I suppose I'm kind of like a, is it a hybrid career?
Speaker:I don't quite know what the term is, but I am, I
Speaker:started sort of writing in my, probably in my
Speaker:forties and sort of writing and getting published.
Speaker:'cause those two things are obviously separate.
Speaker:You can often write and not be published.
Speaker:And I suppose at the moment, I would probably describe
Speaker:myself as kind of being a consultant, a broadcaster and
Speaker:author, stroke journalist.
Speaker:And now I could probably add another string, which
Speaker:would be content creator, because one of the things
Speaker:that seems to be doing quite well on my Instagram is me
Speaker:doing Reels where I basically hold up various household
Speaker:items to my Ear and pretend that they're a telephone
Speaker:and then have imaginary conversations on WhatsApp.
Speaker:Um, and it's funny because I've tried so hard and
Speaker:I've worked for different people doing social media,
Speaker:but actually these are probably more popular than
Speaker:many of the other kind of jobs I've been paid to do.
Speaker:Um, which just shows you that sometimes you can do something
Speaker:completely unintentionally and people just find it
Speaker:funny and it resonates.
Speaker:Um, so I, I guess I had children quite late, so it's
Speaker:kind of worth saying that, you know, up until I think I
Speaker:had my first daughter at 40.
Speaker:Up until then, I was hard to the, you know, I am
Speaker:trying to think nose to the grindstone career wise.
Speaker:So I'd kind of climbed up the, the greasy pole and
Speaker:was at the top of the greasy pole, but very much wanted
Speaker:to slide that down again.
Speaker:Um, and so a lot of what I kind of write about kind of, I
Speaker:suppose, the disparity between expectations and reality.
Speaker:So kind of expecting the world to be one way, expecting
Speaker:success to be one way, and then kind of realizing
Speaker:that it can be another way.
Speaker:Um, and I think that's something that, uh, I'm now
Speaker:in my late forties, I've kind of come to realize and
Speaker:it's been a, a positive, you know, that, um, I, I kept
Speaker:waiting for my life to start and it just didn't start.
Speaker:And then I realized I had to start it kind of myself.
Speaker:I'm curious about that, 'cause, you know, I've been
Speaker:playing around with this idea of the midlife startup
Speaker:and just messing around with some thoughts based on our
Speaker:own experiences, myself and Laurence, in terms of just
Speaker:taking the, the back roads of life rather than the
Speaker:motorway in terms of the slow scenic route, and then what
Speaker:that means in terms of just a kind of a more emergent
Speaker:winging it approach to work.
Speaker:When you say you were waiting for it to start,
Speaker:what did start mean?
Speaker:Um, it's, it's interesting I think, um, because I'd done
Speaker:all the things that, I suppose it's all, you know, as a Gen X
Speaker:kind of generation school kid had been told, um, I'd sort
Speaker:of done all of those things.
Speaker:So I'd kind of gone to university, I'd got
Speaker:a fairly good degree.
Speaker:I'd got into a career.
Speaker:I'd stayed in a solid job for 17 years, actually
Speaker:staying with the same agency and had worked my way up to
Speaker:sort of managing partner.
Speaker:So I was kind of managing an office with three
Speaker:other people and, um, I still just kept projecting
Speaker:into the future because I knew that I wasn't happy.
Speaker:So I was.
Speaker:Earning quite a lot of money at that point.
Speaker:Um, so I had all the kind of materialistic things.
Speaker:I mean, I wasn't massively wealthy, but
Speaker:I was pretty privileged.
Speaker:And yet I was also suffering from lots of
Speaker:physical symptoms, so I was feeling like I had
Speaker:headaches all the time.
Speaker:I was feeling grumpy and drained.
Speaker:I was constantly feeling like in meetings that, I
Speaker:mean, I, I write quite a lot about this, how I was
Speaker:almost disassociating so people would be talking.
Speaker:I worked in market research and we did a lot of research
Speaker:into big advertising campaigns or new products
Speaker:that were coming out.
Speaker:And I'd often be sat in meetings, just sort of
Speaker:doodling in, in the kind of exercise, but often quite
Speaker:sort of saying often quite ridiculous kind of doodles,
Speaker:you know, like drawing, you know, often drawing the
Speaker:clients and sort of, there was kind of part of my personality
Speaker:that was very much, um, suppressed in that role
Speaker:because I couldn't, I couldn't show up and be my real self.
Speaker:You know, I'd been like a very playful child, very sort of,
Speaker:I suppose, quite outgoing.
Speaker:And then I feel like this kind of marketing career
Speaker:capped some of that.
Speaker:And so I was kind of pretending that I was
Speaker:someone that I wasn't.
Speaker:And so there'd be this inner voice all the time
Speaker:that would be going, this is shit, you know.
Speaker:This me all was talking bol, you know, all this
Speaker:stuff will be going on.
Speaker:And I think that's what was kind of causing
Speaker:a lot of my symptoms, my physical symptoms.
Speaker:'cause I was trying to squash that person down.
Speaker:And actually I, I wrote a book, my first book
Speaker:that I got published was about a woman who is
Speaker:struggling in her career.
Speaker:And everybody within that narrative was, was
Speaker:based on people that I, I did actually work with.
Speaker:So I kind of, I found that quite cathartic.
Speaker:But I think it was, Part of why this is, you know, sort
Speaker:of called exploding your life is that it was an explosion in
Speaker:that it was this realization that I'm not, I'm not happy.
Speaker:I don't really know what to do about it.
Speaker:I know that what I'm doing at the moment
Speaker:isn't making me happy.
Speaker:And and gradually trying to sort of discover what
Speaker:would make me happy.
Speaker:And I have to say, 'cause some people might be thinking,
Speaker:God, what an amazing position to be in that you can just
Speaker:go and seek your Happiness.
Speaker:It wasn't like that.
Speaker:I didn't kind of drop out and go to Tibet for six
Speaker:months or anything like that.
Speaker:Afford to do that.
Speaker:That's an option that's only open to a very
Speaker:small minority, I think.
Speaker:I had to earn money.
Speaker:So basically I just started to segue, um, doing sort of
Speaker:some sort of writing online that was turned into a blog,
Speaker:trying to sort of, um, do some social media stuff that I was
Speaker:interested in and gradually, gradually started to sort of
Speaker:discover work that I enjoyed.
Speaker:And I suppose the writing really, really helped.
Speaker:And I'd, I'd definitely say if you are listening
Speaker:and, and watching and thinking, oh, I'm at a loss
Speaker:about who I'm and what I want to do, start writing.
Speaker:And even if that's just a load of brain dump mm, it's often a
Speaker:really good tool to help guide you into sort of finding out
Speaker:who you are and what you want.
Speaker:'Cause I sort of feel that that's what I did.
Speaker:I sort of discovered, I rediscovered this
Speaker:place inside myself.
Speaker:Again, when I was writing, I realized I,
Speaker:I really enjoyed it.
Speaker:And that's kind of kept me going actually.
Speaker:So I still work now.
Speaker:So I still, I work at head of brand, uh, company.
Speaker:It's another Startup called Jude who are amazing.
Speaker:And I'm still kind of writing and I, but I think what's
Speaker:happened is my attitude to work has shifted.
Speaker:So I think now maybe other people will feel this
Speaker:is true too, but I kind of feel like it's not
Speaker:my core focus anymore.
Speaker:There's like me, there's my personality, there's my
Speaker:work, there's my writing, there's my relationship,
Speaker:there's my friendships, there's a whole other
Speaker:load of stuff that exists.
Speaker:Whereas I think probably for the first 18 years
Speaker:of my career, it, it was very narrow.
Speaker:It was, it was really just work.
Speaker:And a partner, but it was kind of shopping.
Speaker:That was it.
Speaker:It was traditional capital, you know,
Speaker:things and that was it.
Speaker:So I feel like it's much richer now.
Speaker:So work is just one aspect of, of my life.
