The Tragedy of King Lear by William Shakespeare w/Libby Unger
—
- Welcome & Introduction – 0:01:35
- CEOs Building Stronger Companies with Common Touch Leadership
- Lessons from Shakespeare’s King Lear for Modern Leaders
- Never Forget Your Roots: Lessons in Humility and Servant Leadership
- Challenge Assumptions
- Cultivate Servant Leadership
- Build What Good Looks Like
- Leadership Lessons from the Great Books
- The Importance of Truth Tellers
- Lessons from the Decline of Empires
- Morality and Leadership from King Lear
- Taking Ruthless Inventory
- Self-Awareness Can Transform Your Leadership
- Rhetoric, Positions, and Principles
- Seek Truth, Act Locally
- False Promises in Leadership Don’t Deliver
- The Power and Elite
- Insights into an Insular Leadership Structure
- Saying “No”
- Staying on the Path
—
- Listen to Libby Unger on Episode #42 – The Road to Serfdom by F.A. Hayek w/Libby Unger —> https://share.transistor.fm/s/512f183c
- Libby Unger on LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/libbyunger/
- Libby Unger Email Contact – libby@lumineaula.com
- Libby Unger’s Website – http://lumineaula.com/
—
- Pick up your copy of 12 Rules for Leaders: The Foundation of Intentional Leadership NOW on AMAZON!
- Check out the 2022 Leadership Lessons From the Great Books podcast reading list!
—
- Check out HSCT Publishing at: https://www.hsctpublishing.com/.
- Check out LeadingKeys at: https://www.leadingkeys.com/
- Check out Leadership ToolBox at: https://leadershiptoolbox.us/
- Contact HSCT for more information at 1-833-216-8296 to schedule a full DEMO of LeadingKeys with one of our team members.
—
- Leadership ToolBox website: https://leadershiptoolbox.us/.
- Leadership ToolBox LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ldrshptlbx/.
- Leadership ToolBox YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJvVbIU_bSEflwYpd9lWXuA/.
- Leadership ToolBox Twitter: https://twitter.com/ldrshptlbx.
- Leadership ToolBox IG: https://www.instagram.com/leadershiptoolboxus/.
- Leadership ToolBox FB: https://www.facebook.com/LdrshpTlbx.
00:00:17,550 –> 00:00:20,634
Hello. My name is Jesan Sorrells and this
6
00:00:20,672 –> 00:00:23,446
is the Leadership Lessons from the Great Books podcast,
7
00:00:23,638 –> 00:00:27,442
episode number 56 with our
8
00:00:27,496 –> 00:00:31,742
play today, the basis for multiple films
9
00:00:31,806 –> 00:00:35,550
and plays and adaptations focused on leadership,
10
00:00:35,710 –> 00:00:39,066
revenge, deception, cold-blooded murder.
11
00:00:39,198 –> 00:00:43,186
Corruption and power, including my personal favorite
12
00:00:43,218 –> 00:00:46,658
adaptation, the 1985 film Ran
13
00:00:46,834 –> 00:00:50,390
by the late, great Akira Kurosawa.
14
00:00:51,630 –> 00:00:55,558
William Shakespeare’s The Tragedy
15
00:00:55,734 –> 00:00:59,526
of King Lear. Now, today we’re
16
00:00:59,558 –> 00:01:03,286
going to be reading the Folger, Shakespeare Library edition,
17
00:01:03,318 –> 00:01:06,414
which I would encourage you to go ahead and pick up. And we are going
18
00:01:06,452 –> 00:01:09,994
to be joined today on the podcast by our returning
19
00:01:10,042 –> 00:01:14,014
guest co-host from episode number 43, where we
20
00:01:14,052 –> 00:01:17,774
broke down the reality of human leadership through the lens of
21
00:01:17,812 –> 00:01:21,078
politics and economics by reading The Road to Serfdom
22
00:01:21,114 –> 00:01:24,814
by F.A. Hayek. I would encourage you to go back and listen to that episode.
23
00:01:24,942 –> 00:01:28,730
And I’d like to welcome back to the podcast today Libby Unger.
24
00:01:28,830 –> 00:01:32,002
How are you doing? Libby I am doing terrific.
25
00:01:32,066 –> 00:01:34,520
I’m really excited for King Lear.
26
00:01:35,050 –> 00:01:39,030
Now, Shakespeare, we’ve been doing a month of Shakespeare.
27
00:01:40,330 –> 00:01:43,210
We’ve covered Hamlet, we’ve covered Taming of the Shrew,
28
00:01:43,630 –> 00:01:47,510
and now we’re getting into King Lear. Othello is upcoming,
29
00:01:47,670 –> 00:01:49,980
very excited to cover that one as well.
30
00:01:51,150 –> 00:01:54,326
Shakespeare, of course. Shakespeare’s plays,
31
00:01:54,358 –> 00:01:58,474
of course, lay at the root of all human behavior and all human understanding
32
00:01:58,602 –> 00:02:01,966
and have influenced the West, as I said on the episode where we
33
00:02:01,988 –> 00:02:05,146
discussed Hamlet, have influenced
34
00:02:05,258 –> 00:02:09,534
human nature, have influenced our western understanding,
35
00:02:09,582 –> 00:02:13,058
of human nature and quite frankly, our Western understanding of everything that comes out
36
00:02:13,064 –> 00:02:16,610
of human nature, including leadership for gosh
37
00:02:17,430 –> 00:02:21,400
the last 400 years. And so
38
00:02:21,850 –> 00:02:25,526
with that, I would like to open from
39
00:02:25,708 –> 00:02:29,350
once again the Folger Library edition of King Lear.
40
00:02:29,420 –> 00:02:33,020
We’re going to start off with act One, scene One,
41
00:02:33,630 –> 00:02:37,318
and we’re going to begin with Lear’s comments.
42
00:02:37,494 –> 00:02:41,238
As Cornwall, Albany, Gonereil,
43
00:02:41,334 –> 00:02:44,846
his daughter, Regan, his other daughter, Cordelia, his other daughter and
44
00:02:44,868 –> 00:02:48,880
some attendants enter the throne room.
45
00:02:50,530 –> 00:02:53,642
Lear attend the lords of France and Burgundy.
46
00:02:53,706 –> 00:02:57,710
Gloucester. Gloucester I shall, my lord. He exits.
47
00:02:58,050 –> 00:03:01,630
Lear meantime, we shall express our darker purpose.
48
00:03:01,790 –> 00:03:05,506
Give me that map. Here he’s handed a map. Know that
49
00:03:05,528 –> 00:03:09,166
we have divided in our three kingdoms and TISS our fast intent to shake
50
00:03:09,198 –> 00:03:12,694
all cares and business from our age conferring them on
51
00:03:12,732 –> 00:03:16,610
younger strengths while we unburdened crawl toward death.
52
00:03:16,770 –> 00:03:19,954
Our sons of Cornwall and you, our no less loving
53
00:03:20,002 –> 00:03:23,254
son of Albany we have this hour a constant will to publish
54
00:03:23,302 –> 00:03:26,854
our daughters several dowers that future strife may be prevented.
55
00:03:26,902 –> 00:03:30,662
Now the two great princes, France and Burgundy,
56
00:03:30,726 –> 00:03:34,086
great rivals in our youngest daughters love long in our court,
57
00:03:34,198 –> 00:03:38,014
have made their amorous sorjorn. And here are
58
00:03:38,052 –> 00:03:41,994
to be answered. Tell me, my daughters, since we will now divest
59
00:03:42,042 –> 00:03:45,294
us both of rule, interest of territory, cares of state,
60
00:03:45,412 –> 00:03:48,994
which of you, shall we say, doth love us most that we
61
00:03:49,032 –> 00:03:52,654
our largest bounty may extend where nature doth with merit
62
00:03:52,702 –> 00:03:56,100
challenge gonerill. Our eldest born speak first.
63
00:03:56,470 –> 00:04:00,174
Gonearill. Sir, I love you more than word can wield
64
00:04:00,222 –> 00:04:03,954
the matter dearer than eyesight, space, and liberty beyond
65
00:04:04,002 –> 00:04:07,094
what can be valued, rich or rare no less than
66
00:04:07,132 –> 00:04:10,754
life with grace, health, beauty, honor as much as a child error loved or father
67
00:04:10,802 –> 00:04:14,550
found. A love that makes breath poor and speech unable.
68
00:04:14,630 –> 00:04:17,500
Beyond all manner of so much I love you.
69
00:04:18,030 –> 00:04:21,226
Cordelia aside. What shall? Cordelia speak?
70
00:04:21,328 –> 00:04:23,530
Love and be silent.
71
00:04:24,190 –> 00:04:28,014
Lear pointing at the map of all these bounds, even from this line to
72
00:04:28,052 –> 00:04:31,546
this with shadowy forests and with champagnes
73
00:04:31,578 –> 00:04:34,814
rich with plentous rivers and wide skirted needs we
74
00:04:34,852 –> 00:04:39,006
make thee lady. To thine and Albany issue be this perpetual.
75
00:04:39,118 –> 00:04:42,466
What says our second daughter, our dearest Reagan, wife of
76
00:04:42,488 –> 00:04:46,174
Cornwall? Speak, Reagan.
77
00:04:46,302 –> 00:04:49,954
I am made of that self metal as my
78
00:04:49,992 –> 00:04:53,606
sister and prize me at her worth. In my true heart I
79
00:04:53,628 –> 00:04:57,446
find she names my very deed of love. Only she comes too short that
80
00:04:57,468 –> 00:05:00,742
I profess myself ran enemy to all other joys which
81
00:05:00,796 –> 00:05:04,266
the most precious square of sense possesses and find I
82
00:05:04,288 –> 00:05:08,166
am alone felicitate in your dear highness’s
83
00:05:08,198 –> 00:05:11,290
love. Cordelia aside, then.
84
00:05:11,360 –> 00:05:15,058
Poor Cordelia. And yet not so since, I am sure my love’s
85
00:05:15,094 –> 00:05:19,070
more ponderous than my tongue. Lear to
86
00:05:19,140 –> 00:05:22,686
thee and thine heredity ever remain this ample third of
87
00:05:22,708 –> 00:05:26,190
our fair kingdom no less in space, validity, and pleasure than
88
00:05:26,260 –> 00:05:30,002
that conferred on Gonorrhill. Now our joy, although our last
89
00:05:30,056 –> 00:05:33,726
and least to whose young love the vines of France and milk
90
00:05:33,758 –> 00:05:37,746
of Burgundy strive to be interest. What can you say to
91
00:05:37,768 –> 00:05:41,474
draw a third more opulent than your sisters?
92
00:05:41,602 –> 00:05:45,430
Speak. Cordelia nothing,
93
00:05:45,500 –> 00:05:47,766
my lord. Lear nothing?
94
00:05:47,948 –> 00:05:51,466
Cordelia nothing? Lear nothing will come of
95
00:05:51,488 –> 00:05:53,420
nothing. Speak again.
96
00:05:54,590 –> 00:05:58,186
Cordelia unhappy that I am, I cannot leave my heart into my
97
00:05:58,208 –> 00:06:02,218
mouth. I love your majesty according to my bond, no more and
98
00:06:02,304 –> 00:06:05,534
no less. Lear how, how.
99
00:06:05,572 –> 00:06:09,118
Cordelia mend your speech a little, lest you may mar
100
00:06:09,284 –> 00:06:13,066
your fortunes. Cordelia good my lord,
101
00:06:13,098 –> 00:06:16,510
you have begot me, bred me, loved me. I return those duties back
102
00:06:16,580 –> 00:06:19,718
as are right fit, obey you, love you, and most honor
103
00:06:19,754 –> 00:06:23,650
you. Why, of my sister’s husbands, if they say they love you all
104
00:06:23,800 –> 00:06:27,234
happily, when I say I shall wed that lord whose hand must take my
105
00:06:27,272 –> 00:06:30,850
plight shall carry half my love with him half my care and duty.
106
00:06:30,930 –> 00:06:34,760
Sure I shall never marry, like my sisters, to love my father all.
107
00:06:35,290 –> 00:06:37,960
Lear but goes thy heart with this?
108
00:06:38,490 –> 00:06:42,042
Cordelia my good lord? Lear so young and
109
00:06:42,096 –> 00:06:45,606
so untender? Cordelia so young, my lord,
110
00:06:45,638 –> 00:06:49,434
and true. Lear let it be so.
111
00:06:49,632 –> 00:06:53,306
Thy truth then be thy dower. For by the
112
00:06:53,328 –> 00:06:56,646
sacred radiance of the sun, the mysteries of hechatate and
113
00:06:56,688 –> 00:07:00,186
the night by all the operations of the orbs from whom we do exist
114
00:07:00,218 –> 00:07:03,710
and cease to be here I disclaim all my paternal care
115
00:07:03,860 –> 00:07:07,286
propicity and property of blood, and as a stranger
116
00:07:07,338 –> 00:07:11,166
to my heart and me hold thee from this forever. The barbarous
117
00:07:11,198 –> 00:07:15,054
scythian, or he that makes his generation messes to gorge
118
00:07:15,102 –> 00:07:19,146
his appetite shall to my bosom be as well neighbored,
119
00:07:19,198 –> 00:07:23,430
pitied and relieved as thou my sometime daughter.
120
00:07:24,090 –> 00:07:27,894
Kent. Good my liege, lee your peace. Kent, come now
121
00:07:27,932 –> 00:07:31,414
not between the dragon and his wrath. I love her most and thought
122
00:07:31,452 –> 00:07:34,998
to set my rest on her king nursery to cordelia
123
00:07:35,014 –> 00:07:38,234
hence and avoid my sight. So be my grave my
124
00:07:38,272 –> 00:07:41,210
peace here as I give her father’s heart from her.
125
00:07:41,280 –> 00:07:45,018
Call France. Who stirs, call Burgundy. An attendant exits Cornwall in
126
00:07:45,024 –> 00:07:48,094
Albany. When my two daughters dowers digest the third,
127
00:07:48,212 –> 00:07:52,266
let pride, which she calls plainness, marry her. I do invest you jointly
128
00:07:52,298 –> 00:07:56,138
with my power, preeminence and all the large effects. The troop with majesty,
129
00:07:56,314 –> 00:07:59,702
our self, by monthly course, with reservations of 100 knights,
130
00:07:59,786 –> 00:08:04,098
by you be sustained, shall our abode make with you by due turn only
131
00:08:04,184 –> 00:08:07,822
we shall retain thy name and all the addition to a king, the sway,
132
00:08:07,886 –> 00:08:11,602
revenue, execution of the rest beloved sons be yours,
133
00:08:11,666 –> 00:08:15,480
which to confirm this coronet part
134
00:08:16,010 –> 00:08:17,320
between you.
135
00:08:22,870 –> 00:08:26,514
There’s a lot there and I just sort of
136
00:08:26,552 –> 00:08:29,866
ran through folks, we’ve been doing a month of Shakespeare.
137
00:08:29,918 –> 00:08:33,346
This is how it goes. I put the Shakespeare voice on. You got to throw
138
00:08:33,378 –> 00:08:36,390
it out there a little bit. You got to do the sort of Orson Wells,
139
00:08:37,450 –> 00:08:40,954
English actor, Patrick Stewart comes to mind. You got to sort of do that kind
140
00:08:40,992 –> 00:08:44,886
of thing. You got to give it a little flourish, because Shakespeare
141
00:08:44,918 –> 00:08:47,770
cannot be read in merely a plain voice.
142
00:08:48,510 –> 00:08:51,642
But after all of the flourishes, after all the exaggeration,
143
00:08:51,786 –> 00:08:55,982
I know why teenagers struggle with
144
00:08:56,036 –> 00:08:59,342
King Lear. There’s a lot of complicated things
145
00:08:59,396 –> 00:09:02,926
going on here and quite frankly, flattery, and this
146
00:09:02,948 –> 00:09:05,906
is maybe the first thing that we get from King Lear.
147
00:09:06,008 –> 00:09:09,586
Flattery will apparently get you everywhere in business, just as
148
00:09:09,608 –> 00:09:11,730
it will in royalty.
149
00:09:12,790 –> 00:09:15,780
Leaders to get what you want, engage in flattery, right?
150
00:09:16,630 –> 00:09:20,518
Turns out the narcissism is not a modern psychological state. It’s just
151
00:09:20,604 –> 00:09:24,002
moved from being a private act tinned with shame,
152
00:09:24,146 –> 00:09:27,622
tinned with tinned with shame, to being a shameless
153
00:09:27,686 –> 00:09:31,290
public act, right? We’re not shameless in our narcissism.
154
00:09:31,870 –> 00:09:36,118
We put it out there. We want it to be publicly applauded.
155
00:09:36,294 –> 00:09:40,234
Gonerill and Reagan at least had the good grace to
156
00:09:40,272 –> 00:09:44,174
keep it private. The other thing that we get from
157
00:09:44,212 –> 00:09:47,914
that big opening act where Lear is trying to divide
158
00:09:47,962 –> 00:09:51,038
up his kingdom is this concept. And we toyed with it a
159
00:09:51,044 –> 00:09:54,226
little bit in Hamlet, and we’re going to toy with it a little bit more
160
00:09:54,248 –> 00:09:57,650
in Othello. And of course, it pops up in Julius Caesar.
161
00:09:58,230 –> 00:10:01,890
But Shakespeare was very much concerned, as should leaders,
162
00:10:02,470 –> 00:10:05,938
about this idea of beguiling or deceiving
163
00:10:06,034 –> 00:10:09,426
another person. Reagan and Gonerill
164
00:10:09,538 –> 00:10:12,646
and their husbands in particular,
165
00:10:12,748 –> 00:10:16,600
cornwall, he’s going to prove to be a problem later on
166
00:10:19,050 –> 00:10:22,454
they engage in acts of deception,
167
00:10:22,502 –> 00:10:25,786
they engage in acts of beguiling. King Lear. Now, you could
168
00:10:25,808 –> 00:10:29,378
say, of course, the King Lear deserved to be beguiled. He wasn’t
169
00:10:29,414 –> 00:10:33,054
going to listen to honest feedback from Cordelia when she said
170
00:10:33,092 –> 00:10:36,714
she had nothing for him other than her mere honor
171
00:10:36,762 –> 00:10:42,206
and her love and her truth to give him and
172
00:10:42,228 –> 00:10:45,486
beguiling a person in power to attain the power that they have. Which is what
173
00:10:45,508 –> 00:10:48,978
Gondrial and Reagan are involved in in this little clip here, right at
174
00:10:48,984 –> 00:10:52,226
the beginning, the opening of King Lear. If you do
175
00:10:52,248 –> 00:10:56,482
that, it’s a robust short term tactic, but it’s a poor
176
00:10:56,546 –> 00:11:00,146
long term strategy. Unless, of course, your fundamental
177
00:11:00,178 –> 00:11:03,638
philosophy is establishing a tyranny with you
178
00:11:03,724 –> 00:11:07,414
the top of the hierarchy. And this
179
00:11:07,452 –> 00:11:11,530
is where we open. This is where Shakespeare starts us off in
180
00:11:11,600 –> 00:11:14,806
the journey in through five acts, as usual,
181
00:11:14,998 –> 00:11:19,494
of King Lear, a man who is going to find out exactly
182
00:11:19,632 –> 00:11:23,114
what it’s like to fall off the top of a mountain.
183
00:11:23,242 –> 00:11:27,454
And how many people do you meet going all the way
184
00:11:27,652 –> 00:11:28,800
back down?
185
00:11:31,650 –> 00:11:35,266
As I said before, we have Libby Younger here, and we were talking about
186
00:11:35,288 –> 00:11:38,878
the road to Serfdom, as I mentioned previously, in episode number 43, and King
187
00:11:38,894 –> 00:11:42,306
Lear ties weirdly into the road to
188
00:11:42,328 –> 00:11:45,538
Serfdom. I think Hayek would appreciate us reading
189
00:11:45,634 –> 00:11:49,670
this because it’s not necessarily about the economics of power,
190
00:11:49,740 –> 00:11:53,254
although that does sort of come into it, particularly in this first part
191
00:11:53,292 –> 00:11:55,880
here with the division of property.
192
00:11:58,190 –> 00:12:02,058
But there’s also an element here of human nature which
193
00:12:02,144 –> 00:12:05,738
Hayek touches on extensively in Serfdom, particularly in
194
00:12:05,744 –> 00:12:09,920
his chapter about why the worst always get to the top.
195
00:12:11,650 –> 00:12:16,174
And so let’s start off with Libby here as
196
00:12:16,212 –> 00:12:19,566
we open with King Lear. I guess my
197
00:12:19,588 –> 00:12:23,102
first question is, Libby, why doesn’t anyone read Shakespeare anymore?
198
00:12:23,166 –> 00:12:27,394
I’ve been asking almost everybody that since
199
00:12:27,432 –> 00:12:31,006
we started this little trot this month on the podcast
200
00:12:31,198 –> 00:12:34,726
through the works of Shakespeare, and we’ll revisit Shakespeare again. There’s just
201
00:12:34,748 –> 00:12:38,694
too much good stuff inside of all of his work to miss.
202
00:12:38,892 –> 00:12:41,430
But why does anyone read Shakespeare anymore?
203
00:12:42,410 –> 00:12:45,894
That is a very good question. I think
204
00:12:45,932 –> 00:12:49,354
it simply comes down to the language is
205
00:12:49,392 –> 00:12:50,170
foreign.
206
00:12:52,750 –> 00:12:56,186
It really is like a foreign language that you need
207
00:12:56,208 –> 00:12:59,898
to be introduced to through guidance
208
00:13:00,074 –> 00:13:02,160
and with teachers and education.
209
00:13:04,370 –> 00:13:07,726
It’s like French. I’m not going
210
00:13:07,748 –> 00:13:11,534
to learn French on my I may, but it’d be a lot easier to
211
00:13:11,572 –> 00:13:13,810
learn French with guidance and instruction.
212
00:13:17,430 –> 00:13:20,994
The story and the lessons of King Lear have been
213
00:13:21,032 –> 00:13:24,754
modernized, so we haven’t necessarily lost the
214
00:13:24,792 –> 00:13:28,686
lessons. You spoke of ran,
215
00:13:28,798 –> 00:13:32,550
but I was thinking more even more recently of succession.
216
00:13:34,570 –> 00:13:38,246
We brought up succession. Interestingly enough, we brought up succession in our
217
00:13:38,268 –> 00:13:40,650
episode on Hamlet with Todd Libby.
218
00:13:42,270 –> 00:13:45,482
I think Hamlet skews more towards
219
00:13:45,536 –> 00:13:48,838
something like Sons of Anarchy. That’s more like Hamlet but with a biker
220
00:13:48,854 –> 00:13:52,494
gang, right? Which I also said on the podcast. But, yeah, you’re right. King lear.
221
00:13:52,692 –> 00:13:56,030
King Lear is interesting because it is succession.
222
00:13:57,330 –> 00:14:00,938
And I don’t think the father and I’ve never watched succession
223
00:14:00,954 –> 00:14:04,446
on HBO. I’ve just seen clips and I’ve seen trailers floating around. I got
224
00:14:04,468 –> 00:14:08,354
the general gist of kind of what the show is about, but it
225
00:14:08,392 –> 00:14:11,506
is this idea of building an empire and then how
226
00:14:11,528 –> 00:14:15,058
the hell do you divide it up? Because you’re not
227
00:14:15,064 –> 00:14:18,694
going to live forever, and at a certain point, you have
228
00:14:18,732 –> 00:14:21,880
to give it away, like you have to divest yourself of your property.
229
00:14:22,410 –> 00:14:25,320
And this is a real problem.
230
00:14:26,010 –> 00:14:29,514
Yeah. Well, let’s step back and more.
231
00:14:29,632 –> 00:14:33,066
You’ve got the lessons of succession is teaching the
232
00:14:33,088 –> 00:14:36,570
lessons of King Lear and the human nature.
233
00:14:36,910 –> 00:14:40,030
The builder creates a huge fief dumb.
234
00:14:42,210 –> 00:14:45,834
He wants it to continue and to thrive. And his successors
235
00:14:45,882 –> 00:14:49,566
are well positioned to do that, although they didn’t learn the
236
00:14:49,588 –> 00:14:52,882
tricks of the trade and how to build,
237
00:14:52,936 –> 00:14:56,290
and they’re overconfident in their capabilities and competencies.
238
00:14:57,430 –> 00:15:01,486
And what becomes of them? They let their greed
239
00:15:01,678 –> 00:15:04,298
start to dictate their actions,
240
00:15:04,414 –> 00:15:08,070
and ultimately they lie and cheat
241
00:15:09,290 –> 00:15:13,254
in order to retain power or to hold on to the last
242
00:15:13,452 –> 00:15:17,234
grasp of it. But you’ve got succession,
243
00:15:17,282 –> 00:15:19,878
but you’ve got Dallas and you’ve got Dynasty.
244
00:15:19,974 –> 00:15:23,610
Dallas in the 1980s. Right? Same thing. Same thing.
245
00:15:23,680 –> 00:15:27,626
Yeah. But what’s so beautiful about Shakespeare and the classics and
246
00:15:27,648 –> 00:15:31,806
what you’re trying to do through these podcasts is it
247
00:15:31,828 –> 00:15:34,906
really demonstrates that human nature is a constant.
