Merry Christmas and happy holidays, friend. I know the holidays aren’t the easiest time for people, and no matter what today looks like for you, I wanted to share this video. It’s a beautiful conversation I had with my good friend Humble the Poet, where we talk about how to love yourself, set boundaries, and build healthier habits around love and attraction.
I found his words incredibly heartwarming and uplifting, and I hope you’ll feel the same way.
Happy holidays, everybody,
Matthew x
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Matt:
Today we have a guest, a friend of mine, Humble the Poet, an author, an MC, a spoken word artist and an incredible thinker who has just written a book on love. So, I invited him along today to talk about self-love, healing, the patterns that we engage in in early dating that sabotage us.
I think what you’re going to find in listening to this conversation is not just really valuable insights on men and bridging the gap between men and women and understanding why men do the things they do, it’s also going to be a really amazing insight into the patterns that keep us from finding real love. I think the best word I can use to describe this conversation is healing. If you’re single right now, I think you’re going to come away from this conversation feeling better about being single right now, and also feeling like you have more hope for the future in finding someone. So, I present to you Humble the Poet.
Humble, what’s up, man?
Humble the Poet:
How you doing?
Matt:
It’s good to have you.
Humble the Poet:
Yes.
Matt:
This is the first time we’ve done anything together.
Humble the Poet:
Professionally.
Matt:
Right?
Humble the Poet:
Yes.
Matt:
I don’t think we’ve done anything like this.
Humble the Poet:
No. It’s all been-
Matt:
We started our relationship in the freezing cold in Poland on Wim Hof’s retreat for four or five days. I can’t even remember now.
Humble the Poet:
I had no idea who you were.
Matt:
Yeah.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
We met there.
Humble the Poet:
That’s where we met, yeah.
Matt:
We did everything from jumping into frozen cold lakes together to sitting in ice for up to 10 minutes, climbing the tallest mountain in Czech Republic-
Humble the Poet:
Without clothes on.
Matt:
. . . without clothes on.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
It’s hard.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. But it was definitely a great bonding experience. I learned that. If you want to bond, suffer.
Matt:
I think there were 10 or 11 of us, total.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. Yeah.
Matt:
All different walks of life. We had like award-winning American footballer on the . . . Steve Weatherford, the Super Bowl champion.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
We had Jesse Itzler.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
We had Lewis Howes
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. Aubrey Marcus.
Matt:
And it was crazy group.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Nick Simmons, the Olympic gold medalist.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
It was like a crazy group of kind of superhumans from all different walks of life.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. Super superhuman men that weren’t afraid to be vulnerable.
Matt:
Yeah. And it was interesting because that to me, when I came away… And I made a video about male vulnerability after that trip because it seemed to me that was almost the most profound part.
Humble the Poet:
1000%.
Matt:
Because the ice, doing all of the extreme challenges, which I was terrified of at the time, that allowed us to all be in the same place. But then in between times was when we would sit on the sofa and just talk.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
And I remember even Wim Hof, the Iceman, said that he got vulnerable there in a way that he wasn’t normally vulnerable.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. I remember because . . . And I don’t know if you remember this part or if it applied. To make a call, we had to leave the cabin and climb up a little hill, a little bit higher to get good reception. So, I remember being up on that hill making a call. And then a car drive by, and it’s Wim. This is later in the evening. And he gets out, and he gives me a hug and he says, “Thank you.” And I don’t know what he’s saying thank you for. And then I realized he was talking about this creating an opportunity for him to be more vulnerable, him to have a deeper connection with his son after that trip as well. And I guess things were happening while I wasn’t even there, kind of in the kitchen or during the meals.
But yeah, it was definitely one of those situations where you first think that you’re in a room full of hyper-competitive, toxic alpha dudes, locker room energy, but very quickly you realize these are a lot of self-aware guys. There still was competitive energy. There still was . . . As I learned later from Dr. Trish when we went to Utah, she said, “You guys weren’t supposed to be in the ice past two minutes.” She goes, “You cavemen, I don’t know why you stay in the ice for so long.” She goes, “It’s only two minutes. It’s only meant to be two minutes.”
Matt:
That’s all you need to do in an ice bath.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
It’s two minutes.
Humble the Poet:
That’s all you need.
Matt:
And then we’re in there chanting at 10 minutes.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. She’s like, “You guys are just being cavemen.” And I thought that was hilarious. And it’s still a healthy version of competitive.
Matt:
It was a part of the bonding, right?
Humble the Poet:
It definitely was.
Matt:
And it’s interesting because Wim Hof is used to being on these big programs, much bigger than we did. He’d have, I assume, a couple of hundred people or a hundred people on his program. And so he’s kind of the guy that comes in and people are very excited to see him, and he’s really playing the leader in that environment. And he did for us too in the sense that we all wanted guidance and we all needed his kind of moral support in those situations. But it felt like he even gave himself permission to not have to be the leader the whole time. Because it was all leaders and every single one of us is a leader in our field. But that was what was quite disarming about it, is that you actually got a chance to shed all of that and just to be a person in this environment, and go back to being a student and going back to being . . . You’re around impressive people, so none of us feel like-
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
None of us feel like we’re the shit in that environment.
Humble the Poet:
1000%. But everyone’s still a self-starter.
Matt:
Yeah.
Humble the Poet:
So, I think the basics were there for us to make things happen, but I think feeding off each other’s energy, benefiting from that, and then yeah, not only getting in the ice because someone else caught in the ice, but being vulnerable because somebody else got vulnerable and somebody else shared that. And I think for me, that was . . . Getting the invite to that, not having a lot of context as to what it would be, just agreeing because it was a unique experience, and then being so glad it happened, especially considering months later, the world shut down. And I think that primed me for the unexpected and regulating my own resilience.
Matt:
And you did the hideous thing of actually making use of that time and writing a book.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. That kept me afloat, yeah, writing an entire book.
Matt:
Some of us ate cereal at 11 o’clock at night and you were writing a book. I’m so excited about this, because speaking of being vulnerable, I read somewhere that you wrote this book, which is called “How to Be Loved.” Are you saying “How to Be Love” or “How to Be Loved”?
Humble the Poet:
So, you inspired this title because-
Matt:
I didn’t know that.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. You inspired the title because you told me to meet the audience where they’re at. And I think one of the references you made was if you can make a video about self-love, the title of the video, something a little bit more surface level, like, why he won’t text back. And I really thought about that, and I was thinking about catching myself, even what was catching my eye. And I realized that the secret is to be love, is to view love as a verb and an action and a service. But what we all want is to feel loved. We want to acquire love, and realizing that there’s no difference. So, putting the D in parentheses is kind of like . . . That’s a spoiler alert. In order to feel loved, you have to be love.
Matt:
So, I read that you wrote this book on the back of a breakup.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Can you dig into that? Because I feel like that’s meeting people where they are.
Humble the Poet:
Right. Yeah.
Matt:
I mean, people tend to pick up a book like this and people often tend to encounter my YouTube videos at a point of pain. They’re going through something, maybe they’ve been lonely for a while, maybe they just went through a bad breakup, maybe they’re scared that they’re never going to meet someone. Can you take us back to that time when you’d gone through a breakup and it kind of inspired you writing this book?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. So actually, to be 1000% honest, it was the book that inspired the breakup. And what it was is I was in a relationship for a few years and we had just got engaged, and the engagement in itself was kind of a piece of duct tape to try to address the challenges in the relationship. So, it was like, oh, let’s go in deeper because we’re not good where we’re at, so maybe that’s the solution. And knowing on the inside, that’s definitely not the solution. And then I committed to trying to have a deeper understanding of love and how to be a better partner because I really didn’t want to mess it up. And in the initial journey of trying to better understand love, I started to realize that I was in the wrong place. And even if I couldn’t put it into words while I was having these feelings that this wasn’t the space I needed to be in.
And it wasn’t for a lack of love, and I wasn’t with a person who wasn’t good to me. I was in a position where I wasn’t able to receive love. I hadn’t addressed all that has been kind of built up around me. The same fortress I built to protect myself was now serving as a prison to keep everybody else out and keep me out as well. And I was realizing that you could shower me with love and no love could be received because I wasn’t in a place for that, and that motivated the breakup. But then at that point, I was still in the middle of researching this book and doing some of the early writings. That’s when it became clear that I needed to really figure this out. It couldn’t be for nothing. So, the journey of the book is . . . I write it from the frame of this being the breakup because the vast majority of the writing and research happened all after the breakup.
But it was very clear I didn’t think I’d be writing a book specifically about self-love predominantly. I thought this really would be a pragmatic day-to-day kind of dating type book. And then I realized, no, the reason I’m having so many problems isn’t because simply I’m not a good partner, it’s because I’m not in a position to realize love. And I started to realize very quickly that we view love as this kind of external thing that we earn or that we can acquire or we can get or we deserve or we’re enough for, when really love is something that you can only realize and experience. And the analogy I use is love being like a breeze. And the work to find the breeze, the work is to open your cell. And I realized very quickly my cell was not open. No matter how windy it was, my cell was not open. And the work I had to do for that required me to be alone.
I couldn’t do it at the same time with all the family obligations, dealing with somebody who is a great person, but at the same time, on their own journey, refusing different type of help that they might have needed for their own healing. And so I had to walk away from that situation. And then at that point, it’s not . . . I’m not doing it with confidence and I’m not saying, okay, this was the best decision of my life. Let’s move forward. It was, I need to make this worth it. I need to figure out how I got here. I need to figure out how I never get here again.