Speaker:I think that's an interesting part there, this whole
Speaker:identifying with work, and that being the thing
Speaker:that we, you know, we have this narrow focus.
Speaker:It's all about the career or the job or
Speaker:the things that we do.
Speaker:And I don't know if it feels like it's still a very strong
Speaker:narrative, you know, while younger people are looking,
Speaker:it feels like, um, new generation is just trying
Speaker:to understand a different ex uh, relationship to, to work
Speaker:and life and what it means to be successful, there's still
Speaker:a very strong attachment to this idea of that work is
Speaker:the thing that defines us.
Speaker:From your experience, why do we get forced down that path?
Speaker:What is it that just narrows Our view and focus
Speaker:are purely on the work?
Speaker:I think 'cause from, you know, when we are at school, the
Speaker:first question that people ask us is kind of, what are
Speaker:you gonna be when you grow up?
Speaker:And we are kind of, we are not necessarily encouraged to say,
Speaker:I'm gonna be a great dad, or I'm gonna be an amazing lover
Speaker:to my partner, or, you know, I'm gonna do all the domestic
Speaker:admin around the house, or, you know, I'm gonna.
Speaker:I, I'm gonna have two cats and I'm gonna love them to death.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Gonna write, you know, you're really encouraged to just see
Speaker:yourself as your profession.
Speaker:And we carry that on when we go to parties, when we
Speaker:meet other people, um, we tend to almost immediately
Speaker:ask them, what do you do?
Speaker:You know, what's your job?
Speaker:And we are still very status driven.
Speaker:So there are certain jobs that we kind of.
Speaker:Might give you extra kind of Brownsey points
Speaker:and respect and some jobs that might less so.
Speaker:And certainly with me, because I was in market
Speaker:research, market research, a lot of people, when I
Speaker:introduced myself and said I did that, they thought
Speaker:I was one of those people with a, a clipboard who kind
Speaker:of come and harass you in Tesco, you know, and ask you
Speaker:20 questions about how your shopping has been that day.
Speaker:And I used to always then sort of, I'd follow it up
Speaker:with not that kind of market research, like I do other kind
Speaker:of market research, and then I would try and name some of
Speaker:the big brands that I kind of worked with and piggyback
Speaker:onto their reputation.
Speaker:So I'd be like, oh yeah, you know, so I'm like,
Speaker:my big client is kind of like Estee Lauder, you
Speaker:know, I do like loads.
Speaker:So it's kind of, it was very much kind of, all of
Speaker:my identity was tied up with work, but funny enough, I
Speaker:didn't feel proud of, of that.
Speaker:You know, I didn't feel, I would feel very empty inside.
Speaker:So when I did use that as an introduction, I
Speaker:didn't feel like, oh yeah.
Speaker:You know, um, because I think part of the problem is, is you
Speaker:can never, you can, once you go down that route of purely
Speaker:defining yourself by your professional success, there's
Speaker:always gonna be somebody who's better than you in the room.
Speaker:There's always going to be someone who is, has got
Speaker:more money, a bigger house.
Speaker:You know, it's a, it's a very narrow definition.
Speaker:And now I think once, one of the interesting things is when
Speaker:I meet someone with a really impressive job, I always
Speaker:think, oh, that's great.
Speaker:What about all the other stuff?
Speaker:What about what's going on?
Speaker:And so, and, and often when I read profiles of people,
Speaker:I'll notice that they leave all of that stuff out.
Speaker:So they talk quite often about the daily routine of the,
Speaker:the founder of the, you know, massively successful business.
Speaker:But sometimes they, they leave the rest of it.
Speaker:And I'm like, well, who feeds your cats?
Speaker:And, you know, mm-hmm.
Speaker:You know, what do you, what do you love doing with your kids?
Speaker:And, you know, what's the thing that your wife gets
Speaker:really irritated about?
Speaker:You know, what's your, you know, why can't we
Speaker:talk about those things?
Speaker:'cause actually, the fact that you've done 16
Speaker:conference calls while you were running on a treadmill
at 6 00:11:52
00 AM, I don't find that impressive, that level
at 6 00:11:55
of obsessive productivity is actually really damaging.
at 6 00:12:00
So I think, uh, hopefully now one of the things
at 6 00:12:03
that's happened, I think post covid is that people
at 6 00:12:05
are starting to think, I want more out of life.
at 6 00:12:08
You know, hopefully, I'm, I'm hoping that younger
at 6 00:12:10
generations are, are thinking, you know, I, I want to find
at 6 00:12:14
other definitions of success.
at 6 00:12:16
And I do hear that amongst colleagues
at 6 00:12:18
when I talk to them.
at 6 00:12:19
And they're all much younger than me, and, and
at 6 00:12:20
they do seem to be talking that kind of language.
at 6 00:12:24
Um, that, the trouble is, is that in London, you
at 6 00:12:27
know, living in London, you've got to earn a
at 6 00:12:29
certain amount of money in order just to survive.
at 6 00:12:31
So it's still, it's still a really tricky one.
at 6 00:12:34
You can't suddenly go, oh, I'm gonna start a business selling
at 6 00:12:37
beanie hats 'cause that's what I really wanna do inside.
at 6 00:12:40
Mm-hmm.
at 6 00:12:40
Um, so I'm always, yeah, I'm always cautious 'cause I sort
at 6 00:12:44
of think I, I still have to do, you know, and certainly
at 6 00:12:48
when I'm freelancing, I do a lot of work I enjoy and I
at 6 00:12:51
would, you know, I have to go and just do it just in
at 6 00:12:54
order to earn, earn money.
at 6 00:12:56
And I think we all have to do that.
at 6 00:12:58
Um, but it's just, if you can, if you could do a
at 6 00:13:00
sidestep into stuff you're more interested in, I
at 6 00:13:03
really think that's when you are more successful.
at 6 00:13:05
So, like my, you know, my books haven't made me
at 6 00:13:08
kind of a millionaire, but I feel, I feel more
at 6 00:13:11
successful since I've been writing and being published.
at 6 00:13:15
Um, much more successful than when I was a managing partner
at 6 00:13:19
and could you use that as a, as a term to describe myself?
at 6 00:13:23
So on one hand, there's this story or this narrative
at 6 00:13:26
about the, our self-worth and values defined by how much
at 6 00:13:31
we do or how much we have.
at 6 00:13:33
Then the challenge I'm hearing with that is then there's
at 6 00:13:36
always someone who's done more or someone who has more.
at 6 00:13:39
And I think we talked about this a little bit in our
at 6 00:13:42
conversation before about this idea of comparisonitis.
at 6 00:13:46
We're always looking to compare ourselves.
at 6 00:13:49
So I wanted to touch on that before we maybe just
at 6 00:13:51
think about some other ways of thinking about success.
at 6 00:13:54
So from your experience of this whole comparisonitis
at 6 00:13:58
thing, what, why, why do we fall into that trap?
at 6 00:14:00
Um, I think as we expect to get the payoff, you know,
at 6 00:14:03
so if we've, if we've done what we were supposed to
at 6 00:14:06
do, we, you know, we got the job and we worked really
at 6 00:14:08
hard, and then we got the, the family and the house
at 6 00:14:11
and the car, then we want to feel successful and we want
at 6 00:14:16
to feel fulfilled inside.
at 6 00:14:18
And so I think quite often we use that to judge other
at 6 00:14:21
people as well and to make ourselves feel better.
at 6 00:14:24
I mean, I, I think I sort of described it to you, I mean,
at 6 00:14:27
Miranda Sawyer, who wrote a really good book about sort
at 6 00:14:29
of being in your forties, she said, um, she's the only
at 6 00:14:32
one who doesn't have the box on the back of the house.
at 6 00:14:35
And, and the box on the back of the house effectively,
at 6 00:14:37
the kitchen extension that everybody has as another
at 6 00:14:41
kind of tick for success.
at 6 00:14:44
And they all look exactly the same.
at 6 00:14:46
So, you know, you go to your friend's house and you
at 6 00:14:48
go, oh, what house am I in?
