat a little bit more. But she’s probably saved my life in some
ways. Because I love her I’ve opened my world
from being a certain way. It isn't this one model now. One of my sons, I’ll finish with this example,
I have 4 children and they’re all adults now and I’m so proud of all of them. But one of my sons, my youngest sons, I was
always worried about him because he had a heart of gold. He’s made of the same stuff you are, I am,
just amazing. A contribution driven kid, beautiful soul. No exaggeration. Not just because he’s my son, anyone would
know that’s who he is. But early, years ago, he just had no work
ethic. Like, you know, I grew up with nothing. We didn't go to the family island that we
own, we didn't go on a private jet. I was [inaudible]. If I could make it to LA it was a big deal. You know? And so it produced in him not the same level
of hunger to drive or grow. He still cared about people. And I’d always be worried. I mean, trying to intervene on him. And I can intervene on anybody, but the difference
is I was hooked because if I die I don't… money is not it. I want him to be a proud human being. And he’s… I don't use my name and I’d show up at a
concert and there he was backstage and then, I won't use the name of the group, but they’d
say, “Oh, it’s your son.” And everybody wants to do something for my
son as a way of giving me something. I don't want them to give my son anything,
I want him to earn everything. I would be so stressed out. And then I didn't want to have to come to
Jesus meetings. And I’m like what is going on here. And then one day I thought what if… what
if I’m supposed to learn from him? What if it’s not about me teaching him,
what if there’s something in me that needs to change that’s so intense? And I thought, what skill does he have that
I don't have? And I thought, chillin’. He knows how to chill. I don’t know how to chill. And I thought to myself, you know, I love
that I have the work ethic I do. I love that I’m so driven. I love that I wanna help every human I can. And someone stops me on the street and I’m
there always. But, man, living that way is pretty stressful
on the body. It can wear you out and can make you not be
there with somebody else because you’re busy trying to solve everything all the time. And I thought, you know, maybe instead of
trying to make him be a certain way, maybe… I don't wanna be lazy. I will never be that. I’m incapable of that. But maybe I need to let go just a little bit
and relax, like your two weeks. Maybe that’s the gift here. And so I literally changed my approach from
being worried about him that I brought him in and I said, “I need to talk to you son.” And he was like, you know, “Oh, we’re
gonna have another one of those talks.” You could just see his face, like I just read
his mind. Right? And I looked him in the eye and I just said,
“I have to apologize to you.” And he said, “What?” And I said, “I’ve got to apologize to
you.” I said, “I’ve been so worried because
I want you to be… have everything you want in your life and I know work ethic is such
a huge part of that and I know you have a work ethic, but it’s not my insane level.” But I said, “I realize you don't need my
insane level. You’re not starting where I started from.” And I said, “So I realize, you know, I’ve
had these conversations, I hate having these conversations with you. I know you hate having them with me when I’m
trying to coach you to get more work ethic and you’ve probably felt insulted by it. And you do things easier. You look for the easier way, sometimes the
strategic way.” And I said, “So I want you to know I really
apologize for that,” but I said, “I want to learn from you. I realize you’re in my life not only as
my son but to teach me too.” And you can see this quizzical look on his
face. And I said, “I think there’s a skill you
have that I need.” And he had this shocked look on his face,
I’ll never forget it, and he goes, “What’s that, dad?” And I said, “Chillin’.” And he started to laugh out loud and then
he looked at me like this must be a technique. You’re gonna manipulate me with this or
something. I can read his mind, I know him like the back
of my hand. Right? My son. So he goes… I said, “I’m serious.” He goes, “Dad, no, you are not good at chillin’.” I said, “No, so coach me. How do you do this chillin’ thing? What do you do?” And he goes, “Well, you just sit.” Sit? And we had the most funny, beautiful conversation. Here’s why I tell you this story, I love
my son so much, I’m so proud of him as a human being. When I stopped pushing, put your fist up. If I push you like this. Yes. What are you doing? I didn't tell you to push back. That’s what all humans do, right? I push on you, you push back. So instead of pushing on him I let go and,
as a result, he’s coming towards me. Right? And what happened was I was sincere, I worked