Matt:
With people that are out there dating right now, or even people in relationships, what do you think are the telltale signs that someone is struggling to receive love? Because some people may not have that awareness. They may just say, “I’m just really struggling to meet someone,” or “I never feel what I want to feel.” It manifests in other ways. So in terms of almost diagnosing where people are, what do you think are the signs that someone is struggling to receive love and that’s the reason that that love isn’t happening the way that they intended it to?
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Humble the Poet:
An easy clear one is people’s inability to accept the compliment. Receiving a compliment from somebody gets you flustered in a way, because so often as young children, we signal to ourselves that you have to earn love, you have to do something to earn it. And as we get older, authentic moments of love aren’t things that we earn. So, I think this inability to accept a compliment can give somebody a hint. Even go ahead and compliment yourself. You can go ahead . . . Think about the last time you were naked in the mirror and gave yourself a compliment, not looking at your body critically, and try complimenting something that you don’t normally compliment. There’s going to be a weird feeling. That in itself is an inability to receive love, just because it’s almost foreign.
Matt:
It’s funny, just yesterday, I was awarded my blue belt in jiu-jitsu.
Humble the Poet:
Congratulations.
Matt:
Thank you, man. It was a really special moment because I had worked towards it for some years now. And it happened to be a particularly busy class yesterday, so there must have been . . . What were they, like 30 or 40 people in the room, 40 people in the room? And I was the only person that was awarded a belt that day. And so they called my name at the end of class and I had to go up, and the professor, the coach put the belt on me. And then you go around and you shake every single person’s hand in the room. And they’re all lined up, and you go along and you shake every single person’s hand and look them in the eye. And this happens at the end of every session.
But on this particular session, every single person whose hand I shook said congratulations. And it’s funny because initially, I noticed I was almost trying to move through people really quickly because I was like, oh, this is a lot of attention on me. I’m used to attention but it’s a different kind of . . . I’m used to . . . If I’m on stage and people are saying nice things about me or they’re saying nice things in a video, I don’t know, it feels different somehow. In those environments, I’m in the role of the leader.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
But in this environment, I’m very much in the role of the student.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
And there are people way better than me in that class, many of them. So, to walk along and for everyone to say individually, “Congratulations, man. Congratulations, man,” in my head, I had to reset a quarter of the way through and tell myself, hey enjoy this. You earned-
Humble the Poet:
You definitely earned that.
Matt:
You spent years doing this, and you’re now trying to almost rush through these congratulations because there’s some part of you that’s feeling a little uncomfortable in just accepting this praise and accepting that people are celebrating you right now. It’s your birthday today. You know what I mean?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. Yeah.
Matt:
And I reset. I had a little bit of self-talk where I literally told myself in real time, hey, enjoy this, actually . . . Everyone is saying congratulations. Try and really receive it. So even after all the work that I’ve done on myself over the years, I still had that moment where in that particular context, I had to give myself a talk about just accepting the praise.
Humble the Poet:
Completely. And I think especially with that because that’s so almost . . . It was a process. You didn’t win a sweepstakes. You didn’t get lucky. There’s a step-by-step guide to getting the belt and you couldn’t skip any shades in that gradient, and you slowly made your way there and you worked your butt off to get it. So, that should be one of the easier ones. And it is really interesting because it is starting to recognize what type of attention we can’t absorb and what type of attention we can’t. As you said, you might be able to talk in front of 10,000 people, but maybe eight of your closest friends sitting watching at the dinner table do a speech, it might be completely different.
Matt:
Yeah.
Humble the Poet:
And I think these are the opportunities for us to become aware in that context. And I think accepting a compliment, I think, is one of the easier ones to look at or even realizing how critical we are of ourselves, but also just our definition of love. I think oftentimes attention, affection, power, control, validation, adoration, all of these things, I identify them as kind of fast food versions of love-
Matt:
Interesting.
Humble the Poet:
… that don’t have that nutritional value that actual love creates.
Matt:
So, can you repeat those, the ones that you feel like are fast food versions?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. I mean, as I said, validation, power, control, success, adoration, attention, admiration, worship, all of these kind of things that really feed the ego.
Matt:
I was going to say that it seems to me the common denominator in all of those is they’re based in ego.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. And ego is the border that separates us from each other. Ego is that membrane that makes every drop think it’s separate from the other drops in the oceans.
Matt:
So, because in a way our inability to receive love is you can reduce it back to ego, right?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Because ego can go in two directions. Ego can be, “I’m so great, and therefore someone should love me.” Ego can also be, “I’m worthless and no one’s going to love me.” Right? It’s still a form of ego, is I’m making it about . . . It’s almost like I’m especially unlovable-
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
. . . is also an act of ego. I’m especially lovable, and I’m especially unlovable, I find are both rooted in that same place. And you can flip between them very easily because the person who associates with being super hot is also terrified of the rejection of someone who doesn’t think they’re that hot.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
So, it can flip quickly.
Humble the Poet:
I kind of define ego a lot more as the identifier, the way you identify yourself separate from others. Because when you have these moments of authentic love with someone, that’s when there ceases to be a you and them. It’s kind of like you melt into each other. There’s not a you and me. There’s a we, whether it’s you and a child or you and a romantic partner. And also going back to people’s definition of love, I forgot who said it, but love is so vast, they can love those things deemed unlovable. So going back to the ego, the ego is where we derive separateness and value because we think that we have to have value for love. I’m unlovable. I’m not . . . when love is bigger than that. And there is no value to a person. A person can’t be enough of a person. A person can’t be worthy of love. Love isn’t measured in worthiness. Love isn’t measured in enough. People are measured in worthiness or enoughness.
Matt:
So, what are you saying to people who love the concept of that, they find that extraordinarily beautiful, but the way that things practically play out in their life is that it feels like their worst fears are always being confirmed, in the rejections they get. I want to feel like I’m not, I’m bringing down the barrier between me and this person that I’m attracted to, but I very much . . . My experience are one of rejection. “This person doesn’t want me. This person call me or didn’t rejected me when I asked for their number, or didn’t call me after the date. Or we slept together, and they no longer wanted me.” We meet in an everyday world of dating a lot of rejection. And in some cases, we even hear, the rejection as being tied to something that we feared made us not enough. And we go, “Oh my God, it is because I’m not pretty enough. It is because I’m not good-looking enough. It is because . . .”
In the case of guys, there are guys that every time they hear that height actually does matter to a lot of women, they feel their worst fear confirmed, that I’m not enough because I’m not tall enough. So, how do you marry . . . Well, I suppose if there is a intrinsic reality to what you are saying-
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
. . . how does someone actually embody that in a world that can feel so full of constant rejection, on the very things that I am actually worried make me not enough in the first place?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah, so I’m not here to discount the crappy feelings of rejection in any capacity, but you’re not being rejected by love. You’re being rejected for a second date or for a first date or for some other validating factor. You’re being rejected for something that’s delicious, not really nutritious. And I would challenge people to go back and look at their current relationships in their life where they authentically feel love, right? And that may not be a romantic relationship right now. It may be them and a nephew, them and a parent, them and a sibling, even them in an activity. And I want to challenge them to ask, is there anything that person . . . Is that person perfect? Is that person enough? Do you even look at them in terms of their enoughness or their perfectness? Do they have to qualify for your love? And the answer is? No. Because the truth is everybody we love, we know all their imperfections. And the deeper we know them, the more in detail we could list out these imperfections. None of that disqualifies them from love.
Matt:
Have come across people, and what do you say to them if they say, “I do have that kind of love, and it’s beautiful and it’s one of the things I treasure the most in my life. I still feel a yearning for romantic love. And in the field of romantic love, in that domain. I feel like no one is giving me the kind of love that you’re talking about where they do accept my imperfections and I’m really struggling because it seems as though no one’s ready to love me like that?”
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. Again, I would challenge them to look at the current apparatus. And I’m not lost on that idea. I’m a heterosexual male and I have what I find attractive, what I don’t find attractive. And I have a list of qualities. That may or may not actually be what I require in a partner, but it’s what I think I require, and that could cause me to have misconnections, and I think that can cause me to also connect with the wrong people. I’ve also had given exceptions to people who don’t fit my list of certain things that I’m looking for, but because they had a symmetrical face, I let it pass. And then two weeks later, I’m suffering those consequences. So, I think it’s enough to take ownership over this idea that, hey, we barely understand ourselves, let alone can’t understand other people. I think that’s the first thing to recognize.
I think the second thing too is, going back to our ability to receive love, our relationship with other people is going to be heavily based on our relationship with ourselves. And the sting of rejection . . . Yesterday, I was hanging out with a friend who is a real estate agent, and I was telling him, I go, “I went through this process of writing this book, shedding as many layers of protection as I can to be as vulnerable as possible. Now, I feel like that vulnerability is kicking me in the butt, inviting me in the butt now that I’m out in the sales department, I’m reaching out to people, trying to get on podcasts, trying to get people to give the book a chance, and every rejection I get feels like it stings extra hard. This isn’t even my first book, but it’s just been so long since I’ve been in that.”