at 6 00:14:50
Am I in the, am I in, you know, Jackie's
at 6 00:14:52
house or Jean's house?
at 6 00:14:53
'cause they both are exactly the same, but
at 6 00:14:55
that's definitely a tick box for success.
at 6 00:14:58
And I get caught up in it too.
at 6 00:15:01
So I spent a lot of time really mourning the fact
at 6 00:15:04
that I didn't have the box on the back of the house.
at 6 00:15:06
And then kind of realizing that.
at 6 00:15:08
In order to get that, I would have to go back
at 6 00:15:11
into probably a corporate kind of environment again.
at 6 00:15:14
And if I did my, my duty there and really got my head down,
at 6 00:15:19
I could have one of those.
at 6 00:15:20
And then I sort of thought I, I've started now sort of
at 6 00:15:22
thinking, do I want that?
at 6 00:15:24
And yeah, sometimes I bloody do.
at 6 00:15:25
Like, sometimes I do think, like at the moment we've got
at 6 00:15:28
a car and it's got gaffer tape holding the bumper on because
at 6 00:15:31
we've, we've not got round to fixing it and we've also
at 6 00:15:34
been budgeting and we've got loads of other stuff to do.
at 6 00:15:38
But I still find myself caught in that trap.
at 6 00:15:40
And we all have our personal triggers.
at 6 00:15:42
So your, yours might not be the box on the
at 6 00:15:44
back of the house.
at 6 00:15:45
It might be meeting somebody and realizing that they've got
at 6 00:15:47
a holiday home or they've got a brand of trainers on that
at 6 00:15:50
you can only buy in Korea and they're like 5 million pounds.
at 6 00:15:54
Or, you know, you are all gonna have your,
at 6 00:15:56
your flashpoints.
at 6 00:15:58
But I think I've got better now at kind of
at 6 00:16:00
taking a step back and thinking, what do you do?
at 6 00:16:02
What do you have to do in order to get that?
at 6 00:16:05
And what, what do I really want that, is that actually
at 6 00:16:08
gonna make me, make me happy?
at 6 00:16:10
'Cause you can still be miserable.
at 6 00:16:11
I've got plenty of friends who've got enormous houses
at 6 00:16:14
and their marriages are just bullshit and their
at 6 00:16:16
relationships with their kids are not great and.
at 6 00:16:18
Mm-hmm.
at 6 00:16:18
They're stressed.
at 6 00:16:19
And so I think we all know that that's true, but still
at 6 00:16:23
we buy into it, you know, because the messages are
at 6 00:16:26
so strong and pervasive.
at 6 00:16:27
You know, when we're on the tube, when we're watching tv,
at 6 00:16:31
that materialism and having a lot of material stuff is
at 6 00:16:35
what defines you successful and makes you happy.
at 6 00:16:39
And it's very hard actually.
at 6 00:16:41
'cause, you know, I, I, I was totally like that as a child.
at 6 00:16:43
I totally wanted to have all of that material success.
at 6 00:16:48
And I think it's only now that I'm realizing it, it
at 6 00:16:51
doesn't work, you know.
at 6 00:16:53
Within reason.
at 6 00:16:54
Because the, the thing is we have to be very cautious
at 6 00:16:56
that of course you need to have a roof over your head.
at 6 00:16:59
You need to have food.
at 6 00:17:00
You know, these are all.
at 6 00:17:02
The basics you need to have, you know,
at 6 00:17:04
I, when you say that, and you mentioned it before,
at 6 00:17:06
you like this being a very kind of balanced view
at 6 00:17:09
that I think of Maslow's hierarchy, hierarchy of needs.
at 6 00:17:12
You know, there's a certain, well we have needs for
at 6 00:17:14
material safety and physical safety, uh, in terms of
at 6 00:17:18
having food on the table and, and, and not feeling like
at 6 00:17:21
someone's just gonna walk into our house and steal stuff.
at 6 00:17:24
Funny because I'm still looking in the background and
at 6 00:17:26
I'm sort of thinking, I wonder what their kitchen looks like.
at 6 00:17:29
You know, I still, I mean, I'm still, I still have
at 6 00:17:32
that kind of schizophrenia a little bit where, you know,
at 6 00:17:35
I find it hard to not want, you know, not want those
at 6 00:17:38
things or not to wonder.
at 6 00:17:40
You know, I have to, if I go and visit somebody, I've, one
at 6 00:17:42
of my best friends has got amazing, an amazing house.
at 6 00:17:45
And I go inside and I feel myself sort of sink, you
at 6 00:17:48
know, I feel, I feel like, I have all those voices, like,
at 6 00:17:50
you're not successful enough.
at 6 00:17:51
You could have achieved this, but you haven't, you know,
at 6 00:17:54
you made some bad choices.
at 6 00:17:55
All those things are coming up.
at 6 00:17:57
And then I'm sort of looking around and then I'm like,
at 6 00:17:59
I walk away and I still feel this horrible kind of
at 6 00:18:02
sense of failure, really.
at 6 00:18:03
That's the only way I can describe it.
at 6 00:18:05
And then I sort of have to take a deep breath and sort
at 6 00:18:07
of go, hang on a minute, you're getting wrapped
at 6 00:18:09
up in that thing again.
at 6 00:18:10
Mm-hmm.
at 6 00:18:10
And you need to stop.
at 6 00:18:12
Well, you said before you take, you, you, you've
at 6 00:18:14
been able to take a bit of a, well, a step back.
at 6 00:18:16
And so I'd be curious to, to talk about that.
at 6 00:18:18
And I think given what we talked about, you know,
at 6 00:18:20
this, this magic number or magic number, a number.
at 6 00:18:23
We, we had some I.
at 6 00:18:25
Comments about the, using the, the, the 40 number, because
at 6 00:18:29
for some people that's still very young, so, okay, cool.
at 6 00:18:33
And on the, we have the majority of people here,
at 6 00:18:37
the overwhelming majority are here, are 40 and over.
at 6 00:18:40
There's this thing around, and I remember when I was
at 6 00:18:42
young, I couldn't wait till they get to the age of 40
at 6 00:18:45
for some reason in my head, once I was at 40, it would be
at 6 00:18:48
all fine, you know, sorted.
at 6 00:18:51
And, and there's this, like, up until then it is, I dunno,
at 6 00:18:55
there was, it was gonna be a rollercoaster ride.
at 6 00:18:58
And then you hit this age of 40 and you're
at 6 00:19:00
supposed to have done certain things or whatever.
at 6 00:19:02
It's, is it achieved, got the certain job, it's got some
at 6 00:19:06
certain type of lifestyle, you know, whatever trappings that
at 6 00:19:10
modern life is giving you.
at 6 00:19:12
But even then, like you're saying, we fall into this
at 6 00:19:15
behavior of thinking, oh, I haven't got enough, it
at 6 00:19:19
isn't enough because someone else has more than me.
at 6 00:19:22
It's funny 'cause I have a whole lot and I noticed that
at 6 00:19:25
Ray has said about kind of a thought spiral and sort
at 6 00:19:27
of when you, when you get caught, caught up in that.
at 6 00:19:30
And really, I, I mean I love self-help books and I've been
at 6 00:19:33
reading them from a very, you know, I probably was reading
at 6 00:19:36
self-help books when I was about eight, nine years old.
at 6 00:19:39
And through, throughout that period of time, I've kind of
at 6 00:19:42
gathered a whole lot of tools.
at 6 00:19:44
And some of them are things like, um, exercise, like
at 6 00:19:48
just going and, you know, doing a, a walk outside.
at 6 00:19:52
Some of them is actually being with my, you know,
at 6 00:19:54
being with my kids.
at 6 00:19:55
There's a kids just walk in here.
at 6 00:19:58
Some of it's just kind of like doing that.
at 6 00:20:01
Um, sometimes it might be doing some breathing.
at 6 00:20:04
Like I, you know, I do have an app on my phone and I
at 6 00:20:07
try and basically do a bit of meditation now and then.
