I don't know what you guys had planned to talk about today,
Clark:but I've got something on my mind.
Clark:It's really been bothering me.
Clark:I especially given that Rob is into relationships and you work so much
Clark:with so many young guys, Tony or have done in the footballing world.
Clark:It's, it is been playing on my mind a lot recently because of
Clark:the type of work I've been doing.
Clark:Most of this week, the last couple of days I've been having some calls in the states.
Clark:So it's meant that I've needed to stay in my office here, which is on a an estate,
Clark:a sort of a business estate in Norwich.
Clark:And I've been staying till maybe 10 in the evening.
Clark:And what I noticed the last couple of nights was that at about six o'clock, so
Clark:I've got, there's a street running across here, it's a fairly quiet part of Norwich.
Clark:A van will pull up about 30 yards down the road.
Clark:And there's just a guy in it, and I, when I look out, I can see he's
Clark:just sitting there reading and then the light goes off at whatever time,
Clark:and I'm guessing he goes to sleep.
Clark:And then about an hour later, a car pulls up over there, and it's a guy
Clark:in a car, and he just sits there reading, and then goes to sleep.
Clark:So I was talking to the, one of the guys that work here,
Clark:and I said what's going on?
Clark:He said, oh, they've got nowhere to live.
Clark:He said they sleep there every night.
Clark:And I thought, that's so strange, and I was talking yesterday morning.
Clark:So in my building, there's a couple of offices, there's a factory here,
Clark:and then there's a gym just down here.
Clark:I was talking to the guy that runs the gym, really nice guy, in his thirties,
Clark:and I told him about this, he said, oh yeah, he said, I know them, he
Clark:said he said, I've been sleeping in my gym for the last couple of months.
Clark:I said, what?
Clark:Why?
Clark:He said, me and my wife are having some problems.
Clark:And I, this started to pique my interest because I thought,
Clark:wow, this is interesting.
Clark:Most of my work has always been with guys in, in manufacturing,
Clark:trade and that sort of thing.
Clark:But since the accident, a lot of people have approached me about
Clark:coaching and it predominantly revolves around how men navigate
Clark:the current environment, let's say.
Clark:A lot of guys feel out of sync with the way things are.
Clark:Was asking this guy, if you've got problems with your relationship,
Clark:why are you sleeping in the gym?
Clark:He said, the thing is, he said, when things were going well, everything was
Clark:fine, he said, but the minute I started to struggle, and I became vulnerable, The
Clark:interactions between me and my partner became very difficult and awkward and he
Clark:said, I just needed to get out of there because otherwise I haven't got the time.
Clark:He said, I've got business I'm trying to run that's struggling for money.
Clark:I'm being attacked at home.
Clark:He said, I just need to get into somewhere where I can get
Clark:some peace and focus on my work.
Clark:So I was thinking about this.
Clark:Yesterday, that guy, Grayson Murray, died.
Clark:Committed suicide.
Clark:It makes me laugh because they say you died by suicide.
Clark:I killed himself.
Clark:He murdered himself.
Clark:And that's not an easy thing to do.
Clark:How low have you got to be to do that?
Clark:And I just sat there last night and I thought, I'm going to just
Clark:Google this and I Googled, is there something wrong with men?
Clark:I just wanted to see what the, what answer, and I got five things.
Clark:The top five answers were, the trouble with men, how the modern
Clark:male has reached crisis point, how to fix toxic masculinity, what's
Clark:the matter with men, why are some men so terrible and what we do.
Clark:That's it.
Clark:And what's the problem with men?
Clark:And I just thought there's a lot of guys out there really struggling and we keep
Clark:hearing about how these guys need help.
Clark:And I never see any of it.
Clark:You never see any help.
Clark:Where's the, where is the help?
Clark:And I just thought in this forum, I just wanted to get your guys thoughts on this
Clark:because he actually, being ex military, I've seen a lot of military friends go
Clark:down the same road and it terrifies me.
Clark:Not because I think that.
Clark:the world is doing something bad to them, but just because they feel
Clark:that they're trapped in some way.
Clark:And it really concerns me because given that this seems to be such a a big issue,
Clark:so little appears to be done about it.
Clark:And these guys are dropping like flies.
Clark:I just wondered if you had any thoughts on it.
Tony:Rob I'll defer to you in terms of your vast knowledge and
Tony:relationship experience, but a couple of immediate things spring to mind here.
Tony:I think there's a paradox when it comes to vulnerability and this
Tony:expectation that it's necessarily always a strength that can leave people, I
Tony:think, feeling rejected in some cases.
Tony:And when it comes to those interpersonal relationships when,
Tony:obviously can't speak to everyone.
Tony:I don't know who these guys are, but there was a, at some point in that
Tony:relationship where they were the guy that, that, Partners wanted to marry.
Tony:They thought he was the top man.
Tony:The man.
Tony:And I think once there's a loss of status.
Tony:It's interesting, the timing of this.
Tony:I was looking at this stuff myself over the last week or so there's a biological
Tony:hierarchy that people, in terms of mating relationships you want to mate
Tony:up the hierarchy as high as you can get.
Tony:And I think if there's a anything like if somebody loses their job or if somebody
Tony:loses their charisma or there's a drop in energy or they're not looking after
Tony:themselves as, as much as they were.
Tony:It's probably an unconscious thing, but there's a loss of
Tony:status within that relationship.
Tony:They're not going to be as admired and as respected they once were.
Tony:And so I think there's a lot of work to do to reframe that for people and help
Tony:them understand what their role is in that take responsibility for themselves.
Tony:And also to be, all of that stoicism and stuff has got some real benefit, I think.
Clark:Yes.
Clark:And just before you offer your thoughts on that, Rob.
Clark:I think you're dead right about that loss of status because the guy that runs the
Clark:gym, I've known him since I've been in this office, which is about 18 months,
Clark:he's a really nice guy in his early 30s.
Clark:Fit, good looking guy, makes me feel jealous looking at him, the guy's
Clark:a really perfect specimen of a man.
Clark:Having spoken to him about it, though, I said what do you think is causing this?
Clark:He said, look I can't give it too much thought.
Clark:He said, because I've got a business that's going down the pan here.
Clark:So I'm trying to keep this thing afloat.
Clark:He said, but it seems, That when I'm at my most vulnerable when I need the most
Clark:support is when I'm getting attacked the most and there you go Yeah, that's
Clark:really that really stuck with me when you said that because he said it from
Clark:the heart the guy was in pain I mean He felt that this person that at one
Clark:point He was the man his partner chose him to spend the rest of their life
Clark:together And I just got a feeling that he felt like he'd been betrayed.
Clark:Now I've heard people talking about how it's all the women's
Clark:movements and all this.
Clark:I'm not interested in that.
Clark:I'm more interested in how the guys can deal with whatever territory we're having
Clark:to be living in at the moment, regardless of what else is going on in the world.
Clark:And when I do coaching with guys, it's all about how do you become
Clark:the best version of yourself and magnifying that out a little bit.
Clark:I'm trying to think of how we can help.
Clark:men in general become the best version of themselves.
Clark:One of the things I say on my LinkedIn profile is that men don't have
Clark:to be less to help women be more.
Clark:It's brilliant, the fact that women have got a space at the table.
Clark:It's taken over a hundred years for that to happen.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:It doesn't mean that the men need to leave the table, and there comes a
Clark:point, I think, when I was looking at this guy and I didn't, Actually,
Clark:specifically say, look, I want to help you coach you or anything, but the
Clark:conversation that we had, we sat there till quite late last night talking
Clark:and I thought this guy needs somebody to listen to him and I think that's a
Clark:general but yeah, I'll be interested to hear what you think on that, Rob.
Rob:Yeah I'm trying to grasp really what the crux of the I have some experience
Rob:in this in being in relationships.
Rob:Most of the people I spoke to, it tends to be women.
Rob:So I have looked more from that side, but I did when I had groups.
Rob:I noticed that men were different when women weren't in the room.
Rob:So I had men only groups.
Rob:One of the most common scenarios is someone probably about our age, 40s
Rob:to 50s, will a man in a, they've been in a relationship maybe 25 years,
Rob:and they'll just suddenly get up and leave for some younger model.
Rob:And what I noticed is people go into relationships with a vision.
Rob:And the problem is they both go into it with their vision of what they want.
Rob:And they think this other person's going to fulfill it.
Rob:And then I end up in a tug of war of, if you could just be like
Rob:this, we'd be perfect together.
Rob:And if you could just be like this, we'd be perfect together.
Rob:And they end up pulling at each other.
Rob:Typically men, especially if they're successful at work, they get like
Rob:respect from their work, they get especially often it's someone younger,
Rob:they, a young woman looks up to them.
Rob:Then they're mentoring them.
Rob:They're showing them their experiences.
Rob:They are, as you say, the man.
Rob:Whereas at home, when you've been living with someone 20 years, you're just
Rob:the person who puts out the rubbish.
Rob:The kids don't respect you.
Rob:It's not they don't see you in the same light because you're being domesticated.
Rob:And and so often men will leave for that respect which ends up often it's a month,
Rob:two months, and they end up regretting it.
Rob:There is some controversial research, but it, I think it does hold true
Rob:that women want love over respect and men want respect over love.