248
00:15:35,098 –> 00:15:38,574
Right? So the same tendencies that
249
00:15:38,612 –> 00:15:42,358
the powerful have had back in the 16 hundreds
250
00:15:42,394 –> 00:15:46,340
are the same ones that we’re having in the Tooth in 2020.
251
00:15:50,150 –> 00:15:53,534
Why is it that Orwell and Anne Ran
252
00:15:53,662 –> 00:15:57,526
could so accurately predict where we would
253
00:15:57,548 –> 00:16:01,720
be landing as a society 80 to 100 years from
254
00:16:02,330 –> 00:16:05,974
when they were living? Okay, then let me ask you this follow up question,
255
00:16:06,012 –> 00:16:09,466
because this is the key crux question.
256
00:16:09,568 –> 00:16:10,780
Yeah. Okay.
257
00:16:13,390 –> 00:16:17,242
I am old enough and and you are old enough to
258
00:16:17,296 –> 00:16:21,690
remember an analog time before all this digital nonsense,
259
00:16:21,770 –> 00:16:25,450
right? We’re both in that weird sort of middle ground generation,
260
00:16:25,530 –> 00:16:28,974
right, analog than digital. And now we got to adapt, right?
261
00:16:29,172 –> 00:16:32,926
And there’s
262
00:16:32,958 –> 00:16:36,434
a fundamental hubris that’s built into digital, and we’re seeing this right now
263
00:16:36,472 –> 00:16:39,650
with large language models being called artificial intelligence.
264
00:16:40,470 –> 00:16:44,674
And the fundamental hubris is a is a lack of being.
265
00:16:44,792 –> 00:16:48,942
Not even a lack of being. It’s the desire now
266
00:16:49,016 –> 00:16:52,886
for every individual to never be forgotten. One of the things
267
00:16:52,908 –> 00:16:56,166
that I tell folks is, and I do have this written into my
268
00:16:56,188 –> 00:17:00,280
will, I want to be erased from the Internet when I’m gone.
269
00:17:00,730 –> 00:17:03,414
I want to be eliminated. I don’t want to show up in some deep fake
270
00:17:03,462 –> 00:17:05,900
video 100 years from now.
271
00:17:06,270 –> 00:17:09,450
And I think I may have said this on the podcast, but like selling Nestle,
272
00:17:09,950 –> 00:17:13,398
because Nestle’s pushed everything out to the edges and now they’ve
273
00:17:13,414 –> 00:17:16,074
got to grab regular people and I’m in the background of a crowd somewhere.
274
00:17:16,122 –> 00:17:20,080
Or because my voice is around everywhere. This is brought to you by
275
00:17:21,730 –> 00:17:25,726
any of that right? Erase me, move me from the Internet. But the fundamental
276
00:17:25,758 –> 00:17:29,170
hubris of our time is that technology has allowed us to believe
277
00:17:29,240 –> 00:17:33,006
that we are King
278
00:17:33,038 –> 00:17:36,610
Lear, right? That we’re at the top of our own little pile,
279
00:17:36,770 –> 00:17:40,374
and now we can sort of do these things. And it used to be
280
00:17:40,572 –> 00:17:44,050
when we were more tragically focused
281
00:17:44,130 –> 00:17:48,082
or maybe not tragically focused, we were more acknowledging of the tragic nature
282
00:17:48,146 –> 00:17:51,762
of humanity, that we were like, no, there has to be boundaries
283
00:17:51,826 –> 00:17:54,458
like that’s for those people over there, and we still do have a lot of
284
00:17:54,464 –> 00:17:57,962
that. But for us over here, there’s something
285
00:17:58,016 –> 00:18:01,406
different, and we can look at it. Right. Like, I think
286
00:18:01,428 –> 00:18:04,974
of this is now the second
287
00:18:05,012 –> 00:18:08,830
time these people have made it on the podcast, but okay, Harry and Megan,
288
00:18:10,290 –> 00:18:13,506
the Markle twins over there, those two people.
289
00:18:13,608 –> 00:18:16,786
And, yeah, if you all find me, you ran, come sue me.
290
00:18:16,808 –> 00:18:19,250
It’s fine, whatever. Good luck.
291
00:18:21,830 –> 00:18:25,330
But the dynamic there of,
292
00:18:25,480 –> 00:18:28,886
oh, well, that’s those people over there doing that thing, but I’m living over
293
00:18:28,908 –> 00:18:33,186
here doing this thing, has sort of become wrapped up with this narcissistic
294
00:18:33,218 –> 00:18:37,222
hubris. That’s why I opened up with narcissism, this narcissistic hubris, because of technology.
295
00:18:37,356 –> 00:18:41,034
Like, if I can build my own reality on Facebook, then why
296
00:18:41,072 –> 00:18:45,286
shouldn’t I be King Lear? The digital age I’ve
297
00:18:45,318 –> 00:18:48,666
shared this with a lot of folks over the years is
298
00:18:48,688 –> 00:18:51,930
that it’s distance perception from reality.
299
00:18:52,090 –> 00:18:55,758
So we have the perception that we’re more important
300
00:18:55,924 –> 00:18:59,422
than we are, either good or bad.
301
00:18:59,556 –> 00:19:03,750
There’s this perception that we’re
302
00:19:03,770 –> 00:19:08,814
bigger and more powerful than we are. And Oprah
303
00:19:08,862 –> 00:19:12,334
used to talk about this, which is whenever
304
00:19:12,382 –> 00:19:16,386
you’re trying to analyze someone’s behavior, recognize that we
305
00:19:16,408 –> 00:19:20,762
all just want to be seen. And the digital feat,
306
00:19:20,926 –> 00:19:24,066
it used to be that we were seen in our local communities,
307
00:19:24,258 –> 00:19:28,342
right? Yeah, exactly. At grade school, in the schoolyard,
308
00:19:28,406 –> 00:19:32,554
or at church or in girl
309
00:19:32,592 –> 00:19:36,918
scouts or cub Scouts. And we got rapid feedback,
310
00:19:37,014 –> 00:19:40,662
but it was real and untinged. So it wasn’t
311
00:19:40,806 –> 00:19:44,598
this narcissistic like like, that was ephemeral.
312
00:19:44,694 –> 00:19:48,750
You could feel it in your soul. You could feel it viscerally,
313
00:19:51,890 –> 00:19:55,154
and you knew the person, so you actually would have to face them day
314
00:19:55,192 –> 00:19:59,374
in and day out. On the digital world, the feedback we’re getting is from anonymous
315
00:19:59,422 –> 00:20:02,290
folks. And if you say something negative,
316
00:20:02,870 –> 00:20:06,246
there’s no consequences for your action, because you don’t have to be with them
317
00:20:06,268 –> 00:20:09,702
or be with them or interact with them
318
00:20:09,756 –> 00:20:13,414
in a real human way anymore. But there’s this perception that if I
319
00:20:13,452 –> 00:20:15,320
say something true, it is.
320
00:20:17,370 –> 00:20:21,206
And we’re completely being divorced from reality as
321
00:20:21,228 –> 00:20:24,950
it is in this digital world. The narcissism,
322
00:20:25,770 –> 00:20:29,000
I think it is actually fueled economically as well.
323
00:20:29,330 –> 00:20:33,146
Yeah. You and I both touch the VC
324
00:20:33,258 –> 00:20:36,942
and tech space where all these folks are
325
00:20:37,076 –> 00:20:40,894
being given free money. Free money. Free money. They can blow up
326
00:20:40,932 –> 00:20:44,514
their companies, and they’re given another job
327
00:20:44,712 –> 00:20:48,500
doing the same thing six months from then.
328
00:20:50,230 –> 00:20:53,982
They aren’t actually having to deliver anything other than growth.
329
00:20:54,046 –> 00:20:57,890
They’re not thinking about sustainability and delivering a viable
330
00:20:57,970 –> 00:21:01,560
business. It’s just, look at me, look at me. I’m raising money.
331
00:21:02,730 –> 00:21:06,626
I’m building something big. But they’re not thinking about the bigger picture.
332
00:21:06,818 –> 00:21:10,362
Who am I building it for? Right? It’s more
333
00:21:10,416 –> 00:21:13,962
about, look at me, I’m important. Like Forbes 30
334
00:21:14,016 –> 00:21:16,140
under 30 throw up.
335
00:21:18,590 –> 00:21:21,180
You know, squat in your twenty S.
336
00:21:22,910 –> 00:21:26,894
I talked about this on on the Shorts episode that
337
00:21:26,932 –> 00:21:30,606
came out this Tuesday, right ahead of the Shorts episode, number 75.
338
00:21:30,628 –> 00:21:33,838
You go back and listen to this, but it is this idea, and it’s
339
00:21:33,854 –> 00:21:38,386
also wrapped up with what you’re saying of and
340
00:21:38,408 –> 00:21:41,922
I keep going back to this over and over again because I’m working on something
341
00:21:41,976 –> 00:21:45,910
here, philosophically and rhetorically out loud with folks.
342
00:21:47,450 –> 00:21:50,150
It’s this idea of the adults in the room.
343
00:21:50,300 –> 00:21:53,640
So I look at lists like 30 under 30,
344
00:21:54,170 –> 00:21:57,378
40 under 40, for God’s sakes. I just got an email the
345
00:21:57,404 –> 00:22:00,620
other day, could we interview you about being 50 under 50?
346
00:22:01,150 –> 00:22:04,454
And I went and I immediately
347
00:22:04,502 –> 00:22:08,234
deleted it. What are we doing? Right? So there was
348
00:22:08,272 –> 00:22:11,118
a dynamic in our culture, and I said this on our Shorts episode. I think
349
00:22:11,124 –> 00:22:15,134
it’s lear repeating. There was a dynamic where
350
00:22:15,332 –> 00:22:19,118
you would never trust anyone no, not never trust you would
351
00:22:19,124 –> 00:22:22,526
never give power to any right. You never trust anyone over 30. But that
352
00:22:22,548 –> 00:22:25,666
was also intention against the dynamic in
353
00:22:25,688 –> 00:22:29,506
the post World War II era of don’t you dare give anybody any
354
00:22:29,528 –> 00:22:33,298
power who’s under 40 because they can’t handle it.
355
00:22:33,464 –> 00:22:36,678
Because there was something going to get tragic right about that. And we
356
00:22:36,684 –> 00:22:39,654
see this in Reagan and gonerill in King Lear.
357
00:22:39,772 –> 00:22:43,558
Right. Yes. All the Shakespeare parts are played by young men.
358
00:22:43,644 –> 00:22:47,480
Young boys, usually 16 to 19. Yes, okay, got it.
359
00:22:47,850 –> 00:22:50,998
And yes, they would have been a 16 year old boy playing Reagan and a
360
00:22:51,004 –> 00:22:54,106
six Lear old boy playing Gonorrhill. Okay, got it. Yeah, I’m aware of all
361
00:22:54,128 –> 00:22:58,822
that in the Globe Theater and in the Elizabethan
362
00:22:58,886 –> 00:23:03,294
Theater age. Right. I’m aware of all this. My point is the
363
00:23:03,412 –> 00:23:07,774
people as characters are
364
00:23:07,812 –> 00:23:11,614
young and arrogant. They’re under 40. They’re not
365
00:23:11,652 –> 00:23:15,060
behaving with wisdom. Right? That’s the whole setup for Lear.
366
00:23:15,670 –> 00:23:18,754
It’s the whole set up for succession. It’s the
367
00:23:18,792 –> 00:23:22,466
whole set up for another show that’s very popular, which is
368
00:23:22,488 –> 00:23:26,306
shocking to me. My wife and I watched, I think, the first two
369
00:23:26,328 –> 00:23:29,582
episodes of the first season, and then my wife is like, these are bad people.
370
00:23:29,656 –> 00:23:31,606
I don’t need to have these people in my house. So we never went back
371
00:23:31,628 –> 00:23:35,250
to it again. But Yellowstone a show that has just blown
372
00:23:35,330 –> 00:23:39,226
up, but it’s basically King Lear with
373
00:23:39,248 –> 00:23:41,500
Costner at the top of the hierarchy. Right?
374
00:23:45,150 –> 00:23:49,098
There’s a couple of threads in here that I think are important, and I think
375
00:23:49,264 –> 00:23:52,726
there is always a really good tension between the young and
376
00:23:52,848 –> 00:23:56,058
the young and the old. And I think it’s
377
00:23:56,074 –> 00:23:59,786
an important tension. But this is why it’s
378
00:23:59,818 –> 00:24:05,874
so important to understand history, to understand your
379
00:24:05,912 –> 00:24:09,554
own behaviors and your own tendencies, so that you
380
00:24:09,672 –> 00:24:12,260
are able to put a check on yourself.
381
00:24:13,030 –> 00:24:16,854
One is this concept around humility 99
382
00:24:16,892 –> 00:24:20,486
billion people have walked the planet. Why do you think your name is going
383
00:24:20,508 –> 00:24:23,160
to stand out in history? Right?
384
00:24:24,090 –> 00:24:27,394
But when you’re always moving, when you’re not reflecting,
385
00:24:27,442 –> 00:24:31,194
when you’re not stepping back to assess the environment and
386
00:24:31,232 –> 00:24:34,698
to assess what’s happening in context of a greater history,
387
00:24:34,864 –> 00:24:38,826
you will have the inclination to let your ego self lead.
388
00:24:38,928 –> 00:24:41,994
And your ego self is about me, me, status,
389
00:24:42,042 –> 00:24:46,480
status, status. And there are some benefits from
390
00:24:46,930 –> 00:24:49,930
a heavy ego, from a survival perspective.
391
00:24:50,090 –> 00:24:54,590
But in the world that we live in now, it can be very self destructive
392
00:24:54,670 –> 00:24:58,258
and destructive to others. And in this digital world
393
00:24:58,344 –> 00:25:01,890
where we all get these rapid feedbacks, positive or negative,
394
00:25:02,870 –> 00:25:06,274
in the digital world, we do feel a lot more important than we
395
00:25:06,312 –> 00:25:09,926
actually are. And I had this
396
00:25:10,108 –> 00:25:13,938
there’s two things that are stand out thoughts
397
00:25:13,954 –> 00:25:17,762
that have occurred to me and been important through my evolution
398
00:25:17,826 –> 00:25:21,226
as a human. And the first is remembering a statement that
399
00:25:21,248 –> 00:25:24,826
my stepmother said to me young when I was
400
00:25:24,848 –> 00:25:27,866
young. She said, in my twenty s I thought I knew it all. In my
401
00:25:27,888 –> 00:25:31,502
thirty s I realized I didn’t, but I thought I could. And in my forty
402
00:25:31,556 –> 00:25:34,910
s and thereafter I realized that I would never know at all.
403
00:25:35,060 –> 00:25:38,942
So it’s so freeing to recognize how little you
404
00:25:38,996 –> 00:25:42,750
actually know and how much you have to discover about
405
00:25:42,820 –> 00:25:45,970
life. Now, that can be scary if you live in a fear based,
406
00:25:46,040 –> 00:25:50,514
control need environment, or it can be extremely fringe if
407
00:25:50,552 –> 00:25:53,860
you recognize that there’s only room to grow.
408
00:25:54,250 –> 00:25:57,430
The second was after my own CEO stint
409
00:25:57,850 –> 00:26:01,766
and I got caught up in even
410
00:26:01,788 –> 00:26:06,054
though I had always viewed myself as a servant lear I
411
00:26:06,092 –> 00:26:09,240
had started to move into this more narcissistic world,
412
00:26:10,650 –> 00:26:14,314
which is easy when you live in the Bay Area and everyone around you is,
413
00:26:14,352 –> 00:26:17,434
what are you doing? You’re getting funding, you’re working for VC. I’m building
414
00:26:17,472 –> 00:26:21,854
the next big company. And it can be
415
00:26:21,972 –> 00:26:25,646
overly consuming where you define yourself by
416
00:26:25,668 –> 00:26:29,600
your title and your role and not who you are.
417
00:26:31,510 –> 00:26:35,166
And when I moved
418
00:26:35,198 –> 00:26:38,900
on from that, I started asking myself,
419
00:26:39,910 –> 00:26:43,122
what is my legacy? And I’ll go back to Oprah again.
420
00:26:43,176 –> 00:26:47,086
I really miss Oprah. And she was talking about
421
00:26:47,128 –> 00:26:50,850
how Maya Angelou how she had told Maya Angelou
422
00:26:50,930 –> 00:26:54,994
that this school that she’s building in South Africa was going to be her legacy.
423
00:26:55,122 –> 00:26:58,586
And Maya said, you don’t know what your legacy will be. And I
424
00:26:58,608 –> 00:27:02,026
always thought, Oprah, your legacy is everyone who watches you.
425
00:27:02,208 –> 00:27:05,740
You taught me about Michael Singer and
426
00:27:06,190 –> 00:27:10,362
Eckert Tolley and all these other amazing things. Your destiny
427
00:27:10,506 –> 00:27:13,950
legacy are the small moments. And honestly,
428
00:27:15,250 –> 00:27:18,574
over the last five years, it is the small moments that
429
00:27:18,612 –> 00:27:22,762
make a difference. It’s the small moments that have a ripple and butterfly
430
00:27:22,826 –> 00:27:26,002
effect through life, in people’s lives. How you treat
431
00:27:26,056 –> 00:27:29,826
someone when you’re in the grocery line and they’re having a bad day
432
00:27:29,928 –> 00:27:33,474
could completely shift their day. And the knock on
433
00:27:33,512 –> 00:27:37,746
effects that they have, impact they have on others. So the humility
434
00:27:37,938 –> 00:27:41,030
isn’t actually realizing how small you are,
435
00:27:41,180 –> 00:27:44,434
but how much power you have in the small moments versus
436
00:27:44,482 –> 00:27:49,814
the big ones. And that’s a good reminder for folks
437
00:27:49,862 –> 00:27:52,170
with ambition, leaders with ambition.
438
00:27:53,390 –> 00:27:58,858
Ambition is a well,
439
00:27:59,024 –> 00:28:02,426
I’m going to paraphrase from base camp here. They’re talking about VC.
440
00:28:02,538 –> 00:28:04,270
Ambition is a hell of a drug.
441
00:28:05,810 –> 00:28:09,962
And it’s not necessarily a bad thing, but checking
442
00:28:10,106 –> 00:28:13,930
your intentions. And that’s the important thing, is your intentions.
443
00:28:14,090 –> 00:28:17,922
And this is where we always see those executives before
444
00:28:17,976 –> 00:28:21,746
they were executives. They’re like, I’m going to spend all my time
445
00:28:21,848 –> 00:28:25,042
helping develop talent and making sure everyone gets paid
446
00:28:25,096 –> 00:28:28,278
right and gets opportunities. And then once they’re in their role, they are looking up
447
00:28:28,284 –> 00:28:32,600
to the next thing and they’ve forgotten who’s behind them. So ambition about
448
00:28:32,970 –> 00:28:37,030
building big businesses. Why? Because you have a great product for your customer.
449
00:28:37,180 –> 00:28:40,774
You’re providing jobs in a great place, jobs so
450
00:28:40,812 –> 00:28:45,110
people can put food on their family’s table. It’s all about the intention
451
00:28:45,190 –> 00:28:48,106
behind the ambition. What we have today,
452
00:28:48,288 –> 00:28:51,934
and this is where the fourth Turning, I think, plays a big
453
00:28:51,972 –> 00:28:55,502
picture. What we’re seeing in King Lear,
454
00:28:55,636 –> 00:29:00,174
too, is that people
455
00:29:00,212 –> 00:29:04,066
aren’t building or creating and what
456
00:29:04,088 –> 00:29:07,522
they’re chasing becomes smaller and so they become
457
00:29:07,576 –> 00:29:11,410
more vigilant. If they’re defining themselves
458
00:29:11,480 –> 00:29:15,134
by their position and their power, then they’re going
459
00:29:15,192 –> 00:29:19,442
to start and that’s all that matters. And that’s when the tyrannical
460
00:29:19,506 –> 00:29:22,934
and authoritarian traits start to come back, come into
461
00:29:22,972 –> 00:29:25,080
play. Yeah, well, because.
462
00:29:29,230 –> 00:29:33,142
Step aside. Well, not only that, but you’re
463
00:29:33,206 –> 00:29:36,586
constantly mounting a you’re mounting a
464
00:29:36,608 –> 00:29:40,010
defilade, rear focused defense
465
00:29:40,930 –> 00:29:44,494
on an incredibly tiny slice of
466
00:29:44,612 –> 00:29:46,720
an incredibly shrinking fat head.
467
00:29:50,130 –> 00:29:54,190
And when you’re mounting that rear facing defense,
468
00:29:54,530 –> 00:29:58,234
you’re so afraid of the future that you can’t
469
00:29:58,282 –> 00:30:01,566
let go. And so now you’re trapped, right, because your
470
00:30:01,588 –> 00:30:03,760
hands are full of the thing you have now.
471
00:30:04,690 –> 00:30:07,766
And and I’m kind of a little bit in this moment now and so I’m
472
00:30:07,788 –> 00:30:10,086
kind of talking to myself a little bit. You’re kind of in a little bit
473
00:30:10,108 –> 00:30:13,286
in this moment right now with some things, but you’re so holding on so hard
474
00:30:13,308 –> 00:30:16,806
to think you’ve got now, but you have to let it go
475
00:30:16,908 –> 00:30:18,760
to grab onto something else.
476
00:30:20,810 –> 00:30:23,286
I think of Grappling. I think of Jiu. Jitsu. Right. I always going to bring
477
00:30:23,308 –> 00:30:25,786
a jujitsu at least once, a podcast, and this is going to be the moment.
478
00:30:25,968 –> 00:30:29,914
But in Jiu Jitsu, if you’re in a bad position and
479
00:30:29,952 –> 00:30:32,666
this is one of the lessons like I’ve had to learn and it’s really hard
480
00:30:32,688 –> 00:30:35,742
to learn. Like when you first start, when you’re a white belt and it
481
00:30:35,796 –> 00:30:38,800
sucks and you’re getting crushed all the time,
482
00:30:39,170 –> 00:30:41,946
you want to just hold on for your life. It’s like a roller coaster ride.
483
00:30:41,978 –> 00:30:44,686
Like, yeah, I got this one hand in here. I’m holding on. I’m never letting
484
00:30:44,718 –> 00:30:48,514
go. Right. But the reality is you have to
485
00:30:48,552 –> 00:30:51,986
let go. You have to have the bravery, the courage to let go of
486
00:30:52,008 –> 00:30:55,906
that position, to find something else because you
487
00:30:55,928 –> 00:30:59,670
only have two hands. That’s it. That’s all you got. It’s the concept of what
488
00:30:59,740 –> 00:31:03,334
you resist, persists. Correct. Right. And if you
489
00:31:03,372 –> 00:31:07,986
just step back and let go and
490
00:31:08,028 –> 00:31:11,098
have trust that the good things will follow,
491
00:31:11,184 –> 00:31:14,630
it’s amazing what will happen. It’s a scarcity mindset
492
00:31:14,710 –> 00:31:18,026
and a fixed state mindset that puts you into a
493
00:31:18,048 –> 00:31:21,260
tyrannical and authoritarian kind of world.
494
00:31:22,590 –> 00:31:26,350
And we see this with Lear in his behavior.
495
00:31:27,330 –> 00:31:31,374
Now, there’s always usually a check on that.
496
00:31:31,572 –> 00:31:35,374
And I want to talk about the blindness
497
00:31:35,422 –> 00:31:39,460
of hierarchies because when
498
00:31:39,910 –> 00:31:44,782
well, when Lear is challenged
499
00:31:44,846 –> 00:31:48,534
a little bit in his decision making,
500
00:31:48,732 –> 00:31:52,166
he doesn’t really like that. And he kind of
501
00:31:52,188 –> 00:31:57,222
sort of pulls the old
502
00:31:57,276 –> 00:32:00,666
card of the old card, but he pulls the card of, I’m in
503
00:32:00,688 –> 00:32:04,214
charge. I get to make this decision and I get to decide
504
00:32:04,262 –> 00:32:07,834
what happens with my lands and how it’s going to go.
505
00:32:08,032 –> 00:32:11,558
And there’s a check in the court
506
00:32:11,654 –> 00:32:15,406
there and that check is as it is in our
507
00:32:15,428 –> 00:32:18,954
own society and culture. And I think this was something important that Shakespeare
508
00:32:19,002 –> 00:32:22,650
picked up on the check. Was the comedian or the fool.
509
00:32:22,810 –> 00:32:26,126
Right. The fool. Right. Fool is
510
00:32:26,148 –> 00:32:29,634
critically important psychologically. Fool is also important for
511
00:32:29,672 –> 00:32:32,770
leaders. And it’s important in order
512
00:32:32,840 –> 00:32:36,658
to wake up those who are at the top of the hierarchy with
513
00:32:36,664 –> 00:32:39,942
the all seeing eye to the fact that they might not be seeing
514
00:32:39,996 –> 00:32:44,226
all the things that they think they’re seeing. And so let’s
515
00:32:44,258 –> 00:32:47,638
start with the blindness of hierarchy. Let’s go back to King Lear a
516
00:32:47,644 –> 00:32:51,340
little bit. Let’s open up with act one, scene four.