at 6 00:20:11
So it's kind of, there's a whole variety of tools
at 6 00:20:13
that I kind of use.
at 6 00:20:15
And that gets me out of the catastrophizing.
at 6 00:20:19
That's what I would call it.
at 6 00:20:20
Well, there's, there's something for me there
at 6 00:20:22
about being present.
at 6 00:20:24
So the link I'm making to this whole comparisonitis and maybe
at 6 00:20:28
just, this, these unpleasant feelings that we may get
at 6 00:20:31
when we go and see someone who's got a nicer kitchen,
at 6 00:20:33
a bigger house, a nicer car, and more holiday homes.
at 6 00:20:38
Like you said, sort of like there's a self-criticism
at 6 00:20:41
or regret because of an actions that we
at 6 00:20:43
didn't take in the past.
at 6 00:20:45
Or there's a kind of a looking to the future of
at 6 00:20:50
like, okay, what does that mean in terms of where am
at 6 00:20:53
I gonna be if I don't have this house or this space?
at 6 00:20:57
These kind of like thoughts that take us out of like
at 6 00:20:59
experiencing what we're experiencing right now.
at 6 00:21:02
I mean, I've, I've written about this quite a lot,
at 6 00:21:04
kind of in the eighties there was this whole idea
at 6 00:21:06
that, you know, you could have it all, you know, you
at 6 00:21:09
could, as a woman anyway, that you could kind of, you
at 6 00:21:12
know, Shirley Conran wrote this amazing book, which
at 6 00:21:14
actually was misinterpreted, which was, I think it
at 6 00:21:16
was called Superwoman.
at 6 00:21:17
So it was all about, you can have the career, you
at 6 00:21:19
can have the kids, you can have the relationship, have
at 6 00:21:21
the friends have them, you can have the whole thing.
at 6 00:21:24
And I certainly kind of absorbed some of
at 6 00:21:26
that information where basically I thought I
at 6 00:21:29
could have it, have it all.
at 6 00:21:30
I do talk quite a lot about kind of people pleasing, and
at 6 00:21:34
I think that's, that's another thing about doing the things
at 6 00:21:37
that you don't love, you know, judging other people
at 6 00:21:40
on kind of material things.
at 6 00:21:42
It's all sort of tied in with that notion of
at 6 00:21:45
wanting people to like you and sort of judging
at 6 00:21:47
other people and stuff.
at 6 00:21:48
And a big thing for me, I think was just that post
at 6 00:21:52
40 I experienced a, you know, more recently I've
at 6 00:21:56
experienced kind of literal kind of losses in terms of,
at 6 00:21:59
you know, my dad died, um, very unexpectedly sort of
at 6 00:22:03
probably just two years ago.
at 6 00:22:05
Uh, you know, I had fertility treatment in my forties.
at 6 00:22:09
These, some of these kind of medical sort of things
at 6 00:22:12
and losing people, I think actually those things,
at 6 00:22:15
unfortunately, even though you don't choose them, they bring
at 6 00:22:17
you into the present because you are, you are having to,
at 6 00:22:21
and you're, you're basically gone from somebody who's
at 6 00:22:24
kind of preoccupied by the meeting that they've got that
at 6 00:22:26
morning to actually thinking about really big questions,
at 6 00:22:29
which is like, what happens if, if I die tomorrow, will I
at 6 00:22:34
be, will I be satisfied with what's happened thus far?
at 6 00:22:38
You know, with my parents dying now, are they, it it
at 6 00:22:42
sort of sets you off on a path of looking backwards
at 6 00:22:44
and thinking about their lives and were they happy
at 6 00:22:46
with the path that they took?
at 6 00:22:48
And so I now find that actually some of those really
at 6 00:22:52
deep, quite heavy things has helped me stay present.
at 6 00:22:55
'cause even with things, I mean, you know, even
at 6 00:22:58
things like grieving for example, um, it's a
at 6 00:23:01
very visceral sensation.
at 6 00:23:03
You know, you do, you kind of feel, you feel quite heavy.
at 6 00:23:07
You can be crying, you know, you can be very up and down.
at 6 00:23:10
And I sort of, I think now I'm much more, maybe
at 6 00:23:14
that is through practicing some of the mindfulness.
at 6 00:23:16
I'm more in tune with my emotions and sort of
at 6 00:23:18
like my feelings and, and not avoiding them.
at 6 00:23:20
And I think a lot of the behavior before I was
at 6 00:23:23
basically avoiding feelings.
at 6 00:23:25
So I was running all the time.
at 6 00:23:27
I think a lot of working people are that, you know,
at 6 00:23:30
people say that to me now.
at 6 00:23:31
They're kind of like, you, you, you find it very hard
at 6 00:23:34
to relax and that's true.
at 6 00:23:35
Um, and that's, that's something I learned from
at 6 00:23:37
my own parents that we didn't prioritize rest.
at 6 00:23:40
We just didn't, you know, you were only, you had
at 6 00:23:43
to be busy all the time.
at 6 00:23:44
Um, now I think I've probably got better
at 6 00:23:46
at noticing that too.
at 6 00:23:48
So sort of going, hang on.
at 6 00:23:49
You are really, you are, you are, you're getting really
at 6 00:23:52
sucked into that busy thing and you need to come back
at 6 00:23:54
into this, this moment now.
at 6 00:23:57
Um, something, I mean, it's very hard, but I think
at 6 00:24:00
you all, you just have to practice it, you know?
at 6 00:24:02
Um, and unfortunately life circumstances can
at 6 00:24:05
force you into it too.
at 6 00:24:07
Another factor around the busyness is that how, like
at 6 00:24:10
we were saying before, our value and our self-worth is
at 6 00:24:13
tied to how much we do and, and how impactful or how broad
at 6 00:24:19
the impact of that doing is.
at 6 00:24:21
Whether that's, you know, managing people in a company
at 6 00:24:25
or being a TED talker, But this whole idea of
at 6 00:24:30
not stopping, and being, because it then means that
at 6 00:24:36
we have to feel stuff or these feelings come up.
at 6 00:24:40
And, you know, talking about grief and how I think some
at 6 00:24:44
people try suppress it.
at 6 00:24:45
And I've been very, um, guilty of just like try to push away
at 6 00:24:48
the feelings because I didn't know what to do with them.
at 6 00:24:50
It's like that, ah, this feels really horrible.
at 6 00:24:52
How do I put, how do I, what do I do with this?
at 6 00:24:56
How do I, what, what is this supposed to, what value is
at 6 00:25:00
this to me to feel shit?
at 6 00:25:04
But then there's something around how I think I'm
at 6 00:25:06
seeing what I'm hearing is I like, actually it's just the
at 6 00:25:09
processes, feeling shit is is the what you need to do.
at 6 00:25:13
But also, I mean, that's something to not, I mean
at 6 00:25:15
it depends what your sort of spiritual beliefs are.
at 6 00:25:18
But the level of shit that you feel, certainly when you miss
at 6 00:25:20
somebody is really reflective of how much you love them.
at 6 00:25:24
So it's really comes back to, now I'm starting to
at 6 00:25:27
realize that now, is that my productivity, productivity
at 6 00:25:32
really took off after my dad died and I, in
at 6 00:25:34
lockdown, I wrote two books.
at 6 00:25:36
I launched a podcast.
at 6 00:25:37
I was just going mad in terms of doing stuff,
at 6 00:25:41
and I was totally trying.
at 6 00:25:42
I mean, now I look back on it and I think, oh, we
at 6 00:25:44
were just totally trying to avoid feelings and it was
at 6 00:25:47
a complicated situation in, in the situation that he,
at 6 00:25:50
you know, circumstances, it wasn't easy, um, because he
at 6 00:25:53
had a problem with addiction and he was an alcoholic.
at 6 00:25:56
So there was all sorts of other issues as well.
at 6 00:25:58
Um, but now when I get these heavy feelings, and I
at 6 00:26:01
do get them still, because that's the other thing with
at 6 00:26:03
grief is that people often think, oh, you get over it.