Rob:I've heard a lot of women say that their partner is just, It's just crying
Rob:over everything, so I think sometimes men don't understand vulnerability in
Rob:that they think being vulnerable means, okay, I just unload all my problems and
Rob:they should accept me because I'm being vulnerable, whereas vulnerability is,
Rob:okay, this is what I'm dealing with, I'm sharing what I'm dealing with, but it
Rob:doesn't take away the fact that I'm in the fight, that I'm doing what I can.
Rob:So I think there is been so much that we're pushing men to change.
Rob:And I think men haven't really understood that.
Rob:Men often are looking, what do I have to do?
Rob:Tell me what I have to do.
Rob:Tell me what I have to say.
Rob:So this was the thing in the men's meeting.
Rob:No, when they were there and there was a woman there, they
Rob:were like, What's the answer?
Rob:What's the answer?
Rob:What?
Rob:How do I say this?
Rob:And they would even ask that question.
Rob:They go, someone said this to me.
Rob:What do I say?
Rob:And they're just, what do you believe?
Rob:What do you think?
Rob:And so I think that we've grown up, men of our age have grown up in a
Rob:world where it was vastly different.
Rob:But I think there is a huge amount of shame in being wrong.
Rob:So when I look at communication, women are generally more manipulative.
Rob:And I think it's because the frame of patriarchy has told
Rob:men, you have to be right.
Rob:You, when it goes back, the man was the head of the household and if
Rob:he's a wife and his children didn't follow him, then he wasn't a real man.
Rob:And so what happens is that puts an enormous pressure on men to be right.
Rob:What it also does is it means that women have to be very manipulative
Rob:and they can't directly challenge, but they can try and lead a man and
Rob:so they don't say things directly.
Rob:And I think one of the problems we have in communication is that.
Rob:Women are afraid to say things directly and men are afraid to show anything
Rob:other than anger or like being grumpy.
Rob:Like a lot of people complain that the man is grumpy and it's
Rob:because grumpy and angry, you can show emotions, but the rest of the
Rob:emotions have always been not manly.
Rob:Yeah, I think there's a lot of things.
Rob:I think a lot of men are struggling to cope with the change.
Rob:It changes in society.
Rob:Don't know if that really answers, cause I haven't really grasped the
Rob:frame of the problem, but maybe that will give something more.
Rob:I
Clark:think Rob the issue probably is that nobody really knows
Clark:what the problem actually is.
Clark:I've looked over the last couple of days since I started looking at this.
Clark:A lot of people recognize that there's a problem and having worked in manufacturing
Clark:specifically around problem solving, I've gone into the subject with a
Clark:view to defining the problem, finding out why it's a problem, who it's a
Clark:problem for, in what way it presents as a problem, and there's nothing.
Clark:There's nothing.
Clark:You've literally just said that men are being challenged for crying
Clark:all the time when it seems that they've been asked to be vulnerable.
Clark:Clearly, that's not the sort of vulnerable that they want.
Clark:They want a different sort of.
Clark:And I find myself asking when I work with the clients, one on
Clark:one, this subject always comes up.
Clark:I don't feel I'm insert word enough, man enough, respected enough,
Clark:assertive enough, or whatever it is.
Clark:And the question I always ask is, who's telling you this, where are you
Clark:getting this from this feeling, this information, and you've just said
Clark:that men are being pushed to change.
Clark:I'm really interested to find out what pressures men feel, because surely the
Clark:goal of all people, men and women, is to be self actualized, to be fulfilled and
Clark:complete as their own person, not relying on other people's validation or approval.
Clark:So if we're listening to other people telling us how we should be, the question
Clark:arises how do you know how I should be?
Clark:Can we say that all men need to be a certain way?
Clark:Because we certainly wouldn't be able to say that all women
Clark:need to be a certain way.
Clark:You'd get thrown out the window.
Rob:I Yeah, I think I have something to that is that.
Rob:Men have been pushed because relationships don't work for women anymore.
Rob:Until the 50s, 60s, women were tied into a relationship and marriage
Rob:was an economic unit since then.
Rob:And this has a parallel in corporate as well, is that.
Rob:So women wanted more.
Rob:So women started divorcing men in droves.
Rob:I think what women really want and what men aren't doing is engaging.
Rob:Men are saying, what do I need to do?
Rob:And women are saying, I need you to engage with me.
Rob:I need you to be on it with me.
Rob:And men are going yeah but what's the answer?
Rob:So I think it, and I think in corporate people are, when you have
Rob:the great resignation and quiet quitting and all of that stuff, I
Rob:think people are increasingly leaving because they're in a relationship
Rob:where it's a relationship of power.
Rob:So I think women want them to engage with them and they want a partner.
Rob:I equally think women are confused about what they want.
Rob:Because what they say they want.
Rob:And then I think generally the issue is we have a broken model for relationships.
Rob:When you look at how people talk about relationships, it's still the fairy tale.
Rob:It's magic.
Rob:It's like the chemistry and it's but we haven't defined it.
Rob:And I think people don't have a frame.
Rob:They're working from a frame that doesn't work.
Rob:If I
Tony:think about it as, if you think about the work you do in business, Clark,
Tony:and some of the work that I do and perhaps yourself, Rob, the companies invest
Tony:thousands to help people improve their communication to help the team dynamic.
Tony:And I don't think when those people go home, they necessarily apply the
Tony:same principles and methods to the biggest relationship that they have.
Tony:So when I think about who's telling them that when you said who, who's
Tony:actually telling them this, that they're not X enough, whatever it might be.
Tony:I think the world's telling everybody that I think The modern world social
Tony:media, even mainstream media, are just bombarding people with images
Tony:and references to nobody's actually good enough unless you're high
Tony:stakes, look at these fantastic people over here versus you miserable lot.
Tony:So I think out of that it's how do we help people take responsibility for being
Tony:who they want to be and need to be in order to sustain that relationship and
Tony:to, it's to help them navigate those, what are really difficult conversations.
Tony:If we've got two independent people with very different biologies and
Tony:very different outlooks on the world, who've come together in a relationship,
Tony:probably at an age where they haven't fully matured necessarily, just
Tony:plucking some ideas out of the sky here.
Tony:If they just continue down that path and don't take the time to grow and
Tony:mature into this evolving thing, it seems natural to me that it's gonna
Tony:just naturally deteriorate over time without the effort to understand,
Tony:without the effort to appreciate, without the effort to, all the stuff
Tony:about gratitude and things like that.
Tony:They're the types of conversations that perhaps need to be had more
Tony:often and aren't had in lots of cases.
Tony:I just think there's a, there's such a contrast between my experience in the
Tony:workplace of what the type of work I do, the types of conversations I have with
Tony:people versus this conversation we're having today, which is exposed like your
Tony:experience, Clark, is exposed absolutely just in that local domain that you're in.
Tony:You've seen this.
Tony:Increasing isolation.
Tony:People that they don't know how to forge this thing back together, or
Tony:they don't even know why it's got to where it has in the first place.
Clark:I, I think as well, Tony the reason I see it is because I'm looking for it
Clark:because of the type of work that I do.
Clark:I had, one of my most recent clients was referred to me by a woman not
Clark:their partner, but a colleague.
Clark:Who said, I want you to meet this guy, I've not told him that you're going
Clark:to pitch him or anything like that because it's not the way I work anyway.
Clark:But I want you to just meet him and see what happens because I really think
Clark:this guy needs to have a chat with you.
Clark:And I got talking to this guy and Rob, I think you nailed it there
Clark:in an oblique sort of way anyway.
Clark:When you said that the men sit there and say, what do I do?
Clark:What do I do?
Clark:because our parents generation knew what to do, even if it was the wrong
Clark:thing, and it often was the wrong thing.
Clark:You would go down to the pub with your dad and the things that they would talk about
Clark:and the attitudes that they espoused were completely conducive to a happy family.
Clark:However, to them, they were right.
Clark:I'm the man, et cetera.
Clark:Thankfully that's changing, but having pulled the rug out
Clark:from underneath a lot of men.
Clark:There's no solid ground for a lot of them to stand on now, and they lack certainty,
Clark:it seems to me, this is the image that I'm getting so that when you talk about what
Clark:the crux of the situation is, Rob, I've got a feeling, when I spoke to this guy,
Clark:when I was referred to this guy, and I spoke to him, and we were just chatting,
Clark:and he said, I really appreciate it.
Clark:His dad had died and there were some issues around trauma and that sort of
Clark:thing, but basically it was, I have this feeling that I'm not enough, I'm not man
Clark:enough, I'm not assertive enough, I'm not strong enough, et cetera, et cetera,
Clark:and we had a bit of a conversation and we ended up working together, and he was
Clark:a lovely man, but it, that was a very clear, crystallized View of a lot of the
Clark:conversations that I'm having where guys I've been told as you said, Tony, by the
Clark:world, the old way is no good anymore.
Clark:We have to adapt to, to, to a new way.
Clark:But what is the new way?
Clark:Tell me.
Clark:Yeah, tell me.
Clark:That's what they're saying, right?
Clark:We look what's the answer
Tony:I was gonna say Clark.
Tony:So on that basis, then let's use that as a model.
Tony:What is the benchmark then?
Tony:So let's say somebody comes to you and says.
Tony:I've got these feelings of not being good enough, whatever it might be strong
Tony:enough, assertive enough, et cetera.
Tony:So what is the benchmark then?
Tony:And obviously it's going to be different for everybody.
Tony:Maybe there's a real gap there and there's training to be had.
Tony:So actually, yeah, you could be more assertive.
Tony:Yes, you could be you could take more of a stand in these
Tony:situations, whatever it might be.