at it. I’m still not a master of chillin’. I’m not as good a master as he is at chillin’. I don't think I'll ever be. But I have that skill, which my wife loves
now. Because I can turn off, like, people say he’s
turned on all the time. It’s just me. I’m not turned on, it’s who I am. But the ability to let go at a different level
has been invaluable and I’ve done things I’ve never done in my life before like chill
with my wife in different ways, and she loves it. So it’s truly been a gift but what’s amazing
was I had no more conversations with him about work ethic, and what do you think magically
happened in about, I don't know, 3, 4 months? It’s like a work ethic exploded in him. You know, it’s just because… because now…
it’s like I think God, the universe, life, whatever you want to call it, infinite intelligence,
I think God puts people in our lives always for a reason and the reason when we feel irritated
is so that we can become more whole. So we can go from when we were wide open and
now we can only be this way and this is who I am, this is who I have to be, to we don't
have to be all those other ways at once, but where you can embrace receiving, where you
can let go and not think you have to solve everything for your son or daughter right
now and that it’s ok if they make mistakes and learn and grow. Or that I can learn something from them. And when the pressure was no longer there,
when I realized God keeps putting these things in your life until you conquer them, and it’s
conquering inside you not outside you, I couldn’t… I've always been, I love my son and I’m
close to my son, but our relationship has transformed and I’m so proud of him. And, you know, he met a woman, now he’s
married to and now he’s, like, got a different reason to work and he’s… and, I mean,
he’s phenomenal. Same heart he always had, but he’s got the
work ethic too and I didn't do shit. All I did was let go. So that’s… I know most of your viewers are achievers,
right? They’re so striving, they’re such good
people, that’s why I wanted to do this conversation with you. I think you’d be served if you could just
ask yourself what is it I have to do all the time and where’d it come from? Whose love, if you’re listening, whose love
did I crave the most? My mother, father, or if they were passed
away my grandfather, aunt, uncle? Whoever’s with you. And who did you have to be for that person? Here’s another one, who could you never
be for your father? Oh, goodness. Who could I never be? You could never be…? I don't even know. Like, gosh. I’m drawing a blank, I feel so bad right
now. Don't feel bad. Who could I never be? It’s not how it normally works. You’re a moving towards person. I am a moving… I know that about you, that’s why I’m
doing this. I want you to dig. Ok. If you’re willing to. Of course. 100%. Who could I never…? I could never be…? Just don't filter, just first. I could never be…? Sad. Good. I could never be, like, kind of pissy. Yeah. I could never be… like, I just have this
ability to figure things out, so I don't think I could ever really be confused or, like,
helpless. So are there times when you’ve been sad? Oh, yeah. Are there times you’ve been pissy? Yes. If I asked your man, he would say yes. Oh, absolutely. At times. No, of course. So the point of the matter is when you’re
not being that, that produces a level of pressure inside you because the source of love you
needed to be that for, and it’s in your unconscious. It’s not a conscious thing. So there’s a level of life and death emotional
survival that shows up that says I’ve got to overcome this. Well, there’s nothing wrong with having
drive, but what it does is it makes you be inhuman to yourself. And when you’re inhuman to yourself your
man is going to feel it because even though you don't mean to be, and you’re one of
the sweetest souls I know, if I rub your arm like this no problem. But if you’ve got a scab there and I touch
you with a hair, a cat hair, you’re jumping out of your skin. And so there’s scabs there from those things,
it’s a horrible metaphor, but there are… there are pieces that irritate that are there. And when someone is spiritually developed
it isn’t that they can quote scripture. It’s a nice thing to be able to do. Or that they go to church every single day,
I think those are beautiful things, but the real thing is they’re comfortable within
themselves and if when you’re comfortable in yourself then you can give to other people
and there aren’t the hooks. You’re not doing it because you have to,
you’re not doing it because it’s your identity. You know, there may be a part of that. You’re doing it because it’s what’s
real right now. And I just think that the more we can figure
that out, the more you being to understand why you do what you do. Also I ask people, who do you really, really