at 6 00:26:06
You, you never do.
at 6 00:26:07
I still strongly believe that, you know, 10, 20 years on, you
at 6 00:26:10
have these very, very strong feelings of, of, of loss.
at 6 00:26:14
Um, I'm now much better at recognizing, but you know,
at 6 00:26:17
that's, this is normal.
at 6 00:26:18
Not only is it normal to feel like this, this
at 6 00:26:21
is a reflection of the fact that you loved your
at 6 00:26:22
father, you know, and he loved you and that, and
at 6 00:26:25
you are missing that love.
at 6 00:26:26
That's the absence of, of, but the love is
at 6 00:26:28
actually still there.
at 6 00:26:29
It sounds really cheesy, but I'm still carrying that.
at 6 00:26:31
It's just that I don't have anyone to sort of
at 6 00:26:34
bo it back to me again.
at 6 00:26:36
Um, so I think once you sort of accept that it's, it's
at 6 00:26:40
normal and it's natural.
at 6 00:26:41
And I would say if anyone, you know, if anyone is grieving,
at 6 00:26:44
it's really helpful to sort of find resources that, that
at 6 00:26:47
are kind of filled with other people who are going through
at 6 00:26:50
it because there's an awful lot of kind of, yeah, you feel
at 6 00:26:54
so much better just knowing that it's a, the feelings that
at 6 00:26:57
you're having a a, a normal whatever that means, um.
at 6 00:27:01
Hmm.
at 6 00:27:01
But I guess, yeah, that's definitely, definitely
at 6 00:27:03
made me more present.
at 6 00:27:04
But definitely thinking about my parents and their
at 6 00:27:07
definitions of success.
at 6 00:27:08
'Cause they, I think both of them were kind of
at 6 00:27:10
workaholics pretty much.
at 6 00:27:12
Um, and so now I sort of think, well, it's not
at 6 00:27:14
surprising that you grew up to be a workaholic too.
at 6 00:27:18
Um, you know, and, and like you've already touched on,
at 6 00:27:21
we, we respect workaholics, you know, um, but we have
at 6 00:27:25
this strange thing where we sort of go, you know,
at 6 00:27:28
hope you're keeping busy.
at 6 00:27:29
That's another thing that people say, oh,
at 6 00:27:30
you're keeping busy.
at 6 00:27:31
And if you said, no, I'm not keeping busy.
at 6 00:27:32
I'm just sitting in the garden doing absolutely nothing, you
at 6 00:27:36
would be judged, you know?
at 6 00:27:38
Um, so there's this whole, apart from the kind of
at 6 00:27:40
what are you gonna be when you grow up, you know,
at 6 00:27:43
the kind of keeping busy.
at 6 00:27:45
And then there's this whole notion around kind
at 6 00:27:47
of judging one another by how much stuff they have.
at 6 00:27:49
You can see how we get caught in these narratives.
at 6 00:27:52
Um, and it's hard to, to jump out.
at 6 00:27:55
And even with my, when I write my books, I still
at 6 00:27:58
want to have success.
at 6 00:27:59
I still want to.
at 6 00:28:01
You know, I have mad fantasies where I wanna be on Oprah's
at 6 00:28:05
Book Club and you know, I wanna be, you know, I wanna
at 6 00:28:08
be as big as Marian Keys and, and what's that all about?
at 6 00:28:10
Why can't I just be happy just writing?
at 6 00:28:13
Um, so there are still, I still kind of wanting
at 6 00:28:17
to be successful.
at 6 00:28:18
But I guess what, what I want now is to be
at 6 00:28:20
recognized for the things that I really enjoyed doing
at 6 00:28:23
versus for something that didn't really feel like it
at 6 00:28:27
was me and my best work.
at 6 00:28:29
You know, I was, I was sort of trapped in someone
at 6 00:28:32
else's body for a long time.
at 6 00:28:34
One of the things that we, we've been exploring, um,
at 6 00:28:39
the Happy Startup School in our programs and our coaching
at 6 00:28:43
is this connection to needs.
at 6 00:28:47
And so, a way I would interpret what you're saying
at 6 00:28:49
before about the feelings, you know, the feelings of grief,
at 6 00:28:52
feelings of loss, feelings of sadness, 'cause there's
at 6 00:28:54
this need for connection with someone with your father
at 6 00:28:58
who's no longer around.
at 6 00:29:00
And then how identifying these things, these feelings and
at 6 00:29:04
what they connect to in terms of these needs are, are ways
at 6 00:29:07
to navigate our way forward and understand what, what kind
at 6 00:29:11
of actions we need to take.
at 6 00:29:14
And I'm linking that to this, you know, we're talking
at 6 00:29:16
about how do we navigate the second half of life, let's
at 6 00:29:19
put it this way, given that we've used a certain compass
at 6 00:29:22
in the past, uh, which was this objective measure of
at 6 00:29:25
success based on some kind of numeric, uh, approach.
at 6 00:29:29
You know, you, we, we talked about, we, we've been led
at 6 00:29:32
by other people's metrics.
at 6 00:29:35
What is your, now, now your process of defining
at 6 00:29:39
that and working with that?
at 6 00:29:40
You said about doing stuff that you love and
at 6 00:29:42
being known for that.
at 6 00:29:43
How you, how, what is it that's, helping you
at 6 00:29:46
define those things?
at 6 00:29:48
Um, it's an interesting one.
at 6 00:29:49
I mean, one of the exercises that I find really helpful,
at 6 00:29:52
like I said, is writing a lot.
at 6 00:29:54
So using writing, not just writing for publishing, but
at 6 00:29:57
just writing for myself.
at 6 00:29:59
What I've found is that when you write, there tends to be
at 6 00:30:02
a, a gut kind of feeling which points you in the direction
at 6 00:30:06
of the thing that you want.
at 6 00:30:07
You know, you're sort of like, oh.
at 6 00:30:09
The more that you write, the more you're kind of like,
at 6 00:30:10
oh, this is how, you know, this is what I love doing.
at 6 00:30:12
This is kind of how I feel.
at 6 00:30:14
It helps identify what you don't want as well.
at 6 00:30:17
I mean, I wish I kind of, what I wish is that
at 6 00:30:19
I discovered way earlier.
at 6 00:30:21
'cause I mean, there may be people who are listening
at 6 00:30:23
and they're kind of like, That little voice that's
at 6 00:30:25
on your shoulder that's going, this is shit.
at 6 00:30:27
I hate it.
at 6 00:30:28
I hate this, this, this jerk is driving me mad.
at 6 00:30:31
You know, I, I wanna, you know.
at 6 00:30:33
All those thoughts, listen to them.
at 6 00:30:35
Don't just go right, I'll have some booze and that
at 6 00:30:38
will shut that one up.
at 6 00:30:39
Or, you know, I'll go and have an affair with someone
at 6 00:30:41
and then I'll feel better about myself, or whatever
at 6 00:30:43
those things are that we use to numb or escape,
at 6 00:30:46
listen to that voice.
at 6 00:30:47
And I think all that's happened with me is I've got
at 6 00:30:49
better at listening to it.
at 6 00:30:50
And then I, once I, once I listen to it, sometimes that
at 6 00:30:54
voice isn't right, by the way.
at 6 00:30:55
'cause sometimes the voice can be like, you're really
at 6 00:30:57
shit and you are a failure.
at 6 00:30:59
This is another voice, which is really your
at 6 00:31:00
gut, which is kind of telling you who you are.
at 6 00:31:03
Um, and if you're feeling increasingly every time
at 6 00:31:05
you go to work, feeling like the real kind of, it's
at 6 00:31:08
not coherent with who you are, then listen to that.
at 6 00:31:11
Um, and I think that's all I've probably done.
at 6 00:31:14
But I've also had to take direct action.
at 6 00:31:15
So I basically had to, you know, I was lucky that I
at 6 00:31:18
was made redundant from work, and within that
at 6 00:31:20
redundancy I got a payout.