And he reminded me, he goes, “Look, rejection is your friend in this because it’s their story, not yours. That’s the first thing we have to always remember. When someone says no to you, it’s their story. It’s not yours. They can have all these qualities that they’re looking for. And if you don’t fit those qualities, that doesn’t mean they know what they need either.” And I think that’s important. And then also, that has always been the situation. The humans that we are, we derive our understanding through our acceptance from other people, and that makes so much sense. When we lived in smaller communities in these villages of a hundred people and we needed them to like us, we needed them to accept us because our direct survival depended on it. And again, my parents grew up in a village like that, so I’m one generation removed from that mindset. Then when we come to these cities full of millions of people and that mindset doesn’t apply anymore because it is impossible to get everyone to like you. Also, you don’t like everybody. And I think very often we don’t look at the type of rejections that we would provide people and how non-personal it actually is. And somebody saying, for example, “Height matters.” And I watched a funny YouTube video recently where the girl was probably five-one, the guy was probably five-seven and she said, “You’re too short.” And he goes, “How tall do I need to be?” And she goes, “I need you to be six three.” He goes, “Why?” She goes, “Because then I’ll feel safe.” He goes, “Safe from what?” She goes, “What if five guys come and attack me?” He goes, “You think somebody who’s six three will be more successful than somebody five-seven fighting five guys?” And she’s like, “Well, maybe he’ll know karate.”
And so now she’s already un-peeling the lack of logic in her situation as well. And he’ like, “Well, maybe the five guys will know karate too, because you’re not making sense with what you’re asking for.” And I think very often when we seek these external things, we haven’t taken the time to figure out is this what I want or is this what I’m told I want?
Matt:
Yeah.
Humble the Poet:
I need to have an attractive partner or I need to have somebody who makes a lot of money. But what we don’t ask the question is, “Why? Why is that actually important?” And going through the journey of self-awareness it’s like, “Okay, let’s say, well, how did that make you feel?” Because at the end of the day, what we really need is to be around someone who makes us feel good about ourselves. And you mix that with the fact that many of us as children were given this signal, an incorrect signal, that you have to earn love. Because we weren’t able to realize that sometimes the adults who we looked up to were having bad days unrelated to us and we internalized that.
So now we find ourselves attracted to people that we have to win over. And there’s that famous quote, “We adore those who ignore us and ignore those who adore us.” And many of us are guilty of that because we have this broken idea that we have to earn love. And, again, we live in a consumeristic society which needs us to feel like we’re not enough as is so we can buy their stuff.
Matt:
I love that point about people don’t necessarily know what they need.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
And that idea alone can save us from a lot of the worst kind of conclusions of a rejection.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Because we can realize then that we’re not necessarily hearing from a trusted source. We’re not hearing from someone who’s got it even all figured out for themselves. And that the decisions that this person is making right now may actually make them unhappy for a long, long, time.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Because they continue to go after the wrong things.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
So to me that almost leads into two thoughts, I guess. One is that we’re always in a sense educating people on what’s important by what we display as important. We can come across someone who might be a little shallow when we meet them, but if we are really connected to our worth, in the non-shallow sense, and we’re really believable, then in a way we become the best marketer of depth.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
And someone around us can start to realize, “Oh, wow, this person really believes in their value in other ways.” And that then becomes very compelling.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
And so the irony of self-acceptance and self-love is that when we really feel connected to the value of our deeper qualities and who we are as a human being and just our value as a human being, we then become much more convincing for certain people who can be perhaps educated on these things that are more important than the things they think are important.
Now I suppose the paradox is that do we want to attract someone we have to convince? Or do we want to meet someone who’s also at a level of awareness in their life, that they already have a real sense of what’s important outside of what I could kind of overly simplistically say are the wrong things to base all these decisions on.
If someone’s saying, “Well, what I really want is to meet someone who is already in a place of maturity.” They’ve started to value the right stuff and therefore are going to value those things in me and don’t need to be convinced. Do you think that there are ways, because I actually saw someone write this the other day, they were like, “Matt, how do you attract a self-aware person?” And I’m curious as to whether you think that people who are out there trying to attract someone who’s already at that level, are there things you can look out for? Or do you think that life is always going to be a little bit of both? Yes, you’re trying to attract a self-aware person but you know also have to be responsible for marketing your value and the depth of you and that being an important thing?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah, well, I mean I think the simple answer is to attract a self-aware person is to become a self-aware person. And I think that becoming what you want to attract, I think, is super important. And also for anyone to describe such a impressive individual, for that impressive individual to get there? Self-awareness is only developed through going through boatloads of crap. You know what I mean? That self-aware individual will have to have dealt with endless rejection, endless pain, and processed that and dealt with that.
Matt:
And in a way the wrong thing’s not working.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
That person has to have dealt with having gone down the path of what they think they want enough times and it didn’t work, that they’re ready to try something new.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. Like I recently went on a date with a woman who broke up with a billionaire because she’d spent her time thinking, “Somebody with amazing wealth is something I need.” And then she had to get in it to realize, “Oh, there’s a downside to this as well.”
Matt:
Me and Audrey were watching The Crown.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
This week.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
And there’s this great moment where Diana, Princess Diana, she’s basically on a date with this doctor that she’s met in a hospital.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
And it’s really funny because he leaves the date when she starts to become physical with him, and she’s like, “Why are you leaving?” And all of us are watching going, “Why are you leaving?” And he says, “I don’t know what you see in me. I’m a slightly overweight doctor with no time,” and he essentially is saying, “There’s nothing special about me. Why are you even on a date with me?” And the thing that made me and Audrey laugh is that she said, at first she starts by saying, “I’m not who you think I am. I haven’t got people that I’m close to. I feel stranded and lonely and out in the cold and I’m just a normal person. I’m not what you think I am.” And then she says, “I married a prince and it didn’t work out. Now I’m ready,” I think the line she said is, like, “I’m ready to try a frog.”
Humble the Poet:
I was thinking that in my head.
Matt:
And it cracked me up and we were laughing at it because we were like, she perhaps could have said it’s slight, I mean I’m sure Diana didn’t actually say in real life, “I’m ready for a frog,” because no one wants to be the frog.
Humble the Poet:
But I think a lot of good points in terms of projections.
Matt:
But it cracked us up because it was like, “No, I’ve tried a prince. I’ve tried Prince Charming. I’m ready for you, the frog.”
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
But it was an example of exactly what you’re saying that sometimes when you explode that idea of what you think you want and you realize, “Oh, happiness does not reside there.” Then it opens you up to trying something new. And I’m sure a lot of people listening to this will have perhaps in their lives reached a point where they’ve tried the same thing so many times and it’s not worked, that they have to now start to suspect what it is they’re actually looking for.
Humble the Poet:
Because they end up becoming the common denominator in all these failed relationships.
Matt:
Yeah.
Humble the Poet:
And then it has to be, if you do the same things, you’re going to get the same outcome. And I know for me, through therapy, what I ended up doing was reliving my entire love life. And the therapist making points of when my face lit up during telling these stories and being like-
Matt:
Why did it light up?
Humble the Poet:
The first time someone said, “The world needs to hear your voice.” And that same person calling me years later after we weren’t even together, being like, “I’m watching what you’re putting on YouTube. You’re putting some weird goofy comedy. Your work’s important. Why are you trying to be an entertainer for? Get back on track.” Somebody recognizing my value as a person before-
Matt:
So you felt seen by that?
Humble the Poet:
Felt seen, felt validated. I think what I realized what that was, all of us have these moments where our confidence isn’t there and we want someone to help us. And I think so often, especially with the work I do and the work you do, people look to you to kind of instill some confidence in them. But you have your low days as well. And that was somebody like without hesitation being like, “No. Who you are and this path you’re taking matters even if you don’t think that today.” And they did it with a level of assertiveness and aggression that I needed to hear.
So having someone that does that versus somebody planting fear in my head if I have a big goal and they’re like, “Oh, but what if that doesn’t happen? Let’s take a different route.” So recognizing how important that is for me. Having memories of people pushing me to the edges of life in terms of experiences, understanding that I’m not looking for happily ever after. I’m looking to continue an adventure, continually find new unfamiliar situations, territories, and experiences and keep doing that. So that may not be somebody who’s looking for a house in the suburbs and kind of an autopilot life after a certain amount of things. I’m an artist. I’m here to peel away layers and get deeper and more tormented in some capacities.
Matt:
So you lit up when that person said that because there was this sense that they saw you, that they saw how wonderful you are, and how that there’s something in you that is important for it to be out there. And that’s a beautiful feeling when someone sees us in that way and we want to be around that energy. And so in seeing that, you lit up talking about that because it was like a connection to something that was much more important than the superficial in somebody else. And it gave you a sense of what you’re actually looking for, the kind of teammate that you are actually looking for. Now, I don’t know, and you don’t need to say, why that’s not someone that as a result of that lighting up you are now with?
Humble the Poet:
Oh, she was just ahead. Her adventures were ahead of mine and she left the country, she left the continent, and started her adventures, and was it like, “We can’t keep this up.”
Matt:
Got it, got it.
Humble the Poet:
So yeah, that’s all it was. She was just way too ahead.
Matt:
Because I guess, there are people that will say, “I know what’s really important, but what I am attracted to is a problem, because I have this sense of what’s important, but I keep getting attracted to these things that aren’t good. And they shouldn’t be that important, but they seem to be.”
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
“Because it’s what I keep getting attracted to. I’m attracted to these hot cool people who are indifferent to me, and they may not say they’re attracted to the indifference, but I’m attracted to the fact that they’re hot and they’re cool and that there is something sexy about them.”