517
00:32:52,110 –> 00:32:59,082
And this is where King Lear is
518
00:32:59,136 –> 00:33:03,890
talking to the fool. And the fool is fool’s
519
00:33:03,910 –> 00:33:07,786
poking him a little bit in his court,
520
00:33:07,818 –> 00:33:10,926
which is, by the way, the fool’s job. By the way, the modern fool is
521
00:33:10,948 –> 00:33:14,766
Dave Chappelle. That’s the modern fool. Or Chris Rock.
522
00:33:14,878 –> 00:33:18,530
Right. You keep your hands off the fool. Will Smith.
523
00:33:19,030 –> 00:33:21,650
He has a right to Joe Rogan. Or Joe Rogan.
524
00:33:22,710 –> 00:33:26,282
That’s right. He has a right to be in the court.
525
00:33:26,366 –> 00:33:27,800
You need him there.
526
00:33:29,210 –> 00:33:32,886
Act one, seed four of King Lear. Enter, fool. Fool. Let me
527
00:33:32,908 –> 00:33:36,306
hire him, too. To Kent. Here’s my coxcomb. He offers Kent
528
00:33:36,338 –> 00:33:39,650
his cap. Lear cow. Now, my pretty Dave.
529
00:33:39,730 –> 00:33:43,274
How dosted thou, fool? To Kent. Sarah your
530
00:33:43,312 –> 00:33:46,410
best bet. Take my cox comb. Lear why, my boy?
531
00:33:46,560 –> 00:33:50,714
Fool? Why? For taking one’s part that’s out of favor to
532
00:33:50,752 –> 00:33:53,514
Kent. Nay, and thou canst not smile as the. Wind.
533
00:33:53,552 –> 00:33:57,166
Sits thou little to catch a cold shortly. Here. There, take my
534
00:33:57,188 –> 00:34:00,894
coxcomb. Why, this fellow has banished two sons and daughters and
535
00:34:00,932 –> 00:34:04,538
did the third. A blessing against his will. If thou follow him, thou must knees.
536
00:34:04,554 –> 00:34:08,438
Lear my coxcomb. How now, ran uncle. Would I had two coxcombs
537
00:34:08,474 –> 00:34:11,620
and two daughters. Lear why, my boy.
538
00:34:11,990 –> 00:34:15,246
Fool if I gave them all my living, I’d keep my coxcombs
539
00:34:15,278 –> 00:34:18,690
myself. There’s mine. Beg another of thy daughters.
540
00:34:19,270 –> 00:34:22,914
Lear take heed, akira the whip. Fool truce.
541
00:34:22,962 –> 00:34:26,514
A dog musta kennel. He must be whipped out when the lady brock
542
00:34:26,562 –> 00:34:30,214
may stand by the fire and stink. Lear a pestilent gall
543
00:34:30,262 –> 00:34:33,702
to me. Fool. Sarah I’ll teach thee a speech.
544
00:34:33,766 –> 00:34:37,114
Lear do, fool. Market, uncle. Have more
545
00:34:37,152 –> 00:34:40,374
than thou ShoWest speak less than thou
546
00:34:40,422 –> 00:34:43,994
knowest, lend less than thou owest ride
547
00:34:44,042 –> 00:34:47,514
more than thou goest learn more than thou
548
00:34:47,562 –> 00:34:51,082
trowst that less than thou throwst.
549
00:34:51,226 –> 00:34:55,346
Leave thy drink and thy whore and keep in a door and
550
00:34:55,368 –> 00:34:58,834
thou shalt have more than two tens to
551
00:34:58,872 –> 00:35:02,050
a score. Kent this is nothing,
552
00:35:02,120 –> 00:35:05,662
fool. Fool Vintis, like the breath of an unfettered lawyer.
553
00:35:05,726 –> 00:35:09,166
You gave me nothing for it. You make no use of nothing, uncle.
554
00:35:09,358 –> 00:35:12,866
Lear why, no, boy. Nothing can be made out of nothing. Fool to can’t
555
00:35:12,978 –> 00:35:16,502
tell him so much the rent of his land comes to, he will not believe
556
00:35:16,556 –> 00:35:17,430
a fool.
557
00:35:19,290 –> 00:35:22,966
Lear a bitter fool. Fool DOST
558
00:35:22,998 –> 00:35:25,818
thou know the difference, my boy, between a bitter fool and a sweet one?
559
00:35:25,904 –> 00:35:29,910
Lear no, lad. Teach me. Fool that lord that counsel
560
00:35:29,990 –> 00:35:33,454
thee to give away thy land complace him here by
561
00:35:33,492 –> 00:35:36,826
me. Do thou for him to stand. The sweet
562
00:35:36,858 –> 00:35:40,346
and bitter fool will presently appear. The one in motley
563
00:35:40,378 –> 00:35:43,860
here, the other found out there.
564
00:35:44,310 –> 00:35:47,742
Lear DOST thou call me a fool,
565
00:35:47,806 –> 00:35:51,646
boy? Fool all other titles thou
566
00:35:51,678 –> 00:35:55,300
hast given away that thou was born with.
567
00:35:55,830 –> 00:35:59,886
Kent this is not altogether fool, my lord. Fool no,
568
00:35:59,928 –> 00:36:03,586
faith, lords and great men will not let me. If I had a monopoly
569
00:36:03,618 –> 00:36:07,254
out there, they would have part on it, and ladies, too. They will not have
570
00:36:07,292 –> 00:36:11,126
me. They will not let me have all the fool to myself. They’ll be
571
00:36:11,148 –> 00:36:14,534
snatching. Uncle, give me an egg, and I’ll give thee two crowns.
572
00:36:14,662 –> 00:36:17,130
Lear what two crowns shall they be?
573
00:36:17,280 –> 00:36:20,486
Fool why, after I have cut the egg in the middle eat up the meat,
574
00:36:20,518 –> 00:36:23,626
the two crowns of an egg. When thou clovest thy crown in the
575
00:36:23,648 –> 00:36:27,226
middle and gaveest away both parts thou bourse thine ass on thy
576
00:36:27,258 –> 00:36:30,394
back or the dirt thou hast little wit in thy bald crown
577
00:36:30,442 –> 00:36:34,094
when thou gayest. The golden one, away. If I speak like myself in this,
578
00:36:34,132 –> 00:36:37,554
let him be whipped that first finds it. Fools hath never less
579
00:36:37,592 –> 00:36:41,426
grace in a year for wise men are grown foppish and know not how
580
00:36:41,448 –> 00:36:44,690
their wits to wear their manners are so epish.
581
00:36:45,110 –> 00:36:48,286
Lear when were you want to be full
582
00:36:48,328 –> 00:36:51,702
of sons? Sarah fool, I have used an uncle ever since
583
00:36:51,756 –> 00:36:55,106
thou mast thy daughters, thy mothers. For when thou gavest
584
00:36:55,138 –> 00:36:58,898
him the rod and puttest down thine own breeches he Sings
585
00:36:58,994 –> 00:37:02,794
then they for sudden joy did weep and I for sorrow sung that
586
00:37:02,832 –> 00:37:07,206
such a king should play Bo Peep and go the fools among rithy
587
00:37:07,238 –> 00:37:10,598
nuncle, keep a schoolmaster that could teach thy fool to lie.
588
00:37:10,694 –> 00:37:12,830
I would fain to learn to lie.
589
00:37:14,130 –> 00:37:17,146
Lear and you lie. Sarah will have you whipped.
590
00:37:17,338 –> 00:37:20,762
Fool. I marvel what king thou and thy daughters
591
00:37:20,826 –> 00:37:24,206
are. They’ll have me whipped for speaking true. They’ll have
592
00:37:24,228 –> 00:37:27,950
me whipped for lying. And sometimes I am whipped for holding peace.
593
00:37:28,110 –> 00:37:31,330
I’d rather be any kind of king other than a fool. And yet
594
00:37:31,400 –> 00:37:35,026
I would not be thee, uncle. Thou hast pard thy wit on
595
00:37:35,048 –> 00:37:37,000
both sides and left nothing in the middle.
596
00:37:38,730 –> 00:37:42,086
Here comes one of the pairings. Enter.
597
00:37:42,188 –> 00:37:45,654
Gonerill. Lear hey, now,
598
00:37:45,692 –> 00:37:49,062
my daughter, what makes that frontland on me? Thinks you are too much
599
00:37:49,116 –> 00:37:50,710
late in thy frown,
600
00:37:52,170 –> 00:37:55,466
fool. That was a pretty fellow without hast no need to care for her
601
00:37:55,488 –> 00:37:58,794
frowning. Now thou art without a figure. I am better than thou art.
602
00:37:58,832 –> 00:38:02,042
Now I am a fool. Thou art nothing to Gorill. Yes,
603
00:38:02,096 –> 00:38:05,342
for sooth I will hold my tongue. See, your face bids me,
604
00:38:05,396 –> 00:38:08,346
though you say nothing. Mum, mum. Neither keeps, nor crust,
605
00:38:08,378 –> 00:38:11,120
nor crumb, weary of all, shall want some.
606
00:38:12,130 –> 00:38:15,294
He points at lear. That’s a
607
00:38:15,332 –> 00:38:19,590
shell. Peace. God not only serves
608
00:38:19,690 –> 00:38:22,302
this you’re all licensed fool,
609
00:38:22,446 –> 00:38:26,046
but other of your insolent retinue do hourly carpet
610
00:38:26,078 –> 00:38:29,410
quarrel, breaking forth in rank and not to be endured riots.
611
00:38:29,490 –> 00:38:32,886
Sir. I had thought by making this well known unto you to have found a
612
00:38:32,908 –> 00:38:37,334
safe redress but now grow fearful by what yourself who
613
00:38:37,372 –> 00:38:40,422
late have spoken and done that you protect this course
614
00:38:40,476 –> 00:38:43,546
and put it on by. Your allowance, which if you should the fault would not
615
00:38:43,568 –> 00:38:47,642
escape censure nor the redress sleep which in the tender of a wholesome wheel might
616
00:38:47,696 –> 00:38:51,114
in their working do you that offense which else were
617
00:38:51,152 –> 00:38:55,450
shame that then necessity will call discreet proceeding.
618
00:38:55,790 –> 00:38:59,754
Fool. For you know, nuncle, the hedge sparrow feed the cuckoo
619
00:38:59,802 –> 00:39:02,446
so long that it’s had its head bit off by it.
620
00:39:02,468 –> 00:39:06,194
Young so without the candle, and we
621
00:39:06,232 –> 00:39:08,450
were left darkling.
622
00:39:11,930 –> 00:39:13,960
Now, granted, there’s a lot there.
623
00:39:15,850 –> 00:39:18,778
It took me a couple of readings of that to kind of grab what the
624
00:39:18,784 –> 00:39:22,060
fool was doing. But there’s a couple of things there.
625
00:39:23,550 –> 00:39:28,266
Well, the biggest thing, I think if
626
00:39:28,288 –> 00:39:29,580
you look at act one,
627
00:39:33,090 –> 00:39:34,400
scene four,
628
00:39:37,170 –> 00:39:41,600
the biggest thing there is this idea.
629
00:39:42,390 –> 00:39:46,162
And you get it with Lear first,
630
00:39:46,216 –> 00:39:50,530
but then with Glauster later of blindness.
631
00:39:51,590 –> 00:39:55,798
And the fool is trying to point out something because the
632
00:39:55,804 –> 00:39:59,126
fool is the one who can see, the fool is the
633
00:39:59,148 –> 00:40:03,240
one who can observe. The fool is the one who
634
00:40:04,010 –> 00:40:07,782
can well successfully
635
00:40:07,846 –> 00:40:11,980
point out when the king has no
636
00:40:12,750 –> 00:40:13,690
clothes.
637
00:40:15,790 –> 00:40:19,546
The Earl Gloucester loses his eye in act three, scene seven. You may
638
00:40:19,568 –> 00:40:21,386
want to go back and take a look at that. We’re not going to read
639
00:40:21,408 –> 00:40:25,574
the whole play today, as usual. And I always say that the Fogo Shakespeare
640
00:40:25,622 –> 00:40:29,146
Library is a great library version of Shakespeare is a great version to pick
641
00:40:29,168 –> 00:40:32,018
up. And of course, we cannot read the whole play, so we’re dipping in it
642
00:40:32,024 –> 00:40:35,554
out. We’re making our points, but go back and read it. The earl loses his
643
00:40:35,592 –> 00:40:39,138
eye in act three, scene seven, which put me in mind as I
644
00:40:39,144 –> 00:40:42,914
was reading also what the fool was talking about here
645
00:40:42,952 –> 00:40:46,934
and trying to get in Lear to open up both of his eyes.
646
00:40:47,132 –> 00:40:50,790
I was put in mind of the blind Oedipus at Colonus
647
00:40:51,130 –> 00:40:54,118
by Sophocles. And in that play,
648
00:40:54,204 –> 00:40:57,526
one of my personal favorites, part of the triumvirant of
649
00:40:57,548 –> 00:41:01,034
Sophocles plays about Oedipus, the man who killed his own
650
00:41:01,072 –> 00:41:05,126
father and, well, married his own mother and forgot
651
00:41:05,158 –> 00:41:08,214
the riddle of the Sphinx. Oedipus at Colonus,
652
00:41:08,262 –> 00:41:11,514
when he’s blind, he asks the chorus, men of Colonus,
653
00:41:11,562 –> 00:41:15,402
how was I innately evil? Or other translations,
654
00:41:15,466 –> 00:41:18,270
men of Colonus, how was I evil?
655
00:41:20,770 –> 00:41:24,306
Lear, in his interactions with the fool, actually doesn’t understand
656
00:41:24,408 –> 00:41:28,578
how he’s evil. He doesn’t understand how he’s missing it.
657
00:41:28,744 –> 00:41:32,686
He doesn’t see what the fool sees. He’s beginning
658
00:41:32,718 –> 00:41:36,018
the psychological blindness that will eventually wind up in physical
659
00:41:36,114 –> 00:41:38,920
blindness at the end of the play.
660
00:41:40,650 –> 00:41:44,214
There’s also something here about the Western eye that is
661
00:41:44,332 –> 00:41:47,606
very important for us to point out, for me to point out to you and
662
00:41:47,628 –> 00:41:51,542
for us to note as leaders. If you look through Western literature,
663
00:41:51,686 –> 00:41:55,606
the eye is dominant, particularly in Western art forms,
664
00:41:55,638 –> 00:41:59,366
almost all Western art forms going back to Egypt, but really hyper dominant
665
00:41:59,398 –> 00:42:03,518
in Western literature. So it’s not just a blind Oedipus at Colonus or
666
00:42:03,604 –> 00:42:08,010
the all seeing eye in an Egyptian hieroglyphic.
667
00:42:08,090 –> 00:42:11,242
It’s also that the top of Sauron’s tower in Lord of the Rings,
668
00:42:11,306 –> 00:42:14,526
there’s an all seeing eye. And, of course, in the myth
669
00:42:14,558 –> 00:42:18,610
of Osiris, the god is depicted as a disembodied eye.
670
00:42:18,950 –> 00:42:22,882
And, of course, the Western view of art, we always say
671
00:42:23,016 –> 00:42:26,870
that we are affixing a piece of art with our gaze.
672
00:42:28,330 –> 00:42:31,446
There’s something fundamental here in the west. It’s not in
673
00:42:31,468 –> 00:42:35,154
the east. And King Lear Shakespeare is grabbing
674
00:42:35,202 –> 00:42:38,886
onto this, right? He’s grabbing onto
675
00:42:38,918 –> 00:42:43,018
this idea that Cole calculating and
676
00:42:43,184 –> 00:42:46,682
scientific realism represented by a guy
677
00:42:46,736 –> 00:42:49,660
like Edmund, and we’ll talk a little bit about Edmund later on.
678
00:42:52,110 –> 00:42:53,740
It’s not seeing enough.
679
00:42:55,310 –> 00:43:00,362
And that Lear’s ultimate sin might
680
00:43:00,416 –> 00:43:03,714
be that he didn’t recognize that the higher up
681
00:43:03,752 –> 00:43:07,486
you go in a hierarchy, the blinder and more fragile
682
00:43:07,598 –> 00:43:08,500
you become.
683
00:43:11,710 –> 00:43:14,540
A lot of different threads and thoughts in that.
684
00:43:14,910 –> 00:43:18,346
But let me close with this. I got to
685
00:43:18,368 –> 00:43:21,466
admit, and I’m going to go on record about this, and I’ve never gone on
686
00:43:21,488 –> 00:43:24,518
record about this before on the podcast, so this will be a first. I don’t
687
00:43:24,534 –> 00:43:27,034
know why I feel compelled to go on record about this now, but I do.
688
00:43:27,072 –> 00:43:31,262
So I’m going to go with it. It I’m not gigantically
689
00:43:31,326 –> 00:43:33,140
worried about one world government.
690
00:43:35,030 –> 00:43:38,258
Don’t get me wrong. Guys like Klaus Schwab and the
691
00:43:38,264 –> 00:43:41,506
World Economic Forum the people who believe they are the masters
692
00:43:41,538 –> 00:43:46,146
of the universe, the people who are in governmental
693
00:43:46,178 –> 00:43:49,766
bureaucracies behaving with corporations in a fascistic manner all
694
00:43:49,788 –> 00:43:53,606
over the globe manipulating currencies and
695
00:43:53,788 –> 00:43:57,100
doing things in the dark that should not be spoken of in the light.
696
00:43:57,710 –> 00:44:01,466
Don’t get me wrong. Those are folks to pay attention to and
697
00:44:01,568 –> 00:44:04,938
those are things to be worried about. I’m not naive nor am I
698
00:44:04,944 –> 00:44:08,846
stupid to those dangers and they should be battled at every step of the
699
00:44:08,868 –> 00:44:12,910
way. But I don’t think
700
00:44:13,060 –> 00:44:16,814
it’s going to work because the
701
00:44:16,852 –> 00:44:21,134
eye becomes blind the higher up the tower
702
00:44:21,262 –> 00:44:24,978
it goes. How exactly
703
00:44:25,144 –> 00:44:28,820
are you going to control 9 billion people?
704
00:44:30,650 –> 00:44:33,400
Actually I have even more important question than that.
705
00:44:34,250 –> 00:44:40,134
If you can’t even control a nation state of 2 million or
706
00:44:40,172 –> 00:44:44,042
a locality of 50,000 or
707
00:44:44,096 –> 00:44:45,740
a tribe of 500,
708
00:44:47,230 –> 00:44:50,986
when you go to scale the arrogance and hubris that you will
709
00:44:51,008 –> 00:44:55,162
be able to control whether through electronic, economic or
710
00:44:55,216 –> 00:44:58,554
psychological means falls apart. This is why
711
00:44:58,592 –> 00:45:01,278
I’m not worried about one world government and don’t get me wrong I used to
712
00:45:01,284 –> 00:45:05,934
be very worried about it and now not so much because
713
00:45:05,972 –> 00:45:09,410
of the fragility of that all seeing eye.
714
00:45:13,030 –> 00:45:16,866
Anyway, leaders what
715
00:45:16,888 –> 00:45:20,818
can leaders take from this? How do leaders keep their sight Libby? How do
716
00:45:20,824 –> 00:45:25,650
they how do they maintain vision?
717
00:45:26,310 –> 00:45:29,446
And by the way, what’s the role and a sub question what’s the
718
00:45:29,468 –> 00:45:33,750
role of the fool in the court of the CEO
719
00:45:35,230 –> 00:45:39,130
these days? Particularly when we’re all doing de and I and
720
00:45:39,200 –> 00:45:40,940
trying to sanitize everything?
721
00:45:44,030 –> 00:45:47,200
Yeah, these are all really good questions.
722
00:45:49,890 –> 00:45:53,630
I’m inclined to speak to somewhat to
723
00:45:53,780 –> 00:45:59,198
what you went on record about and you
724
00:45:59,204 –> 00:46:02,386
got to know what’s out there and what’s a possibility. But I
725
00:46:02,408 –> 00:46:06,098
do have broader faith in in the people and all
726
00:46:06,184 –> 00:46:10,340
empires fall for the same reasons and it’s because
727
00:46:11,350 –> 00:46:15,234
they believe they’ve become too removed from
728
00:46:15,432 –> 00:46:19,414
the the individuals. They’ve become too removed from
729
00:46:19,612 –> 00:46:21,160
where they came from.
730
00:46:22,810 –> 00:46:28,490
I find that the CEOs who actually walk
731
00:46:28,560 –> 00:46:32,058
the halls and talk to the common man are much more
732
00:46:32,224 –> 00:46:36,078
in tune to are going to build
733
00:46:36,244 –> 00:46:40,014
better enduring companies than
734
00:46:40,052 –> 00:46:42,960
those who come in and believe they know it all.
735
00:46:43,410 –> 00:46:46,494
I have a good example of that. I won’t go into it.
736
00:46:46,532 –> 00:46:49,934
But one company the CEO shortly
737
00:46:49,982 –> 00:46:53,634
did three years after he took office he was
738
00:46:53,672 –> 00:46:57,042
kicked out due to an internal scandal and the other built
739
00:46:57,176 –> 00:47:01,990
a business that grew and grew and grew above market
740
00:47:02,060 –> 00:47:05,154
rates. So never lose
741
00:47:05,282 –> 00:47:08,614
touch with the common man and never forget where you
742
00:47:08,652 –> 00:47:13,006
came from. One of the things that I wrote down when preparing
743
00:47:13,058 –> 00:47:17,302
for this is again those executives
744
00:47:17,366 –> 00:47:20,966
who once they’re in executive positions tell you that title doesn’t
745
00:47:20,998 –> 00:47:24,874
matter. They’re never willing to give
746
00:47:24,912 –> 00:47:26,320
it up right.
747
00:47:28,210 –> 00:47:31,534
And to remember where you came from,
748
00:47:31,652 –> 00:47:34,894
to always challenge your assumptions and
749
00:47:34,932 –> 00:47:38,786
your intentions. It’s really important. What is
750
00:47:38,808 –> 00:47:42,500
my intention in making this decision and making this move?
751
00:47:44,310 –> 00:47:47,780
Am I working for me or am I working for we
752
00:47:49,510 –> 00:47:53,270
and creating that mindset around a servant leadership
753
00:47:54,650 –> 00:47:58,054
where you’re actually helping build conditions for everyone to
754
00:47:58,092 –> 00:48:01,682
thrive versus conditions for me to survive.
755
00:48:01,826 –> 00:48:06,140
Right? But all empires fall
756
00:48:07,710 –> 00:48:10,806
when you don’t have truth tellers at the table.
757
00:48:10,918 –> 00:48:14,634
The fool was the obvious one. But there is one theme that
758
00:48:14,672 –> 00:48:18,800
is really powerful, is that the good hide themselves.
759
00:48:19,730 –> 00:48:23,242
They put on disguises. Kent and Edgar
760
00:48:23,386 –> 00:48:26,974
both disguise themselves in order to try
761
00:48:27,012 –> 00:48:29,150
to save the king from himself,
762
00:48:30,290 –> 00:48:34,194
or Edgar tries to save Glauster from
763
00:48:34,232 –> 00:48:38,642
himself. Both were willing to forgive and
764
00:48:38,696 –> 00:48:42,758
move on. Edgar, his father. In his
765
00:48:42,924 –> 00:48:46,994
final moments, Edgar forgives his father for turning
766
00:48:47,042 –> 00:48:50,760
against him for a lie that he had believed was true.
767
00:48:51,450 –> 00:48:54,778
So good oys prevails even those
768
00:48:54,864 –> 00:48:57,690
who appear to have bad intentions, like Albany,
769
00:48:58,430 –> 00:49:02,950
he ultimately ends up doing the right thing. He checked himself.
770
00:49:03,110 –> 00:49:06,302
So even if you find yourself doing the wrong thing
771
00:49:06,356 –> 00:49:09,882
in a moment, be vigilant
772
00:49:09,946 –> 00:49:13,214
about doing a ruthless inventory of yourself and
773
00:49:13,252 –> 00:49:16,634
catch yourself and change. And that’s what Albany
774
00:49:16,682 –> 00:49:21,054
did well in. Edmunds, a really interesting case
775
00:49:21,092 –> 00:49:25,198
study, too, because I kind of circled
776
00:49:25,214 –> 00:49:28,386
it and I wasn’t quite sure we were going to cover it because it’s not
777
00:49:28,408 –> 00:49:31,458
covered in any of the sections that were multiply minorly touched on in any of
778
00:49:31,464 –> 00:49:35,590
the sections we’re going to read today. But Edmund is a critical character because Edmund
779
00:49:36,730 –> 00:49:41,110
pushes the narrative forward through his actions and through
780
00:49:41,260 –> 00:49:44,886
his deceit. And there’s a great line
781
00:49:45,068 –> 00:49:48,518
we’re going to cover Othello coming up here very soon on the podcast, but there’s
782
00:49:48,534 –> 00:49:51,974
a great line in Play It As It Lays by Joan Didion,
783
00:49:52,102 –> 00:49:57,034
where she says where she writes through
784
00:49:57,072 –> 00:50:00,462
one of her characters voices in that novel. People often
785
00:50:00,516 –> 00:50:03,790
ask, what makes yago evil? I don’t ask anymore.