Clark:And maybe not, I don't.
Clark:The thing is, Tony before I ever even got involved in this side of things, when I
Clark:was working in manufacturing, one of the things I used to do in training was talk
Clark:about, from a business point of view, it's no good saying, we have mission statements
Clark:and strategy and Hoshinkanri and all this stuff that organizations put together.
Clark:And I always used to say, look, there's no point saying where you want to go if
Clark:you don't know where you're starting from.
Clark:If you're standing in the middle of a map, and you say we're going that way
Clark:are you facing in the right direction?
Clark:And one of the things I say now, talking to these guys, is You
Clark:need to know where you're starting from before you can do anything.
Clark:And I think this is probably one of the reasons I really started pushing to get
Clark:into writing, because talking to one guy is hugely rewarding, obviously, but it's
Clark:also frustrating when you see these guys sleeping in their vans and stuff, and you
Clark:think that this is almost an epidemic.
Clark:I don't want to be melodramatic about it, but it seems to me.
Clark:There's a vast gulf now between what guys think is expected of them
Clark:and how they are actually expected to behave in the modern world.
Clark:And I started, my, my coaching course is 36 sessions, separate sessions that
Clark:involve things like how you relate to your family, how you deal with being resilient
Clark:how you handle money, all sorts of things.
Clark:But it starts with two questions.
Clark:What's real?
Clark:What do you know to be true as a map?
Clark:And then the second question is, how do you know, how do you know that?
Clark:And if you know those, then you'll be amazed at how few
Clark:people can answer those questions.
Clark:Because once they can answer those questions, a lot of the stuff that
Clark:gets said to them, or you're not X enough, they just say, no, I am, thanks.
Clark:And it changes it.
Clark:I
Tony:mean, I love the the map reference.
Tony:The platform that I'm building, just by the way, it's called Team GPS.
Tony:It's all about if we're going somewhere, where are we now?
Tony:What is the start point?
Tony:If you switch your GPS on, it always starts from home and then
Tony:you decide what the best route is to get where you want to go.
Tony:And it might change if there's a roadblock, you might have to deviate,
Tony:you'd take the next best fastest route.
Tony:So I really resonate with that.
Tony:And it's the same for individuals as it is for, those two questions that
Tony:you asked is all about just increasing self awareness in an instant and
Tony:helping them understand actually.
Tony:I don't know the answer to these questions.
Tony:What a great place to start a conversation.
Clark:You, you, I think you just nailed it, actually that
Clark:idea that what's the benchmark?
Clark:It's just stuck in my brain that most guys don't know what the, 100 years
Clark:ago, people were either political or religious, or they looked up to some
Clark:sort of local mentor or something.
Clark:Nowadays, there are no, who have we got?
Clark:We've got that, what's his name, Tate fellow, Andrew Tate.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:And that's it.
Clark:And if that's all we've got, we're in trouble.
Clark:And, there also used to be years ago the YMCA the Young Men's Christian
Clark:Association, and things like the AA and so on, which were all revolved
Clark:around offering people, not just men, but people a standard by
Clark:which they could set themselves.
Clark:In all problem solving in manufacturing, the question is,
Clark:what do you think the problem is?
Clark:And then what's the standard?
Clark:What is the standard that you're trying to achieve in the process for getting to it?
Clark:And are you following the process?
Clark:And if you are following the process and not achieving the
Clark:standard, is the standard too high?
Clark:And so on.
Clark:Actually the key is what you've just said.
Clark:What's the, in my mind, when you say what's the benchmark,
Clark:it's, yeah, what's the standard?
Clark:I don't know why I'd even forgotten that, actually.
Clark:You've just made me think of something that I've known for 20 years.
Clark:I
Rob:think I think it is about a map.
Rob:I think men are lost.
Rob:I think the map has been taken away.
Rob:So I, one of my past things was emotional GPS and then I had
Rob:relationship GPS and now Tony, you've stolen team GPS before I got there.
Rob:But, I think it is a map and I think, so when I look at people need three
Rob:things, so they need to belong and they need to provide value and they
Rob:need meaning and I think what women are looking for is the meaning piece.
Rob:I think they are looking, I think traditionally men have had
Rob:the direction and they've led.
Rob:And I think a lot of women are looking to go on a journey and then looking
Rob:to go on a journey with someone.
Rob:I think the value piece is that they're looking for someone to
Rob:emotionally engage with them.
Rob:And I think a lot of men, like you say, are so lost that they're not engaging.
Rob:They're not really engaging.
Rob:I don't know.
Rob:Maybe it doesn't come naturally to men that I think there's a distinction like
Rob:I've seen anthropologists talk about the men will go off and they'll hunt
Rob:and because they're on the hunt they have to be quiet so they don't talk.
Rob:So men are used to being spending long periods of time not talking, they're
Rob:just focused on what they're doing.
Rob:Whereas the women would go out hunting and gathering and it's a
Rob:very social occasion where they'll all be interacting all the time.
Rob:So I think there's a, mismatch in styles, but also I think there's something
Rob:I have in relationships and I think the interactions create the climate
Rob:and the three killers of relationship are blaming, gaming and shaming.
Rob:And so we talked about the shame.
Rob:And I think what, when someone feels shame, it shuts down communication.
Rob:And then because it shuts down, the more someone pokes at them.
Rob:The more they shut down and so I think that might be some of it.
Rob:But I definitely think, I think it does, a lot of it does come back
Rob:to, like you say Joseph Campbell and rites of passage and the aligning
Rob:of the spiritual with the science.
Rob:And having a narrative that brings some clarity and some guidance because
Rob:when you look at the popularity of Andrew Tate and Jordan Peterson's
Rob:another one and they have millions of devout followers because they give
Rob:a narrative to a lot of young men.
Tony:Very different characters though.
Tony:One I would say is way more ethical than the other.
Tony:Yeah.
Tony:For me, I've studied the sort of personality for the last four years
Tony:deeply and trait neuroticism is higher in women than it is in men and you would
Tony:expect it to be so they've got heightened sensitivity towards danger because
Tony:they're wired to look after children and protect families and so forth.
Tony:Now if their partner has lost status, has lost that sense of being the man who they
Tony:first came together, the chance of that sensitivity increasing is significant.
Tony:The chance of me feeling if I'm a partner, afraid that he can no longer protect us.
Tony:It's just, it's an unconscious thing.
Tony:Now, if that's, there's no awareness of that.
Tony:it can just start to deteriorate because no one's talking about it.
Tony:So I think that when we're looking for the benchmarks for for how men can be those
Tony:questions that Clark's asking up front are really strong because we need to be,
Tony:we need to be in the scheme of things.
Tony:We are human beings, we are biological beings and all of the
Tony:stuff that gets pumped at us, we start to become self conscious about
Tony:because we don't understand it.
Tony:We're just told that you need to be more vulnerable.
Tony:I don't know what that means.
Tony:So I'm going to start crying at home every day.
Tony:That's not working for your partner anymore because
Tony:she doesn't feel protected.
Tony:She doesn't feel safe.
Tony:And these are broad brush strokes, of course, but there's a bit, there's a fair
Tony:bit of biology going on, and it needs interventions from people such as Clark to
Tony:help people actually recognize where these maps are, where these start points are.
Tony:Because it may well be that actually I do need to bring some of my previously stated
Tony:sense of self back into this arrangement.
Tony:If I've lost my identity, if I've lost who I was.
Tony:So let's say you lose your job and suddenly you don't feel worthy anymore.
Tony:You don't feel good enough anymore because of something
Tony:external that happened to you.
Tony:And that starts to play out in all sorts of unhealthy ways.
Tony:Then the reality is at that point, yeah, you might need a
Tony:bit, you might need support.
Tony:You might need understanding on all of those things.
Tony:Of course you do.
Tony:But it doesn't take away from the fact that your partner still
Tony:needs, The guy you were before.
Tony:So the sooner we can take responsibility for getting back on track And if it was
Tony:ambition that drove us, get that ambition back, get that drive back, get that will
Tony:to succeed back, whatever it might have been then you give yourself a chance.
Tony:If you allow circumstances to dictate, then I think it's
Tony:problematic because people naturally, they're feeling stuff as well.
Tony:They're experiencing emotions around all of these things, and they're
Tony:experiencing a sense of loss.
Tony:This is who I married.
Tony:I feel like I've lost the person that I married.
Tony:There's a sort of semi grieving process going on, perhaps.
Tony:And it's very complicated, this stuff we're talking about, but.
Clark:I think, Tony, there's a bit of a paradox going on, actually because it
Clark:seems to me I wrote a post yesterday.
Clark:It probably doesn't look when you, like it when you read the post, but
Clark:it was, Directly dealing with this particular question because sometimes
Clark:the things that you think you want are not the things that you want or need.
Clark:And it, I get the impression that some of the things that men are being asked to do
Clark:in trying to do them, they are becoming less than they actually are needed to be.
Clark:And I remember this goes back 10 years, my wife, and my wife's
Clark:quite a strong personality as well.
Clark:But we had a little bit of a disagreement and she told me afterwards because
Clark:she was complaining to her friend how I will not compromise, it's this,
Clark:that's it, and her friend said, you can't marry a man because he's strong
Clark:and then complain that he's strong.
Clark:It's really stuck with me because I thought, Sometimes the things that we
Clark:think we're unhappy about are not actually the thing that we're unhappy about.
Clark:And the post yesterday was talking about, Alan Watts proposed this idea years
Clark:ago called the backwards law, which basically said that you can have anything
Clark:you want, as long as you don't want it.