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
“And it seems to always lead me to people who either don’t want me or who don’t treat me very well. Meanwhile, the people that seem to have these gorgeous qualities you’re describing, at deep level, I think are amazing qualities but I don’t feel compelled to be with them.” What do you say to that? And does the book allude to any of that?
Humble the Poet:
Oh, yeah, completely. We all, and even outside of romantic relationships, we all choose what’s familiar over what’s healthy. And oftentimes this cool aloof individual, what it really is is a feeling that you have to earn something. And oftentimes that matches the flavor of what we had growing up. We may have been in a household where there was a parent, in whatever the primary parent was, where we felt that we had to constantly earn their love. And now we’re finding ourselves doing the same thing where we find someone that matches that flavor.
Matt:
I agree with that.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
I absolutely agree with that. If I were trying to challenge it in the most brutal way, I would say, and let me play the role of this person.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
“Humble, that’s true. But hot is hot. Someone who’s just physically, they look a certain way, I find that really sexy and life has this group of people that are super sexy, that I’m always drawn to, and they can have lots and lots of people because they’re super sexy and okay, maybe there’s something going on with my past in parenting and that’s making me attracted to indifference because it’s what I experienced as a child. And I feel like, but even if I remove the indifference and control for that, I’m still just attracted to these super hot people that can have so many people that they’re never really attracted to me or they don’t give me the time of day. And we live in a world where just if your good-looking life is a 100 times easier and you have lots of options and I find myself drawn to those people, but those people treat me as disposable because I kind of am to them.”
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
What do you say to that person?
Humble the Poet:
Again, it’s, A, look at your track record. You want to keep doing it, you’d been happily ever after a long time ago if one of these ended up working out. Two, it’s the next level on top of choosing qualities is asking how does that quality make you feel? So what is it about somebody who does not show interest in you? What is that feeling?
Matt:
But for the person who says, “No, no, no. I’m not attracted to them not showing interest. I’m attracted to how good looking they are.”
Humble the Poet:
Well, there’s nothing wrong with being attracted to somebody who’s good looking and again-
Matt:
Right, but what if-
Humble the Poet:
People with symmetrical faces aren’t monolithic. Not every single person who is an extremely good-looking individual treats people with indifference.
Matt:
Right.
Humble the Poet:
And I think that in itself, we’re creating this archetype that isn’t real.
Matt:
Trying to get to what, is this a hard truth that a lot of us have to accept that just there are people who aim too high in terms of looks and it always makes them unhappy because they’re just always drawn to people that have this wealth of options and therefore we are more likely to be disposable to those people. Do you think that’s happening to a decent number of people? Like dating apps just show that people, a lot of people are going just for the best looking person in the room, and that there’s 1% that’s getting 99% of the messages.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Do you think it’s incumbent on people to continue going for those kinds of people until they find one that turns around to meet them? Or do you think people themselves need to almost start with what they’re hoping someone else will do, which is to say, “I am going to stop needing people to look a certain way for me to choose them, because in a way what I’m expecting is the exact same thing. I’m choosing based on looks, and then I’m frustrated that someone isn’t choosing me based on that same quality.”
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Do you think people need to almost start from a basis of saying, “I’m not going to value this as highly as I used to?”
Humble the Poet:
Well, they shouldn’t. It depends on your goals. If your goal is to enjoy somebody like a snack, then fine, get the most attractive snack you can have. If you’re trying to find something long-term? How does somebody’s looks play into a long-term situation in any capacity? And I think that’s something that is worth asking.
And also use these apps as an example, even for yourself. Even when you’re not getting a lot of matches, look at this idea of the analysis paralysis that comes from having too many options. Too many options in itself is a curse for anybody. And any of these guys or girls who are getting this inundated with attention, they’re existing in a world of fragmented relationships as well. And they’re not building deep connection and they’re not getting fulfillment out of this either. And they could do it for how long? And they become addicted to the validation that comes from the new conquer, the new what have you.
And at the end of the day, and I’m sure you as well, we all know, especially us in this world, we all know of the one girl who said no to that guy that everybody thought can get any girl he wants. That is a reality. There’s endless levels to this. I’ve been in a room full of guys who are making $100,000 a month complaining about how they’re losing girls to NBA players. And I’m sure those NBA players are complaining about how they’re losing those girls to Leonardo DiCaprio or something. You know what I mean? These pyramids are endless.
Matt:
Or complaining that they’re only ever getting attention from a certain kind of person.
Humble the Poet:
Certain kind of person. And recently, too, one of the first friends I made, I’ve only lived out here in LA for a year, one of the first friends I made out here is a female from West Philadelphia and she is genetically gorgeous. She won the genetic lottery and she’s completely gorgeous. And she moved out here and was creating art and then very quickly got into, didn’t have a lot of education, but got into the service industry in Beverly Hills and now making a gang of money and has a lot of celebrities reaching out and asking her. And she says, she goes, “It’s frustrating being attractive.” She goes, “You’re always second guessing yourself as to why someone is talking to you or what have you.” The same way, maybe even a guy with a lot of money, and people know he has a lot of money, can make himself more attractive and now he has to second guess why people are talking to him.
As I said, I think we’re thinking short-term when we’re talking about attractiveness. I’m not here to discount that. You don’t have to not be attracted to somebody before you date them. But I would also say, “Hey, give somebody.” One of the pieces of advice I was given was, “Okay, you can have your ranking. Give somebody who you consider a seven or a six, give them three dates, see what happens.” Because I think very often too, these sparks that were chasing this initial attraction, that fades no matter what. And there’s stories of some of the most beautiful human beings still having to deal with infidelity from their partners.
So attractiveness is not a sustainable model to do something. It could be initial attraction, but at the end of the day, it’s going to take you a few times to get to know a person, to see if they even connect with you on the stuff that actually matters. And all that work is done internally. You’re figuring out what actually matters to you. And even I’ve learned that too. I’ve learned the girls that find me attractive, what I learned is as a guy with a big beard or what have you, depending on how they grew up, this is what a man looks like. And it’s very few girls I know that would find me attractive and also find a guy like Justin Bieber attractive. They’d be like, “Oh, he looks like a boy. I like my men looking like men.” And then I’m sure girls that think he’s super hot may not find me attractive.
So you start to understand this idea of even attractiveness is not this universal term. Yeah, there is science behind having a symmetrical face and certain features and what have you. But at the end of the day, I think there is an opportunity for each of us, our presentation will always matter and how we carry ourselves and conduct ourselves. And we can all make ourselves more attractive in that capacity. And stack other qualities to ourselves to make ourselves more attractive and viable in that capacity. But if you’re like, “Okay, I only dudes with this body fat percentage and this type of face and this type of hair and he has to look like boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.” Cool, but then you don’t know who he is and what he’s looking for and what he finds attractive and what he wants out of this. And if everything’s just based off your social media algorithm, then you’re going to have a very skewed understanding of life.
Matt:
And you’re disqualifying so many people.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Because the idea that you’re going to get everything you want in every other way, alongside all of those boxes being ticked, it’s like playing top trumps. You’re constantly trying to optimize.
Humble the Poet:
And also it goes back to the same question. What about these qualities? Why do you want these qualities? There’s a feeling attached to these qualities. As I said, going back to that idea of wanting a tall man. What is it about a tall man that you want? And is it safety? Now let’s define safety for you. What actually is safety? Is it physical safety? Are we actually living in parts of the world where on a regular basis we feel physically unsafe? Is it financial safety? Now, what’s the definition of financial safety? Is it somebody whose parents gave them money and you’ll feel safe knowing that the family gave them money? Or is it that guy you know that will constantly get himself out of a jam because he has impeccable work ethic, he’s super ingenious when it comes to coming up with new ideas, and no you know, no matter what, the bills will be paid and he’ll have your back and he never asks for a handout?
These are the type of things that you can do. I have a friend right now where her whole definition is, “I will only date guys who are self-made. I will not date anybody who received anything from anybody.” And again, that’s a genetic lottery situation in itself, too. Because you’re going to hold it against somebody who’s one generation removed from success. But she’s like, “I need to know that they can do it.” But at least she’s a little bit more clear on it. I don’t know if it’s the most accurate thing that she should be doing. She’s chasing a feeling of wanting to be around someone who’s efficient with what they can do.
Matt:
It’s also chasing this wildly overly simplistic view of life. The idea that someone is less than because they haven’t done it all on their own is absurd.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Firstly, no one’s done it all on their own.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. Nobody. Nobody.
Matt:
Everyone’s had help of some kind.
Humble the Poet:
Yes. Yes.
Matt:
Whether it’s a great mentor or someone put the right ideas in their head at an early age or someone, or by the way, they just were born with the genetics that made them weirdly driven.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
And it’s nothing to do with their social conditioning. They’ve just got something about the way their brain is built that makes them get after it in a different way. They did nothing to earn that. It looks like earning it on the surface, but they did nothing to earn that. And similarly, you get rich kids who don’t take the ball and run with it, and you get rich kids who do. Or you get rich kids who decide, “Hey, since money isn’t a thing that I have to do to survive, I don’t have to earn money to survive.” They go out and do something incredibly creative and they excelled in a different way. Or oh God forbid they found peace without having to excel and having the insecurity of their parents thinking they need to do something in order to be worthy.
So that’s a good example of someone who has created this definition of worth and value that really reduces humans to this very simple thing. And by the way, how many people do we know that they’re “self-made,” quote, but what it comes with is the disease? They can’t stop and they’ve been trying to prove something their whole lives and they’re still trying to prove something. And that doesn’t go away because they’ve not found peace within themselves.