786
00:50:04,690 –> 00:50:08,346
And that’s a really interesting that’s worthy
787
00:50:08,378 –> 00:50:11,666
of pulling apart in the context of Othello. But in
788
00:50:11,688 –> 00:50:15,266
reading King Lear, people will ask, what makes Ed medieval? And I
789
00:50:15,288 –> 00:50:18,674
don’t ask that, not after looking around in our
790
00:50:18,712 –> 00:50:23,010
time. We don’t talk about illegitimacy
791
00:50:23,170 –> 00:50:26,758
in the kinds of ways that it was framed in King Lear.
792
00:50:26,924 –> 00:50:30,422
And that would read to our modern years as just
793
00:50:30,476 –> 00:50:34,210
being ridiculous and an anachronism. Right. Who cares if he’s a
794
00:50:34,220 –> 00:50:38,122
bastard child? Who cares if he’s illegitimate? But that
795
00:50:38,176 –> 00:50:41,820
actually means something. And this is something fundamental to like,
796
00:50:42,270 –> 00:50:46,010
again, it’s something fundamental to reality, the things that we’re talking about today,
797
00:50:46,080 –> 00:50:49,070
right? Things that are fundamental to human nature.
798
00:50:49,810 –> 00:50:53,870
It’s interesting, this Sunday you talk about going to church this Sunday in my church,
799
00:50:54,370 –> 00:50:58,080
one of the pastors was talking about how we pay it.
800
00:50:58,390 –> 00:51:01,262
God pays attention if you read the Bible carefully.
801
00:51:01,406 –> 00:51:04,994
God pays attention to the
802
00:51:05,032 –> 00:51:09,214
widows and the fatherless, right? And the foreigners, the sojourners,
803
00:51:09,262 –> 00:51:12,878
right. The people that in our modern society,
804
00:51:12,974 –> 00:51:16,390
based on our smartphones and our digital access, we don’t pay attention to.
805
00:51:16,460 –> 00:51:19,526
Right. Or if we do, we try to throw money at the problem and then
806
00:51:19,548 –> 00:51:23,014
run away. Right. And he says that if
807
00:51:23,052 –> 00:51:26,358
we want to behave like Christians, basically this is his point. We need to be
808
00:51:26,364 –> 00:51:29,594
paying attention to things that God pays attention to and ignoring the things that God
809
00:51:29,632 –> 00:51:32,986
ignores. Okay. And by the way, Jesus also in the New
810
00:51:33,008 –> 00:51:36,822
Testament. Throughout the New Testament, right. Helping widows,
811
00:51:36,886 –> 00:51:40,286
helping orphans, helping the fatherless chastising the
812
00:51:40,308 –> 00:51:44,590
rich, particularly the rich young ruler. The story of the rich young ruler who
813
00:51:44,660 –> 00:51:47,866
couldn’t give away everything and follow him. Talk about the CEO
814
00:51:47,898 –> 00:51:49,620
who couldn’t give up his title. Right.
815
00:51:51,590 –> 00:51:54,882
There’s a thread through Western thought here, right.
816
00:51:55,016 –> 00:51:58,402
And it runs through Edmund as well. And it’s this
817
00:51:58,456 –> 00:52:02,066
idea that if you don’t pay attention,
818
00:52:02,178 –> 00:52:06,022
this is part of that blindness to the fatherless in
819
00:52:06,076 –> 00:52:09,734
particular, you are
820
00:52:09,772 –> 00:52:12,920
sowing the seeds of your own destruction. Yeah,
821
00:52:13,690 –> 00:52:17,578
I actually kind of see this a different way and
822
00:52:17,664 –> 00:52:21,514
can make it a modern analogy. Going back
823
00:52:21,552 –> 00:52:24,714
to what Oprah said about the fact that we all want to be seen.
824
00:52:24,912 –> 00:52:28,714
Yeah. Edmund wasn’t seen.
825
00:52:28,832 –> 00:52:32,666
Now, he wasn’t seen during that time by his father because he was illegitimate,
826
00:52:32,778 –> 00:52:36,586
but it could have been he was the youngest child, and his father just didn’t
827
00:52:36,618 –> 00:52:40,350
spend time with him either. Right. And because he wasn’t
828
00:52:40,430 –> 00:52:44,610
seen, he had two choices to make. One was
829
00:52:44,680 –> 00:52:48,498
to seek revenge on that who did not see him,
830
00:52:48,664 –> 00:52:52,420
and the other was to go and live a fruitful life
831
00:52:53,030 –> 00:52:57,062
and create opportunities for himself. The same
832
00:52:57,116 –> 00:53:00,630
is, like, gone. Auroral versus Cordelia.
833
00:53:01,290 –> 00:53:04,406
Gonerrell has a choice to either.
834
00:53:04,588 –> 00:53:07,754
She decides to act out of fear and she
835
00:53:07,792 –> 00:53:11,894
says this to her husband, is, I would rather be wrong acting
836
00:53:11,942 –> 00:53:15,260
out of fear than to be wrong acting out of trust.
837
00:53:15,890 –> 00:53:19,262
So she chose to turn against
838
00:53:19,316 –> 00:53:22,574
her father because she anticipated how he would
839
00:53:22,612 –> 00:53:26,558
behave, whereas Cordelia chose to do the right thing
840
00:53:26,724 –> 00:53:30,114
for her and lived to her true values and lived a
841
00:53:30,152 –> 00:53:34,430
good life. She wasn’t
842
00:53:34,510 –> 00:53:38,290
seen, and she chose a good path,
843
00:53:39,590 –> 00:53:42,962
and Edmund wasn’t seen, and he chose
844
00:53:43,106 –> 00:53:44,870
a vengeful path.
845
00:53:47,130 –> 00:53:50,914
Ultimately, it’s about recognizing
846
00:53:50,962 –> 00:53:54,742
human nature, and everyone has two choice points.
847
00:53:54,876 –> 00:53:58,586
You can play a victim and seek revenge, or you
848
00:53:58,608 –> 00:54:01,706
can say, I own my destiny and I’m going to create
849
00:54:01,808 –> 00:54:05,066
a life for myself. Okay. So I’m going to push back a little
850
00:54:05,088 –> 00:54:08,014
bit on that from the opposite end. A little bit. Okay.
851
00:54:08,052 –> 00:54:11,214
Yeah, great. I don’t want to be a
852
00:54:11,252 –> 00:54:15,520
sucker. Well, if I’m 20
853
00:54:16,210 –> 00:54:25,314
and I’ve grown up in this world and I
854
00:54:25,352 –> 00:54:29,266
share the same things as youth from other times, it’s not any different.
855
00:54:29,448 –> 00:54:32,680
I distrust my elders. I can fix everything.
856
00:54:33,210 –> 00:54:35,880
I can’t even make my own bed, but I can fix the world.
857
00:54:39,210 –> 00:54:42,280
I can get riled up about the injustices of the world.
858
00:54:44,170 –> 00:54:47,942
Whatever the activist du jour ideology of the moment is,
859
00:54:47,996 –> 00:54:51,386
I can go and run to that because that’s the great adventure, right?
860
00:54:51,408 –> 00:54:53,706
Because I want to have a great adventure because I’m 20. I want to have
861
00:54:53,728 –> 00:54:57,546
a great adventure. Right. Everybody at 20 wants to have a great adventure. You’re no
862
00:54:57,568 –> 00:55:00,078
different than any other 20 year old, but okay, you think you are because you
863
00:55:00,084 –> 00:55:02,766
have a mobile phone. Cool. All right. So you’re going to go off and have
864
00:55:02,788 –> 00:55:06,334
your great adventure. But in the process of having that great
865
00:55:06,372 –> 00:55:09,886
adventure, I’m also because I’ve been exposed to all of this
866
00:55:09,908 –> 00:55:13,270
stuff, I have a deep well of cynicism, a deep
867
00:55:13,290 –> 00:55:16,286
well of cynicism inside of me. And so I don’t want to be a sucker.
868
00:55:16,398 –> 00:55:19,394
So there’s this tension, right. I don’t want to be taken advantage of.
869
00:55:19,432 –> 00:55:23,560
Right. And you talked about it’s interesting. You talked about how in the past
870
00:55:24,890 –> 00:55:28,422
you got rapid, real feedback, right? Because the gaps between
871
00:55:28,476 –> 00:55:31,794
distance, perception and reality were closed, were tighter.
872
00:55:31,842 –> 00:55:35,334
Maybe now the distance between perception and reality
873
00:55:35,382 –> 00:55:38,934
is more broad. Right. And the feedback
874
00:55:38,982 –> 00:55:42,294
is not rapid, and it’s very much not bona fide,
875
00:55:42,342 –> 00:55:46,010
as they would say down here where I live, bona fide.
876
00:55:48,030 –> 00:55:51,902
It ain’t the real thing. And so now I’m operating in this well of
877
00:55:51,956 –> 00:55:55,626
just nonsense, right? And I’m 20, and fundamentally,
878
00:55:55,658 –> 00:55:58,158
at the end of the day, I want to have hope. I want to have
879
00:55:58,164 –> 00:56:00,770
a great adventure, and I don’t want to be a sucker.
880
00:56:01,990 –> 00:56:06,386
Well, so this is where not
881
00:56:06,408 –> 00:56:09,426
gone. Real, but cordelia doesn’t read well to me.
882
00:56:09,608 –> 00:56:11,858
I’m either going to be gone real or I’m going to be Edmund. I’m going
883
00:56:11,864 –> 00:56:15,254
to pick one of those two. That’s really interesting.
884
00:56:15,372 –> 00:56:17,894
I would be cordelia. Okay.
885
00:56:18,012 –> 00:56:21,366
Right. And I just know that about who I am because I have to live
886
00:56:21,388 –> 00:56:24,566
with myself. Right? Well, and that idea of living with
887
00:56:24,588 –> 00:56:28,150
yourself so you have to be willing. To walk away,
888
00:56:28,300 –> 00:56:32,362
right? Right. I wonder if it’s easier to be Cordelia when
889
00:56:32,416 –> 00:56:36,060
you’re 40 than it is to be Cordelia when you’re 20.
890
00:56:36,450 –> 00:56:37,520
I don’t know.
891
00:56:41,090 –> 00:56:45,182
I have an analogy that I use from third
892
00:56:45,236 –> 00:56:48,726
grade. I’m friends with everyone, and I belong
893
00:56:48,778 –> 00:56:52,530
to nothing. I actually really love learning
894
00:56:52,600 –> 00:56:55,698
from all types of people. I belong to all different types of group, but I
895
00:56:55,704 –> 00:56:59,220
don’t identify myself as a group. Sure.
896
00:56:59,670 –> 00:57:02,982
And one of the reasons I remember when I was in third
897
00:57:03,036 –> 00:57:06,600
grade and I was part of the cool
898
00:57:07,210 –> 00:57:10,994
club, friends with one of the Broncos
899
00:57:11,042 –> 00:57:14,506
kids, and we were really cool,
900
00:57:14,608 –> 00:57:19,146
and everyone wanted to hang out with us. And I
901
00:57:19,248 –> 00:57:22,666
bullied my best friend from two years old
902
00:57:22,848 –> 00:57:26,430
because she wasn’t cool enough. And I still feel
903
00:57:26,500 –> 00:57:30,494
that ick in my body. And I
904
00:57:30,532 –> 00:57:34,958
knew at that moment that belonging was never important
905
00:57:35,044 –> 00:57:37,760
enough to holding true to who I am.
906
00:57:42,310 –> 00:57:44,420
The ins don’t justify the means.
907
00:57:46,550 –> 00:57:50,260
And so this concept around you need to live with yourself
908
00:57:51,670 –> 00:57:55,622
is really important. It doesn’t mean that I othered the cool kids,
909
00:57:55,676 –> 00:57:59,126
I was still friends with them, but I
910
00:57:59,148 –> 00:58:03,030
would not bully, I would not subscribe to all of their behaviors.
911
00:58:03,710 –> 00:58:07,546
But you also see what you want
912
00:58:07,728 –> 00:58:11,802
to see. So if you only believe that
913
00:58:11,856 –> 00:58:16,426
there’s one path, like anger and activism,
914
00:58:16,618 –> 00:58:20,094
or there are role models everywhere that
915
00:58:20,132 –> 00:58:24,000
disprove a belief system that you have,
916
00:58:28,790 –> 00:58:31,938
it requires flexibility and a willingness to go against
917
00:58:32,024 –> 00:58:34,500
the grain and not by.
918
00:58:35,830 –> 00:58:39,438
There’s such an innate human instinct
919
00:58:39,534 –> 00:58:42,130
for us to label ourselves.
920
00:58:42,810 –> 00:58:46,214
Because if we label ourselves, we provide ourselves with
921
00:58:46,252 –> 00:58:49,510
certainty around who we are and how we should act. And then
922
00:58:49,580 –> 00:58:52,774
others are certain with how they will
923
00:58:52,812 –> 00:58:57,226
respond to us and react. And one
924
00:58:57,248 –> 00:59:00,554
of the things with age that is terrific is that you start
925
00:59:00,592 –> 00:59:05,114
to see that there is really no one path to
926
00:59:05,152 –> 00:59:08,926
happiness. And when you start trying on different hats, like one thing may fit the
927
00:59:08,948 –> 00:59:13,162
other, doesn’t king willing to flex
928
00:59:13,306 –> 00:59:17,440
and never being certain that only one path is right.
929
00:59:18,130 –> 00:59:21,242
And that’s one of the challenges that I see in youth,
930
00:59:21,386 –> 00:59:24,338
is that they need like, I need to go to this school because it’s going
931
00:59:24,344 –> 00:59:27,634
to give me the path to this. It’s going to be the path to
932
00:59:27,672 –> 00:59:31,234
happiness, or this job is going to be the path to happiness. But when
933
00:59:31,272 –> 00:59:35,206
you look at the people who have been successful, some people who
934
00:59:35,228 –> 00:59:38,694
are happy and successful did take one path, but there is
935
00:59:38,732 –> 00:59:42,310
an exception to every rule. Oh, yeah. And so being
936
00:59:42,380 –> 00:59:45,866
flexible, I always say I’m not someone who’s going to find a wall
937
00:59:45,968 –> 00:59:49,622
and stop. I’m going to find a crack,
938
00:59:49,686 –> 00:59:53,322
I’m going to find a crack, I’m going to dig under it, jump over it,
939
00:59:53,376 –> 00:59:57,214
find another way. But knowing who you are
940
00:59:57,252 –> 01:00:00,622
and what matters to you has
941
01:00:00,676 –> 01:00:04,346
got to be that inner
942
01:00:04,378 –> 01:00:05,680
pool and drive.
943
01:00:07,890 –> 01:00:11,840
And understanding tribal instincts is really
944
01:00:12,210 –> 01:00:12,960
important.
945
01:00:16,710 –> 01:00:20,354
Like the Stanford Prison Experiment. It’s really important
946
01:00:20,472 –> 01:00:24,566
to say, if I were alone and
947
01:00:24,588 –> 01:00:28,006
not seeking to belong, how would I act? And as part
948
01:00:28,028 –> 01:00:31,714
of the tribe, how am I acting? Well, and this is the challenge.
949
01:00:31,762 –> 01:00:35,774
So we read Gulag Archipelago on the podcast
950
01:00:35,842 –> 01:00:39,686
last year, and we’re going to revisit Gulag Archipelago
951
01:00:39,718 –> 01:00:43,386
not this year, but next year. We’ll revisit that because there’s some other
952
01:00:43,408 –> 01:00:47,226
things that we need to pull from that text that
953
01:00:47,248 –> 01:00:51,070
are critical for our time. We’re also going to be reading
954
01:00:51,570 –> 01:00:55,146
a couple of other heavy books this year. So we’re reading Eli Weisel’s
955
01:00:55,178 –> 01:00:58,606
Knight, and we’re also going to be reading The Power of the Powerless by
956
01:00:58,628 –> 01:01:01,874
Voklov Hovel. And again,
957
01:01:01,912 –> 01:01:06,094
there’s a thread that goes through all three of those, right? From Gulag Archipelago
958
01:01:06,142 –> 01:01:10,542
through Eli Weisel, through Voklov Hovel and even Victor Frankel
959
01:01:10,686 –> 01:01:14,486
man’s search for meaning. Right? There’s some ideas. There’s an idea that goes
960
01:01:14,508 –> 01:01:16,280
through this, and the idea is that,
961
01:01:19,850 –> 01:01:20,600
um,
962
01:01:23,770 –> 01:01:27,740
you can be the worst tyrant you could be as a tyrant to yourself.
963
01:01:28,670 –> 01:01:32,490
But you don’t know that when you’re 20, right? That’s right.
964
01:01:32,640 –> 01:01:35,420
You have no clue about that when you’re 20.
965
01:01:37,010 –> 01:01:41,262
And when you lock yourself up into
966
01:01:41,316 –> 01:01:44,202
a tyranny that is totalizing,
967
01:01:44,266 –> 01:01:46,750
thus it is a totalitarian tyranny.
968
01:01:47,250 –> 01:01:50,898
Whether that is a totalitarian tyranny pursuing a job
969
01:01:50,984 –> 01:01:55,614
or a life that you think other people will appreciate
970
01:01:55,662 –> 01:01:59,026
and will give you status, or whether it’s pursuing some form
971
01:01:59,048 –> 01:02:02,754
of activism to change society even though your
972
01:02:02,792 –> 01:02:06,126
own household might be a mess. Exactly.
973
01:02:06,248 –> 01:02:10,166
Whatever the totalizing tyrannical thing is that
974
01:02:10,188 –> 01:02:12,120
you are in the grasp of,
975
01:02:14,350 –> 01:02:17,530
you’re going to wind up metaphorically
976
01:02:18,830 –> 01:02:22,806
behind barbed wire, you’re going to wind up behind barbed
977
01:02:22,838 –> 01:02:25,420
wire, you’re going to wind up in a problem.
978
01:02:26,350 –> 01:02:29,534
And I think what
979
01:02:29,572 –> 01:02:33,402
troubles me deeply is I think leaders are missing
980
01:02:33,466 –> 01:02:36,926
and have been missing for a while, although maybe they’re starting to
981
01:02:36,948 –> 01:02:40,686
wake up. But I think leaders have been missing the opportunity to
982
01:02:40,788 –> 01:02:44,650
state this as baldly as possible at the lowest possible
983
01:02:44,740 –> 01:02:48,254
level. So I think about the kinds of people listen to our podcast
984
01:02:48,302 –> 01:02:50,226
and the kinds of people listen to our podcast tend to be, and I said
985
01:02:50,248 –> 01:02:52,974
this before when we were doing Road to serve them, they tend to be community
986
01:02:53,032 –> 01:02:56,198
leaders, right? They tend to be people who are local to the community,
987
01:02:56,364 –> 01:02:59,910
local to where I live, a little bit more national, too, a little bit
988
01:02:59,980 –> 01:03:02,840
more national focus, business,
989
01:03:03,290 –> 01:03:06,540
government, religion, those kinds of areas, right?
990
01:03:06,990 –> 01:03:10,506
People who are thinking deeply about these connections, right, in a wide variety of
991
01:03:10,528 –> 01:03:13,706
different spaces, and the greatest possible spot they
992
01:03:13,728 –> 01:03:17,214
have to influence people is directly where
993
01:03:17,252 –> 01:03:18,320
they are at.
994
01:03:23,250 –> 01:03:26,320
And yet there can be totalitarianism there.
995
01:03:26,850 –> 01:03:30,114
There can be a totalizing idea there that, by the way, they may
996
01:03:30,152 –> 01:03:33,666
think is good, but it
997
01:03:33,688 –> 01:03:37,426
can capture them and it can ideologically possess them the same way that
998
01:03:37,448 –> 01:03:39,940
Edmund was ideologically possessed. Right?
999
01:03:41,750 –> 01:03:44,850
That’s one point. Then my other thought there
1000
01:03:44,920 –> 01:03:47,654
is, and by the way, when I was a kid, I would have been more
1001
01:03:47,692 –> 01:03:51,222
like Cordelia, except, like, I probably would have would have
1002
01:03:51,276 –> 01:03:54,486
taken gone real and King out back and we were going to fix this problem
1003
01:03:54,668 –> 01:03:57,290
tomorrow. That’s how that problem is going to get fixed,
1004
01:03:58,990 –> 01:04:01,818
old fashioned, fix this problem, because I don’t want to hear the taste of my
1005
01:04:01,824 –> 01:04:05,226
name falling out your mouth, because that’s how
1006
01:04:05,248 –> 01:04:10,746
I solved problems. I was a kid and
1007
01:04:10,768 –> 01:04:14,138
I was always the person who, like, if I saw somebody being bullied,
1008
01:04:14,314 –> 01:04:17,578
I’m going to step into that situation, even if it’s not, quote,
1009
01:04:17,594 –> 01:04:21,246
unquote, my business, right. Because I can’t abide by
1010
01:04:21,268 –> 01:04:24,258
that. Even if it means, and many times it did when I was a kid,
1011
01:04:24,344 –> 01:04:28,350
even if it means me taking a beating, that’s fine, I can take a beating,
1012
01:04:28,430 –> 01:04:29,380
that’s fine.
1013
01:04:31,350 –> 01:04:35,778
But I was raised sort of with that moral assertiveness.
1014
01:04:35,874 –> 01:04:39,574
I also was born with the ability to be kind of
1015
01:04:39,612 –> 01:04:42,274
sort of a little bit, as you can tell from the podcast.
1016
01:04:42,322 –> 01:04:46,490
Disagreeable. So it’s okay, right? I’m okay with not being liked.
1017
01:04:47,310 –> 01:04:50,538
In the world that we that’s important.
1018
01:04:50,624 –> 01:04:53,702
You need to be okay not being liked.
1019
01:04:53,846 –> 01:04:57,722
Right. And in the world we live in today, that’s the other dynamic,
1020
01:04:57,786 –> 01:05:01,422
right? Where in order to
1021
01:05:01,476 –> 01:05:04,746
tell the truth the way Cordelia does to her father,
1022
01:05:04,938 –> 01:05:08,562
you have to be okay with the consequence of that.
1023
01:05:08,696 –> 01:05:12,466
Right. And I want leaders to
1024
01:05:12,488 –> 01:05:15,806
be okay with consequences, because the leaders
1025
01:05:15,838 –> 01:05:19,970
that are most okay with the consequences get to be the adults in the room.
1026
01:05:20,120 –> 01:05:23,430
And I worry we don’t have enough adults in enough rooms.
1027
01:05:24,090 –> 01:05:25,880
Agree. What’s really interesting,
1028
01:05:28,330 –> 01:05:32,406
I also believe that it’s in
1029
01:05:32,428 –> 01:05:35,798
everyone’s best interest to speak the truth. Right. And I tend
1030
01:05:35,814 –> 01:05:38,918
to use a fact based truth and not a feels based truth.
1031
01:05:39,014 –> 01:05:42,374
Yeah. And there are leaders
1032
01:05:42,502 –> 01:05:46,330
as you’re climbing the ladder, there are leaders who are going to appreciate that,
1033
01:05:46,480 –> 01:05:49,822
and therefore, you will continue to work together because
1034
01:05:49,956 –> 01:05:53,338
you’re only trying to get at the truth or the best solution.
1035
01:05:53,514 –> 01:05:57,470
And then there are going to be leaders who are threatened
1036
01:05:58,050 –> 01:06:01,802
by the truth. And your willingness,
1037
01:06:01,866 –> 01:06:05,666
like, I’m a change agent. I turn around businesses and
1038
01:06:05,688 –> 01:06:09,390
I transform them. I’m going to be telling you uncomfortable
1039
01:06:09,470 –> 01:06:14,102
truth. And if
1040
01:06:14,156 –> 01:06:17,640
your leader believes that it’s a reflection on them
1041
01:06:19,210 –> 01:06:23,090
and their self worth, then they’ll be threatened by it and you will be
1042
01:06:23,260 –> 01:06:27,846
pushed out, either implicitly
1043
01:06:27,878 –> 01:06:32,166
or explicitly. But what I love about Cordelia
1044
01:06:32,278 –> 01:06:35,854
is that she was pushed out and
1045
01:06:35,892 –> 01:06:40,174
it also revealed the
1046
01:06:40,212 –> 01:06:45,086
other truth seekers and good people for
1047
01:06:45,108 –> 01:06:48,690
the more material ones. So Burgundy showed his true
1048
01:06:48,760 –> 01:06:52,146
cards. She only got to see his
1049
01:06:52,168 –> 01:06:55,250
true cards because she was able to speak her truth.
1050
01:06:57,030 –> 01:07:00,530
And France showed his, and he loved her for her,
1051
01:07:00,680 –> 01:07:04,150
not for the material goods. So she’s going to
1052
01:07:04,300 –> 01:07:07,654
then therefore live a life more aligned with
1053
01:07:07,692 –> 01:07:11,970
her values because she’s going to attract
1054
01:07:12,130 –> 01:07:15,110
those who are like her and reveal those who aren’t.
1055
01:07:16,330 –> 01:07:19,754
Yeah. Well, this is good
1056
01:07:19,792 –> 01:07:22,234
because we’re going to turn the core. We’re going to talk a little bit about
1057
01:07:22,272 –> 01:07:25,618
Cordelia. Yeah, we’re going to talk a little about Cordelia.