at 6 00:31:22
If I hadn't got that, I wouldn't have been able to
at 6 00:31:24
then embark on a sort of hybrid career of my own.
at 6 00:31:28
Now almost every decision I make is driven by the
at 6 00:31:31
fact of financially.
at 6 00:31:32
Is it rewarding enough that it's worth my while?
at 6 00:31:35
Or is it something that I would love to do?
at 6 00:31:37
So like, you know, if I love doing something, I will do it.
at 6 00:31:40
And does it feel like the gut voice is going yeah, that's
at 6 00:31:42
great, that's brilliant, you do that, then I do it.
at 6 00:31:45
Um, if it's really financially rewarding, I do it.
at 6 00:31:48
If it's neither of those things, then I don't do it.
at 6 00:31:50
Um, it's kind of the older you get, the better you
at 6 00:31:54
get identifying that.
at 6 00:31:55
So you're kind of, you know now, I used to spend
at 6 00:31:59
a lot of time because I was very much in the sort
at 6 00:32:02
of Instagram world where there were so many people
at 6 00:32:04
pre covid where it's like, let's go and have a coffee.
at 6 00:32:07
You know, let's go and have a coffee.
at 6 00:32:08
And I would go and have coffees with a million
at 6 00:32:10
different people.
at 6 00:32:11
And now I'm just like, no, I don't wanna have a coffee.
at 6 00:32:14
Like, I'll be completely frank with you.
at 6 00:32:15
But unless there's something happening out of this,
at 6 00:32:18
like, be it a friendship, I, we feel some sort of gut
at 6 00:32:22
risk connection that we're gonna be friends or there's
at 6 00:32:25
some work coming out of it, which is gonna be well
at 6 00:32:28
paid or it's gonna be some creative pursuit that I'm
at 6 00:32:30
really into, I'm not into it.
at 6 00:32:32
Do you know what I mean?
at 6 00:32:33
I won't, I won't do it.
at 6 00:32:34
And I think through using that kind of traffic light
at 6 00:32:37
system of red, you know, Amber Green for everything,
at 6 00:32:41
life gets a lot easier and you just find yourself
at 6 00:32:43
doing more of the thing.
at 6 00:32:44
And it's funny because I'm now at a bit of a
at 6 00:32:46
crossroads 'cause I've kind of realized I've written
at 6 00:32:48
five books and they've been published, but I'm not living
at 6 00:32:51
off the proceeds of that.
at 6 00:32:53
So I'm now at the point where I'm kind of, I could
at 6 00:32:55
write another book, but actually what I want to
at 6 00:32:57
do is take some time and reflect what I want next.
at 6 00:33:01
And obviously I'm working at the same time, but it's
at 6 00:33:03
kind of, am I gonna just keep on writing books?
at 6 00:33:06
Am I still happy writing books and not getting a sort of
at 6 00:33:09
salary out of it, you know?
at 6 00:33:11
Mm-hmm.
at 6 00:33:11
Um, what do I do?
at 6 00:33:13
Um, and it's interesting 'cause actually
at 6 00:33:14
it's the two things.
at 6 00:33:15
It's kind of the material, you know, there is still
at 6 00:33:17
that materialism about wanting to be a Sunday
at 6 00:33:21
Times bestselling author.
at 6 00:33:23
But yeah, I, I mean, I actually think for anyone
at 6 00:33:25
who's kind of in their 40, not 40 or is just in
at 6 00:33:28
early forties, I really do strongly believe that life
at 6 00:33:30
gets better as you get older.
at 6 00:33:32
Um, and I didn't believe that for a long time.
at 6 00:33:35
And for women, I think aging in particular is
at 6 00:33:38
a really quite a tricky thing to navigate.
at 6 00:33:41
But I do now.
at 6 00:33:42
I do, I sort of, I sort of, as long as you're lucky
at 6 00:33:45
enough to have your health, I think in terms of your
at 6 00:33:49
clarity on what you want, it becomes much, much clearer.
at 6 00:33:54
And that's why they call it the midlife crisis often,
at 6 00:33:56
is that it's the, it's the snake shedding its skin.
at 6 00:33:59
You know, the old, the old sort of skin comes off and the
at 6 00:34:01
new snake comes out, whatever.
at 6 00:34:03
Probably not a good analogy.
at 6 00:34:05
Um, but you do feel, feel.
at 6 00:34:08
You know, you're like, right, I've got no time for bullshit.
at 6 00:34:11
I don't wanna waste time having coffee with
at 6 00:34:12
people I don't like, you know, I don't give a
at 6 00:34:14
shit about your big car.
at 6 00:34:16
You know, you can drone on about your holiday, but
at 6 00:34:18
I'm not gonna listen to it because I know that's not
at 6 00:34:20
what I want at the moment.
at 6 00:34:21
And you sort of, yeah, I think you do.
at 6 00:34:24
You just become much, much lost, less tolerant of, uh,
at 6 00:34:28
certain things, which, which makes your life better.
at 6 00:34:31
Sounds like you are a point now of reflection.
at 6 00:34:35
You know, you're saying, okay, well given everything
at 6 00:34:37
I've done so far, where do I want to go next?
at 6 00:34:41
And I, I, I've come to value that much more
at 6 00:34:45
recently in terms of not the incessant doing and,
at 6 00:34:49
and, and just plowing on, um, though stopping and just
at 6 00:34:54
thinking, just feels, and I, I still have a bit of a
at 6 00:34:57
reaction to it 'cause it, it feels a bit too passive.
at 6 00:35:00
But there's something here around, given what you said
at 6 00:35:02
before, there's something here around feelings.
at 6 00:35:04
There's something about just, just checking in,
at 6 00:35:07
and then, then being able to, to carve out the, the
at 6 00:35:12
right strategy, the right path for the future based on
at 6 00:35:15
what you've learned so far.
at 6 00:35:18
And it could be a completely different path because
at 6 00:35:21
you think, okay, you know, this isn't working, so
at 6 00:35:23
I'm gonna do something else, um, which I think is
at 6 00:35:26
challenging for some people.
at 6 00:35:27
And so, a question I had was really around how
at 6 00:35:31
has your tolerance for risk evolved over time?
at 6 00:35:37
I think it's really interesting when we
at 6 00:35:38
think about risk.
at 6 00:35:39
'cause I think I was really risk averse, which is
at 6 00:35:42
obviously why I stayed in the same job for so long.
at 6 00:35:45
Um, but because I came from a, you know, we are all,
at 6 00:35:47
we, we are the way we are because of our childhoods.
at 6 00:35:50
And I think my childhood, we moved a lot.
at 6 00:35:53
We lived in different countries.
at 6 00:35:55
My parents were divorced.
at 6 00:35:56
Um, we had what would be described as a bohemian
at 6 00:36:00
sort of upbringing.
at 6 00:36:01
You know, I have something like upwards of, I can't even
at 6 00:36:04
keep count six to nine sort of step and half brothers.
at 6 00:36:08
You know, my mom's married three times.
at 6 00:36:09
I mean, none of that's judge judgy, but what I wanted
at 6 00:36:13
instability for a long period of time actually,
at 6 00:36:15
that's what I wanted.
at 6 00:36:17
And actually now, I mean, children come into it actually
at 6 00:36:20
is that now I'm probably more, um, open to taking risks.
at 6 00:36:24
You know, like now I'm even considering like, do I wanna
at 6 00:36:26
move to a different location?
at 6 00:36:28
But the children are now the big factor of kind of like,
at 6 00:36:31
is that gonna be okay or not?
at 6 00:36:33
Uh, what about that?
at 6 00:36:34
You know, I think they're much more cautious now.
at 6 00:36:36
My parents really did not, I don't think they, they were
at 6 00:36:39
not inconsiderate, but they did, they lived their lives
at 6 00:36:42
and children lived with them.
at 6 00:36:44
They didn't live their lives for their children, which
at 6 00:36:46
is what we tend to do now.