Humble the Poet:
And it also creates the avoidant attachment style because now they’re afraid of losing their autonomy because they think they’re self-made and the last thing they want to do is depend on anybody for anything, including emotions.
Matt:
Right. Yeah.
Humble the Poet:
And on top of that entire list, just being born in a part of the world where you could do something like that, where you were part of an economic situation that allowed that.
Matt:
Yeah.
Humble the Poet:
Because there’s people are being born in war torn parts of the world where they won’t have the opportunities to do any of this, so they can’t be self-made. And they’re working significantly harder than any of us-
Matt:
100%.
Humble the Poet:
entrepreneurs are, yeah.
Matt:
100&.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. But again, it is this thing and again, I think for me, it goes back to the self-awareness. And I have a story in the book about the first time I dated a girl who everybody else made it clear that she was significantly out of my league in terms of attractiveness and then once she left and the relationship ended, what that did to my self worth and the chapter’s called What’s In Your Wallet? And it’s this idea that I identified myself through having this beautiful partner. And even then, even during having this such beautiful partner, not knowing how to deal with it. When people complimented your girlfriend for being beautiful, your girlfriend’s beautiful, am I supposed to say thank you? You didn’t compliment me. I didn’t do anything in this, what am I supposed . . . ? Am I supposed to say, “I know?”
Matt:
Yeah.
Humble the Poet:
I don’t know. And it is one of those situations where it was realizing that . . . And people were actually saying, “Yo, good job. You’re making us guys look good, getting a girl like that.” And it is all compliments that are creating the damage, not insults. And then she’s gone and all of a sudden I don’t know who I am and then deciding I needed to reshuffle my wallet and put stuff in there of value that people can’t take away.
Matt:
So it’s such an interesting story because it happens to people in all different capacities. Me and Audrey were at an event recently and someone recognized me at that event and they came over and then I said, “This is my fiancée, Audrey.” And she was as excited to meet Audrey as she was to meet me, but the first words out of her mouth were, “You must have done everything right to get him.” And it was to her credit, to her credit, this person came up to Audrey after the event and it was an event on female empowerment and a lot of really beautiful things were said that night about where value comes from, and she came up to Audrey again at the end of the evening and she said, “I just want to say that was wrong of me to say that because that assumes that he’s somehow the person of value in the equation and that you had to do everything right to get him. And I caught myself thinking about it and now I want to tell you that wasn’t something that I’m proud of.”
Humble the Poet:
It was like an initial knee-jerk reaction.
Matt:
And that happens in all sorts of different ways in different relationships. You don’t have to be someone who’s recognizable to be in a dynamic like that. Her version of fame in that scenario with you was that she was really pretty.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
And so then your male friends said, “Well, you’re lucky.” And if people say you’re lucky enough, if people start saying, “You are the lucky one,” it’s like a form of brainwashing where some people keep saying to you, “Just so you know, you are the lucky one. Just so you know, you are the lucky one,” and then you start thinking, “Well, so I guess I am the lucky one and if I’m the lucky one, I should be terrified of losing this because I won the lottery here.”
Humble the Poet:
Yeah, yeah.
Matt:
“I won the lottery.” Not we together got really fortunate that we both met someone awesome in life and isn’t that amazing? And I say that to Audrey all the time, I’m like, “How lucky are we? How lucky are we that we met?” We met at an engagement party. I’m like, “Maybe one of us didn’t go that night and we never met and we both would’ve missed out on this incredible human being. We’re so lucky.”
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
That’s a different message. But when you are taught by other people, even if it’s just your peers . . . That’s the worst part. It’s your friends in that situation who are saying that stuff. When you are continuously told you are the lucky one, you start to believe it and then you start to be terrified of losing this person because now you feel like you are losing the best part about you.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
It is this person.
Humble the Poet:
Yep. Yes, exactly.
Matt:
“And I can’t afford to lose them. And if I can’t afford to lose them, then I’ll do anything to keep them.”
Humble the Poet:
Which generally means losing myself.
Matt:
Yes.
Humble the Poet:
If I don’t want to be at war with them, then I probably have to be at war with myself. And I think that that was kind of the awakening because it was like despite my efforts, as I told you, it’s the same one that left and that was her journey. She left and we tried to do long distance and it didn’t work. So there wasn’t a rejection of me. And I think even during the breakup, I never felt it was a rejection of me but I did notice how much effort I was putting in to keep the relationship alive. And the interesting thing about that specific relationship was there was no chasing between either of us. The big thing that stood out with her, she made everything easy. She made making a date easy, she made hanging out easy.
There was an actual synergy between me and her based off our qualities of people. And the beauty of that is she’s also in the last chapter of the book, she’s since gotten married and has two kids and we had met up for dinner during the pandemic and the last chapter of this book is called You Don’t Know Love. And it’s her saying, “How could you write a book about love? You don’t have kids.” And it’s a beautiful kind of back and forth, showing our dynamic because we still have a really deep friendship. And my editor not wanting that story in the book because my editor felt attacked, saying, “I’m sick and tired of parents telling me that I don’t know love because I don’t have kids.”
Matt:
Interesting.
Humble the Poet:
And I said, “Listen, I don’t think she was trying to put me down. I think what she was saying is, “You’re the guy who puts the words together. Have some kids and explain this to me because I’m just flooded with anxiety and love with these kids.”” And she refers to having kids as a selfish decision. She’s like, “If you’re selfish enough, have kids.” And it is just this beautiful idea of while telling people I wrote a book about love, them kind of looking at me, “What makes you qualify to write a book? You’re not a love guru.”
Matt:
And that’s a very pervasive message in one way or another in the world we live in that makes us more insecure is this idea that, “You don’t know shit because you’re not in a relationship, you don’t know shit because you don’t have kids. You don’t know shit because you’re not married.” And again, it reduces everything to a series of checkpoints before which you have no right to talk. And you have to be really strong not to adopt that message. I mean, look, I heard Jordan Peterson say he doesn’t think anyone can truly grow up until they have kids. And it’s a bold statement to make. The rest of the world who hasn’t had kids, it’s impossible that they could have grown up. And his argument was that, “No one can ever truly cease in being selfish unless they have kids because having kids is the first real time in your life where you’re acting selflessly in service of somebody else.” Which is funny because it’s in contrast to what your friend said.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
But my problem with that is not that he doesn’t have a point about how unselfish it can be to love someone else and put them first. And the ultimate act of doing that, I’m sure for so many people comes when you have kids and it’s not all about you anymore. But we also know so many situations where people have had to be unbelievably selfless in their lives in service of other people who have never had kids. And what about the people who can’t have kids?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
What, they’ve got no shot at being selfless and growing up? It’s these kind of reductions that make people feel less than for not having achieved a certain checkpoint in their life.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. It’s like a modern tribalism. And again, I think especially with Jordan Peterson, because all of his work revolves around chaos and order, I think for most people who aren’t doing the work to figure out a purpose, the moment you have a child, you have purpose and now get to it. And I think it’s kind of this default way where you have a child, this entire project, this entire movement that you’ve created, it’s your baby and it requires so much sacrifice for you. And I think that’s the interesting thing where I do think humans have to exist with purpose and direction and a life bigger than themselves. And I see that and I see the value of that. And children might be the simplest way that can get accomplished. But yeah, 1000%.
And as I said, with my ex saying it to me, she was speaking about her frustrations and anxieties around where the world is headed, the environment and all of that. Watching the documentary gives her anxiety, she can’t sleep at night. And then her making peace with the idea, “Maybe my kids are only going to live to 25 and cool, that’s fine. Maybe that’s what it is because this planet won’t be habitable.” But I think from that capacity, it gets really interesting because we find validation in our little tribes.
Matt:
You said something interesting earlier when we were talking offline about the ways that people compete in love and one of the reasons we feel we need to compete is because someone else has got something I don’t, someone else is attractive in a way that I’m not. And then a lot of people have the experience of almost . . . I had a woman, not so long ago, say to me, “I’m dating a guy who I really like, but he’s also seeing somebody else. How do I win the exclusivity race? How do I beat this other woman to it in the race for exclusivity with this guy?”
Humble the Poet:
Yeah, yeah.
Matt:
Speak just to that idea and the dangers of it that you said to me earlier.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. I think specifically for women, there isn’t a way to compete where you win. For her, for this one, this example you had, she’s going to have to reduce her boundaries. That’s going to be the way that she’s going to become more alluring to this guy and she’s going to lose herself in the process. And that in itself is a dangerous game to play because the value historically with women is they’re the selectors, they’re the choosers, they’re not the ones to be chosen, and that comes through their ability to say no. That comes through their boundaries. And healthy relationships, healthy relationships exist within boundaries and boundaries have to be communicated. So for her, to forfeit some of those to make her more appealing versus the other woman, that’s not going to lead to a healthy relationship in any capacity.
Matt:
She may, may get her prize, but it’s a poisoned chalice. It’s not going to be what she wants.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah, she’s going to lose herself by getting him.
Matt:
And then be in a relationship where the boundaries are all wrong.
Humble the Poet:
The boundaries are all wrong.
Matt:
And she’s going to have to reset all of those. And by the way, when she does reset all of those, she might lose him anyway because he signed up for the relationship based on her having no boundaries, not on her having boundaries.