1058
01:07:25,654 –> 01:07:29,600
So we’re going to read a little bit from act one, scene one,
1059
01:07:32,530 –> 01:07:37,022
right after the land gets
1060
01:07:37,076 –> 01:07:41,002
cut up like a Thanksgiving turkey
1061
01:07:41,146 –> 01:07:44,674
and all of the turkeys leave the room,
1062
01:07:44,792 –> 01:07:48,114
by the way, we didn’t want to pause for just one moment. I do
1063
01:07:48,152 –> 01:07:51,478
want to kind of circle back around and close the loop on this other idea.
1064
01:07:51,644 –> 01:07:54,806
So how
1065
01:07:54,828 –> 01:07:57,750
do we get more of the fool back into the corporate boardroom?
1066
01:07:58,490 –> 01:08:01,974
How do we get the fool into the meeting? Because we
1067
01:08:02,012 –> 01:08:05,814
need those people. And again, I do genuinely worry
1068
01:08:05,862 –> 01:08:09,930
that in our pursuit of the good of everyone feeling comfortable,
1069
01:08:10,750 –> 01:08:14,106
everyone being agreeable, perhaps maybe not
1070
01:08:14,128 –> 01:08:18,510
comfortable with disagreeable. In the pursuit of having agreeable rooms,
1071
01:08:18,850 –> 01:08:22,638
we’re not allowing the fool the space. To work.
1072
01:08:22,804 –> 01:08:26,106
And by the way, I don’t mean the fool should be offensive or the fool
1073
01:08:26,138 –> 01:08:29,758
should be clearly like, whatever, right.
1074
01:08:29,844 –> 01:08:33,620
But sometimes I don’t know.
1075
01:08:35,670 –> 01:08:39,266
You need to create the conditions. Like Ran Dalio in the way that he
1076
01:08:39,288 –> 01:08:42,806
leads his companies. You always have the
1077
01:08:42,828 –> 01:08:46,086
devil’s advocate. You always have a pro versus a
1078
01:08:46,108 –> 01:08:50,530
con debate. It has to be rewarded.
1079
01:08:50,690 –> 01:08:54,422
And people observe what rewarding
1080
01:08:54,486 –> 01:08:58,282
looks like. So you have to invite it
1081
01:08:58,336 –> 01:09:04,154
to the table and reward it. And for
1082
01:09:04,192 –> 01:09:08,000
many leaders, you may actually need to go out and build that company.
1083
01:09:09,490 –> 01:09:12,800
Because right now, what we’re seeing is
1084
01:09:13,170 –> 01:09:16,650
when everyone’s compromising, you have a rapid
1085
01:09:16,810 –> 01:09:20,606
deceleration towards mediocrity. Same story with Anne
1086
01:09:20,638 –> 01:09:24,882
Ran, right? When all you want to do is be
1087
01:09:24,936 –> 01:09:28,034
liked and have everyone agree with you,
1088
01:09:28,152 –> 01:09:32,630
society is destroyed because all of our standards erode
1089
01:09:33,210 –> 01:09:36,582
in the name of being liked and not based
1090
01:09:36,636 –> 01:09:39,826
on competence or outcome. Well, and it’s weird
1091
01:09:39,858 –> 01:09:42,926
to me how, like, you would have people who would be identified
1092
01:09:43,058 –> 01:09:46,726
in the past as iconoclasts in a wide variety
1093
01:09:46,758 –> 01:09:50,010
of different spheres, who are now part of the establishment.
1094
01:09:50,670 –> 01:09:54,362
And people who would never have been allowed into
1095
01:09:54,416 –> 01:09:56,240
the establishment, ever,
1096
01:09:57,730 –> 01:10:01,120
are seen as being the absolute,
1097
01:10:02,850 –> 01:10:07,386
just satanic living end by dominant
1098
01:10:07,418 –> 01:10:10,318
power structures. And I don’t even have to say names.
1099
01:10:10,414 –> 01:10:14,386
People could figure it out. Right. This is
1100
01:10:14,408 –> 01:10:17,700
the cultural dynamic of the west that we are in now.
1101
01:10:18,870 –> 01:10:23,330
And the challenge, of course, with that is true iconoclasts
1102
01:10:24,230 –> 01:10:27,782
who may start off at the lowest end being fools and work their way up,
1103
01:10:27,836 –> 01:10:31,318
which is, again, I mentioned Dave Chappelle. I mean, I think he started off
1104
01:10:31,404 –> 01:10:34,646
well. No, I think I know. I’ve been watching that guy’s career for
1105
01:10:34,668 –> 01:10:38,006
25 years. Like, he started off as the fool on the street
1106
01:10:38,038 –> 01:10:42,170
corner and now I would call him a genuine iconoclast.
1107
01:10:42,830 –> 01:10:46,438
It’s because he and Chris Rock don’t need to be liked.
1108
01:10:46,534 –> 01:10:50,234
Right, right, exactly right. But Chappelle
1109
01:10:50,282 –> 01:10:53,470
walked away from the foolery
1110
01:10:53,890 –> 01:10:57,086
of the corporate world because they
1111
01:10:57,108 –> 01:11:00,170
were asking him to be something other than he was. Correct.
1112
01:11:00,340 –> 01:11:04,206
That’s why he still has the fool.
1113
01:11:04,398 –> 01:11:07,902
Well, he’s got the cachet. Stern. Right. Where has Howard
1114
01:11:07,966 –> 01:11:11,746
Stern he’s now fallen in love so much with being
1115
01:11:11,848 –> 01:11:15,330
revered that he can no longer see the truth.
1116
01:11:15,410 –> 01:11:18,966
Oh, my God. Howard Stern. Yeah. I mean, he’s just a really great example.
1117
01:11:19,068 –> 01:11:22,886
No, that is a great example. Yeah. No, that’s fabulous. Well, okay.
1118
01:11:23,068 –> 01:11:26,422
Or Neil Young. Or Neil Young. Yeah, there’s another one.
1119
01:11:26,556 –> 01:11:30,198
There’s another one. When you talk about and I’m
1120
01:11:30,214 –> 01:11:33,466
fascinated by radio and guys who do interviews. Let me
1121
01:11:33,488 –> 01:11:36,174
look what I’m doing now. But, I mean, I’m fascinated by all of that.
1122
01:11:36,212 –> 01:11:40,654
And the two probably well,
1123
01:11:40,692 –> 01:11:45,098
I wonder if this is fundamental to generations, too, because the baby boomer generation
1124
01:11:45,194 –> 01:11:49,200
in general really liked beating each other
1125
01:11:50,130 –> 01:11:53,986
at the game, whatever the game happened to be. So you have Howard Stern and
1126
01:11:54,008 –> 01:11:56,926
then on the opposite side of that. You have Rush Limbaugh, and they both liked
1127
01:11:56,958 –> 01:12:00,580
beating each other, beating their heads. They did.
1128
01:12:01,590 –> 01:12:04,726
I don’t know if it’s a Japanese or Chinese proverb, but when the elephants fight,
1129
01:12:04,748 –> 01:12:08,182
the ground gets trampled. And there was a lot of that debate over
1130
01:12:08,236 –> 01:12:11,730
generation, a lot of the elephants fighting. You go a couple of generations
1131
01:12:11,810 –> 01:12:15,286
down, though, where now we’ve got this idea of agreeableness being the
1132
01:12:15,308 –> 01:12:18,639
highest virtue, and you talk about it if you framed it
1133
01:12:19,139 –> 01:12:22,966
in terms of mediocrity, that’s one one framing, and I would not disagree
1134
01:12:22,998 –> 01:12:27,678
with that framing. A larger framing may be and
1135
01:12:27,764 –> 01:12:31,210
buddies of mine have this discussion about sports,
1136
01:12:31,290 –> 01:12:34,906
right? Because the whole LeBron James versus Michael Jordan thing continues
1137
01:12:34,938 –> 01:12:38,286
to rage basketball. I am personally of
1138
01:12:38,308 –> 01:12:41,774
the belief that we will never see a Tom Brady level quarterback of the NFL
1139
01:12:41,822 –> 01:12:45,122
ever again. Like we just won’t. Because that guy was fine
1140
01:12:45,176 –> 01:12:48,834
if you didn’t like him, he just wanted to cut your throat out
1141
01:12:48,952 –> 01:12:52,226
to win. That was it. Didn’t care. Oh, you don’t like
1142
01:12:52,248 –> 01:12:54,470
me. Cool. Same thing with Michael Jordan.
1143
01:12:56,090 –> 01:12:58,774
If you could see behind my camera, I’m a Jordan guy,
1144
01:12:58,812 –> 01:13:02,310
right? He came not just to kill you, but to cut your heart out,
1145
01:13:02,380 –> 01:13:05,886
and he didn’t care if you liked him. LeBron James cares
1146
01:13:05,938 –> 01:13:09,514
very much about who likes him on Twitter, and I don’t understand
1147
01:13:09,632 –> 01:13:13,386
that. To me, that doesn’t click over. And so as we’ve gone into this
1148
01:13:13,408 –> 01:13:17,482
level of agreeableness, competitiveness ambition, these things wind
1149
01:13:17,536 –> 01:13:20,806
up conforming to these spaces.
1150
01:13:20,918 –> 01:13:24,266
And this is where then you get speaking of radio, to flip back to radio
1151
01:13:24,298 –> 01:13:27,354
for just a second, you get all the people who would not have been allowed
1152
01:13:27,402 –> 01:13:30,990
through the narrow keyhole of radio are now running podcasts
1153
01:13:32,130 –> 01:13:34,946
because Joe Rogan they weren’t going to let Joe Rogan on the radio. They never
1154
01:13:34,968 –> 01:13:39,010
let that guy radio never let that guy on. So just a minor observation there.
1155
01:13:39,080 –> 01:13:43,186
It’s all about what you’re striving for. And Michael
1156
01:13:43,218 –> 01:13:46,630
Jordan was striving for their team to be the best
1157
01:13:46,700 –> 01:13:49,894
team on the merits, right?
1158
01:13:50,012 –> 01:13:53,654
And by challenging and setting the pace and the
1159
01:13:53,692 –> 01:13:56,602
tone for his team, everyone else stepped up,
1160
01:13:56,736 –> 01:14:00,554
right? I say this a lot. I’d rather be
1161
01:14:00,592 –> 01:14:03,946
respected than liked. I don’t really care if you like me. I want you
1162
01:14:03,968 –> 01:14:07,306
to respect me. Right? And too
1163
01:14:07,328 –> 01:14:10,846
many people care about being liked. And there’s lots of fine people that I
1164
01:14:10,868 –> 01:14:14,480
like, but I don’t respect the way that they make decisions, right?
1165
01:14:15,410 –> 01:14:19,010
I don’t respect how they’re living their lives and how they treat themselves
1166
01:14:19,080 –> 01:14:22,562
and others. But there can be lots of reasons for why I like someone.
1167
01:14:22,616 –> 01:14:26,500
And respect is a very different something very different,
1168
01:14:27,190 –> 01:14:31,586
yeah. Well, respect lands
1169
01:14:31,618 –> 01:14:36,166
in that place of I
1170
01:14:36,188 –> 01:14:39,846
think we see this a little bit in King Lear, but it winds up
1171
01:14:40,028 –> 01:14:44,402
it’s that combination of merit driven by competency,
1172
01:14:44,546 –> 01:14:48,890
right? And I think we’re missing something on competency, but it’s merit.
1173
01:14:49,230 –> 01:14:52,890
We don’t measure competency anymore. We’re actually saying we don’t
1174
01:14:52,960 –> 01:14:55,882
want to measure competency because people will feel bad.
1175
01:14:56,016 –> 01:14:59,866
Well, we don’t even know how to define it, I don’t think. Exactly. Which is
1176
01:14:59,888 –> 01:15:02,814
weird to me. Like, how do you not know? Okay, you don’t know. Okay,
1177
01:15:02,852 –> 01:15:06,142
fine. But if you don’t you you can’t get to respect without
1178
01:15:06,196 –> 01:15:09,982
merit and competency and then you can’t get to merit and competency without
1179
01:15:10,036 –> 01:15:13,902
a baseline understanding of what the parameters of a goal
1180
01:15:13,966 –> 01:15:17,486
are. So we’re missing both the top of and this is a cultural
1181
01:15:17,518 –> 01:15:20,594
critique, but we’re missing the top of the hierarchy in some
1182
01:15:20,632 –> 01:15:24,478
ways, and we’re also missing the bottom of the hierarchy while the
1183
01:15:24,504 –> 01:15:27,906
middle gets hollowed out, which means, and I’ve
1184
01:15:27,938 –> 01:15:31,078
been saying this for a while now on the podcast. The west is approaching a
1185
01:15:31,084 –> 01:15:34,214
Tower of Babel or Tower of Babel moment.
1186
01:15:34,412 –> 01:15:38,150
And the tower can’t stay up.
1187
01:15:38,300 –> 01:15:42,390
Everything’s driven everything’s driven by politics and emotion,
1188
01:15:42,470 –> 01:15:45,866
which means everything is unpredictable. When you’re managed by the rule
1189
01:15:45,898 –> 01:15:49,646
of law versus the human nature, there are
1190
01:15:49,668 –> 01:15:53,402
at least guardrails that make it predictable
1191
01:15:53,466 –> 01:15:58,638
around how you win and lose. Like in business in about 2008,
1192
01:15:58,804 –> 01:16:02,030
people, they stopped doing performance reviews or goals.
1193
01:16:03,410 –> 01:16:06,446
Well, if you and now it’s
1194
01:16:06,478 –> 01:16:11,154
hard to find like, a job description that’s meaningful or understanding
1195
01:16:11,202 –> 01:16:14,838
how you measure success in a specific role. Well, what happens
1196
01:16:14,924 –> 01:16:18,662
when it isn’t clear how success is
1197
01:16:18,716 –> 01:16:22,790
defined? You become more political and cutthroat.
1198
01:16:23,450 –> 01:16:26,862
And that’s where the Tower of Babel happens, is politics
1199
01:16:26,946 –> 01:16:30,086
will always take over when you don’t have clarity of objectives,
1200
01:16:30,198 –> 01:16:34,154
when you don’t have clarity of outcomes and clarity of roles. And then, of course,
1201
01:16:34,192 –> 01:16:38,074
you get rule by the worst because you get people who are experts at politics.
1202
01:16:38,122 –> 01:16:41,520
Exactly. Everyone else drops out, moves out,
1203
01:16:41,890 –> 01:16:46,906
because does something different, which is fascinating.
1204
01:16:47,098 –> 01:16:50,500
Yeah, it’s a fascinating psychological study. There’s a little jog there.
1205
01:16:51,270 –> 01:16:55,794
I want to talk a little bit about the truth in Cordelia and
1206
01:16:55,832 –> 01:16:59,794
telling truth to power. Much is made
1207
01:16:59,832 –> 01:17:03,558
of that in our time. Back to the book, back to the
1208
01:17:03,564 –> 01:17:06,866
play, back to King Lear. The tragedy of King
1209
01:17:06,898 –> 01:17:10,418
Lear by William Shakespeare. Once again, the Folger Shakespeare
1210
01:17:10,514 –> 01:17:14,380
Library edition. I would encourage you to pick it up.
1211
01:17:18,270 –> 01:17:22,070
It’s a smooth read, regardless of how I may have mangled
1212
01:17:22,150 –> 01:17:25,482
the Old English here, but it is a smooth read
1213
01:17:25,536 –> 01:17:28,630
with clearly defined stanzas.
1214
01:17:28,790 –> 01:17:32,446
As Libby said, it’s almost like a library in
1215
01:17:32,468 –> 01:17:36,046
a book there. And I would also encourage you, by the way,
1216
01:17:36,148 –> 01:17:39,594
and this is something that’s critical, I think, for understanding Shakespeare.
1217
01:17:39,722 –> 01:17:43,266
Shakespeare has to be absorbed in a couple of different ways. And so in
1218
01:17:43,288 –> 01:17:46,514
preparation for these podcasts, just a little Inside Baseball, I not only
1219
01:17:46,552 –> 01:17:50,082
read the Shakespeare, but then I also listen
1220
01:17:50,136 –> 01:17:54,334
to it for you and perform right. And there’s many different performances of Shakespeare
1221
01:17:54,382 –> 01:17:57,686
on YouTube. You can just go find any of them. It doesn’t matter. Pick one
1222
01:17:57,788 –> 01:18:01,122
and listen to it. While you’re reading it, and it makes the thing flow,
1223
01:18:01,186 –> 01:18:04,762
makes the thing understandable. And then, at a third level,
1224
01:18:04,816 –> 01:18:08,234
I would recommend go out and find a film version that you
1225
01:18:08,272 –> 01:18:11,386
can of Shakespeare and watch that.
1226
01:18:11,568 –> 01:18:14,666
It makes it all digestible. And what
1227
01:18:14,688 –> 01:18:17,870
the heck, spend 799 on a DVD and
1228
01:18:18,020 –> 01:18:21,646
you’ll be all right. All right. So back to
1229
01:18:21,668 –> 01:18:25,194
the play, back to Act One. We’re going to go back to Scene
1230
01:18:25,242 –> 01:18:28,606
One a little bit later on, after, like I said,
1231
01:18:28,628 –> 01:18:32,082
after everything’s been sort of cut up and Cordelia is speaking
1232
01:18:32,136 –> 01:18:36,338
to King Lear. So we’re going to pick up with stanza 255.
1233
01:18:36,424 –> 01:18:40,686
255 to 260. Cordelia to lear. I yet beseech
1234
01:18:40,718 –> 01:18:44,390
your majesty if
1235
01:18:44,460 –> 01:18:47,974
for I want that glib and oily art to speak and purpose not
1236
01:18:48,092 –> 01:18:51,878
since what I well intend I’ll do it to before I speak
1237
01:18:51,964 –> 01:18:55,746
that you make known it is no vicious, blot murder or foulness,
1238
01:18:55,778 –> 01:18:59,206
no unchaste action or dishonored step that hath deprived me of your grace
1239
01:18:59,238 –> 01:19:02,426
and favor. But even for want of that for
1240
01:19:02,448 –> 01:19:05,878
which I am richer, a still soliciting eye in such a tongue
1241
01:19:05,974 –> 01:19:09,754
that I am glad I have not. Though not to have it hath
1242
01:19:09,882 –> 01:19:11,630
lost me in your liking.
1243
01:19:12,370 –> 01:19:15,822
Lear better thou hast not been born than
1244
01:19:15,876 –> 01:19:19,726
not have pleased me better. France it
1245
01:19:19,748 –> 01:19:23,506
is, but this attireness in nature would often leaves the history unspoke. What it
1246
01:19:23,528 –> 01:19:27,038
intends to do. My lord of Burgundy, what say you to the lady loves
1247
01:19:27,054 –> 01:19:30,738
not love when it is mingled with regards that stands aloof from the entire point?
1248
01:19:30,824 –> 01:19:34,450
Will you have her? She is herself a dowry.
1249
01:19:35,270 –> 01:19:38,914
Burgundy de Lear royal king, give but that portion
1250
01:19:38,962 –> 01:19:42,882
which yourself proposed, and here I take Cordelia by the hand.
1251
01:19:43,036 –> 01:19:46,218
Duchess of Burgundy. Lear nothing.
1252
01:19:46,304 –> 01:19:49,674
I have sworn I am firm. Burgundy to cordelia. I am
1253
01:19:49,712 –> 01:19:53,046
sorry. Then you have lost. You have so lost a father,
1254
01:19:53,158 –> 01:19:55,850
and you must lose a husband.
1255
01:19:56,430 –> 01:19:59,674
Cordelia. Peace be with Burgundy. Since that respect
1256
01:19:59,722 –> 01:20:02,682
and fortunes are his love, I shall not be his wife.
1257
01:20:02,826 –> 01:20:06,698
France fairest Cordelia, that art most rich, being poor,
1258
01:20:06,874 –> 01:20:10,286
most choice forsaken and most love despised thee and
1259
01:20:10,308 –> 01:20:13,934
thy virtues here I seize upon. Be it lawful I take up what’s cast
1260
01:20:13,982 –> 01:20:17,474
away. Gods, gods. Tis stranger, that from their
1261
01:20:17,512 –> 01:20:21,614
colst neglect my love should kindle to inflame respect. Thy doubloless
1262
01:20:21,662 –> 01:20:25,606
daughter, king, thrown to my chance, is queen of us, of ours, of our
1263
01:20:25,708 –> 01:20:29,634
fair France. Not all the dukes of Washless,
1264
01:20:29,682 –> 01:20:32,886
Burgundy can buy this unprised precious maid of me.
1265
01:20:33,068 –> 01:20:36,486
Bid them farewell. Cordelia thou unkind, thou losest.
1266
01:20:36,518 –> 01:20:39,820
Here better where to find lear
1267
01:20:40,670 –> 01:20:44,358
thou hast her, France. Let her be thine. For we have no such daughter,
1268
01:20:44,454 –> 01:20:47,360
nor shall we ever see that face of hers again.
1269
01:20:47,890 –> 01:20:51,454
To Cordelia. Therefore be gone without our grace, our love,
1270
01:20:51,492 –> 01:20:54,430
our medicine. Come, noble Burgundy.
1271
01:20:55,170 –> 01:20:58,478
Lorish all but France. Cordelia gonrial and
1272
01:20:58,484 –> 01:21:02,446
Regan, exit. France bid farewell to your sisters.
1273
01:21:02,558 –> 01:21:06,366
Cordelia the jewels of our father with washed eyes, cordelia leaves
1274
01:21:06,398 –> 01:21:09,554
you I know what you are. And like
1275
01:21:09,592 –> 01:21:13,538
a sister, and most loathe to call your faults as they are named
1276
01:21:13,714 –> 01:21:16,070
love well, our Father,
1277
01:21:16,970 –> 01:21:20,054
to your professed bosoms I commit him,
1278
01:21:20,252 –> 01:21:23,930
but yet, alas, stood I within his grace.
1279
01:21:24,590 –> 01:21:28,794
I would prefer him to a better place. So farewell to
1280
01:21:28,832 –> 01:21:32,234
you both. Reagan prescribed not us
1281
01:21:32,272 –> 01:21:35,926
our duty gonerill, let your study be to content your lord
1282
01:21:35,958 –> 01:21:40,078
who hath received you at fortune’s alms. You have obedience scanted and
1283
01:21:40,164 –> 01:21:43,200
well or worth the want that you are wanted, that you have wanted.
1284
01:21:43,570 –> 01:21:47,146
Cordelia time shall unfold with plighted
1285
01:21:47,178 –> 01:21:50,482
cunning hides, who covers faults at last
1286
01:21:50,536 –> 01:21:54,050
with shame derides well may you prosper
1287
01:21:54,630 –> 01:21:58,222
France. Come by, Pharaoh. Cordelia france
1288
01:21:58,286 –> 01:22:05,794
and Cordelia exit that
1289
01:22:05,832 –> 01:22:09,830
little clip right there, a little piece right there of a much
1290
01:22:09,900 –> 01:22:14,690
larger dynamic that’s occurring between France,
1291
01:22:14,770 –> 01:22:18,238
Burgundy, Gonorrhea,
1292
01:22:18,274 –> 01:22:20,380
Regan, Cordelia, and King Lear.
1293
01:22:21,630 –> 01:22:25,558
It’s like watching a movie clip. And the reason why I pulled that is
1294
01:22:25,584 –> 01:22:29,066
because Cordelia, as Libby
1295
01:22:29,098 –> 01:22:33,790
has already said, cordelia committed all the way to the end on her principles.
1296
01:22:34,850 –> 01:22:36,960
See, the truth will set you free.
1297
01:22:38,450 –> 01:22:41,380
Free of influence, free of pulling the levers of power,
1298
01:22:41,990 –> 01:22:44,850
but not free of accountability for your actions.
1299
01:22:45,830 –> 01:22:48,946
There are some people in the leadership development space who would say
1300
01:22:48,968 –> 01:22:53,094
that Cordelia should not have spoken the truth. Cordelia should have shut her mouth and
1301
01:22:53,132 –> 01:22:57,074
stayed in a position of power, eaten the wrap
1302
01:22:57,122 –> 01:23:00,374
that was delivered by Gonorl and Regan, bited her
1303
01:23:00,412 –> 01:23:04,090
time, and then sprung the trap.
1304
01:23:05,150 –> 01:23:08,426
They would say that you can’t influence from the
1305
01:23:08,448 –> 01:23:12,220
outside and so you must be on the inside.
1306
01:23:13,870 –> 01:23:17,306
They would also say that Cordelia can’t tell truth
1307
01:23:17,338 –> 01:23:20,686
to power unless she’s near to
1308
01:23:20,708 –> 01:23:22,240
the source of power.
1309
01:23:24,130 –> 01:23:27,594
But Cordelia understood something that I think a lot of those folks
1310
01:23:27,642 –> 01:23:30,866
who would advocate for that position miss. And I think it
1311
01:23:30,888 –> 01:23:33,860
is something that is important in our fractured age.
1312
01:23:34,230 –> 01:23:38,226
No longer are we in an era of mass media and mass
1313
01:23:38,328 –> 01:23:42,242
audiences and mass consumers and even mass consequences.