like a lot? And then what are the qualities in them? And whatever you like in another person are
qualities that are in you but you have disassociated from them, you’ve disidentified with them
because they didn't match the way you’re supposed to be. Right? In the source of love. And when you reclaim them you’re more alive. That’s really what it is. Or I’ll say to people who do you dislike? I know you love everyone because you’re
green, beautiful, socially conscious person. But we usually have something that we get
annoyed by, pissed off by. Yeah. And whatever qualities piss you off are qualities
in you that you’ve also disidentified with. You don't have to become a jerk, but you have
to find… if it was a taker, you’ve got to find the energy of receiving. If it’s about domination and they’re dominant
and you hate that, it’s really about you stepping up and taking that part of your life
and dominating it a little bit in an intelligent way. Whatever energy is either annoying you, is
calling you to find that part in yourself, or anything you love in another person is
actually you. In fact, how many of you at home have gotten
in a relationship sometime in the past and you were enamored for this person? They were so passionate, they were… they
were a man or woman and took the room and you loved how they just, they were so potent
or powerful or loving or playful or something. And you’re more quiet, you’re more internal. Or you’re way out there and you loved how
calm they are compared to you. Right? The opposite energy attracts us. But then here’s what happens. In one of my relationships, without saying
who, I had a long term relationship with a woman who was a great lady. And she met me and I’m a force of nature
and she loved I was a force of nature and I make things shit happen and I’m not much
of just, you know, hanging out. And she loved that in the beginning because
it’s a part of her that she did not see was in her that she thought that was the opposite
of her. She wanted those pieces. But if you don't reclaim that part of yourself,
the very thing you used to love in that person you will hate. You will hate it because you have not grown
and now you blame them unconsciously. So all of a sudden, I talk loud and intensely
and passionately. That didn't change, but all of a sudden it
went from isn’t that cool to does he always have to take charge of the thing? Does he always have to talk so loud? The very thing she loved in me she now hated
in me. Right? I’m like, “I don't think I’ve changed. Right? I don't think there’s anything there.” Because she didn't grow in that area. She didn't tap into that part. She didn't have to become me, but she needed
to find where she was not the passenger, where she was the person who was taking charge at
times. Not every moment, but at times. She didn't get the growth. That’s what makes you start to feel that
love for someone, because there’s something in them that is recognized in your spirit
that’s there and not fully developed or not reclaimed. And when it’s reclaimed then that relationship
becomes even more powerful. It doesn't mean competitive like one is trying
to be like the other, it just… we’re all more whole. And for me, you know, simplistic things. I sleep, you know, I eat. You know, I laugh at little stuff. I don't have to make everything be the most
funny thing in the world. All those things came from my wife because
since I love her and I love those qualities in her I learned to appreciate them in myself
and it just made me more whole. So beautiful. Tony, you’re just an extraordinary human
and I’m so grateful we’re on the planet at the same time. Me too. For everyone watching, you have to see this
film. You will adore it. Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru on Netflix
now in 190 countries around the world translated. As of this Friday, July 15th. Exactly. Watch it, you will enjoy it. And thank you so much for being here. Thanks for having me on again. Absolutely. Beautiful to be with you. Thank you. Now Tony and I would love to hear from you. What’s the single biggest insight that you're
taking away from this conversation today and how can you put it into action right now in
your life? Now, the best conversations happen after the
episode over at MarieForleo.com, so go on over there and leave a comment now. And while you’re there be sure to sign up
for our email list and become an MF insider. You’ll get instant access to an awesome
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dreams because the world needs that special gift that only you have. Thank you so much for watching and I’ll
catch you next time on MarieTV. The important stuff. Brilliant, does my hand look ok? Tony likes my shoes. We are good to go. From tip to toe.