Humble the Poet:
1000%. Or she may not reset them and now live in a world of dis-ease where she’s going to be constantly be medicating this lack of peace in her life. And there’s a wonderful example of that in the second season of White Lotus, whoever’s watching that, a character who has had to make peace with being in a situation where the boundaries aren’t honored but the stakes are too high now. And now she’s constantly trying to medicate that lack of peace through different activities and substances and behaviors. And I think that’s something that we have to really pay attention to because that will impact how we feel about ourselves. And then our quality of living will dramatically go down even if things look good on the outside.
Matt:
I love that. I’m going to keep throwing a couple of ideas at you because there’s some things you said that I think are just potent ideas and I want to make sure we kind of check them off.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
You said that self-love, you’ll tell me the exact phrase, but the idea of self-love has to come with teeth.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Having teeth.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Can you explain that, especially in the context of what we are talking about right now, boundaries?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. Loving yourself is showing your teeth. And I think very often, a lot of the problems that we have is we choose being likable over love. We don’t want to disappoint people. We don’t want to say no. If somebody tries to have something at our expense, we don’t stand up for ourselves. And we think being likable is more important than standing up for ourselves, not realizing that not standing up for ourselves will put us in a place of resentment, which is a very dark place, which is very difficult for love to exist in that space. So standing up for yourself, establishing boundaries, saying no, letting people know that you’re not someone that can be walked on, the same way, the exact same way and it’s funny, I was in a very short situation with somebody who got very aggressive very quickly, and a friend who was in a much worse relationship was telling me . . . And I was already standing up, I had cut the relationship off, but I used that as an analogy.
I was like, “Would you want me to go back to that person? Because you’re staying in your situation.” “Well, if that person ever comes back, I’m going to punch them in their face.” And it seems so much easier to stand up for somebody you care about. I’ll stand up for my best friend, I’ll stand up for my sister, I’ll stand up for somebody else if somebody mistreats them but I’ll deal with it if somebody mistreats me. And self-love is having that relationship with yourself.
Matt:
How do people do that?
Humble the Poet:
Know your boundaries. First off, build that self-awareness of what your boundaries are, what you’re okay with, what you’re not okay with and articulate them and communicate them.
Matt:
But what if you know what you want your boundaries to be, but the thing that is supporting those boundaries ultimately is that, “I think that I am a person who’s worthy of having those kinds of boundaries?” Because like you said, if it’s my best friend, I stick up for them because I love them and I don’t want them to come to harm. So it’s natural to stick up for them and go into tiger mode when it’s my friend.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
When it’s myself, I have theoretical boundaries that go out the window the moment I like someone, the moment I really want to hold onto them, and those boundaries are nowhere to be seen when I start being pushed or mistreated.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
How does someone build that same relationship with themselves that underpins those boundaries so that they actually have weight instead of being paper thin?
Humble the Poet:
I think that’s a fantastic question. I think the first thing we have to divorce is this worthiness concept, that the worthiness isn’t there. Your best friend doesn’t have to constantly earn their worthiness for your love. The child in your life doesn’t have to . . . Children do nothing to earn your love. Your first interaction with them, you’re already in love with them. There’s no worthiness that’s required there. And then also go back to how did you develop this relationship with your friend? You know guys hung out. The cornerstone to creating connection is vulnerability. You and I are friends. I think if you and I met and we met on a five-day trip to Hawaii, we would be hi-bye friends. We would just be casual friends. We suffered together, we were vulnerable together, we both sat there an hour before going into the ice, sharing openly our fears about losing our fingers and our extremities and all. And I remember specifically you asking Wim saying, “But what if I get frostbite?” And Wim saying, “Your body will know what to do.” And I remember looking at your face and being like, “That’s-“
Matt:
“That’s not an answer.”
Humble the Poet:
“That’s not an answer, old man. What was that?” And me being like, “I agree, that wasn’t an answer.” But that’s how we bonded, through being vulnerable with each other. We need to be vulnerable with ourselves. When we’re vulnerable with ourselves, we’ll build a deeper connection with who we are. I learned through that journey of having the attractive girl. Why was that such a big deal? Because I also grew up in a part of the world where I don’t look like the majority and I was always made to feel different. And in many cases, I was made to feel ugly, whether it was overtly through racism or never seeing myself on television and being like, “You don’t belong here.” And the moment somebody who everybody feels belongs here accepts me… And even for her, it was an educational moment. When we traveled together, she was full bottle of shampoo in her check luggage pretty. And I was-
Matt:
In the luggage that she’d take on the plane?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
That’s hilarious.
Humble the Poet:
That’s what I’m-
Matt:
That’s such a funny way of saying it.
Humble the Poet:
“What is a speeding ticket? Pretty”, you know what I mean? And, “I thought the cop just wanted to have a conversation,” type situation. And I was randomly screened a hundred percent of the time. And again, that made me realize that you are not chasing attractive women because you’re at attracted to attractive women, you are chasing attractive women because they feel like a prop for you to make up for a childhood where half the people that said mean things to you were just kids being jerks and they don’t decide your value but their voices have stayed in your head. And that’s the important thing from understanding that. And me having this conversation with myself, that’s vulnerability and me connecting with myself and understanding who I am. In the book, I mentioned two ways of doing that. Irrespective of your religious beliefs, pray because what prayer does is prayer as you’re doing it by yourself and you are the most honest with the things that you want and you are the most honest for the things that you’re grateful for.
So it’s not performative in any capacity because you’re earnestly asking your God or your algorithm or what have you for what you want and you’re earnestly saying thank you. And it could be, “Thanks for letting me catch that last yellow light so I made it on time,” or, “Thanks for making sure I had enough money in my bank account today to eat,” whatever it is. And it allows you to understand what’s important to you. And journaling. Journaling with complete vulnerability. This is how we establish a better relationship with ourselves. And when we establish that relationship with ourselves and understand who we need. And again, the subtitle of this book is Going Easier on Yourself. That’s the first thing in self-love. You go easy on your friends, you hold grace for them.
Sometimes we make excuses for our friends even when they’re not at their best but we don’t do that for ourselves. We’re so critical of ourselves because we keep hearing critical voices that came from those who raised us or what we see on social media or what we saw on media growing up. So I think establishing that relationship with yourself requires you to do it the same way you made relationships with anybody else. The challenge with a lot of this is a lot of these things happened to us when we were younger and we weren’t paying attention. We learned essential skills over years, we didn’t learn them overnight. We didn’t learn how to read overnight. It was adults putting us in repetition over years to get us to learn how to read a book. But now if we want to start a new skill, we don’t. And being vulnerable with ourselves and then prioritizing our self-respect over our self-esteem.
Matt:
So there was a phrase you said to me earlier today, which was, “There’s no such thing as mixed signals,” in the context of respecting ourselves. What did you mean by that?
Humble the Poet:
There are no mixed signals. Take mixed signals as a no, let it be that. I mean dating and not dating. And again, I live in LA and I live in a world of, “You’re supposed to poke everybody four times with an email if it’s work,” but the truth is you don’t. The truth is I didn’t have to poke you for this. The truth is that agent who said she’d read my script and had to poke her four times, I should take that as a no because I have been a full-time artist paying my bills for a decade now. And if I reverse engineer my entire career, very little of it came from continually having to poke somebody or somebody with mixed signals. And the same thing in the dating world, especially when it comes to women. Men don’t do mixed signals. And I’m learning as somebody who’s dating women, all my best experiences with women never involve mixed signals in any capacity.
Matt:
It didn’t feel complicated?
Humble the Poet:
It didn’t feel complicated. And I also respect that women have to feel comfortable and safe, but that still doesn’t have to manifest itself in terms of mixed signals. It doesn’t manifest itself in getting a text message every three days. It doesn’t manifest itself in any of that capacity, especially in a culture where everyone’s looking at their phone all the time. And I may only be guilty of it in the capacity of when I don’t have an answer for someone. If somebody asks me a specific question, I don’t have an answer, I may not reply immediately. But in terms of social stuff like that, I’m available to reply to a text message.
Matt:
Do you have an opinion on a lot of women today saying that they’re dating men and the men find them intimidating because of what they’ve achieved, because of the position they’re in life, who they are, their job title, the money they earn? I’m curious both in terms of situations that you’ve seen out there, but also maybe even in your own life that you encounter. Do you have a take on this?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah, I think I shared with you that story about a woman who wanted me to be her sidepiece, her third in a relationship because she had ended up partnering with a gentleman primarily because he wouldn’t get in way of her personal and professional ambitions and that he wasn’t butting heads with her when she wanted to do larger than life things. But then apparently, that wasn’t the type of energy she required in the bedroom.
Matt:
So he wasn’t threatened by her, but he was too far the other way where he-
Humble the Poet:
I think he was very passive.
Matt:
Yes.
Humble the Poet:
I don’t think he was comfortable in his own skin, I think he was just extremely passive to the point where even when she brought up this idea of having another guy in her life, I think he was cool with that as well. So I hesitate to use the word beta, but I think it was more along the lines of she tried to find the path of least resistance with this individual for her own personal side and I think she started to realize that wasn’t translating when it came to type of energy she wanted in the bedroom.
Matt:
So what about when women are coming across guys that are the opposite?
Humble the Poet:
They are the opposite, which I think they’re coming across a lot.