Clark:If you chase happiness, by definition, you're admitting
Clark:that you don't have happiness.
Clark:So it's actually self defeating.
Clark:And when somebody says to you, Oh, you're not enough.
Clark:And you say what should I do?
Clark:You're literally saying you're right.
Clark:I'm not in instead of saying no fine.
Clark:Thanks You sort yourself out.
Clark:Now, clearly that does require, as you said, a standard by which you can
Clark:compare yourself, because otherwise, when you say I'm fine how do you know?
Clark:I know because that's the standard and I'm this far away from it,
Clark:and yesterday I was further.
Clark:By virtue of men saying, and I think that's a really great point actually
Clark:by virtue of men saying what do we do?
Clark:They're saying, we don't know.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:And as soon as you say that, anybody listening will say you're weak.
Clark:You don't even know what you're supposed to be.
Clark:How can you protect us?
Clark:We're done.
Clark:We're doomed.
Clark:And straight away, there's this vicious cycle going on.
Clark:I saw a comedian a long time ago, It was just a guy comedian, and he said, I'm
Clark:as straight as they come, he said, but I was in this training thing where the
Clark:firefighters, I was asked to volunteer for training and these firefighters
Clark:were supposed to rescue us, he said, and this guy come bursting through
Clark:the window, grabbed me and said, I've got you, you're fine, he says, and I
Clark:fell in love with this guy, he said, because he was there to save me.
Clark:And I thought that's so interesting because when you meet somebody
Clark:who says no, I've got this.
Clark:We're cool.
Clark:Straight away.
Clark:We know from a business environment.
Clark:That you feel, oh, we're good, we're safe.
Clark:Your children always look to you.
Clark:And if you look like you know what you're doing, everybody's fine.
Clark:But the minute you say what do I do?
Clark:People just start panicking because if you don't know we're done.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:That's what we're missing.
Tony:I've gone from having a stable employment to being entrepreneurial,
Tony:self employed in this performance space.
Tony:And with that comes, a level of uncertainty.
Tony:So I've experienced, as we sit here having a conversation,
Tony:I'm living that experience.
Tony:It's not feast or famine by any means, but it's that heightened sense
Tony:of insecurity that comes with not having a full time contract and that
Tony:stable check coming in every week.
Tony:So I'm acutely aware of the, And because I suppose I'm attuned to
Tony:how that plays out I'm aware of the dynamics that can start to play.
Tony:So of course I go research, I go and study, I go and try and understand it.
Tony:It's it's fascinating.
Rob:I think it's, there's a lot of things that come to
Rob:mind while you've been talking.
Rob:And one of them is how do we define status?
Rob:And I think When you're looking at like you, you get these young lads that
Rob:are pictured with their Ferrari and they've rented it or they found someone
Rob:else's and pretending it's theirs.
Rob:I think a lot of status when we get into a relationship can be
Rob:based on presenting a fake image.
Rob:Women will often say that, they go on dates and men are just bragging about
Rob:what they've done and what they're trying to do is say here's my value.
Rob:Appreciate me and try to impress.
Rob:And so often people can present an image and then there's a frustration
Rob:when they don't live up to that image.
Rob:Then I think there's a natural dynamic that we have.
Rob:This image and the excitement people have at the beginning of a relationship
Rob:is because finally they think someone is going to fulfill their dream and there's
Rob:a natural delusion that sooner or later we have to face up to, and actually
Rob:there's some research that happy couples are more deluded in that they have a more
Rob:positive view that isn't based on truth, but they just take that positive view.
Rob:So I think that can be part of it, that, that.
Rob:delusion, but I also think socially, what provides status to a man?
Rob:Cause we look at, when you look at in the workplace, women, when you look
Rob:at project Aristotle, it's like teams are better because a woman is on them.
Rob:The women's role in the workplace is risen up and men that don't have
Rob:that emotionally intelligent, the characteristics that we need in a changing
Rob:workplace are often losing their status.
Rob:And when you look at all the blue collar jobs that were traditionally male roles,
Rob:so many of them have been wiped out that there's a real challenge for men
Rob:that aren't, aren't fit for the new working place who got their status
Rob:from what they did rather from who they were are now being challenged in a way.
Rob:When you look at Instagram it's hard for a man to compete.
Rob:So when you look at dating dynamics, women are like three times, five times more
Rob:likely to get, if they send a message, they're more likely to get a response.
Rob:The rejection rate for a man on a dating site is off the roof, like
Rob:women have an unrealistic expectation that they go for 1 percent of men.
Rob:So they want someone who's six foot plus, they want someone of high IQ,
Rob:high earning all of these things.
Rob:But women don't realize that, I don't know, what is it like 15 percent of men
Rob:are six foot or over something like that.
Rob:But they wean it down, like above average heights, above average looks.
Rob:They think it's okay they must be, that must be like 50 percent of the men.
Rob:No, it's 1%.
Rob:And so they set themselves up for failure.
Rob:Yeah, I think the real question is when we see, look at dating is unfair.
Rob:Instagram is unfair.
Rob:An attractive woman will get more likes and whatever than a man.
Rob:So where does a man get status today?
Rob:I think that is, a question that we need to have.
Clark:That's a really interesting question because I'm constantly
Clark:getting DMS and I love to receive them.
Clark:Actually, I get two types of DM.
Clark:I get a lot of DMS saying that you're too direct and too, you swear too much.
Clark:And I just tend to sling the hook.
Clark:I also get a lot from various places.
Clark:Speaking regularly to somebody in Morocco at the moment and I'm happy to do it
Clark:because these, and it's all men asking exactly that question, also, what do I do?
Clark:How do I do this?
Clark:And the interesting thing about men is, as you said, Rob, at
Clark:the beginning, what do we do?
Clark:They just want to know, what do I say?
Clark:How do I say it?
Clark:What do I say first?
Clark:Should I do this?
Clark:What should I wear?
Clark:What aftershave?
Clark:And it, and I keep saying, it's nothing to do with that.
Clark:I had a conversation yesterday with somebody, actually, who said that he's
Clark:in the process of trying to improve himself, he realizes the need to do
Clark:that, and so on and he's got this flat, and he's going to the gym, and he's
Clark:doing this thing, and he's driving this car, and he's saying that, and I said,
Clark:but why do you think they're important, clearly, as you just said, status is
Clark:measured differently for different people.
Clark:And I said, the interesting thing, again, going back to Alan Watts Backward
Clark:Law, all of those things that you think will make you interesting actually
Clark:push people away because you're telling everybody that all my value is in stuff.
Clark:And going back to the Stoics, and I would say probably about a third of all of my
Clark:coaching sessions revolve around some sort of Stoic influence, principle, such
Clark:as apatheia for instance, this detached interest in what's going on around you
Clark:and not being tied to the outcome of any particular situation, all of those things.
Clark:And I said to this guy look, start trying to think of the values that
Clark:you can incorporate into yourself as a person that will make you happy
Clark:because you're a better person.
Clark:Forget what everybody else thinks because by forgetting what they
Clark:think, they will think more.
Clark:It's that paradox again.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:But if you can chase values such as humility and modesty and, showing
Clark:respect and responsibility and honor and duty, all of those things, that
Clark:will make you the sort of person that people will want to talk to.
Clark:Forget what you look like.
Clark:And that seems to be the message that I'm trying to say to people
Clark:at the moment because it is a little bit counterintuitive because
Clark:really all these guys want to get themselves a girlfriend or fix the
Clark:relationship with their partner.
Clark:And by chasing that problem and saying to the women, what do we do?
Clark:What do we do?
Clark:The women are saying the fact that you're asking me makes me want to run away.
Clark:Whereas if the guy said, look, I've got this.
Clark:And then of course, society benefits because a whole half of society is
Clark:perfectly aware of their place and their role in society and is good
Clark:with it and says, yeah, to a certain extent, as males, we are expendable.
Clark:That's a complaint that a lot of guys say, we all get sent off to war.
Clark:We get all the soft jobs.
Clark:Yes, because you're bigger.
Clark:And you can do that stuff.
Clark:It's obvious.
Clark:Why would we send all the women to war, cases, however, there are rewards
Clark:for that as well, for society rewards, courage and boldness and initiative.
Clark:But you need to have those things first.
Clark:And probably the sense of certainty that the guys 100 years ago had.
Clark:Is now lacking because the things that they were sure of are not revered anymore.
Clark:They're not held in esteem.
Clark:So we need to look at the things that are and are timeless.
Clark:And when you look at people like the Stoics, Marcus Aurelius, when they talk
Clark:about things like resilience and grit, you know, you can tell when a guy's got grit.
Clark:And if we can tell it, women can tell it an hour before,
Clark:they can smell it a mile off it.
Clark:It does amaze me, actually, of the women that I've spoken to, how
Clark:easily they can sniff out weakness.
Clark:It is a, it is some sort of biological imperative that, that
Clark:definitely virgin on black magic.
Clark:That they can tell if you are not sincere.
Clark:if you're just after stuff or physical goals.
Clark:And it's good that they're like that.
Clark:You just say in Rob that they want men over six foot.
Clark:You can't blame them.
Clark:It's obvious, isn't it?
Clark:It's a biological initiative to improve the human race.
Clark:What men need to do is then step up their game and say, yeah, okay, I've got this.
Clark:And what worries me, these guys sleeping in vans and stuff
Clark:have basically just opted out.