1314
01:23:42,306 –> 01:23:46,710
We are now fully, firmly in the era of micro audiences,
1315
01:23:47,530 –> 01:23:52,098
micro consequences, and micro interactions
1316
01:23:52,274 –> 01:23:55,846
that, of course, have major implications, don’t get me
1317
01:23:55,868 –> 01:23:59,674
wrong, but they are still, at the smallest, at least
1318
01:23:59,712 –> 01:24:03,386
to this point, possible level, which is, again, one of those reasons why I’m not
1319
01:24:03,408 –> 01:24:05,500
really too worried about one world government.
1320
01:24:07,710 –> 01:24:11,482
Folks like Cordelia don’t get to just skip away into a consequenceless
1321
01:24:11,546 –> 01:24:14,766
future. Nor does she make everyone, as we
1322
01:24:14,788 –> 01:24:18,530
already mentioned, happy with her truth telling. That wasn’t her job. Her job
1323
01:24:18,600 –> 01:24:22,180
was to understand the difference between principles and position.
1324
01:24:23,830 –> 01:24:28,130
And truth tellers may lose materially, but they may win spiritually.
1325
01:24:30,550 –> 01:24:33,846
You have to be comfortable with your past. You have to be comfortable with who
1326
01:24:33,868 –> 01:24:37,126
you were and what you will become.
1327
01:24:37,228 –> 01:24:41,094
And Libby has already mentioned this as well. But sometimes the lure of
1328
01:24:41,132 –> 01:24:45,306
power and influence closes people’s mouths to saying the truth with
1329
01:24:45,328 –> 01:24:49,290
the three C’s clarity, candor, and courage.
1330
01:24:51,070 –> 01:24:54,502
I do fundamentally believe that it is those three C’s
1331
01:24:54,646 –> 01:24:58,320
that we need now more so than ever.
1332
01:24:59,410 –> 01:25:03,134
And people who are willing to accept the consequences for
1333
01:25:03,172 –> 01:25:06,686
speaking with clarity candor encourage whatever they may be. And by
1334
01:25:06,708 –> 01:25:11,010
the way, we are now in the wake
1335
01:25:11,350 –> 01:25:20,190
of the COVID-19 pandemic.
1336
01:25:21,990 –> 01:25:26,126
And clarity candor
1337
01:25:26,158 –> 01:25:31,314
and courage has
1338
01:25:31,352 –> 01:25:35,300
proven to be just as in a short supply as I always thought it was,
1339
01:25:36,710 –> 01:25:38,980
or at least I always suspected it was.
1340
01:25:40,950 –> 01:25:43,398
And so we really need to pick up this we really need to pick up
1341
01:25:43,404 –> 01:25:46,262
this lesson we really need to pick up this lesson about principle, the difference between
1342
01:25:46,316 –> 01:25:50,422
principles and positions. We nearly need to pick up this lesson from Cordelia.
1343
01:25:50,566 –> 01:25:54,006
And by the way, this is just a small sample. She consistently,
1344
01:25:54,118 –> 01:25:57,930
character wise, walks this out through King Lear all the way
1345
01:25:58,000 –> 01:26:01,546
to well, to the clearing at the end of
1346
01:26:01,568 –> 01:26:04,782
the path. As Stephen King would say, a different
1347
01:26:04,836 –> 01:26:07,566
Stephen King. Not the one you see on Twitter. A different Stephen King. The one
1348
01:26:07,588 –> 01:26:15,614
that I know, the one who wrote The Gunslinger. That guy Libby.
1349
01:26:15,662 –> 01:26:19,540
Much is made of telling truths to power. Much is made of
1350
01:26:21,510 –> 01:26:25,362
raising your fist and protesting. I’m thinking in our contemporary moment
1351
01:26:25,416 –> 01:26:29,110
right now of events going on in Tennessee, in the
1352
01:26:29,180 –> 01:26:32,486
state government in Tennessee. If you want to Google what those are,
1353
01:26:32,508 –> 01:26:36,390
you can. They will all be wrapped up by the time you hear this podcast.
1354
01:26:37,070 –> 01:26:39,980
But that is just the latest example of,
1355
01:26:41,390 –> 01:26:44,566
I don’t know, sort of the marketing of truth
1356
01:26:44,598 –> 01:26:48,666
to power versus the actual telling of truth to power with actual
1357
01:26:48,768 –> 01:26:53,470
consequences. How can leaders separate the marketing
1358
01:26:53,810 –> 01:26:55,600
from the actual thing?
1359
01:26:58,620 –> 01:27:02,136
Because the actual thing has actual consequences. Like when I talk about
1360
01:27:02,158 –> 01:27:05,576
job applications, okay, there’s a way to frame this.
1361
01:27:05,758 –> 01:27:11,016
I see a lot of job applications, a lot that say they’re
1362
01:27:11,048 –> 01:27:14,172
gobbledygook as far as what they want you to do. But at the bottom,
1363
01:27:14,226 –> 01:27:17,944
in bold print, it says, our organization has determined the COVID-19 requirements
1364
01:27:17,992 –> 01:27:20,896
must be met. So you must have a COVID-19 shop before you can show up
1365
01:27:20,918 –> 01:27:23,296
to interview for this job. And I just go,
1366
01:27:23,318 –> 01:27:26,672
nope, I’m not looking for a job right now. But like, if I were no,
1367
01:27:26,726 –> 01:27:30,928
then I’m out. There’s principles
1368
01:27:31,104 –> 01:27:34,656
and then there’s the position. Do those principles
1369
01:27:34,688 –> 01:27:37,830
have consequences? For sure.
1370
01:27:40,880 –> 01:27:45,344
And I wonder how
1371
01:27:45,382 –> 01:27:48,480
many folks understand the difference between
1372
01:27:48,550 –> 01:27:51,456
these two things. So how do we tell the truth to power? How do we
1373
01:27:51,478 –> 01:27:54,950
keep our principles as our position?
1374
01:27:56,200 –> 01:27:59,184
Or maybe we don’t. Maybe we just need to be position driven.
1375
01:27:59,232 –> 01:28:02,676
People that wave, wave around with the
1376
01:28:02,698 –> 01:28:06,164
wind. They just wave around
1377
01:28:06,202 –> 01:28:09,256
with the wind. Negotiator like, I understand the value of
1378
01:28:09,278 –> 01:28:12,936
positions. I’m not knocking positions. And at the end of the day,
1379
01:28:13,118 –> 01:28:16,292
you have to have a principle, omar from The Wire.
1380
01:28:16,356 –> 01:28:19,384
You have to have a code. Yeah,
1381
01:28:19,422 –> 01:28:23,084
I mean, if positions aren’t bound by
1382
01:28:23,282 –> 01:28:26,780
principles, you get what we have today.
1383
01:28:26,930 –> 01:28:32,624
Yeah. And it’s really interesting what you talk
1384
01:28:32,662 –> 01:28:36,384
about, what we’ve seen over the last three
1385
01:28:36,422 –> 01:28:40,400
plus years. I always
1386
01:28:40,470 –> 01:28:44,156
knew that politics was a lot of rhetoric in theater.
1387
01:28:44,268 –> 01:28:48,420
I did not realize the extent of it that was theater
1388
01:28:49,080 –> 01:28:52,452
and how much of it is meant to just
1389
01:28:52,506 –> 01:28:56,004
drive our emotions and to keep us focused on
1390
01:28:56,042 –> 01:29:00,180
what they want us to focus on while they move their agendas
1391
01:29:00,260 –> 01:29:04,200
through. It’s not
1392
01:29:04,270 –> 01:29:07,050
courage when you’re saying what everyone is saying,
1393
01:29:09,500 –> 01:29:12,948
even when you act like you’re saying it in anger and conviction,
1394
01:29:13,044 –> 01:29:16,170
all I see is someone who’s towing the party line.
1395
01:29:22,340 –> 01:29:25,916
I tend to be focused on I tend
1396
01:29:25,948 –> 01:29:28,050
to be an outcomes based individual.
1397
01:29:30,820 –> 01:29:34,348
And you
1398
01:29:34,454 –> 01:29:38,036
had identified the owls versus the hummingbirds in one of
1399
01:29:38,058 –> 01:29:41,556
our early conversations, and I
1400
01:29:41,578 –> 01:29:44,836
was definitely more of a hummingbird when I
1401
01:29:44,858 –> 01:29:47,270
was in my twenty s and thirty s.
1402
01:29:51,020 –> 01:29:55,012
Now that I have been through many cycles economic,
1403
01:29:55,076 –> 01:29:58,932
political, familial, you can see certain trends.
1404
01:29:58,996 –> 01:30:02,792
And one of those on the political side is the rhetoric
1405
01:30:02,936 –> 01:30:06,728
doesn’t ever deliver the outcomes that are promised. I don’t
1406
01:30:06,744 –> 01:30:09,996
have to look far from the streets of Ran Francisco, and the
1407
01:30:10,018 –> 01:30:14,284
homeless crisis that was the top of Newsom’s priority
1408
01:30:14,332 –> 01:30:19,040
list in 2010 has only accelerated into severity.
1409
01:30:19,380 –> 01:30:22,988
I don’t have to look farther behind the streets of San
1410
01:30:23,004 –> 01:30:27,312
Francisco where we’re basically conducting
1411
01:30:27,376 –> 01:30:30,896
assisted suicide with the drug epidemic
1412
01:30:30,928 –> 01:30:34,836
and the homeless epidemic. Those outcomes are not outcomes of
1413
01:30:34,858 –> 01:30:38,584
people who care. So after you
1414
01:30:38,622 –> 01:30:42,516
start to see cycles of false promises and false
1415
01:30:42,548 –> 01:30:45,704
prophets, you then need to start
1416
01:30:45,742 –> 01:30:49,396
to look for where the truth is and start to
1417
01:30:49,438 –> 01:30:53,470
act locally and as an individual.
1418
01:30:56,880 –> 01:31:00,844
George Carlin, who I never appreciated in the days he
1419
01:31:00,882 –> 01:31:04,096
was saying, they don’t care about you, but you
1420
01:31:04,118 –> 01:31:07,890
don’t want to get to. They being the government, they being big business.
1421
01:31:09,860 –> 01:31:12,928
That is true. At the end of the day,
1422
01:31:13,014 –> 01:31:16,724
like the power and elite is very insular and they’re really focused on
1423
01:31:16,762 –> 01:31:20,336
continuing to advance their own positions. Whether they’re aware
1424
01:31:20,368 –> 01:31:22,550
of it or not is another story.
1425
01:31:24,440 –> 01:31:28,192
But you do have the ability to act locally.
1426
01:31:28,256 –> 01:31:31,652
You do have the ability individually and in a decentralized
1427
01:31:31,716 –> 01:31:34,570
manner to live a life worth living.
1428
01:31:35,100 –> 01:31:38,824
And our role as leaders is to
1429
01:31:38,862 –> 01:31:42,356
do the right thing because it’s the right thing and just
1430
01:31:42,398 –> 01:31:45,596
put 1ft in front of another and ignore the
1431
01:31:45,618 –> 01:31:49,756
noise. Let me ask you this question, which is always
1432
01:31:49,778 –> 01:31:53,310
the pushback on this? When I say something like this, or I do a
1433
01:31:53,680 –> 01:31:57,356
short episode that basically talks about the difference between principles and positions,
1434
01:31:57,388 –> 01:31:59,776
or I write a blog post and I’ve been writing blog posts about this and
1435
01:31:59,798 –> 01:32:03,456
books about this stuff for years now, right. The pushback I
1436
01:32:03,478 –> 01:32:06,964
always get is invariably, the pushback that I get
1437
01:32:07,002 –> 01:32:10,950
is, well, it’s so hard, Hasan, to know what’s right.
1438
01:32:13,400 –> 01:32:17,316
Give me a break. Really? Oh yeah. That’s still floating
1439
01:32:17,348 –> 01:32:21,224
around out here. I have
1440
01:32:21,262 –> 01:32:24,376
the good grace not to laugh, not out
1441
01:32:24,398 –> 01:32:28,488
loud anyway. But it does make me
1442
01:32:28,574 –> 01:32:31,736
that the fact that that rolls so easily off of people’s
1443
01:32:31,768 –> 01:32:37,404
tongues and
1444
01:32:37,442 –> 01:32:38,590
the fact that.
1445
01:32:41,200 –> 01:32:43,596
They’Re mistaking positions for principles.
1446
01:32:43,708 –> 01:32:47,308
Right. And they’re
1447
01:32:47,324 –> 01:32:51,776
also mistaking principles for and
1448
01:32:51,798 –> 01:32:55,316
don’t get me wrong, they run parallel. They do run
1449
01:32:55,338 –> 01:32:59,040
on parallel tracks. In some cases, they intersect. But principles aren’t necessarily
1450
01:32:59,120 –> 01:33:02,596
morals or even ethics, though they do run
1451
01:33:02,618 –> 01:33:04,790
on parallel tracks. Okay.
1452
01:33:08,360 –> 01:33:11,384
And by the way, my response to that is always well, no,
1453
01:33:11,502 –> 01:33:15,208
I mean, when you don’t do the thing that you’re supposed to do
1454
01:33:15,374 –> 01:33:18,616
and you know you right. Well, and you knew you
1455
01:33:18,638 –> 01:33:22,044
didn’t do the thing you were supposed to do, there’s another old school
1456
01:33:22,082 –> 01:33:25,420
concept I’m going to hit you with that’s called sin.
1457
01:33:26,960 –> 01:33:29,230
And then that’s what I laugh and then I walk quick,
1458
01:33:30,000 –> 01:33:33,890
usually leaving those people kind of just flummox and just standing there looking at me.
1459
01:33:36,500 –> 01:33:39,952
I don’t think things are as complex no,
1460
01:33:40,006 –> 01:33:43,516
not things. Let me be very specific here. I do not think the decision
1461
01:33:43,548 –> 01:33:47,030
to do what is right is as complex as people make it out to be.
1462
01:33:48,360 –> 01:33:52,016
I just don’t think that it is. And maybe I haven’t
1463
01:33:52,048 –> 01:33:56,132
been in areas of enough complexity. You mentioned San Francisco and
1464
01:33:56,186 –> 01:34:00,024
the homeless. I think crisis is not
1465
01:34:00,062 –> 01:34:03,672
ran appropriate, even word to use for this. The absolute total
1466
01:34:03,726 –> 01:34:08,120
societal collapse of the Tenderloin district of San Francisco
1467
01:34:08,460 –> 01:34:11,900
is an unbelievable black eye
1468
01:34:12,400 –> 01:34:16,600
on a black eye of an indictment on California
1469
01:34:16,680 –> 01:34:20,140
in general, california in particular, and America in general.
1470
01:34:20,210 –> 01:34:22,670
Okay. In the coal mine. Oh, my God.
1471
01:34:24,000 –> 01:34:27,608
And by the way, I would not have believed it if I hadn’t gone there
1472
01:34:27,634 –> 01:34:30,832
a few lear ago with my wife and kids and seen it, like, up close.
1473
01:34:30,886 –> 01:34:34,204
I would not have believed that it was that bad and have gotten worse
1474
01:34:34,252 –> 01:34:38,516
since then. Would not have believed it. Thought it was all rhetoric and blown out
1475
01:34:38,698 –> 01:34:42,064
rhetoric. Thought it was rhetoric in theater. No, it’s not rhetoric in theater,
1476
01:34:42,112 –> 01:34:44,230
folks. It actually is that bad.
1477
01:34:50,510 –> 01:34:54,250
The unprincipled people understand that the system
1478
01:34:54,320 –> 01:34:58,006
is run by politics. That’s how Gavin Newsom gets to the top, because he’s unprincipled.
1479
01:34:58,038 –> 01:35:01,670
He understands he’s got competency in that space.
1480
01:35:01,760 –> 01:35:04,640
I’ll grant him that. Yes. Yeah.
1481
01:35:05,170 –> 01:35:09,258
And so the people who would be competent
1482
01:35:09,354 –> 01:35:13,358
at fixing the problem with principles eject out
1483
01:35:13,364 –> 01:35:17,026
of the system, and many of them, by the way, post COVID, pack up
1484
01:35:17,048 –> 01:35:21,122
their bags and go to Utah or
1485
01:35:21,176 –> 01:35:25,922
Texas or
1486
01:35:25,976 –> 01:35:29,314
Florida or Tennessee or anywhere else other
1487
01:35:29,352 –> 01:35:33,186
than where they right and what you’re left with. And we saw this most recently
1488
01:35:33,218 –> 01:35:37,046
in the most recent Chicago elections in 2023. Oh,
1489
01:35:37,068 –> 01:35:40,410
my God. Well, but who’s left to vote?
1490
01:35:41,630 –> 01:35:44,810
And so it’s going to be a self fulfilling cycle of nonsense.
1491
01:35:47,230 –> 01:35:51,194
Who’s, at a
1492
01:35:51,232 –> 01:35:56,938
certain point you’re
1493
01:35:56,954 –> 01:35:59,230
not draining a swamp anymore.
1494
01:36:02,050 –> 01:36:05,166
Okay, I’ll frame it this way. At a certain point I
1495
01:36:05,188 –> 01:36:08,114
used to live in Detroit. I lived in Detroit for a few years in my
1496
01:36:08,152 –> 01:36:10,942
early 20s, rode the bus around Detroit,
1497
01:36:11,006 –> 01:36:15,426
actually, to go to my four different jobs back in the day.
1498
01:36:15,608 –> 01:36:17,906
And on the bus in Detroit was not to the king of heart back in
1499
01:36:17,928 –> 01:36:21,794
the day and then cleaned up Detroit. I mean, Detroit’s gone through
1500
01:36:21,832 –> 01:36:24,886
some interesting things, and there’s a little bit of a renaissance going on. It has
1501
01:36:24,908 –> 01:36:28,018
been for a few years, and that’s good, by the way, for Detroit.
1502
01:36:28,194 –> 01:36:32,498
But in order for that renaissance to begin, Detroit had to and
1503
01:36:32,524 –> 01:36:35,830
there was a corrupt mayor, of course, Kwame Kilpatrick.
1504
01:36:35,990 –> 01:36:38,826
But there was a person in his administration who decided, we got to knock down
1505
01:36:38,848 –> 01:36:42,410
these buildings. We got to start somewhere.
1506
01:36:42,750 –> 01:36:46,326
We got to go after the slum lords who haven’t
1507
01:36:46,358 –> 01:36:50,046
maintained the buildings. And I’ve allowed devil’s nights and Halloween nights to just burn through
1508
01:36:50,068 –> 01:36:53,438
the city for the last 30 by that point, 30 freaking years,
1509
01:36:53,604 –> 01:36:57,314
like, we’re not going to allow this anymore. One person decided that and
1510
01:36:57,352 –> 01:37:01,038
got the ball rolling. And, yes, Kwame Kilpatrick was corrupt in the court
1511
01:37:01,134 –> 01:37:05,154
was a court of a corrupt king. The man went to jail for sending text
1512
01:37:05,192 –> 01:37:08,378
messages to his mistress. By the way, your text messages can be subpoenaed,
1513
01:37:08,414 –> 01:37:12,118
folks. Keep that in mind. They are public record.
1514
01:37:12,284 –> 01:37:16,338
My God, how did he not know this? Anyway, also for hiring
1515
01:37:16,354 –> 01:37:19,160
his relatives and doing other corrupt things. Okay, cool.
1516
01:37:19,530 –> 01:37:22,694
But that was the beginning of the renaissance
1517
01:37:22,742 –> 01:37:25,962
of Detroit, because one principled person who we don’t know the name of and probably
1518
01:37:26,016 –> 01:37:29,820
never will, was like, no, we’re done.
1519
01:37:31,230 –> 01:37:34,726
That’s the cordelia in King Lear’s
1520
01:37:34,758 –> 01:37:38,446
court. Where’s the cordelia? In San Francisco. I think a lot of people
1521
01:37:38,468 –> 01:37:41,694
are asking that. By the way, where is that person that’s inside that just says,
1522
01:37:41,732 –> 01:37:45,442
you know what? You’ve got gubernatorial hair, and you may fire
1523
01:37:45,496 –> 01:37:48,386
me tomorrow, but this has to stop.
1524
01:37:48,568 –> 01:37:52,130
Well, this is that theme that is through King Lear
1525
01:37:52,200 –> 01:37:55,502
with the good people are in disguise,
1526
01:37:55,566 –> 01:37:59,766
like Kent goes into disguise in order to help
1527
01:37:59,948 –> 01:38:03,606
King Lear protect King Lear from himself. And the same
1528
01:38:03,628 –> 01:38:06,950
is true for Edgar, who acts as poor Tom,
1529
01:38:07,100 –> 01:38:10,890
right? And the nameless servant who kills Cornwall.
1530
01:38:11,230 –> 01:38:14,838
So these stories are of the individuals
1531
01:38:14,934 –> 01:38:16,620
who do the right thing,
1532
01:38:18,190 –> 01:38:22,078
and ultimately the
1533
01:38:22,084 –> 01:38:24,480
house of cards comes falling down.
1534
01:38:25,170 –> 01:38:28,202
That is the faith that I have in humanity.
1535
01:38:28,346 –> 01:38:32,078
And when you’re talking about the one world order,
1536
01:38:32,244 –> 01:38:37,442
that’s where I also hold
1537
01:38:37,496 –> 01:38:41,278
some faith in, is the power of the individuals
1538
01:38:41,454 –> 01:38:45,554
working inside. They’re not the narcissists who need to be seen. They’re not the
1539
01:38:45,592 –> 01:38:48,910
narcissists who are doing the right thing in order to be rewarded.
1540
01:38:48,990 –> 01:38:52,278
They’re doing the right thing because it’s the right thing to do.
1541
01:38:52,444 –> 01:38:55,766
One of the things that’s beautiful about where we are in the
1542
01:38:55,788 –> 01:38:59,910
digital age is that all of the playbooks
1543
01:39:00,410 –> 01:39:04,806
by all of the corporations and all the politicians were exposed
1544
01:39:04,918 –> 01:39:08,666
because of the decentralized nature of the Internet and why
1545
01:39:08,688 –> 01:39:13,066
they want to censor the Internet so much is because it
1546
01:39:13,088 –> 01:39:16,026
was hard. Like they were playing Whack a Mole with the truth.
1547
01:39:16,138 –> 01:39:18,800
Right. And,
1548
01:39:20,690 –> 01:39:24,298
yes, we eject out. But I’m a big believer
1549
01:39:24,314 –> 01:39:27,618
that it’s very hard to change a system from within. You have to change it
1550
01:39:27,624 –> 01:39:31,758
from the outside. I call it outside in transformation.
1551
01:39:31,934 –> 01:39:34,930
But you need to go out and build what good looks like,
1552
01:39:35,000 –> 01:39:39,220
and it will attract those who are like you,
1553
01:39:40,730 –> 01:39:43,782
those who will do the right thing because it’s the right thing
1554
01:39:43,916 –> 01:39:47,698
exist. They’re the exception. I wouldn’t
1555
01:39:47,714 –> 01:39:51,686
say they’re the exception. They’re just not visible because they’re not driven
1556
01:39:51,718 –> 01:39:55,766
by visibility. They’re not driven by their ego. They’re driven
1557
01:39:55,798 –> 01:39:57,660
by doing the right thing.
1558
01:40:01,310 –> 01:40:04,774
It’s kind of like how many introverts do you need to overcome
1559
01:40:04,822 –> 01:40:09,230
an extrovert? Probably 50%
1560
01:40:09,300 –> 01:40:13,070
of the world is introverts. 50% are extroverts, and you need
1561
01:40:13,220 –> 01:40:16,866
eight introverts to overcome one extrovert. It’s probably the
1562
01:40:16,888 –> 01:40:20,686
same with the ego driven versus the servant driven
1563
01:40:20,798 –> 01:40:25,614
leader. Right. And they’re there. We just need to create conditions.
1564
01:40:25,742 –> 01:40:30,242
Like, if you’ve gone to Utah or central
1565
01:40:30,306 –> 01:40:33,586
Oregon, you’re creating
1566
01:40:33,618 –> 01:40:36,934
a place outside of the Dystopia for
1567
01:40:36,972 –> 01:40:40,898
people to come to. John Gault could have done that in Atlas
1568
01:40:40,914 –> 01:40:44,826
Shrugs. Instead, he was keeping the good people from doing the good work. But you
1569
01:40:44,848 –> 01:40:48,586
could have created a place where you set the example and the
1570
01:40:48,608 –> 01:40:51,580
good came. You could say Florida is trying to do that.
1571
01:40:51,970 –> 01:40:53,200
Yeah. Well,
1572
01:40:57,650 –> 01:41:00,270
that’s one of the reasons why, like, in July,
1573
01:41:01,490 –> 01:41:05,406
we’re going to cover the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence yet again on
1574
01:41:05,428 –> 01:41:10,254
this podcast. I mean, we are going to do it again because there’s
1575
01:41:10,302 –> 01:41:14,082
no I do not
1576
01:41:14,136 –> 01:41:17,700
think it is rhetoric. It may have been
1577
01:41:19,270 –> 01:41:23,106
I think it was Ronald Reagan when Ronald Reagan said it initially.