Matt:
They’re competitive or they’re afraid that because she’s earning this and because that, that they’re somehow threatened. What’s your take on . . . ? Because a lot of women in those positions are saying it’s a very common thing. They’re coming across those guys a lot and it’s a struggle.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah, it definitely is a struggle. There’s got to be grace for the fact that this is a new phenomenon. It’s late, but I’m glad it’s here. That the empowered woman, making her money, chasing her passions, building what she needs to build, and what she wants to build, this isn’t a phenomenon that was very common 50 years ago or a hundred years ago. And for thousands of years, there were roles and everybody played their roles and now we’re in a transition period and the transition period is important, but there’s got to be grace that there’s going to be some discomfort in that transition period. And I don’t have an issue in any capacity. I’ve never found a woman to be intimidating for making money or even more money than me. But at the same time, I can understand that I was fortunate enough to have life experiences that made me much more self-aware and also have two very high-achieving sisters.
So if anything, that became the benchmark for me. So I wasn’t looking for the opposite, I wasn’t looking for someone I could take care of, I was looking for somebody with both their own income and their own opinions. But I can completely understand that many people, an aggregate weren’t raised that way. They’re still raised with the traditional values. And we’re going through this process right now of this time period where we’re picking and choosing what parts of the old ways we like, what parts of the new ways we like. And I think that in itself is going to be a challenge.
I think for women, they should just hold the course. I don’t think they should in any way, shape, or form make any type of compromises for that because the compromises will have to be for life. When you play a game, the only reward for doing well at any game is that you get to keep playing it. So if you’re whole thing is if you’re going to dim your light so your man feels better, then you’re going to have to dim your light forever. And it’s changing. I think a good example is this is a rapper Cordae. He’s dating and I can’t remember her name, but she is the half-Japanese tennis player, the one that got famous for unseating Serena Williams. And he brag raps about the fact that his woman has more money than him. He brag raps about how other rappers are not dating women who can’t pay their bills. And I think Big Sean, at some point when he was dating the cast member from Glee, the one who unfortunately passed away recently, he bragged rap about his girlfriend having more money than him too. So I think the transition is there, and self-aware men do exist. Are they going to be a lot in the pool? No, but I think for anybody who gets more specific with what they actually uniquely require, your pool will dramatically shrink. But here’s the thing, the divorce rates at 50%, so why avoid that level of specificity?
People are afraid of setting a name because they’re scared if they hit it. And I think for us, it’s realizing that yeah, if you are a successful woman and you make a gang of money and you’re self-aware and you’re doing all this personal work and you’re like now there’s less and less men that I connect with, yeah, we’re focusing on quality, not quantity. And other work needs to be done in that capacity. One of the things that I noticed, which may or may not be seen as controversial is that the old culture of women being difficult to get and easy to keep needs to be reversed. And women need to be easier to get, easier to approach, easier to connect with, but harder to keep.
Matt:
Been saying it for years. I couldn’t agree more.
Humble the Poet:
And that I think goes back. So it’s like, oh well give him a chance and a chance is three dates. Give him three dates. See what happens. Then you can confidently say what have you, because you’ve given other people and you’ve ignored red flags and you’ve given them more than three dates and then now you’re trapped in this loop of certain situations. And also as I said, grace. As I said, the whole premise of this book is about people going easier on themselves and when we go easier on ourselves, we can go easier on other people. And one of the big discoveries I got is holding grace for myself when I was participating in the fuckboy culture. Because what I realized, what that really was for me specifically and I think a lot of guys can relate to this, is I was just spending so much time trying to win her over that I never took time to figure out if she was even good for me.
And then by the time I did all the work to win her over and scale her fence and win her over, now she’s into me and now I’m looking at her to figure out if she’s a good fit for me or not. In addition to the fact that I haven’t even done much work to receive love myself. And then that’s when you get this kind of mixed signal idea of he came so aggressively and so charming to win me over and then the second he got me and I showed him that he had me, he pulled away. And I have to remind myself regularly, you’re not on a first date to win somebody over, you’re on a first date to see if this person aligns with what matters to you.
Matt:
Beautifully said.
Humble the Poet:
And that work has to be done at home by yourself with a journal way before you make the date.
Matt:
Yeah.
Humble the Poet:
And then that could be reflective in the dating app profile or that could be reflective having a conversation. And I know one thing I’ve said to women is because I learned it the hard way, I will only date somebody who’s actively in therapy. And I’ve received paragraphs from women who have found that to be discriminatory and as I said, I’ve made the exception multiple times and every single time its bit me in the ass. And again, you have to hold your position and then maybe that’ll change as I move forward and start to realize that that might not be specific enough either.
And we have a common friend, I don’t know if I should putting his business out there so I won’t say his name, but his journey was we have to start couples therapy immediately. As soon as we decide we’re dating, we’re starting couple therapy. And I think he learned that through his journey of the different women that he’s dated and realizing how important that is for him to not wait till something goes wrong before they start doing the necessary work. And again all of that work happens alone and I think the healthier we are alone, the less likely we are at a fall for a lot of the different traps that happen, especially in this dating world.
Matt:
So if doing the work alone means learning how to love ourselves and practice self-love and out of that boundaries will come and those boundaries when we then have them with other people will be underpinned by that level of self-love and self-confidence. Because self-love is something we hear over and over and over again, if you were to almost enlist fashion of practical, because I think this would be a really powerful way for us to finish this session. If we could make self-love super practical for people, here’s what it actually looks like. I think that would help people. So can we kind of one by one from whatever you can conjure from memory almost make that list.
Humble the Poet:
Yes.
Matt:
What can people who want to practice so that they have the relationship with themselves, that means they hold to their boundaries when they go into a relationship, what can people do?
Humble the Poet:
So I think the first thing is, if I can’t say the word divorce, I’ll say explore a world where enoughness and worthiness are not a factor when it comes to love. And I think this is important because sometimes again we have cultural ideas of looking for my better half. You are not a half a person, you are a complete person. And what I would say is, if you need a better analogy, you are a pillar. View yourself as a complete pillar. And what you’re looking for now is another pillar, that you two together can hold more up. And I think it’s Khalil Gibran that says the more distance between the pillar, the more love that can flow through and the more you can hold up. So I think the first thing is abandoning this idea that you require somebody in order for you to feel complete.
Nobody will make you feel complete. The challenges you have on the inside will never be addressed on the outside. George Carlin famously said, “It’s like taping sandwiches to your body to address your hunger.” You can’t do it. That takes us to prioritizing self-respect over self-esteem. Self-esteem is gaining value from the outside world and we live in a society that does it super well. We count our likes, we count our followers, we have blue check marks, we read comments. All of these are self-esteem. Self-respect is how you feel about yourself and the work necessary for you to feel better about yourself. How to do that? One of my favorite pieces of advice I got from Steve Weatherford, honor your commitments, not your feelings. You say you’re going to do something, do it, okay? This is very important for ghost culture, but this is very important for life in general. You say you’re going to be somewhere, be there, you say you’re going to do something, do it.
The biggest promises we break are always to ourselves. And then when we break promises, be easy on ourselves and figure out why. If I’ve been waking up at noon every single day and I decide okay, I’m going to wake up at 8:00 AM tomorrow, it’s going to be a challenge. So instead say, okay, instead of me breaking that promise and beating myself up over it, set an intention. People are going to be hearing this in the new year. Don’t make a New Year’s resolution. Make a New Year’s intention. Intentions are lifelong. They’re not, I need to lose 10 pounds and now you’re saying I’m not worthy until I lose this 10 pounds. Then you lose the 10 pounds and the euphoria of it isn’t even there. Even with you hitting this milestone in jujitsu, the blue belt isn’t the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
The blue belt is a shade on the rainbow and the rainbow is never-ending. You’re only going to love jujitsu as long as you can continually learn new things. And this is just a stop on the intention of you becoming the best jujitsu artist that you can possibly be. So setting intentions I think is really important. One of the greatest ways to do that is just pick hard things, pick challenging things and do it. One of my favorite sayings is, an easy day at the gym is not a good day. We live in a society, especially in North America that sells us convenience. Convenience is an attack on our resilience. You and I both know this because the moment we sat in the ice, not wanting to sit on the ice, we learned very quickly that we are dramatically more resilient than we ever realized we ever were.
And focusing on what we can do regularly to build up that resilience will put us in a dramatically better situation that we’re in. So prioritizing that, being our own best friend, asking ourselves what would a perfect best friend do? And being that. Take yourself out on dates. You know what activities you enjoy doing, take yourself to these activities. I had dinner with a friend in London, I was there last week. They got an allergic reaction three hours before and their eye was swollen. It was noticeable but it wasn’t end of the world, they’re not going to let you in the restaurant type situation. She put on sunglasses. So we’re having dinner in a dark restaurant and her wearing sunglasses and I’m like, you’ve become more noticeable because you’re wearing sunglasses indoors. And she goes, I’m doing this to protect you. I’m like protect me from what? She goes, I don’t want people to look at you and be like, why is he with this person with swollen eyes and this is the upper, they’re not going to think I hit her. Her upper eyelids were just extra swollen.
So she just looked high and it was realizing that how much we start to think about the rest of the world paying attention to us when they’re not. And I said, see those people in the corner having Christmas dinner wearing the Santa hats? If anyone’s looking at anybody in this restaurant, they see the Santa hats because they’re bright red, nobody’s noticing us in the corner of this restaurant. And it doesn’t matter even if they do. And even if they do notice us, we don’t know what they’re looking at. So I think it’s really important that we focus on our self-respect. If that means taking yourself to the movies, that means taking yourself to get your favorite meal. I have a friend right now who travels the world eating at Michelin star restaurants by themselves, all over the world.