Clark:That's.
Clark:That's my concern.
Clark:Definitely.
Clark:Definitely.
Clark:I can't do this on it.
Tony:Yeah.
Tony:And they need help.
Tony:They need help to be re engaged and re purposed.
Tony:Yeah, but
Clark:the biggest demonstration of men opting out is when they opt
Clark:out permanently, kill themselves.
Clark:And, it's not I had a friend a few years ago now whose
Clark:husband sadly killed himself.
Clark:She was so angry.
Clark:She said, it's such a cowardly, I said, it's not cowardly.
Clark:He was incorrect.
Clark:He was wrong in the conclusion that this was his only option.
Clark:It's not cowardly.
Clark:But at the time, that's all he felt he could do, and I consider it to be
Clark:a very brave thing to do, I couldn't do it, I honestly couldn't do it.
Clark:But the fact that he did that, and these guys are saying, this is my
Clark:ultimate sacrifice, that's me, I'm done.
Clark:And it just worries the living daylights out of me, because
Clark:they seem to be getting younger.
Rob:What comes to mind is, I, when I think back to the men's
Rob:groups, I think what men lack aside from a status is belonging.
Rob:When I would talk to these men, often they would say, Actually,
Rob:really, all I want is a friend.
Rob:I have friends, I go to football with my friends, but all they do is football.
Rob:I play tennis with my friends, but all they do is play tennis.
Rob:I go to the pub with my friends, but all they do is drink.
Rob:And I think there is one of the problems that we all have that men
Rob:have is they don't have the same kind of connection that women do.
Rob:They don't have the same kind of relationships.
Rob:They don't open up and talk about things.
Rob:Whereas almost every woman has friends that they moan to.
Rob:They have people who are there for them, whatever.
Rob:And I don't think men have that.
Rob:And I think they feel that they no longer have the place in the workplace.
Rob:They no longer have that unconditional belonging in their families.
Rob:And so I think That's maybe a core reason why they're struggling.
Rob:They don't feel they belong.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:Men and women have a different way of communicating with each other.
Clark:And obviously we all have things that we can learn.
Clark:But somebody said to me quite a few years ago now, when it was mentioned
Clark:as part of the conversation than mentioned, talk more, open up more,
Clark:and as you just said, Rob, a lot of men are just sitting home crying.
Clark:I know that's hyperbole, it, it paints her.
Clark:fairly grim picture.
Clark:And this guy said, if you think about it, men historically have been, have
Clark:protected the village from other tribes.
Clark:They've been involved in wars and so on.
Clark:And so can you imagine if there's 10, 50, 500 men all sitting in an encampment or
Clark:in a trench waiting to, for the enemy.
Clark:And one of the guys starts opening up about his feelings.
Clark:He said, They'd be running for the hills in minutes, he said, it cannot happen.
Clark:You, he said, you cannot give in to your feelings in those situations.
Clark:You've got to, this whole stiff upper lip thing, which has been ridiculed to
Clark:a certain degree because it is, I think it's been practiced inappropriately.
Clark:There are times when you need to talk to your children, for instance,
Clark:and a stiff upper lip is not a good thing to have in those situations.
Clark:At the same time, when you're dealing with difficulties, you don't want to be
Clark:sitting crying on your wife's shoulder.
Clark:You need to be able to say to yourself, listen, we can deal with this.
Clark:I'm going to do this.
Clark:And it's even just, girding up the loins, as they used to say, once you adopted that
Clark:attitude, it changes your entire outlook and your ability to engage with problems.
Clark:So it's clear that men have
Clark:to communicate differently.
Clark:Friends, I've got this problem, and the friends will say, Oh, tell us about it.
Clark:When you go down to the pub and you say to your friends, I've got a
Clark:problem, it's the biggest laugh that the guys are going to get that evening.
Clark:The first thing they'll say is what did you do?
Clark:How did you mop it?
Clark:It's a completely different way of dealing with things.
Clark:And men love that.
Clark:It's one thing to say that's not a really good way of communicating.
Clark:But when I look at the guys faces in factories, where there's a little bit
Clark:of self deprecating humor, or you take the mickey out of somebody somebody's
Clark:expense, that, that starts, you can see it starting to pull people together.
Clark:And rather than say, men shouldn't be this way, I prefer to look at
Clark:the way men actually communicate in real life from a pragmatic point of
Clark:view and use that to their benefit.
Clark:And when you talk about men's groups, I know having been in the
Clark:military, when, whenever I found myself in a tough spot, in my life.
Clark:And I go up to a guy and say, were you in the military?
Clark:Yeah, I was in whatever.
Clark:Something completely different to me.
Clark:They may have been in the Grenadier Guards or in the tank regiment or
Clark:whatever, but the fact that they were in it, and you say to them,
Clark:I've got a problem, they'll help you.
Clark:It's a weird thing.
Clark:It's a brotherhood.
Clark:Now that does not exist.
Clark:Clearly women have strong bonds strong networks and so on.
Clark:But when a guy can walk up to a total stranger and say, listen, I
Clark:need some help to bury this body.
Clark:Nine times out of 10, they'll do it.
Clark:They'll go and grab a shovel.
Clark:And it's a completely different attitude.
Clark:And I think if we can tap into that rather than criticizing
Clark:it, it just is what it is.
Clark:I don't know why it exists why, biologically men are wired that way.
Clark:But if we can tap into it and help men to feel like they belong.
Clark:Three guys sleeping within 50 yards of each other, not one
Clark:of them talking to each other.
Clark:What the hell is that all about?
Clark:They could have all gone down the pub for a drink.
Clark:And yet they're all sitting on their own, locked away in their vans or
Clark:their cars, suffering in silence.
Clark:So you know they're not happy.
Clark:I thought you were gonna I thought it was the start of a story
Tony:about spy, aspiring, no, come on.
Tony:That's okay.
Tony:And then you took me down this path, . Unbelievable.
Tony:It's so interesting.
Tony:Of course, I think it's important to recognize that we're talking
Tony:about broad groups here.
Tony:We're talking about men, women, for example, and everybody's different, right?
Tony:An individual's resilience factor is going to contribute to whether they
Tony:come back with an optimistic frame of mind, or they start to crumble
Tony:at the first hurdle sort of thing.
Tony:So those things need to be understood, but they're all part
Tony:of where are you on the map.
Tony:There's, it's exactly the same.
Tony:It's as individuals, we can As a group, there might be some things that are
Tony:fairly common across most people, but then well, what's actually happening for
Tony:you because there's this is what's the status of not my status as an individual.
Tony:What's the state of the relation as well as we've got trades, there's
Tony:also states, something bad's just happened, something significant changed.
Tony:All of those things can have a direct impact on.
Tony:on how people are going with their relationships at any given time.
Tony:But I think, just going back to, I think Rob you were talking about This
Tony:fake status, whether it be a young guy pretending he's got a flash car
Tony:in order to attract the next best thing sort of thing is one thing.
Tony:But even couples when they're in that one-upmanship type thing, we've gotta
Tony:do better than the next door neighbor.
Tony:All of those kinds of things, it's almost like a toxic positivity that masks a lot
Tony:of underpinning maybe feelings of sadness and frustration, what is it that's driving
Tony:them to feel that they have to do that in order to feel accepted, and if belonging
Tony:is a thing and it's a, it's that in order to belong to this particular group that
Tony:we want to belong to, we need to actually match them on our income or match them
Tony:on the size of the house we've got, then.
Tony:I think it's on really shaky ground.
Tony:So I think there's something about, I'm an optimist, right?
Tony:I'm delusionally optimistic at times, and that comes at a cost for me, and
Tony:it probably comes at a cost for people around me who are not feeling it.
Tony:The further I go down this path of what's possible, the further away
Tony:People start, suddenly there's suddenly like ants in the distance.
Tony:You're on your own.
Tony:Yeah, you're on your own.
Tony:Yeah, so I've had to grow to be aware of that.
Tony:And I have to surround myself with, my wife is not like that.
Tony:She we, my reference at home, like I'm a kite.
Tony:I'm like, I'm off flying somewhere and she's got hold of the
Tony:string and she's just keeping it grounded in a bit of reality.
Tony:And if I take that into the workplace, same thing, surround myself with and
Tony:I suppose it's a great reference for having a good blend of people in a team.
Tony:You need realists and pragmatists and you need creatives Aspirational so who
Tony:can all come to get like together the sum of all of that gives you Maximum
Tony:opportunity and maximum sort of efficiency to get things done But the reason I
Tony:reference that is that it's great to be optimistic Because it helps you
Tony:with resilience in difficult situation.
Tony:I do bounce back quickly from setbacks It's natural for me, but
Tony:I know there are people that don't Then if I'm going round going, Oh,
Tony:we'll be right guys, we'll be okay.
Tony:People around me are not okay.
Tony:And I need to come and meet them where they're at.
Tony:So those guys in the cars, outside your place, it's like They're not okay.
Clark:As I mentioned, there's a gym downstairs and once a week, there's
Clark:a football team that goes to the gym.
Clark:They're a local youth team.
Clark:Have a Portuguese name.
Clark:So I'm guessing that they may be, we have a lot of Portuguese and
Clark:Brazilian people in this area.
Clark:So there may be, from that community.
Clark:But yesterday they were all stood outside very noisy.
Clark:Just bragging.