1578
01:41:23,298 –> 01:41:26,614
And it might have been John F. Kennedy. I might be putting on Reagan just
1579
01:41:26,652 –> 01:41:30,074
for the sake of putting on Reagan, but I
1580
01:41:30,112 –> 01:41:32,060
do believe the United States,
1581
01:41:33,310 –> 01:41:37,180
for all of our flaws and black eyes and monumental problems,
1582
01:41:38,030 –> 01:41:41,686
is still the last, best hope for let’s be grandiose the last best
1583
01:41:41,728 –> 01:41:44,974
hope for humanity. Because there
1584
01:41:45,012 –> 01:41:49,118
is a system of checks and balances that
1585
01:41:49,204 –> 01:41:52,606
persists in and you mentioned the rule of law. Persists in
1586
01:41:52,628 –> 01:41:56,330
the rule of law, which is why it’s so disturbing,
1587
01:41:56,490 –> 01:41:59,634
the ideological capture of law schools. Right.
1588
01:41:59,752 –> 01:42:02,642
That’s even more disturbing to me than finance. Finance is one thing.
1589
01:42:02,696 –> 01:42:06,466
Money okay. But the law now
1590
01:42:06,488 –> 01:42:10,200
we’re getting into existential things here. Now we’re getting into
1591
01:42:11,370 –> 01:42:13,750
who gets prosecuted and who doesn’t.
1592
01:42:14,330 –> 01:42:18,038
Is there a standard for everyone regardless of
1593
01:42:18,124 –> 01:42:21,382
money or power? And by the way by the way,
1594
01:42:21,436 –> 01:42:24,474
if you want to assert that there’s never been a standard, one standard for everybody,
1595
01:42:24,512 –> 01:42:28,598
regardless of money and power, is there at least the attempt
1596
01:42:28,694 –> 01:42:32,442
to get to a standard? Because there’s not even the attempt.
1597
01:42:32,506 –> 01:42:36,478
If we are now cynically throwing the attempt out, if we’re saying the
1598
01:42:36,484 –> 01:42:40,080
attempt was never. Real. So we’re just going to jettison the whole thing.
1599
01:42:43,250 –> 01:42:46,706
What’s that? WB. Yates the
1600
01:42:46,728 –> 01:42:50,558
falcon can’t hear the falconer second coming, the blood
1601
01:42:50,574 –> 01:42:54,114
dim tide. Yeah, that’s what you’re welcoming because
1602
01:42:54,152 –> 01:42:58,306
then it’s anarchy. Then it is man every it’s it’s a hobbesian nightmare
1603
01:42:58,418 –> 01:43:02,518
that we have not even begun to understand. And so
1604
01:43:02,604 –> 01:43:05,506
the United States is worth protecting,
1605
01:43:05,698 –> 01:43:09,186
the Republic is worth defending, the Constitution is worth
1606
01:43:09,228 –> 01:43:12,700
talking about and examining and
1607
01:43:13,550 –> 01:43:16,650
knowing. And for leaders,
1608
01:43:17,470 –> 01:43:20,506
that kind of knowledge has to undergird your work.
1609
01:43:20,688 –> 01:43:25,758
The mob is never right and
1610
01:43:25,764 –> 01:43:30,014
that’s one of the foundations for the
1611
01:43:30,052 –> 01:43:34,670
US being a republic and not a true democracy.
1612
01:43:36,310 –> 01:43:39,794
Mob rules will
1613
01:43:39,832 –> 01:43:43,860
dictate what individuals do that they ordinarily wouldn’t do.
1614
01:43:45,910 –> 01:43:50,066
But a monarchy isn’t right either. I mean, then you wind up Louis
1615
01:43:50,098 –> 01:43:50,870
XV.
1616
01:43:52,970 –> 01:43:55,480
No, completely agree.
1617
01:43:59,150 –> 01:44:02,630
Total populations and groups can be virtuous,
1618
01:44:02,710 –> 01:44:06,250
but there can get to a place
1619
01:44:06,320 –> 01:44:09,834
where people stop thinking. For example, when you call
1620
01:44:09,872 –> 01:44:14,030
half of the country evil or deplorable versus
1621
01:44:15,570 –> 01:44:16,750
misguided.
1622
01:44:20,610 –> 01:44:23,966
I do believe that every individual has the propensity for good or
1623
01:44:23,988 –> 01:44:27,940
bad. Right. I believe that people
1624
01:44:28,550 –> 01:44:32,354
can change. I don’t believe that you are a fixed state
1625
01:44:32,392 –> 01:44:35,890
in your personality. And as long as you believe that,
1626
01:44:35,960 –> 01:44:40,726
and people are given the opportunity to repent and
1627
01:44:40,748 –> 01:44:43,000
to be good, like Albany was,
1628
01:44:45,770 –> 01:44:49,634
that’s the foundation, having belief in humanity, and that humans
1629
01:44:49,682 –> 01:44:53,114
can always choose to do the right thing. Even if they haven’t in the past
1630
01:44:53,232 –> 01:44:58,154
is what we can do to move forward and
1631
01:44:58,192 –> 01:45:01,562
not get into a dystopia thinking that the world
1632
01:45:01,616 –> 01:45:05,166
will end. Because here we are today. You have
1633
01:45:05,188 –> 01:45:09,518
to believe in humanity. Well, you have to have
1634
01:45:09,684 –> 01:45:12,640
I call it hard headed optimism. Yeah.
1635
01:45:13,890 –> 01:45:17,070
Pragmatic optimist. Pragmatic optimism,
1636
01:45:19,090 –> 01:45:22,306
that’s good. I’m going to borrow that. I’m a pragmatic optimist and I
1637
01:45:22,328 –> 01:45:32,870
don’t think there’s wrong with pragmatism. I think it’s
1638
01:45:34,410 –> 01:45:36,040
passion is fine,
1639
01:45:38,970 –> 01:45:42,586
but passion is like fire. It can either cook your meat or it can
1640
01:45:42,608 –> 01:45:43,820
burn your house down.
1641
01:45:45,230 –> 01:45:48,410
And passion has to be directed
1642
01:45:49,790 –> 01:45:53,654
exactly right. And you talk about
1643
01:45:53,712 –> 01:45:56,800
guardrails, we’ve talked midget guardrails a couple of times.
1644
01:45:58,930 –> 01:46:02,254
We relied for the majority of the 20th century and for a good chunk of
1645
01:46:02,292 –> 01:46:05,486
the 21st. And this is now, we’ve now started to see
1646
01:46:05,508 –> 01:46:08,738
this sort of fall apart. But we’ve relied on the people who proclaim themselves to
1647
01:46:08,744 –> 01:46:11,838
be leaders, to maintain those guardrails.
1648
01:46:12,014 –> 01:46:15,298
And when the leaders themselves are pulling up the guardrails, putting them in
1649
01:46:15,304 –> 01:46:17,766
the field and lighting them on fire, running away and telling us there were never
1650
01:46:17,788 –> 01:46:21,480
any guardrails to begin with, now we’ve got a problem.
1651
01:46:22,170 –> 01:46:25,858
And the problem is with, again, leadership,
1652
01:46:26,034 –> 01:46:29,594
which is why we’re doing what we’re. Doing here, why measurement is so
1653
01:46:29,632 –> 01:46:31,980
important and outcomes are so important,
1654
01:46:34,670 –> 01:46:38,390
equal application of the law. We can all identify
1655
01:46:38,470 –> 01:46:41,894
exceptions to where it wasn’t, where someone like a Kennedy got
1656
01:46:41,952 –> 01:46:44,400
off because of who he was.
1657
01:46:46,450 –> 01:46:49,786
And people can see that. But there’s going to be an exception
1658
01:46:49,818 –> 01:46:52,654
for every one of those rules as well.
1659
01:46:52,772 –> 01:46:56,206
But at least looking for are we trying to dial
1660
01:46:56,238 –> 01:46:58,580
it in to be as perfect as possible,
1661
01:46:59,350 –> 01:47:03,230
recognizing that there’s always king to be an error, not throwing
1662
01:47:03,390 –> 01:47:05,220
away the entire system,
1663
01:47:06,810 –> 01:47:10,214
identifying where it’s flawed and fixing it.
1664
01:47:10,332 –> 01:47:14,182
And that’s what we’ve lost is
1665
01:47:14,236 –> 01:47:18,390
nuance, which is a very common phrase, but we’ve lost nuance,
1666
01:47:19,070 –> 01:47:22,454
we’ve lost relativity, we’ve lost context.
1667
01:47:22,582 –> 01:47:26,026
And the small things now are perceived as the
1668
01:47:26,048 –> 01:47:30,438
biggest things on the planet, as problems. And so measurement
1669
01:47:30,534 –> 01:47:33,998
is so important, knowing where you’re going, how you measure success.
1670
01:47:34,084 –> 01:47:38,318
Instead, we’re getting rid of that and we’re letting emotion drive everything
1671
01:47:38,484 –> 01:47:47,106
and objectivity and reason are gone for
1672
01:47:47,128 –> 01:47:50,498
those who are currently leading the country. I’m not saying that.
1673
01:47:50,584 –> 01:47:53,060
No. Right. No.
1674
01:47:57,210 –> 01:48:01,206
I’m going to go here. Two plus two still equals four at my
1675
01:48:01,228 –> 01:48:04,498
local wastewater treatment plant. Yes. Because if it doesn’t,
1676
01:48:04,594 –> 01:48:06,200
I get poop in my water.
1677
01:48:09,310 –> 01:48:12,540
Yeah, right. Or the bridge falls down
1678
01:48:13,470 –> 01:48:15,580
or my gate doesn’t work,
1679
01:48:16,270 –> 01:48:19,498
and I don’t really care about the color of
1680
01:48:19,504 –> 01:48:22,926
the person’s skin who’s doing the two plus two equals four.
1681
01:48:23,108 –> 01:48:26,494
Not when I want the bridge the bridge to work and not
1682
01:48:26,532 –> 01:48:30,094
fall or the plane to fly or
1683
01:48:30,132 –> 01:48:33,790
to not. Have whatever in my water. Correct. Right.
1684
01:48:33,860 –> 01:48:36,260
So two plus two still equals four.
1685
01:48:37,670 –> 01:48:41,586
Merit and competencies still matter. And what
1686
01:48:41,608 –> 01:48:45,042
we measure matters as much as what is
1687
01:48:45,096 –> 01:48:48,120
being measured. Exactly.
1688
01:48:48,810 –> 01:48:52,550
And how we measure matters as much as what
1689
01:48:52,620 –> 01:48:55,926
is being measured. Let’s turn our
1690
01:48:55,948 –> 01:48:59,798
corner. We’re wrapping up here. We spend a little bit of time with Libby,
1691
01:48:59,814 –> 01:49:05,030
and I want to once again thank her for coming on the podcast. Always invigorating
1692
01:49:05,110 –> 01:49:09,114
conversation with
1693
01:49:09,312 –> 01:49:13,098
Libby unger. So let’s turn the corner a
1694
01:49:13,104 –> 01:49:16,554
little bit here. Let’s talk about the failure of the appalonian.
1695
01:49:16,602 –> 01:49:20,234
Let’s talk about the failure of the eye and then the Dionosian lurking
1696
01:49:20,282 –> 01:49:23,726
in the basement. Let’s talk a little bit about Edmund the
1697
01:49:23,748 –> 01:49:24,670
Bastard.
1698
01:49:27,410 –> 01:49:31,042
Back to the tragedy of King Lear. Act one.
1699
01:49:31,096 –> 01:49:34,514
Scene two. We’re going to do a few stanzas here and there.
1700
01:49:34,552 –> 01:49:36,638
We’re going to kind of jump around a little bit because I want to get
1701
01:49:36,664 –> 01:49:39,878
the words of Edmund out there. Want to give us a little bit
1702
01:49:39,884 –> 01:49:43,990
of a brief look at this fellow?
1703
01:49:45,290 –> 01:49:48,310
King Lear, act one, scene two. Enter.
1704
01:49:48,380 –> 01:49:51,734
Edmond the bastard. Edmund thou nature art
1705
01:49:51,772 –> 01:49:55,158
my goddess, to thy law my services are bound.
1706
01:49:55,254 –> 01:49:59,254
Wherefore should I stand in the plague of custom and permit the curiosity of nations
1707
01:49:59,302 –> 01:50:03,298
to deprive me for that I am some twelve or 14 moonshine’s
1708
01:50:03,334 –> 01:50:07,262
lag of a brother. Why Bastard? Why wherefore base
1709
01:50:07,396 –> 01:50:10,634
when my dimensions are as well compact, my mind is generous,
1710
01:50:10,682 –> 01:50:14,640
and my shape as true as honest madam’s issue?
1711
01:50:15,090 –> 01:50:18,574
Why brand they us with base with bastist bastardy
1712
01:50:18,622 –> 01:50:21,874
base, who in the lusty stealth of nature take more
1713
01:50:21,912 –> 01:50:24,862
composition and fierce quality than doth within a dull,
1714
01:50:24,926 –> 01:50:28,526
stale, tired bed go to the creating a whole tribe
1715
01:50:28,558 –> 01:50:31,560
of fops got Queen asleep and wait.
1716
01:50:32,410 –> 01:50:35,878
Well then, legitimate Edgar, I must have your land.
1717
01:50:36,044 –> 01:50:39,386
Our father’s love is to the bastard. Edmund as to
1718
01:50:39,408 –> 01:50:42,678
the legitimate fine word, legitimate. Well, my legitimate,
1719
01:50:42,774 –> 01:50:46,742
if this letter speed and my invention thrive,
1720
01:50:46,806 –> 01:50:50,646
edmund the base shall pop the legitimate. I grow, I prosper.
1721
01:50:50,758 –> 01:50:54,750
Now gods, stand up for bastards.
1722
01:50:55,570 –> 01:50:59,082
Then Gloucester comes in, speaks to Edmund.
1723
01:50:59,226 –> 01:51:02,126
He exits. End of act one,
1724
01:51:02,228 –> 01:51:06,042
scene two. Edmund. This is the excellent foppery
1725
01:51:06,106 –> 01:51:09,406
of the world. That when we are sick and fortune often the surface
1726
01:51:09,438 –> 01:51:12,798
of our own behavior, we make guilty of our disasters the sun, the moon
1727
01:51:12,814 –> 01:51:15,966
and the stars as if we were villains
1728
01:51:15,998 –> 01:51:19,638
on necessity fools by heavenly compulsion knaves, thieves and
1729
01:51:19,644 –> 01:51:23,858
treachers by spherical predominance druckerns, liars and adulterers
1730
01:51:23,874 –> 01:51:27,126
by enforced obedience of planetary influence and all that
1731
01:51:27,148 –> 01:51:31,782
we are evil in by a divine thrusting on an
1732
01:51:31,836 –> 01:51:35,786
admirable evasion of poor master man to lay his gauchish disposition on
1733
01:51:35,808 –> 01:51:39,494
the charge of a star. My father compounded with my mother
1734
01:51:39,542 –> 01:51:43,086
under the dragon’s tail and my nativity was under Ursa Major so that
1735
01:51:43,108 –> 01:51:46,446
it follows I am rough and lecherous I should have
1736
01:51:46,468 –> 01:51:49,594
been, that I am had the maidenliest
1737
01:51:49,642 –> 01:51:53,658
star and the firmament twinkled on my bastardizing Edgar.
1738
01:51:53,834 –> 01:51:57,314
Then enter Edgar and Pat he comes like the
1739
01:51:57,352 –> 01:52:01,266
catastrophe of the old comedy. My cue is villainous melancholy with
1740
01:52:01,288 –> 01:52:04,766
a sigh like taboo bedland. Oh, these eclipses
1741
01:52:04,798 –> 01:52:07,960
do portend these divisions FA sola me.
1742
01:52:08,810 –> 01:52:12,374
He’s going to talk with Edgar a little bit. He’s going
1743
01:52:12,412 –> 01:52:14,680
to chat him up.
1744
01:52:15,690 –> 01:52:19,834
And then we’re going to leapfrog a little bit over here to
1745
01:52:19,952 –> 01:52:23,578
act two. And we’re going
1746
01:52:23,584 –> 01:52:26,620
to go to scene three in act two.
1747
01:52:28,350 –> 01:52:32,800
And we’re going to
1748
01:52:33,890 –> 01:52:39,680
juxtapose Edmund’s complaint with
1749
01:52:40,290 –> 01:52:43,710
probably the most famous soliloquy in
1750
01:52:43,780 –> 01:52:44,820
King Lear,
1751
01:52:46,150 –> 01:52:51,300
edgar’s Song. Edgar act
1752
01:52:52,150 –> 01:52:55,970
in scene three, act Two. Edgar I heard myself
1753
01:52:56,040 –> 01:52:59,502
proclaimed and by the happy hollow of a tree escaped the hunt.
1754
01:52:59,646 –> 01:53:03,362
No port is free, no place that guard and most unusual vigilance
1755
01:53:03,426 –> 01:53:06,946
does not attend my taking. Whilst I may escape, I will preserve
1756
01:53:06,978 –> 01:53:10,918
myself and am be thought to take the bassist and most porous shape
1757
01:53:11,014 –> 01:53:14,634
that ever pernery and contempt of man brought near to
1758
01:53:14,672 –> 01:53:18,454
beast my face I’ll grime with filth blanket my loins
1759
01:53:18,502 –> 01:53:22,134
elf all my hairs and knots and with presented nakedness
1760
01:53:22,182 –> 01:53:26,078
outface the winds and persecutions of the sky. The country
1761
01:53:26,164 –> 01:53:29,694
gives me proof and precedent of bedlam beggars who with
1762
01:53:29,732 –> 01:53:32,634
roaring voices strike in their numbered and mortified arms,
1763
01:53:32,682 –> 01:53:35,870
pins, wooden pricks, nails, springs of rosemary.
1764
01:53:36,030 –> 01:53:39,198
And with this horrible object from low farms, poor pelting,
1765
01:53:39,214 –> 01:53:41,822
villagers, SHEEPCOATS and mills,
1766
01:53:41,966 –> 01:53:45,646
sometime with lunatic bands, sometime with prayers and force
1767
01:53:45,678 –> 01:53:48,758
their charity. Poor turtley. God.
1768
01:53:48,844 –> 01:53:52,680
Poor tom. That’s something yet. Edgar I
1769
01:53:53,050 –> 01:53:56,598
nothing. Am. And he goes
1770
01:53:56,684 –> 01:54:01,106
to repair himself to
1771
01:54:01,148 –> 01:54:02,890
potentially save the King.
1772
01:54:08,440 –> 01:54:13,668
Edgar and Edmund are two sides and
1773
01:54:13,754 –> 01:54:16,084
we’ve touched on it, we’ve touched on it, touched on. Now we’re going to address
1774
01:54:16,122 –> 01:54:19,530
it directly. They’re two sides of the Western idea.
1775
01:54:21,020 –> 01:54:24,600
Edmund, of course, is a bastard.
1776
01:54:25,340 –> 01:54:28,090
Back when illegitimacy actually meant something,
1777
01:54:29,580 –> 01:54:32,524
actually meant quite a lot. And I still do believe it matters quite a lot.
1778
01:54:32,562 –> 01:54:36,204
But we’ve moved it from the material level to even well, to the spiritual level,
1779
01:54:36,242 –> 01:54:39,756
even though there are material consequences for Illegitimacy that we can
1780
01:54:39,778 –> 01:54:43,456
see in any and all of our major cities. And then
1781
01:54:43,478 –> 01:54:46,636
we have Edgar. Edgar, who is willing to fall on his sword,
1782
01:54:46,748 –> 01:54:50,828
not only speak to truth, to power, but also take action in that truth
1783
01:54:51,004 –> 01:54:54,470
to engage with the
1784
01:54:56,200 –> 01:54:59,536
Dionysian forces that Edmund and even in his cold
1785
01:54:59,568 –> 01:55:03,392
rationality represents. Edmund represents
1786
01:55:03,456 –> 01:55:06,644
the rational Dionysian. He represents rational,
1787
01:55:06,692 –> 01:55:10,024
decadence. I hate you and
1788
01:55:10,062 –> 01:55:14,520
I seek revenge. There’s many characters like this in Shakespeare.
1789
01:55:15,100 –> 01:55:19,436
I would argue that Hamlet’s uncle in
1790
01:55:19,458 –> 01:55:22,904
Hamlet is this character. I would argue that Iago
1791
01:55:22,952 –> 01:55:26,968
in Othello is this character.
1792
01:55:27,144 –> 01:55:31,040
I would even argue that a couple of the characters in Taming of the Shrew
1793
01:55:32,820 –> 01:55:36,812
are these characters as well. Shakespeare plays with this psychological
1794
01:55:36,876 –> 01:55:40,396
idea in the pursuit of fiction, in the pursuit of literature. He plays
1795
01:55:40,428 –> 01:55:44,272
with this idea of the Dionysian as being rational,
1796
01:55:44,416 –> 01:55:47,876
but also being decadent, driven by these decadent emotions. We talked
1797
01:55:47,898 –> 01:55:51,780
a lot about emotion on this podcast, but driven by decadent emotions,
1798
01:55:52,200 –> 01:55:55,776
driven to pursue what is in, quote, unquote,
1799
01:55:55,808 –> 01:55:59,784
their nature. And then, by the way, in a world before, a good 300 years
1800
01:55:59,822 –> 01:56:03,988
before there was any psychological language, shakespeare understood
1801
01:56:04,164 –> 01:56:07,872
that the drivers of these psychological
1802
01:56:07,956 –> 01:56:12,088
behaviors were murky and cathonian,
1803
01:56:12,264 –> 01:56:15,836
and they lived all the way down deep in the dark heart of
1804
01:56:15,858 –> 01:56:19,704
man. Jeremiah 79. The heart is deceitful
1805
01:56:19,752 –> 01:56:25,456
above all else. Who could know it right now?
1806
01:56:25,478 –> 01:56:29,372
There’s two other folks in here. We’ve talked about Cordelia, but we haven’t
1807
01:56:29,436 –> 01:56:33,044
really addressed Reagan and Gone a real. And they
1808
01:56:33,082 –> 01:56:37,136
have female agency and something that Shakespeare
1809
01:56:37,168 –> 01:56:40,704
gets knocked very often for, how he portrays
1810
01:56:40,752 –> 01:56:44,900
his women, either as being too shrewish
1811
01:56:45,320 –> 01:56:49,104
that’s the feminist critique against Taming of the Shrew, Catherine,
1812
01:56:49,152 –> 01:56:52,388
in Taming of the Shrew. But then you also get the feminist
1813
01:56:52,404 –> 01:56:55,736
critique against Cordelia. The feminists somehow miss that
1814
01:56:55,758 –> 01:56:59,912
Reagan and Gonrial drive much of the narrative
1815
01:56:59,976 –> 01:57:03,630
of King Lear. They are women in power. They are women
1816
01:57:05,120 –> 01:57:08,860
who are, in the parlance of our time, to be believed,
1817
01:57:10,100 –> 01:57:13,090
believe all women. I’m old enough to remember when that was a thing.
1818
01:57:15,620 –> 01:57:21,526
I’m also old enough to remember when Supreme
1819
01:57:21,558 –> 01:57:24,060
Court nominees couldn’t define what a woman was.
1820
01:57:27,430 –> 01:57:29,700
Okay, all right.
1821
01:57:31,510 –> 01:57:34,580
Once again, evidence of the Dionysian, right?
1822
01:57:36,390 –> 01:57:39,522
If the Apollonian fails, this is the lesson for leaders.
1823
01:57:39,666 –> 01:57:43,794
If the eye of cold
1824
01:57:43,842 –> 01:57:47,474
rationality fails, the Dionysian always lurks
1825
01:57:47,522 –> 01:57:50,718
in the basement. There’s always cathonian,
1826
01:57:50,914 –> 01:57:54,698
Mother Nature, darker things, earthier things,
1827
01:57:54,784 –> 01:57:57,642
uglier things to fall back into. And,
1828
01:57:57,696 –> 01:58:01,098
of course, this is what we build up against,
1829
01:58:01,184 –> 01:58:05,066
right? Edmund in
1830
01:58:05,088 –> 01:58:08,954
his seemingly Apollonian nature because by his words, he rejects
1831
01:58:09,002 –> 01:58:12,298
all of that Dionysian nonsense. The stars get the heck out of town.
1832
01:58:12,314 –> 01:58:17,010
I’m not driven by the stars. I’m driven by rationality. I’m rationally pursuing revenge.
1833
01:58:18,230 –> 01:58:21,886
But he was manipulated by female nature
1834
01:58:22,078 –> 01:58:24,100
without even being aware of it.
1835
01:58:25,830 –> 01:58:29,614
Cornwall, on the other hand, we haven’t really touched on Cornwall
1836
01:58:29,662 –> 01:58:33,286
too much, but Cornwall was aware of the manipulation and he went along with it
1837
01:58:33,308 –> 01:58:36,758
anyway. He’s like, no, this works for me. I’m going to do this until the
1838
01:58:36,764 –> 01:58:39,974
rail, until the wheels fall off. And they fell off pretty
1839
01:58:40,012 –> 01:58:40,600
quickly.