And they plan these out and they have them all in their calendar. And that’s how you build a deeper relationship with yourself. So often we are terrified of just spending time by ourselves. And either it’s because we’re dopamine addicts and we don’t know how to distract ourselves or we don’t enjoy our own company. Learn to enjoy your own company and then somebody has to earn the right to take some of that. The most important thing we have in this world is our time. The same way I don’t want people forfeiting their boundaries for some attention and affection or status, the same way you don’t want to forfeit your time cause that’s the most valuable thing you have for anything else. So self-love is that.
Also understand that a lot of things, these ideas that we have, that we don’t feel like we’re good enough, we don’t feel like we’re enough, we think perfection is required for some weird reason, they’re not true. In the book I make a reference to, there’s a four-minute YouTube video of Beyoncé falling off stage and the challenge is watch the video see if you love her any less. Imperfections will not disqualify her from your love if you already love her. Understand we live in a society, the context of everything matters, we live in a society that needs us to buy shit. We have to buy shit to keep things afloat. So the way they make us buy shit is by telling us you’re not enough as you are so buy some shit.
You need to own three pairs of shoes. You need to wear this makeup, you need to wear this filter, you need to do all of these things because you’re not good enough as you are. But the truth is there is no enoughness when it comes to you. So recognize that these ideas are being fed to us. Not only that, when we romanticize ideas of relationships, they’re being fed to us by media because the healthiest relationships would not make for good TV, they would not make for good film. The most entertaining relationships are going to be with people with opposite attachment styles, playing a cat-and-mouse game, and being super toxic and that’s why we watch them. That’s why we watch these realities shows.
Matt:
That’s so funny, isn’t it? When you have a clear sense of what a healthy relationship looks like to you, it can ruin a lot of movies.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. Yeah.
Matt:
Because you watch things and you go, this is stupid. This version of love is kind of pathetic. And sometimes the older the movie is the more silly it looks because you’re just like, oh my God, that movies is from the ’90s or the 2000s. There’s just some really daft movies out there. I remember watching Serendipity and just going, what on earth is this movie about this? The female lead in it says they meet each other and they have this great connection and I think she’s the one who says, I’m just going to walk away because if we’re really supposed to be together fate will bring us back together and then we’ll know. And it’s like, what are you talking about?
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
It’s really hard to meet someone you feel an instant connection with. Explore that. Honor that. Don’t get in a taxi and leave hoping that at some point in New York you’ll bump into each other again and then that will tell you that it was something real. The more you have a clear sense of A, how valuable things are and B, what healthy love looks like, the more of these things just start to look absurd.
Humble the Poet:
And I think it’s also the big one too, is the feeling. Again, go back to your authentic relationships of love, the feeling is peace, it’s not pleasure, it’s not even excitement, it’s peace.
Matt:
I know Audrey will be nodding along when you say that because Audrey has said that since the beginning of our relationship. She’s just like peace is the goal.
Humble the Poet:
And the interesting thing about using that sentence, peace is the goal, is nothing is acquired for peace. Things are removed because the peace is at the bottom and you’re just taking away all the junk. So you don’t have to do or be anything for peace. You just have to get rid of all the extra mess and noise. And I think that’s really important, again, because we are informed by media and we’re also informed by the people who raised us. And if they had a rollercoaster ride of a relationship, we think that’s what it needs to be. We think the validation of having a jealous boyfriend means he loves me. No, the validation of being at peace and also being at peace isn’t simply a quelling of anxiety. He finally replied to my text message, I’m no longer anxious, I’m at peace. That is not the peace that we’re chasing because that’s so temporary.
Matt:
Right. You’re only as good as the next.
Humble the Poet:
You’re only as the next. You should be constantly at peace. And the beauty of the book Attached, which explores attachment styles and in a lot of details, one line I love about it so much is we’re not saying we don’t believe in soulmates, we’re saying you probably passed up on your soulmate because you thought they were boring. And I have two sisters and my middle sister has been with her husband since, they got married in 2003. I think they’ve been together since 99 or 2000. And people don’t believe me when I say this, but if you meet them you’ll see it, they’ve never fought, ever. And I’m not saying they haven’t disagreed, I’ve watched them disagree. I think they’re both so aware of themselves. And then again, she practices soulism so I think her emotional keel is very unique. But I watched them talk about where to live, where to buy a house.
And she goes, “You know I thought about it, I don’t care.” She goes, “You pick. Pick the neighborhood. Pick the place. I thought about it, I actually don’t care where we live. Go ahead.” And it’s like they didn’t have a reception for their wedding. They saved a gang of money, didn’t throw a big party when they got married, paid off their mortgage in 10 years. Could I make a TV show about them? Hell no. They do cute things. She likes taking photos and then he takes those photos and hires a painter to paint them and then put them up in the house. They do cute things, but they’re not-
Matt:
You can’t get a series out of that.
Humble the Poet:
They’re not Ross and Rachel.
Matt:
You can’t get whole season out of that.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. They’re not Bobby and Whitney, they’re not Ross and Rachel, but they’re very healthy and they got two kids and they know what they like, they know what they don’t, and they have boundaries within their family and they have boundaries without, and they have unique things. A good piece of advice too is have love role models and the famous what would Jesus do? I think about them when I think about that. What would they do in this situation? How would they handle this situation?
Matt:
I’ve always believed in that idea of find those people that do it differently than you have in your most toxic moments or your worst moments and look up what are they doing differently? How do they think differently? How do they treat each other differently? What are their beliefs? Really model that. I love it. I have a book everyone should read before you go and read Attached and that is How to Be Loved. I can’t remember if you said, when you go out there and talk about it, are you saying it’s called How to Be Love or How to Be Loved as your first?
Humble the Poet:
I’m saying How to Be Loved.
Matt:
How to Be Loved.
Humble the Poet:
Just for Google search purposes.
Matt:
So go out and grab a copy of How to Be Loved by-
Humble the Poet:
And if you open up the opening cover, I give it all away right there.
Matt:
More than showing you how to be loved, I want to show you how to be love.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah.
Matt:
Well I think this whole chat has been an amazing introduction to the book. It’s by my dear friend, Humble the Poet, one of my favorite people that’s come into my life in the last couple of years. And I treasure our friendship and what an unbelievable pleasure it is to be grateful for that on top of our friendship, we actually get to connect like this and have a conversation in front of an audience.
Humble the Poet:
Another fantastic example, I keep telling my friends who first move out to the city, stop networking. Just make friends. And one day if work lines up, work lines up. We ran into each other at Jay’s and I mentioned this and you said you should come on the podcast. It’s like stuff lines up, it lines up.
Matt:
And even Audrey got something out of this friendship because you have a dog called Boogie who’s sitting right beside me, sort of sleeping next to Audrey and that dog has become Audrey’s best friend. So we now dog sit for you anytime you are out of town.
Humble the Poet:
Boogie likes Audrey more than me for sure.
Matt:
Well a hundred percent more than me. I mean literally you just came over and Audrey was in a meeting in the next room and Boogie was crying at Audrey’s door because she could hear Audrey’s voice. So yeah, she’s got us both beat on that one. But it’s been such a pleasure man. And everyone go out and grab a copy of How to Be Loved. It’s a beautiful book. Not only is it full of really profound concepts, but practical concepts that can help you with not only finding love but loving yourself. It also is really readable. There’s lots of pullout quotes, there’s lots of highlights on the key things. So you can either sit with this book cover to cover and read it that way, or you can dip in and just pick the fruit and take some of the really valuable things if you haven’t got a lot of time.
Humble the Poet:
I like that. Dip in, pick the fruit. I say you can open it to any page and you’ll find something with value. I like that, dip in, pick the fruit.
Matt:
It’s yours.
Humble the Poet:
Maybe it just sounds good with your accent. And the moment I say it, people are going to be like, what? But yeah, it was written like that on purpose. And the last thing I want to mention about the book is there’s three sections. What is love, love for self and love for others. But I bookend each section with love stories. I think it’s important that we read those love stories because they’re all non-conventional love stories. And most of those love stories aren’t happy endings for me. But they’re still beautiful examples of love. And one of the ones I want to just talk about very, very quickly was me complaining to a female who wasn’t making time for me, making me wait a week for us to get on a call or a hangout or what have you and a lot of frustration.
I’m like, “Don’t you ever get lonely?” And she said, “I do get lonely.” And I’m like, “Then you’re going to miss hanging out with me.” And she goes, “But when I get lonely I just dance.” And I thought about it, she goes, “I dance, I connect with myself, I connect with my body and that helps me address my loneliness.” And I just instantly stopped. I’m like, maybe I should dance some more and leave you alone. And that story’s called Lonely Dances and really trying to find true love stories to talk about and that was a love story, not between me and her, but between her discovering that her movements and reacquainting herself with her body was a beautiful way to practice self-love.
Matt:
That gave me goosebumps. I love that.
Humble the Poet:
Yeah. So I have various love stories in here that are not conventional and they’re challenging. They’re challenging what we see on TV and I think that’s important.
Matt:
Thank you man. Appreciate you being here.
Humble the Poet:
Thank you so much for having me, man.
Matt:
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The post How to Love Yourself ft. Humble the Poet appeared first on Get The Guy.