at 6 00:36:47
It's like everything we do is driven by what they need.
at 6 00:36:50
They've got a play date, we all go to the play date.
at 6 00:36:52
They've got an activity.
at 6 00:36:53
We all get activity.
at 6 00:36:55
Some of it, I think is not particularly
at 6 00:36:56
healthy, um, necessarily.
at 6 00:36:59
But yeah, I think to your question, I'm, I'm
at 6 00:37:01
probably, I wish I was, I could take more risks, but
at 6 00:37:04
I've now got, you know, I have to consider them too.
at 6 00:37:07
I can't just go off and do whatever I fancy, you know.
at 6 00:37:10
So maybe I'll take kids out of the equation then,
at 6 00:37:12
because that is a very specific pace, case in point.
at 6 00:37:15
'cause we have, uh, well, there's a sense of
at 6 00:37:17
responsibility, uh, not only for their physical wellbeing,
at 6 00:37:21
but also their emotional wellbeing and how these, how,
at 6 00:37:24
how the choices we make in the present will potentially
at 6 00:37:27
impact their futures in all sorts of ways, and I, and
at 6 00:37:30
that's, that's an interesting thing there for me.
at 6 00:37:33
But at a personal level, you said, you know, your,
at 6 00:37:36
sounds like your appetite for risk is be, is greater.
at 6 00:37:39
How has your relationship to risk changed?
at 6 00:37:42
Why are you feeling, forgetting the kids that
at 6 00:37:44
you'd like to shake things up or you're happy to
at 6 00:37:47
shake things up more?
at 6 00:37:48
I think basically, um, probably, the age that
at 6 00:37:51
I am probably losing my father had a big role in
at 6 00:37:54
that because I think I, I, I realized that I'd had so
at 6 00:37:57
many conversations with him around the things that he
at 6 00:37:59
was gonna do when he retired.
at 6 00:38:02
So he was like, you know, when I retire I'm gonna do
at 6 00:38:04
this and I'm gonna, he, he always used to say, when I
at 6 00:38:06
retire, I'll write a book.
at 6 00:38:08
He was a doctor in philosophy, so he was like an academic.
at 6 00:38:11
And he died without having, he didn't retire.
at 6 00:38:14
He didn't get to retire the year that he was supposed
at 6 00:38:16
to retire, that it happened.
at 6 00:38:19
And I think the whole notion of retirement is weird anyway.
at 6 00:38:22
'cause it's kind of like what you're gonna live your whole
at 6 00:38:23
life, not enjoying yourself, just so you can sit on a
at 6 00:38:27
cruise in a Hawaiian shirt or smoking a cigar and then die?
at 6 00:38:31
It's kind of, it's just weird.
at 6 00:38:32
It's like you're storing up just for
at 6 00:38:34
that retirement moment.
at 6 00:38:35
Um, but I think for me now, I've sort of felt, look,
at 6 00:38:38
you know, it sounds really grim, but you know, death
at 6 00:38:41
can come at any moment and we never really know
at 6 00:38:43
what's gonna happen to us.
at 6 00:38:44
And as we get older, we just, we have no, no idea.
at 6 00:38:47
And so it is a bit of that cliche of I've got to do the
at 6 00:38:50
things that are gonna make me happy and fulfilled now
at 6 00:38:53
because I can't, you know, I might be exactly the same.
at 6 00:38:56
I might retire and pop my clogs the next day, you know?
at 6 00:38:59
And then, you know, I'm kind of, I'm often trying
at 6 00:39:02
to keep that perspective now of, I think, along
at 6 00:39:05
with my own voice, there's also my father's voice now
at 6 00:39:07
sort of saying, listen Nik, you need to get a move on.
at 6 00:39:10
You know, do the stuff that you wanna do because
at 6 00:39:13
you know, you've, it's, I haven't got that long left,
at 6 00:39:16
you know, on the planet.
at 6 00:39:17
And so you can't keep putting off like thinking,
at 6 00:39:19
you know, I kept thinking, I thought, you know, when
at 6 00:39:21
I'm 40, I kind of had this idea that, you know, I was
at 6 00:39:24
gonna be living by the coast.
at 6 00:39:26
You know, I thought that might have happened,
at 6 00:39:27
it hasn't happened.
at 6 00:39:28
That's kind of one of the things I really wanna do.
at 6 00:39:31
I wanna go and swim in, like in the sea.
at 6 00:39:33
I haven't really, you know, I haven't done that.
at 6 00:39:35
I like the idea of doing that.
at 6 00:39:36
I like the idea of, you know, sampling
at 6 00:39:39
life outside of London.
at 6 00:39:40
I've lived in London for a long time, but I'm starting to
at 6 00:39:43
fall out of love with it now.
at 6 00:39:45
But the other problem is that I have this whole idea that
at 6 00:39:48
when I live there, I will have a different life and
at 6 00:39:50
my life will be completely different to the way it's now.
at 6 00:39:53
Suddenly I will turn into a very active sport, you
at 6 00:39:58
know, sporty, outdoor person.
at 6 00:40:01
There's something about having children that we also need
at 6 00:40:03
to consider when it comes to our work and how fast
at 6 00:40:07
we wanna move with work.
at 6 00:40:08
So I just wanted to just help invite you to touch a bit on
at 6 00:40:11
that to just, for anyone who, who is having, who does have
at 6 00:40:16
children and they are trying to do something different or
at 6 00:40:19
move forward with a change.
at 6 00:40:21
Yeah, I mean I found it really tough in that I'd had
at 6 00:40:24
so much of my life without children and then suddenly
at 6 00:40:27
to, I think a lot of men and women find it tough.
at 6 00:40:30
I think they traditionally, they always say it's tougher
at 6 00:40:32
for women, but I think it's for both in that you suddenly
at 6 00:40:36
can't, you have to slow down.
at 6 00:40:38
I mean, you've got to, they've got this little
at 6 00:40:39
thing that you've got to look after and you've got
at 6 00:40:41
to, everything's around their routines and stuff.
at 6 00:40:44
I still kind of haven't got it entirely sussed out.
at 6 00:40:47
The one thing I do know is that I couldn't, I
at 6 00:40:50
wouldn't be able to function if I was staying at home
at 6 00:40:52
with them all the time.
at 6 00:40:53
Like, I know, I know that for myself.
at 6 00:40:56
Um, 'cause I know that, and I'm lucky enough in that
at 6 00:40:59
'cause a lot of, you know, childcare's so expensive.
at 6 00:41:01
I'm lucky enough that I can earn enough to pay for
at 6 00:41:03
childcare, 'cause that's a big, that's a big thing for
at 6 00:41:06
a lot of people, you know, childcare's so expensive.
at 6 00:41:09
, I feel the eternal guilt all the time because I'm always
at 6 00:41:11
feeling like whenever I'm doing something for myself,
at 6 00:41:14
I feel like I could be doing something for them.
at 6 00:41:17
And the other thing which I think we're all familiar
at 6 00:41:18
with is there's just so much admin that goes around
at 6 00:41:21
looking after children.
at 6 00:41:21
This kind of, there's obviously being with them,
at 6 00:41:24
but then there's this, all this other shit, like kind
at 6 00:41:26
of, you know, we've got lots of WhatsApp kind of
at 6 00:41:29
channels, which is partly why I started taking the piss out
at 6 00:41:31
of WhatsApp on my Instagram because I was getting sort
at 6 00:41:34
of upwards of kind of 15 messages a day about is it
at 6 00:41:37
PE day, is it World Book Day?
at 6 00:41:39
Can you bring a card in for the teacher?
at 6 00:41:41
You need to log onto this platform and, and do a
at 6 00:41:44
donation, 'cause there's a workshop happening.
at 6 00:41:46
Um, can you, you know, I don't know, there was just so can
at 6 00:41:49
you volunteer for the PSA?
at 6 00:41:50
You know, all of this really quite, some of it's
at 6 00:41:52
really good, obviously.