1840
01:58:44,430 –> 01:58:47,770
And then Edgar Edgar’s song,
1841
01:58:48,350 –> 01:58:51,994
edgar’s Soliloquy song, such as it were, acts as
1842
01:58:52,032 –> 01:58:55,658
an anchor for the child. Roll into the dark Tower came by Robert
1843
01:58:55,674 –> 01:58:59,246
Browning, whose great first line of that poem is my
1844
01:58:59,268 –> 01:59:01,440
first thought was, he lied in every word.
1845
01:59:03,650 –> 01:59:04,880
Love that line.
1846
01:59:08,290 –> 01:59:11,806
There’s a lot between Edmund and Edgar and Reagan and
1847
01:59:11,828 –> 01:59:15,890
Gonorrhill, but again, they represent the Apollonian and the Dionysian.
1848
01:59:17,270 –> 01:59:21,102
They represent the pull of villainy.
1849
01:59:21,246 –> 01:59:24,994
And we’ve talked a lot about that on this podcast because King Lear almost engenders
1850
01:59:25,042 –> 01:59:28,134
it. But the pull of villainy, right? In a time
1851
01:59:28,172 –> 01:59:31,574
of chaos, a time of venal appetites
1852
01:59:31,622 –> 01:59:34,954
and pursuits, a time of decadence when
1853
01:59:34,992 –> 01:59:36,650
everything’s really falling apart,
1854
01:59:41,310 –> 01:59:44,506
how do we lose we’ve kind of maybe talked a little bit about this
1855
01:59:44,528 –> 01:59:47,726
already, Louie, but how can leaders address that chaos and
1856
01:59:47,748 –> 01:59:50,350
that villainy without losing their ethics?
1857
01:59:51,170 –> 01:59:53,920
Pragmatic optimism? Maybe that’s the way.
1858
01:59:54,850 –> 01:59:57,780
Or lamenting even the reality of people.
1859
01:59:59,990 –> 02:00:03,570
How do you maintain hope? How do you stay a happy warrior?
1860
02:00:05,430 –> 02:00:08,854
Yeah, I think we’ve touched a lot on
1861
02:00:08,892 –> 02:00:12,614
this. I always come to come back
1862
02:00:12,652 –> 02:00:16,694
to the concept of that we all have good and bad in
1863
02:00:16,732 –> 02:00:20,054
us, and I look for the exceptions with
1864
02:00:20,092 –> 02:00:23,834
the good and creating conditions for the good to come
1865
02:00:23,872 –> 02:00:27,100
out versus focusing on the bad.
1866
02:00:29,150 –> 02:00:33,390
This also is about I mentioned change
1867
02:00:33,460 –> 02:00:37,280
comes from outside in versus inside out.
1868
02:00:37,970 –> 02:00:40,880
And that means you need to be willing to walk away.
1869
02:00:42,690 –> 02:00:45,150
You need to be willing to walk alone.
1870
02:00:48,550 –> 02:00:51,794
And none of this is said to be easy.
1871
02:00:51,992 –> 02:00:55,394
No. Right. I’m not trying to say, oh, you just walk away in the world.
1872
02:00:55,432 –> 02:00:58,886
That creates a fine place for yourself. But you need
1873
02:00:58,908 –> 02:01:02,294
to be able to walk away to stay clear, to stay true to
1874
02:01:02,332 –> 02:01:06,130
who you are. And you will attract
1875
02:01:06,290 –> 02:01:10,238
others like you to set the stage
1876
02:01:10,434 –> 02:01:13,740
for what good looks like.
1877
02:01:16,350 –> 02:01:19,882
I like that. I wrote that down. Build what good looks like.
1878
02:01:19,936 –> 02:01:23,502
I love that. And this
1879
02:01:23,556 –> 02:01:26,640
also comes from the concept of servant leadership, too.
1880
02:01:28,290 –> 02:01:32,014
It didn’t occur to me until this year that
1881
02:01:32,052 –> 02:01:35,642
I no longer hear we I no longer hear
1882
02:01:35,716 –> 02:01:40,366
what we can do together. When talking to employees
1883
02:01:40,558 –> 02:01:45,122
about how they can contribute to a company or
1884
02:01:45,176 –> 02:01:48,438
even companies talking to employees, it’s all about, what are you going
1885
02:01:48,444 –> 02:01:52,470
to do for me? Tell me what you did. What you did, I did.
1886
02:01:52,540 –> 02:01:55,734
And nothing is
1887
02:01:55,772 –> 02:01:57,350
accomplished with an eye.
1888
02:01:58,730 –> 02:02:02,474
And the concept of servant leadership is
1889
02:02:02,672 –> 02:02:06,186
it would almost be frowned upon to talk about
1890
02:02:06,288 –> 02:02:10,838
in today’s corporate environment
1891
02:02:11,014 –> 02:02:14,654
where you’re actually serving others because by
1892
02:02:14,692 –> 02:02:18,526
nature of being a servant, you’re not in power. But I
1893
02:02:18,548 –> 02:02:22,026
look at the concept of all tides rise, a rising
1894
02:02:22,058 –> 02:02:25,822
tide raises all ships. If I’m helping you
1895
02:02:25,876 –> 02:02:29,586
to become the best version of yourself, whether you’re someone who works for
1896
02:02:29,608 –> 02:02:32,862
me, whether you’re a peer, or whether you’re a board member,
1897
02:02:32,926 –> 02:02:36,562
investor, whomever, my goal is to
1898
02:02:36,616 –> 02:02:39,270
unleash your potential.
1899
02:02:40,410 –> 02:02:43,862
And in doing so, I also unleash my own because I
1900
02:02:43,916 –> 02:02:47,286
learn, I create more opportunity for myself.
1901
02:02:47,468 –> 02:02:50,280
Yada, yada, yada. But at the end of the day,
1902
02:02:50,830 –> 02:02:54,074
where’s this concept about creating conditions for all to
1903
02:02:54,112 –> 02:02:57,514
thrive? And where is
1904
02:02:57,552 –> 02:03:00,966
the we and not the we as a tribe,
1905
02:03:01,078 –> 02:03:04,190
but we as a team, we as an organization,
1906
02:03:04,850 –> 02:03:08,046
we as ran ecosystem? How are we all working together
1907
02:03:08,148 –> 02:03:11,374
to help diverse individuals with diverse needs and
1908
02:03:11,412 –> 02:03:13,790
aspirations thrive?
1909
02:03:18,310 –> 02:03:22,258
I think we’re at the end of division. And maybe I’m only speaking
1910
02:03:22,344 –> 02:03:26,100
from my point of view here,
1911
02:03:26,790 –> 02:03:30,680
my end of the telescope from what I’m seeing in my local community.
1912
02:03:33,690 –> 02:03:37,720
But I do think that we
1913
02:03:38,490 –> 02:03:43,000
collectively have hit the end of the cycle of
1914
02:03:44,010 –> 02:03:47,882
the eye. Now, don’t get me wrong. It’s ascended so high
1915
02:03:47,936 –> 02:03:51,178
that it’s going to take the message has gone up so high, it’s going
1916
02:03:51,184 –> 02:03:54,238
to take a while for the we message to get up. It’s going to take
1917
02:03:54,244 –> 02:03:57,360
a while. There’s still a lot of nonsense it has to push through.
1918
02:03:59,490 –> 02:04:05,374
From where I’m sitting, I do think that we
1919
02:04:05,412 –> 02:04:08,898
are getting it. Not maybe the
1920
02:04:08,904 –> 02:04:12,546
people who are leading us, maybe they aren’t getting it. And by
1921
02:04:12,568 –> 02:04:16,174
the way, I mean, after a certain breakpoint and in politics,
1922
02:04:16,222 –> 02:04:19,446
I go above the state level, probably not. But from
1923
02:04:19,468 –> 02:04:23,142
the local level up. Yeah, the we is coming back for sure,
1924
02:04:23,276 –> 02:04:27,586
right? The we as a civilization,
1925
02:04:27,698 –> 02:04:31,546
right? Yeah. We as a tribe, seeing individuals for what
1926
02:04:31,568 –> 02:04:33,020
you can learn from them,
1927
02:04:34,350 –> 02:04:38,186
embracing our individual diversity and
1928
02:04:38,208 –> 02:04:41,290
true diversity, diversity of experience, diversity of thought,
1929
02:04:41,440 –> 02:04:43,340
all that kind of fun stuff.
1930
02:04:45,330 –> 02:04:49,326
But as they say, I think it’s the Chinese character for
1931
02:04:49,348 –> 02:04:51,840
chaos is also the one for opportunity.
1932
02:04:52,610 –> 02:04:56,142
And in the midst of the chaos,
1933
02:04:56,206 –> 02:04:59,726
people are looking for something that adds meaning. And they’re
1934
02:04:59,758 –> 02:05:04,130
realizing that these evacuous promises
1935
02:05:04,470 –> 02:05:08,550
and externally validating things are not
1936
02:05:08,620 –> 02:05:13,334
fulfilling. They’re looking for something that gives them an
1937
02:05:13,372 –> 02:05:17,270
enduring purpose, an enduring set of enduring
1938
02:05:17,690 –> 02:05:21,034
set of meaning. Well,
1939
02:05:21,072 –> 02:05:24,474
I think you’re seeing this culturally in the decline of the
1940
02:05:24,512 –> 02:05:25,930
superhero film.
1941
02:05:28,750 –> 02:05:32,310
So we’ve reached the end of the superhero film.
1942
02:05:32,470 –> 02:05:36,314
I can pretty definitively say that, yeah, I think that genre
1943
02:05:36,362 –> 02:05:37,310
is dead.
1944
02:05:40,050 –> 02:05:42,720
I’ll push it to 30. It had a good 30 years.
1945
02:05:43,490 –> 02:05:47,738
It warped everything because of the amount of money that Disney
1946
02:05:47,834 –> 02:05:51,146
put behind marvel films, which are really quite frankly,
1947
02:05:51,258 –> 02:05:55,102
I love how you put a rhetoric in theater. They’re rhetoric in theater
1948
02:05:55,166 –> 02:05:58,310
with spectacle on top. And they had nothing
1949
02:05:58,380 –> 02:06:01,560
to say after the spectacle. Right.
1950
02:06:03,770 –> 02:06:07,286
Remarkable silence after the spectacle. Even though there
1951
02:06:07,308 –> 02:06:10,966
are a wealth of stories to be told in the canon, trust me,
1952
02:06:10,988 –> 02:06:14,534
I know. I collected comic books for many years. There’s a wealth of stories
1953
02:06:14,582 –> 02:06:16,090
to be told in the canon,
1954
02:06:17,550 –> 02:06:20,938
but the stories don’t match the rhetoric in
1955
02:06:20,944 –> 02:06:24,574
the theater. And so if
1956
02:06:24,612 –> 02:06:29,680
what you’re selling is rhetoric in theater through
1957
02:06:30,450 –> 02:06:33,534
a heightened cultural message of,
1958
02:06:33,572 –> 02:06:37,618
I not we. I am Iron Man.
1959
02:06:37,784 –> 02:06:41,038
I am Shazam. I am Superman.
1960
02:06:41,214 –> 02:06:44,898
What’s? Batman famous. I’m a Batman guy. I’m Batman. Okay.
1961
02:06:44,984 –> 02:06:48,740
Well, yeah, okay.
1962
02:06:49,350 –> 02:06:52,190
The rhetoric and the puffery isn’t delivering.
1963
02:06:52,350 –> 02:06:55,654
Right? I think we start, you saw early on
1964
02:06:55,852 –> 02:06:59,414
with PR and corporations, and after a while, we’re like, oh,
1965
02:06:59,452 –> 02:07:03,146
they’re going to come out with a PR statement. And then it started moving to
1966
02:07:03,168 –> 02:07:07,114
the puffery and politics and the puffery. Everything was
1967
02:07:07,232 –> 02:07:11,018
puffery and statements that we are.
1968
02:07:11,104 –> 02:07:13,950
But when you looked at what was actually delivering, you’re like,
1969
02:07:14,020 –> 02:07:19,614
just hogwash. All you care about is money and power. So all
1970
02:07:19,652 –> 02:07:23,678
of the gilding is, like, starting to wash away,
1971
02:07:23,844 –> 02:07:27,730
and people are starting to look at real sources of value and truth,
1972
02:07:28,790 –> 02:07:32,862
and they’re finding it locally. But if you believe in the human condition,
1973
02:07:33,006 –> 02:07:36,590
if you study history, if you understand human nature,
1974
02:07:36,670 –> 02:07:40,206
you can have faith in the cycles
1975
02:07:40,238 –> 02:07:43,926
of time and know, hey, it may not be easy. You may be
1976
02:07:43,948 –> 02:07:47,366
the person who sacrificed on the altar, but at least you get to live with
1977
02:07:47,388 –> 02:07:50,966
yourself. I was
1978
02:07:50,988 –> 02:07:53,206
going to ask you, what can we take away from this? How can we stay
1979
02:07:53,228 –> 02:07:56,566
on the path? What can we take away from King Lear? And I think that’s
1980
02:07:56,598 –> 02:07:59,686
a good takeaway. I think that’s the takeaway.
1981
02:07:59,798 –> 02:08:03,062
And you may end up with, like, you’ve got spiritual wealth,
1982
02:08:03,126 –> 02:08:06,126
you may end up with material wealth, you may not, but at least you can
1983
02:08:06,148 –> 02:08:09,566
live with yourself. And the people who are
1984
02:08:09,588 –> 02:08:14,702
more spiritual seem to be happier after
1985
02:08:14,756 –> 02:08:17,942
the ephemeral. Well, fundamentally,
1986
02:08:18,106 –> 02:08:21,874
it’s one of those things where I think
1987
02:08:22,072 –> 02:08:25,620
well, I think yeah. I thought for many years,
1988
02:08:26,230 –> 02:08:29,090
I’m going to be dead a lot longer than I’m going to be alive.
1989
02:08:30,470 –> 02:08:33,638
So since I’m going to be dead a lot longer than I’m going to be
1990
02:08:33,644 –> 02:08:37,014
alive, I should probably be worried about that
1991
02:08:37,052 –> 02:08:39,990
king of stuff and making sure that all that’s aligned,
1992
02:08:40,650 –> 02:08:44,360
because eternity is a really long time,
1993
02:08:45,130 –> 02:08:47,240
like, really long time.
1994
02:08:48,910 –> 02:08:52,746
Even if there is no life after death. Yeah. Even if we take the
1995
02:08:52,928 –> 02:08:56,490
Pascal. Right, yeah. Pascal’s wages that are dictated
1996
02:08:56,650 –> 02:08:59,280
all make life better. Right.
1997
02:09:00,050 –> 02:09:03,486
Why do I want to take dictates and mandates from people who
1998
02:09:03,508 –> 02:09:07,970
can’t manage their own households, whose kids are striped with addiction
1999
02:09:09,190 –> 02:09:12,974
or health policy, from people who are clearly
2000
02:09:13,022 –> 02:09:15,490
anorexic or have problems with overeating?
2001
02:09:16,150 –> 02:09:19,158
Right, exactly. Yeah. Sorry.
2002
02:09:19,244 –> 02:09:19,880
No,
2003
02:09:24,330 –> 02:09:27,986
exactly. Well, and that’s where the Jordan Peterson
2004
02:09:28,018 –> 02:09:30,120
idea of make your own bed comes from.
2005
02:09:31,450 –> 02:09:35,402
And this is where I look at people who
2006
02:09:35,456 –> 02:09:38,698
are in activist positions who yell and scream a lot
2007
02:09:38,784 –> 02:09:42,330
about a lot of things. And I do. I wonder
2008
02:09:42,400 –> 02:09:45,950
as I read their tweets and their proclamations and I watch
2009
02:09:46,020 –> 02:09:48,880
their performative acts, and I wonder,
2010
02:09:50,130 –> 02:09:51,680
what is your family like?
2011
02:09:53,010 –> 02:09:55,870
And as an individual, I have compassion for them.
2012
02:09:55,940 –> 02:09:59,586
Right. I want them to be struggling. I want them to find happiness with
2013
02:09:59,608 –> 02:10:03,614
themselves. But I’m not going to take rules and orders
2014
02:10:03,662 –> 02:10:07,486
from people who don’t, as you said, right. Their own house isn’t
2015
02:10:07,518 –> 02:10:11,414
in order. Focus on
2016
02:10:11,452 –> 02:10:14,742
your side of the sidewalk, I’ll focus on mine, and we’ll be really happy.
2017
02:10:14,796 –> 02:10:17,400
And that means I keep mine clean, right?
2018
02:10:20,350 –> 02:10:23,878
Exactly. All right. Well, in turning
2019
02:10:23,894 –> 02:10:27,850
the corner on King Lear, I think we’ve determined what Libby believes
2020
02:10:28,190 –> 02:10:31,290
is the larger message for leaders for staying on the path.
2021
02:10:33,250 –> 02:10:36,922
I will say this king Lear is often framed
2022
02:10:36,986 –> 02:10:40,286
as a tragedy. Matter of
2023
02:10:40,308 –> 02:10:43,790
fact, on the back of the Dover Thrift edition,
2024
02:10:44,210 –> 02:10:47,442
it says that first performed about 16 five, king Lear
2025
02:10:47,496 –> 02:10:51,166
is one of the most relentlessly bleak of Shakespeare’s
2026
02:10:51,198 –> 02:10:54,578
tragedies, probably written between Othello and Macbeth when the
2027
02:10:54,584 –> 02:10:56,980
playwright was at the peak of his tragic power.
2028
02:10:57,590 –> 02:11:00,594
Lear’s themes of filial, ingratitude,
2029
02:11:00,722 –> 02:11:03,958
injustice, and the meaninglessness of life in a
2030
02:11:03,964 –> 02:11:07,314
seemingly indifferent universe are explored with unsurpassed
2031
02:11:07,362 –> 02:11:09,190
power and depth.
2032
02:11:11,550 –> 02:11:15,610
Yeah, okay. If you just read
2033
02:11:15,680 –> 02:11:18,714
it for what it is on the surface, absolutely.
2034
02:11:18,832 –> 02:11:22,506
It’s relentlessly nihilistic. It is lear. There is
2035
02:11:22,528 –> 02:11:26,974
an existential struggle, and the
2036
02:11:27,012 –> 02:11:30,938
universe does to Neil degrasse Tyson
2037
02:11:30,954 –> 02:11:34,206
or Richard Dawkins glee, I would imagine, reveal itself to
2038
02:11:34,228 –> 02:11:38,126
be just about as dead
2039
02:11:38,158 –> 02:11:41,506
end and meaningless as you would think if you came from that particular set
2040
02:11:41,528 –> 02:11:45,460
of ideological assumptions. And yet
2041
02:11:48,010 –> 02:11:51,350
we’re not reading things into the text that are not
2042
02:11:51,420 –> 02:11:55,586
there. There are multiple interpretations of Shakespeare’s
2043
02:11:55,618 –> 02:11:59,000
work, just as there are multiple interpretations of King Lear.
2044
02:12:00,490 –> 02:12:04,506
Just like when you watch a movie or a television show,
2045
02:12:04,528 –> 02:12:08,502
like a Succession or a Yellowstone, you have to contextualize
2046
02:12:08,646 –> 02:12:12,646
Shakespeare to your moment. And by the way, this is why Shakespeare
2047
02:12:12,678 –> 02:12:16,430
will survive both the nuclear weapons and the cockroaches,
2048
02:12:16,850 –> 02:12:21,306
if it comes to that. They’ll still be doing Shakespeare in China
2049
02:12:21,418 –> 02:12:24,622
or in India or among whoever is left,
2050
02:12:24,756 –> 02:12:27,570
because it’s human nature,
2051
02:12:28,550 –> 02:12:32,340
not English nature or
2052
02:12:33,270 –> 02:12:37,966
white European nature or patriarchal
2053
02:12:38,078 –> 02:12:41,154
nature. You could switch around all
2054
02:12:41,192 –> 02:12:44,806
of the roles in King Lear, as Akira Kurosawa did
2055
02:12:44,828 –> 02:12:48,040
in Ron, and it would still be the same,
2056
02:12:48,650 –> 02:12:52,666
because the drivers are human. Are the
2057
02:12:52,688 –> 02:12:56,026
drivers of humanity bleak? Is there injustice in
2058
02:12:56,048 –> 02:12:58,060
the world? Yes.
2059
02:12:59,470 –> 02:13:03,410
But there’s also hope. There’s also optimism.
2060
02:13:03,590 –> 02:13:07,246
There’s also building what good looks like. Use that
2061
02:13:07,268 –> 02:13:10,240
a lot from Libby today.
2062
02:13:11,170 –> 02:13:14,298
There’s understanding the difference between principles and positions, and there’s
2063
02:13:14,314 –> 02:13:17,330
not getting caught up in spectacle or rhetoric in theater.
2064
02:13:18,070 –> 02:13:22,130
There’s not getting distracted. They’re standing firm
2065
02:13:23,030 –> 02:13:26,926
in the face of chaos and villainy. And just like Cordelia
2066
02:13:26,958 –> 02:13:29,560
does and many others in King Lear,
2067
02:13:29,930 –> 02:13:33,570
including Edgar Silently,
2068
02:13:33,730 –> 02:13:37,346
nor maybe even out loud, but silently asserting
2069
02:13:37,378 –> 02:13:40,594
yourself and saying out loud just one
2070
02:13:40,652 –> 02:13:48,010
word, no leaders.
2071
02:13:48,910 –> 02:13:52,246
We have to learn the power of the no. I think that’s the biggest lesson
2072
02:13:52,278 –> 02:13:55,642
from King Lear. If there’s anything we could take from Cordelia, it’s the power
2073
02:13:55,696 –> 02:13:59,006
of the no. If there’s anything we could take from Edgar, it’s the power of
2074
02:13:59,028 –> 02:14:02,414
what you do after the no has been given. Regardless of how many
2075
02:14:02,452 –> 02:14:07,230
Edmunds or Lausers or Kent’s
2076
02:14:09,430 –> 02:14:12,500
or attendants or servants who’s surrounding you,
2077
02:14:14,390 –> 02:14:17,858
the characters really don’t matter. None of
2078
02:14:17,864 –> 02:14:21,158
them are going to help you at the end of
2079
02:14:21,164 –> 02:14:24,098
that existential struggle and the clearing at the end of that path.
2080
02:14:24,274 –> 02:14:27,590
Now, Lear got lucky. Cordelia was with him there at the end.
2081
02:14:27,740 –> 02:14:29,190
That’s luck.
2082
02:14:31,770 –> 02:14:35,126
In our modern era, Lear would probably be written and I get the
2083
02:14:35,148 –> 02:14:38,506
sense of the father in succession. And potentially, whatever they do
2084
02:14:38,528 –> 02:14:42,266
with the Kevin Costner character in Yellowstone is going to wind up alone in
2085
02:14:42,288 –> 02:14:45,534
a room by himself. And it usually is a man,
2086
02:14:45,572 –> 02:14:48,430
by the way, ladies, full of regret.
2087
02:14:51,270 –> 02:14:54,734
But it doesn’t have to be that way. We have agency,
2088
02:14:54,782 –> 02:14:59,074
we have choice. We can take
2089
02:14:59,112 –> 02:15:02,502
the lessons from King Lear. We could take the lessons from Shakespeare. We could apply
2090
02:15:02,556 –> 02:15:06,294
them to our lived lives. We could
2091
02:15:06,332 –> 02:15:09,962
build a better society and culture starting at the lower local level.
2092
02:15:10,016 –> 02:15:15,864
We could build a we together where
2093
02:15:15,902 –> 02:15:20,264
we can all see with collective eyes and
2094
02:15:20,302 –> 02:15:23,772
create a vision for the future that’s worth
2095
02:15:23,826 –> 02:15:24,700
defending.
2096
02:15:27,360 –> 02:15:30,476
I want to thank my guest, Libby Unger, for coming on the
2097
02:15:30,498 –> 02:15:34,236
podcast today. Always a great pleasure to have her. We will have
2098
02:15:34,258 –> 02:15:37,436
her on again. There’s another couple of books coming
2099
02:15:37,458 –> 02:15:39,890
up in a few months. We’re going to have her on again.
2100
02:15:40,260 –> 02:15:43,696
Libby, is there anything you would like to promote today
2101
02:15:43,718 –> 02:15:46,928
on the podcast? Anywhere where people can find you or where you want to
2102
02:15:46,934 –> 02:15:49,670
be found or do you want to be found, even?
2103
02:15:51,400 –> 02:15:54,836
No, I don’t hide. You can
2104
02:15:54,858 –> 02:15:57,968
always find me on LinkedIn, Libby Younger,
2105
02:15:58,144 –> 02:16:01,524
and ping me there or email me
2106
02:16:01,562 –> 02:16:04,564
directly at libby@luminola.com.
2107
02:16:04,602 –> 02:16:08,516
And you can add that to the show notes. But this has been
2108
02:16:08,618 –> 02:16:12,436
fabulous. Don’t lose hope. Do the
2109
02:16:12,458 –> 02:16:16,044
right thing. The only person that you need to be able to live with is
2110
02:16:16,082 –> 02:16:19,084
yourself and do the right thing,
2111
02:16:19,122 –> 02:16:22,910
because it’s the right thing to do. And with that,
2112
02:16:25,280 –> 02:16:25,850
I’m out.