Clark:They're all sort of 14, 15 and eventually I thought, I need to go down and see,
Clark:and I went down and I said, lads, if I hadn't have just walked past
Clark:you on my way in from Greg's with my coffee, I'd have thought there was
Clark:a bunch of girls down here talking.
Clark:And it is a silly joke.
Clark:But they all started laughing at each other.
Clark:And what I found interesting about that was that.
Clark:You can see that you just said that it takes all types and I've seen this
Clark:time and again in groups of men, as Rob said, men behave differently when
Clark:they're in groups on their own, but they tend to look after each other.
Clark:And the guys down there, there were some smaller guys, there were some big guys.
Clark:And I've seen it time and time again.
Clark:I worked in a factory a few years ago and when I first got there, there
Clark:was of all the supervisors and team leaders that were there, there was
Clark:one guy who was extremely flamboyant.
Clark:I didn't know whether he was gay, but he was very flamboyant that way.
Clark:Very effeminate.
Clark:And I was really interested to see how he fitted into that dynamic.
Clark:And so when we had the team meeting, I thought I'm just going to poke.
Clark:And I just made a comment about this guy's performance.
Clark:And I thought I was going to get lynched.
Clark:These guys all close ranks and looked after him.
Clark:And I just, I was so pleased because I thought we've got a
Clark:really cohesive unit here then.
Clark:There were all different sorts of people.
Clark:But the fact that one guy was a little bit of an outlier, his behavior was a little
Clark:bit different, they made no difference.
Clark:He was one of them, and they looked after each other.
Clark:So as you've just said, there are optimists, there are pessimists,
Clark:there are creative types, there are more dogmatic types.
Clark:And the same with these guys down there yesterday.
Clark:You could see that once an outsider comes in and pokes you with a
Clark:stick, they all close ranks.
Clark:And that, to me, is the key.
Clark:Whatever makes that happen, that's the key.
Clark:And it's not about being vulnerable.
Clark:It's not about being authentic or opening up more, because
Clark:a lot of it is not authentic.
Clark:The way they talk to each other is just banter.
Clark:But clearly, whatever that is, needs to be tapped into.
Clark:Because if you can get guys to be honest with each other, and say,
Clark:look, we've got this issue, or you're the issue or I'm the issue.
Clark:Let's deal with it.
Clark:Or I'm feeling down and they start to pull together.
Clark:To me, that's gotta be the answer.
Clark:And it doesn't need outside stand, the world or Instagram
Clark:telling them how men should be.
Clark:The guys should be answering those questions themselves.
Clark:As you said, Tony, there's a standard.
Clark:This is the standard that we all aspire to, but it's a
Clark:journey that we're all taking.
Clark:And, whether we're, more creative or quiet or introvert or whatever.
Clark:We're all part of that team.
Rob:Agreed.
Rob:I'm just thinking about that.
Rob:When I've seen groups, like you, you spoke about the flamboyant guy.
Rob:It's the amount that they accept.
Rob:I think when someone says when someone is authentic to who they truly are, we get a
Rob:grasp on them and then we can accept it.
Rob:And I think the core of the relationship issue is often people are looking
Rob:for that authentic, who are you?
Rob:And when it doesn't match up, like the guys are saying what do I have to say?
Rob:And they're looking for the right words.
Rob:There's nothing to relate to because if you're not yourself, you're a projection.
Rob:And I think a lot of frustration women have is they're dealing with a projection
Rob:of a man, so there's that element.
Rob:Going back to what Tony was talking about, that we're in a time of confusion.
Rob:And I think our biology, like sitting around the campfire, it
Rob:wouldn't work to cry and open up.
Rob:But that's not the world that we live in anymore.
Rob:And so there's a mismatch between our biology and what's happened,
Rob:like the industrial revolution changed the way that we lived.
Rob:And so we broke down communities.
Rob:And so that belonging piece has gone.
Rob:So that we go to the tube we can have neighbors that we never see.
Rob:We could go to work and never come into meaningful contact with anyone.
Rob:And then I think also perhaps women are looking for a leader and I think men
Rob:are often struggling now for direction.
Rob:So it's just some rambling thoughts.
Rob:And then the other part that I've got down is that everything we've been
Rob:told, most of the messages we've got are from people trying to sell us stuff.
Rob:So the media exists to sell advertising exists to sell us
Rob:something and most marketing works from a basis of you're not enough.
Rob:So I think culturally we've been getting these messages where like male
Rob:attractiveness has always been that if you have the car, you'll have this.
Rob:If you have the aftershave, you will have this.
Rob:So I think what men are.
Rob:picking up is a lot of this message, which actually is it's for someone else's
Rob:interest, but it's confusing the matter.
Rob:And it's probably the predominant message that they're getting for a lot of them.
Clark:Just thinking about that Rob, I, you've just made me think
Clark:of something because I, Tony just touched on something, this idea of
Clark:men being a very broad spectrum, of course it is, but and, I mentioned at
Clark:the beginning of the conversation all of those headlines that, that talk
Clark:about what's wrong with men, toxic masculinity and all that sort of stuff.
Clark:I think it's great that things have changed in recent years.
Clark:The boundaries have become a little bit more blurred.
Clark:And it reminds me of a conversation I had a while back where somebody asked
Clark:me, what does it mean to be British?
Clark:Now, I know this is a different subject slightly, does it mean to be British?
Clark:If you consider yourself a British person, and you're proud of living
Clark:here, then you could probably consider yourself British and that can, you
Clark:could be of Nigerian origin, you could be of Pakistani origin, you could
Clark:be of Fijian, Australian, whatever.
Clark:We are a race of many different nationalities going all the way back to
Clark:the Romans, but it still means British.
Clark:And it reminded me of, there's a place where I come to in Norwich.
Clark:There's a, I won't name it but there's a really nice cafe that's got a little
Clark:bit of a bohemian quality about it.
Clark:I like going into, it's a, it is a bit quirk.
Clark:And there's a person in there, we've not had the conversation, we've talked
Clark:a lot, me and this person, but we've not had this particular conversation, so I
Clark:won't speak on their behalf, but it's, I would say, having spoken to her, that she
Clark:used to be a guy, young person, I don't know, late 20s, and when we were talking
Clark:initially, the first few interactions were a little bit, oh, because I look
Clark:about us as old fashioned as square as it's possible for a guy to look.
Clark:So I would be considered to somebody like that to be potentially problematic.
Clark:And I just basically said, look I keep calling you for coffees and stuff,
Clark:but I don't know what to call you.
Clark:I don't want to say mate, so I'll be totally up front,
Clark:and he said, call me Jenny.
Clark:I went, brilliant, and I said, I'm guessing, I don't know.
Clark:I started making it a little bit lighter the situation.
Clark:I said, I'm guessing you haven't always been Jenny.
Clark:And he said, no.
Clark:He said, I was given a guy's name by my parents.
Clark:He said, but some people just call me bloke in a dress.
Clark:And we had a bit of a laugh about it.
Clark:However, we've got to know each other.
Clark:And this person's history is far more complex than, any of us could probably
Clark:guess if we were to just talk to them.
Clark:He considers himself a guy.
Clark:He doesn't identify according to our conversation as a woman, and I don't
Clark:pretend to understand all of the nuances about this sort of situation.
Clark:But he considers himself a guy, so because of that, I consider him a guy.
Clark:He calls himself Jenny, and he wears a dress.
Clark:But I like him, and we get on really well.
Clark:Now, is he a man?
Clark:Apparently, yeah.
Clark:Is he going to have the same concerns about manhood that I have?
Clark:Almost certainly not.
Clark:I don't have to worry about what tights to wear, when the weather's cold
Clark:or what sort of dresses fits a guy.
Clark:I don't worry about those things or blush or anything like that.
Clark:But at the same time, he doesn't have to worry about how I come across as a middle
Clark:aged white man when I'm talking to people.
Clark:So we've got our own issues.
Clark:But we get on well because we can, we have a mutual respect, a mutual regard
Clark:for each other based on the fact that we've just taken each other at face value.
Clark:And I think that's the key for all men and women for that matter, but men as
Clark:a group of people, you can be anything.
Clark:One of the people I talk about in my coaching, the male icon is Tom Ford.
Clark:And many of the people, I say I use him specifically because
Clark:a lot of people say he's gay.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:He's, he is a man and the guy's cool.
Clark:And he's got great fashion sense and he is a brilliant businessman.
Clark:He takes all sorts of different people, but as long as we can see
Clark:each other with an honest eye and we can accept each other with mutual
Clark:regard, I think that's the key.
Clark:And the problem that most guys have is that they do accept each other.
Clark:They just don't accept themselves.
Tony:I think your reflection on values earlier is, I wouldn't say it's
Tony:everything, but once that's understood and people start living through
Tony:those values, they may well find that actually they're not with the right
Tony:partner, because that was never where it was grounded in the first place.
Tony:But once you start to do that, you start to attract.
Tony:You try, you start to attract the people who actually value
Tony:you for who you really are.
Tony:It's just a natural thing.
Tony:I ran a course last week in Saudi Arabia, about 30 people, mixed
Tony:group, and it was a tech company.
Tony:And just as the intros, nobody likes icebreaks and stuff like that, but
Tony:using one of Thomas's term, one word equity, they had to, cause I
Tony:was trying to understand who they were, but what was their name?
Tony:What was their role?
Tony:And what was their one word equity?
Tony:I've explained what mine was and why it was important.
Tony:And these people from a relatively large company didn't
Tony:really know each other either.
Tony:So they were getting to understand what each other did,
Tony:and they were in teams of six.
Tony:But once they started to share their one word equity that really mattered to them,
Tony:the whole tone of the session changed.
Tony:There was an immediate increase in trust.
Tony:There was an immediate increase in level of respect and care for each
Tony:other, just because we actually knew a little bit more about them.
Tony:And everything that came out was humility loyalty trust, all of these
Tony:things that really matter to, everybody leading a good, ethical, healthy life.
Tony:Whatever we were doing, whatever roles they play, they bringing into this
Tony:environment, these amazing qualities.
Tony:And when you added all these individuals core values together.
Tony:It's wow the, anything's possible here guys.
Tony:So even in that small snapshot, you get instant feedback
Tony:about the value of values.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:Regardless of your educational background your social status,
Clark:your wealth or anything like that.
Clark:And maybe nowadays, we talk about the difference between men and
Clark:women and all that sort of stuff.
Clark:I've seen over the years the military's changed enormously and so many more
Clark:women have got involved in the military, and I think that's such an amazing thing.
Clark:And, I know a lot of women that are far more manly than a lot of the men
Clark:that I know and they're happy being that and I think we probably need to,
Clark:when people say, what's wrong with men, the question should be, which men?
Clark:Which men are we talking about?
Clark:Surely not all the men.
Clark:Are we talking about guys that dig roads in Nigeria?
Clark:Or are we talking about CEOs in America?
Clark:Or are we talking about people that trawl for fish in the North Sea?
Clark:Which sort of men?
Clark:Because to say men or women is really a massive disservice to
Clark:that broad swath of humanity.
Clark:And, some of the situations that I've been, I worked at a factory in
Clark:Coventry, there was, we had a team of about 15 people, there was one woman.
Clark:She was quite assertive, quite strong, some people thought that she may have
Clark:been excessively masculine in her outlook.
Clark:She was a brilliant worker, she was a lovely person, and she was
Clark:almost the big sister to a lot of the people that worked there.
Clark:Why should she be confined to, you're a woman, so you've got to act this way.
Clark:And, when we have that mutual regard, and we adhere to a certain set of
Clark:values, looking at, and you can basically then say this is the standard that
Clark:I aspire to, whatever that might be, I aspire to be more feminine, or I
Clark:aspire to be more masculine, whatever.
Clark:You choose, but then once you've decided that's the benchmark that you want to
Clark:work to, and you are now part of a group of people that are all aspiring to that.
Clark:Yeah, that's a great
Tony:reference.
Tony:That's a great reference, Clark.
Tony:It takes me back to an organization I started working with a few years back
Tony:now and I was working with some of their female leaders, some of the women who
Tony:made it to the top table, and there was definitely a sense that There were
Tony:prejudicial things at play, the dynamics were still there and there was a lack
Tony:of maturity in that space and I could feel that pain around that, they were
Tony:stereotyped as you can imagine, bossy and, all of those negative stereotypes
Tony:that come with that old school thinking.
Tony:And of course we have to be better than that today.
Tony:They are just great leaders who've reached the same pinnacle as all the
Tony:other guys that sit around the table.
Tony:When companies espouse their mission and values and vision and allow those to be.
Tony:stereotypical conversations to take place.
Tony:They're not delivering on the promise that they made
Tony:internally, let alone externally.
Tony:So that's where I really get my teeth stuck into that.
Tony:I really get excited about that because I think that's where you can make big leaps
Tony:quite quickly and you start to empower.
Tony:If it's men, for example, who have got these stereotypical views,
Tony:it's not too hard to get them to reflect and reframe things, I think.
Clark:Yeah, and that's just reminding me of this this meme, this trope
Clark:that's been going around about the women saying, would you rather meet
Clark:a bear or a strange man in the woods?
Clark:You know that one, right?
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:There's been a lot of conversation about that.
Clark:And basically the conversation Asks the question who's going
Clark:to keep women safe from men?
Clark:And the answer is, I've always thought, and as far as I'm aware, all
Clark:of my forefathers thought the same, that the only people that can keep
Clark:women safe from men is other men.
Clark:And I think that applies to everything.
Clark:If a person subscribes to the the perspective of manhood, whether you are,
Clark:consider yourself a man, or you're a woman, subscribe to more masculine values.
Clark:Regardless the standards, the benchmark the men adhere to, allow them then
Clark:to turn to certain types of guys, whether they're driving around in the
Clark:fast Ferraris, trying to be a cool dude, or whether they're beating their
Clark:missus up on a Saturday night, and say, look, that's not how we do it.
Clark:That's not being a man.
Clark:That is not the standard, and we can hold them to account then.
Clark:And, I'm sure women do the same when it comes to other women.
Clark:There's a certain type of behavior that's expected, and they probably hold
Clark:them to account, I'm guessing anyway, if somebody's behavior falls outside
Clark:of that expectation, because that's how we keep society functioning smoothly.
Clark:Yeah, the goalposts might move.
Clark:The standards may change, but when they do change, they need to be standards
Clark:that everybody is to, and they need to revolve around certain values.
Clark:And, you're right, people that guy in the car there, maybe his missus
Clark:doesn't like him, I don't know, but there will be somebody that likes him.
Clark:It's not like he has to try and chase somebody else's
Clark:viewpoint of what he should be.
Clark:If he subscribes for a certain set of values, there will be
Clark:plenty of people that like him and he doesn't need to worry about
Tony:it.
Tony:He likes himself for who he is then.
Tony:It's who are you?
Tony:And then when you know who you are, then you can become who you want to become.
Tony:That's the thing.
Tony:But people going round, Being told that they're not this and they're not that.
Tony:Your questions that you started with are the right ones.
Tony:Who are you?
Tony:Let's work that out.
Tony:And that, once that people land on that, you can almost see
Tony:them fill the space differently.
Tony:Like the aura's changed, the energy's shifted.
Clark:Yeah I'm glad I brought that those questions up at the beginning
Clark:because it was something that was annoying me and, I don't think
Clark:we've spoken about anything new.
Clark:We all know the things that we've spoken about, but it's given me a little bit
Clark:of a refreshed perspective because I was starting to feel a little bit.
Clark:I'm pessimistic about the lot of men in general, but I think guys are smart
Clark:enough to figure this out, I think, as long as there are resources available
Clark:and conversations take place like this, eventually, men will adapt, they will
Clark:adapt to the new landscape, they'll reorientate themselves, and they'll start
Clark:moving forward on the basis of this is where we are now, which I find, Yeah.
Rob:When you were talking about, values exercise and things like that what comes
Rob:to mind is, there's always the Jung quote, until you make the unconscious conscious,
Rob:you'll always be controlled by it.
Rob:And I think when I look back when you had like the Knights of old and you had
Rob:the, they had a clear code of honor and I had clear values and what you're talking
Rob:about really is once we agreed society's values and now I think in the new world,
Rob:it's that we have to define our own.
Rob:And I think so many people are never knowing what their values are and they're
Rob:looking for what they should be doing.
Rob:And I think, that we create the tribes, with shared values.
Rob:And I, so I think for me that's why I take away from this.
Tony:Yeah.
Tony:I think the pursuit of happiness is a fool's errand.
Tony:I think the social values that are pushed into the world are,
Tony:for most people, the wrong values.
Tony:They're not the right fit.
Tony:They're not the right fit for anyone.
Tony:Without those underpinning without the villages and the tribes to hold you
Tony:to account a little bit differently, then that's all you've got to go on.
Tony:It becomes easy to fall into the traps that have been set.
Tony:I think real purpose comes with maturity, you can't expect young people
Tony:necessarily to have it, but when you are in service to somebody else or
Tony:something else, that's when you really get a connection to who you can become.
Tony:So you've got this set of values and then actually in living through these,
Tony:in deciding that I'm going to live through these values in how I work,
Tony:how I behave As a husband and a father and all of those things as a friend.
Tony:Then for what purpose, and the next level is to say the purpose
Tony:is , it's in service to something.
Tony:Since I've been thinking that way since, since my approaches, the work I did on
Tony:myself before I started my business was all about how do I, why do I do what I do?
Tony:Why can I not be in football and feel okay about it.
Tony:So it wasn't football that was the pull.
Tony:What else was it?
Tony:It was identifying those things that, that actually drive me.
Tony:What is it that I'm connected to?
Tony:And like landing on the, I suppose the core driver or in service to
Tony:helping other people achieve what they didn't think was possible,
Tony:helping people reach their potential.
Tony:It's like that.
Tony:So it didn't matter then whether it was in football, I was in business,
Tony:my purpose is to help other people.
Tony:get where they want to go.
Tony:Starts with the turn on the GPS.
Tony:Where are you?
Tony:Where are you today?
Tony:And that's really a values positioning yourself through a set of values.
Tony:And then when you know the destination, whether it's a worked
Tony:outcome or a personal ambition or whatever it might be, a goal.
Tony:It's okay at least we know how we're going to behave in pursuit of this.
Tony:Let's start to work out how we're going to tackle it.
Rob:People don't like to think about relationships as in every
Rob:relationship has a purpose.
Rob:So there, there is something, even if it's a romantic relationship, it's
Rob:to feel love is to fit, to become yourself or that kind of thing.
Rob:But because there's a narrative around that people don't
Rob:like to have that confronted.
Rob:They want to feel it's like unconditional love and all of these things, which
Rob:people aren't actually capable of.
Rob:But it's the purpose of what unites a team for me.
Rob:is the clarity of purpose is when we share that same purpose, that
Rob:my individual goal is the same as my team, as the collective goal.
Rob:That's when we bonded as a team.
Rob:And I think it's the same for a couple that we unite for a reason, whether
Rob:it's to feel love to feel, to create this unit, to create children, to
Rob:create our own independent unit.
Rob:But that clarity of purpose then defines the standards of how we go about it.
Rob:How do, what do we expect?
Rob:These are the benchmarks.
Rob:These are the standards below which the relationship no longer works.
Rob:And this is how it's going to be defined.
Rob:But I think that is so key.
Rob:And I think one of the problems of relationships is we've never liked
Rob:to have that conversation because we go, Oh, I just want to be loved.
Rob:I just want to be loved.
Rob:Yeah, but in what way?
Rob:For what?
Clark:I think you may have actually you may have touched on one of the
Clark:underlying causes of this problem that we started talking about right back
Clark:at the beginning, because there's a probably a misunderstanding of how
Clark:relationships work at a certain level for most of the people involved.
Clark:In that post that I did yesterday that talks about this idea that you
Clark:can have what you want, As long as you don't want to, you can't chase
Clark:happiness, because clearly, you're admitting that you don't have it.
Clark:And at the very end, there was I quoted a guy called Thomas
Clark:Merton, and he died in the 60s.
Clark:He was a priest, funnily enough, but he counseled on relationships,
Clark:and I don't mean romantic relationships, all relationships,
Clark:but he said something interesting.
Clark:He said, love is not a matter of getting what you want.
Clark:Quite the contrary, the insistence on having, on always having what
Clark:you want, on always being satisfied.
Clark:And always being fulfilled makes love impossible.
Clark:And the reason I put that at the end there is because a lot
Clark:of people go into relationships for what they can get out of it.
Clark:And Tony was just there talking about, it's about serving.
Clark:It's about being in service to others.
Clark:And it's a mathematical impossibility for two people who go into a
Clark:relationship to get what they can from it for that relationship to
Clark:work because it's not synergistic.
Clark:It's, you've just got one and one, whereas if that one is trying to serve the needs
Clark:of the other and vice versa, that one and one adds up to much more than two.
Clark:Because they're trying to get each other's benefits out of the relationship.
Clark:And when these guys are sleeping in their vans and their cars, There's a
Clark:gotta be a chunk of that is because they are not fulfilling the needs of the
Clark:other person now who's fault that is, I think is irrelevant, but somebody in
Clark:that relationship is basically saying, I want this and you're not giving it me.
Clark:So we're done or, words to that extent.
Clark:And it needs to be very much more about, there's a reason why tribal initiations
Clark:in sort of ancient tribes and so on.
Clark:We're always carried out where the young person was left on their own,
Clark:because one of the questions I ask in my coaching is, what do you do
Clark:when you don't know what to do?
Clark:You don't know what to do, so what do you do?
Clark:And they go, oh, that's an impossible question to answer.
Clark:Actually, it isn't.
Clark:When we talked about values, you refer to those values.
Clark:I don't know what to do.
Clark:However, what's needed in this particular situation is endurance, or grit,
Clark:or honesty, or candor, or whatever.
Clark:How would that apply in that situation?
Clark:And those young guys, when they were left out in the forest for days on end
Clark:on their own, were left to, to dwell upon and try to learn about the values that the
Clark:tribe espoused, whatever they might be.
Clark:As long as they were everybody's tribe values, they would always know what to
Clark:do when they didn't know what to do.
Clark:And in situations like relationships, when you don't know what to do, most
Clark:people default to what do I want?
Clark:What do I want?
Clark:And why am I not getting it?
Clark:And that, I think, you were saying that women are not happy.
Clark:with relationships or marriage anymore, and they're leaving in droves.
Clark:I think part of the answer is in that.
Clark:Who are they serving them?
Clark:Nah.
Clark:Because, guys clearly are not pulling their weight, but I think there's more
Clark:to that question than people think it is.
Clark:The fact that guys are not doing their bit, because if you were, and maybe
Clark:the situation is that women have been trying to serve the men for years and
Clark:years, and it's just not sticking, and it's not being reciprocated.
Clark:Maybe that's the problem.
Clark:But there's clearly a problem with there not being any mutual service
Clark:to each other, and that's maybe something that needs to be addressed.
Tony:Yeah, I agree with that.
Tony:I say I just thought of something that, I'm gonna say it because I
Tony:haven't really fully thought it through, so I'm hoping it captures
Tony:rounding out the conversation for me.
Tony:I think we're two things.
Tony:We're who we say we are, and we're.
Tony:also who people think we are.
Tony:When those things match up, then happy days, we've got it.
Tony:We've nailed it.
Tony:This is who I am, and this is who the world sees.
Tony:That marries up.
Tony:This is who I say I am.
Tony:The world sees that.
Tony:Marries up.
Tony:Brilliant.
Tony:Okay.
Tony:We're up.
Tony:We're on a winner.
Tony:So without having identified what my core values are and knowing how to live through
Tony:them, I'm making it up as I go along.
Tony:And I have to rely on what the world is telling me to
Tony:work out what my identity is.
Tony:And the world's telling me I'm not good enough.
Tony:My wife's telling me I'm not good enough, whatever it might be.
Tony:I'm not strong enough.
Tony:I'm not assertive enough.
Tony:So that's all I've got to go on.
Tony:So I've got this now I've got this mismatch of the world's
Tony:telling me all this stuff.
Tony:That's not great.
Tony:I haven't really worked out who I am, but I'm faking it as I go along.
Tony:And what do I do?
Tony:What do I say?
Tony:All of those things that came up earlier, that those, what
Tony:should I do in this situation?
Tony:How do I respond to this?
Tony:It's like All right let's grow up now.
Tony:Time to put a peg in the ground and let's do this little bit of work so that you're
Tony:really comfortable about how you're going to go forward and see what happens.
Clark:There's a thought then, Tony, if somebody's telling
Clark:you're not doing X, Y and Z for me, you can do one of two things.
Clark:You can either try and do X, Y and Z, All right.
Clark:And you can guarantee there'll be a P, Q, R, and S as well coming afterwards
Clark:when you manage to, to fulfill those criteria, or you can work on yourself
Clark:and, you can say, I entered into this relationship saying that I was this.
Clark:I'm going to just do that as well as I possibly can, and then
Clark:you've now got to do your part.
Clark:And on that thought, I saw on Instagram, I just come across this thing the
Clark:other day on Instagram, and it was a guy that these guys that just go and
Clark:stop random people and take photographs of them and then the photographs are
Clark:amazing, and you think, wow, that person looks pretty ugly, and until, and then
Clark:you see the photograph, you think, wow, he's done an amazing job, etc.
Clark:But he stopped this guy in a wheelchair, and it was in Belfast,
Clark:apparently the photographer said this is the best thing that's ever
Clark:happened to me in my job, he said.
Clark:I took the boat to Belfast, I was going to go down to Dublin, and for
Clark:some reason I decided to just stay in Belfast city centre, and I just started
Clark:stopping people and photographing them, and he stopped this one guy, who was
Clark:a coach, but he's in a wheelchair.
Clark:He said, I had an accident I can't remember, a few years before, broke
Clark:several, and bearing in mind that I broke my spine in the motorbike accident, I
Clark:was glued to this guy's conversation, he said, I broke my L, L3 and 4 or something,
Clark:he broke two or three vertebrae, he said, I'm now in a wheelchair, and
Clark:he said, I suddenly realized I'm not enough , he said I'm invisible.
Clark:He said, I went from being this big guy walking around.
Clark:To being in a wheelchair and nobody sees me.
Clark:He said, even when I go into Starbucks with my friends, the people behind the
Clark:counter will say, what does he want?
Clark:And he's I'm flipping here, I'm not invisible.
Clark:He said, but it's taught me some incredible lessons about what
Clark:people say they want for humanity.
Clark:We want love and peace and kindness.
Clark:He said, and what they actually do, he said, a different thing altogether.
Clark:And then he said something, and the guy, the photographer, was blown away by this.
Clark:And there were thousands of comments, because it was just so profound.
Clark:He said, I've had to write it down so I could say it properly.
Clark:I am not who you say I am.
Clark:You are who you say I am.
Clark:And I just thought, Oh, that is great.
Clark:That's amazing, isn't it?
Clark:I'm not who you say I am.
Clark:You are.
Clark:I am a projection.
Clark:The things that you see in me that you don't like are
Clark:a projection of what in you.
Clark:Nice.
Clark:And that, for me, Answers that entire question.
Clark:If somebody says, you are not this, that, or the other.
Clark:All I can think of is, wow, you really think you are not
Clark:this, that, and the other.
Clark:I feel sorry for you.
Clark:How can I help you?
Clark:It's not about me, it's about you.
Clark:Interesting.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:I'm gonna leave that there.
Clark:Yeah.
Clark:Brilliant.
Clark:I just want to thank you guys for, I you lifted the cloud from over me.
Clark:I wasn't, I was mildly, I don't get down, but I was mildly
Clark:despondent at the beginning of this.
Clark:I thought, because I just, I didn't like it, but especially when
Clark:you see the suicide thing, and I just thought, oh my goodness, but
Clark:actually, I think we're all right.
Clark:We're gonna be okay.
Tony:It's great, isn't it?
Tony:We never know where these conversations are going to go, do we?
Tony:So it certainly went to a place that I didn't have any
Tony:expectations, but Free therapy
Clark:for me.