at 6 00:41:53
We need to do that stuff, but I felt like it's a lot of
at 6 00:41:56
unpaid work and I'm sure if there's moms who are watching,
at 6 00:42:00
and I know we touched on this before, unfortunately, a lot
at 6 00:42:02
of that work can fall onto the mother rather than the father.
at 6 00:42:06
So the mom has a, a job then it's unpaid work, which
at 6 00:42:10
is organizing her kids.
at 6 00:42:12
You know, entire universe, every day, even thinking
at 6 00:42:16
ahead, it's boring stuff.
at 6 00:42:17
It's like, is there clean socks in the drawer
at 6 00:42:19
because they've gotta go to school tomorrow.
at 6 00:42:21
You know, where's the Brownsey uniform?
at 6 00:42:23
Um, I end up doing this thing when I'm at work
at 6 00:42:26
where I'm WhatsApping other mums, 'cause my partner's
at 6 00:42:29
at home and he's got to get one of them to brownies.
at 6 00:42:31
So I'm basically organizing his childcare at work
at 6 00:42:35
whilst I'm in a meeting.
at 6 00:42:37
And this is one of the bug bears where I think
at 6 00:42:38
there's loads of interesting books about it, where
at 6 00:42:41
that's a big distraction.
at 6 00:42:42
You know, if women, you know, I'm pretty sure that
at 6 00:42:44
Cheryl Sandberg doesn't deal with that, you know,
at 6 00:42:46
and I mean, I know she's a controversial figure, but
at 6 00:42:48
I think if you, women could probably achieve far more,
at 6 00:42:52
if they weren't continually being dragged down.
at 6 00:42:54
It's like having big, massive stones in your
at 6 00:42:56
pockets every day that you are sort of carrying around.
at 6 00:42:59
So certainly when they're, it's been a
at 6 00:43:02
massive compromise.
at 6 00:43:03
'cause I feel like I, I, I, I discovered what I wanted
at 6 00:43:06
to do and then I had kids, and the kids have slowed
at 6 00:43:09
me down significantly.
at 6 00:43:11
But, you know, I chose that and I was lucky
at 6 00:43:13
enough to have, you know, to be able to have them.
at 6 00:43:14
So, um, people keep telling me it gets easier.
at 6 00:43:18
Um, but I dunno if that's true.
at 6 00:43:20
I dunno if it is true.
at 6 00:43:21
I think that's a myth.
at 6 00:43:22
I
at 6 00:43:22
it is, it is true.
at 6 00:43:24
It is true.
at 6 00:43:24
It gets different and it does get easier.
at 6 00:43:26
Um, I just wanna bring in Laurence, 'cause it, well,
at 6 00:43:29
from my, I I had my second child when we just started
at 6 00:43:32
the Happy, Startup School.
at 6 00:43:34
And I think, um, my wife has a different opinion
at 6 00:43:37
as to whether that was a good thing or not.
at 6 00:43:38
Um,
at 6 00:43:41
We were lucky we both had kids around the same time
at 6 00:43:43
when we were growing our business or starting it.
at 6 00:43:45
And so, We were lucky.
at 6 00:43:48
I think that we had similar goals and visions for
at 6 00:43:51
how we wanted to work as co-founders together, which
at 6 00:43:53
I think is quite rare.
at 6 00:43:55
which probably helped that we were friends before.
at 6 00:43:58
Um, but yeah, I think it's, it's a new phenomenon.
at 6 00:44:01
I think this idea of, like you said, putting our kids first.
at 6 00:44:04
My dad always said, they've come to live with you,
at 6 00:44:06
not the other way around.
at 6 00:44:07
And that was one of the things that stuck with me.
at 6 00:44:09
Is like, don't change anything because you've got kids.
at 6 00:44:11
Just, they'll, they'll follow you.
at 6 00:44:13
So if you wanna go make a change, go make it.
at 6 00:44:14
Um, which sounds easy, right?
at 6 00:44:16
It sounds so easy, but I think it's really hard to.
at 6 00:44:18
Yeah, I love that.
at 6 00:44:19
I do love that advice though.
at 6 00:44:20
I think that's really, but that's how my parents
at 6 00:44:23
behaved very much.
at 6 00:44:25
Um, you know, so we did, we traveled a lot.
at 6 00:44:28
But it's just having that bad, it's like being able to
at 6 00:44:30
be free, but also offering them that stability.
at 6 00:44:32
'Cause I think, uh, that was something that I felt like I
at 6 00:44:34
lacked was, it was kind of, I, I I wanted to have a kind of
at 6 00:44:38
very traditional upbringing.
at 6 00:44:40
I wanted to have, you know, I used to say to my mom,
at 6 00:44:42
I'd go like, oh, you know, I want mum who's like,
at 6 00:44:44
wears a pinny and makes me cakes and stuff, you know,
at 6 00:44:47
a mum's got pink hair and a nose ring and is like going
at 6 00:44:50
off to Nicaragua, you know?
at 6 00:44:53
So It, it is hard, but I think it's good for them
at 6 00:44:55
actually a bit of change.
at 6 00:44:57
'cause they're gonna have to navigate change, you
at 6 00:45:00
know, numerous times.
at 6 00:45:01
And also, I think the final thing I'd add to that, I
at 6 00:45:03
mean, we work with a lot of people who are, like
at 6 00:45:04
you said, navigating this transition, let's call it.
at 6 00:45:07
I always just say to people, I always just think if you can
at 6 00:45:09
be the best version of you, then that's good for the kids.
at 6 00:45:12
Even if it means maybe they sacrifice something
at 6 00:45:14
in the short term.
at 6 00:45:15
You know, it might not be, they get all the, the best
at 6 00:45:17
trainers or the best of everything, but hopefully
at 6 00:45:20
you'll be a better person around them and longer
at 6 00:45:21
term it's better for them.
at 6 00:45:22
So, I don't know, I think there's sometimes we have
at 6 00:45:25
this responsibility of they'll expect everything as we
at 6 00:45:27
need to put them first, but.
at 6 00:45:29
Yeah.
at 6 00:45:30
Yeah, I don't think that's always good for them.
at 6 00:45:31
If the collateral damage of that is we end up doing
at 6 00:45:35
something we don't wanna do, which is not good for anyone.
at 6 00:45:37
Yeah.
at 6 00:45:38
And and then they're seeing you 'cause they're gonna
at 6 00:45:40
model themselves on you too, so they're basically seeing
at 6 00:45:43
you not living the life that you want and thinking
at 6 00:45:46
Exactly.
at 6 00:45:46
That's okay.
at 6 00:45:47
Yeah.
at 6 00:45:47
There's something here around any resentment
at 6 00:45:50
that colors anything that you do for your kids.
at 6 00:45:52
I think if there is any of that element of resentment,
at 6 00:45:54
then that's gonna come across and, you know, whether, if you
at 6 00:45:57
have to sacrifice going, doing something so that they can
at 6 00:46:00
do something for themselves.
at 6 00:46:01
Um, there's also the whole material aspect of things
at 6 00:46:05
and wishing that they could have certain things.
at 6 00:46:08
Uh, my, my feeling around this ultimately is if
at 6 00:46:11
they can feel confident in themselves, um, because we're
at 6 00:46:14
all destined to fuck up our kids some way or the other.
at 6 00:46:17
Mm-hmm.
at 6 00:46:17
But ultimately the, for me, if we can make sure that no
at 6 00:46:21
matter what, they feel that someone there loves them and
at 6 00:46:26
is always there for them no matter what and loves them
at 6 00:46:29
for who they are, they might not get everything they want,
at 6 00:46:31
but they will get what they need, which is essentially
at 6 00:46:33
a, a solid foundation of self-confidence and, um,
at 6 00:46:37
self-awareness even hopefully.
at 6 00:46:39
Yeah.
at 6 00:46:39
Is also the, the ability to apologize.
at 6 00:46:42
'Cause that was something that, I mean, I've screwed
at 6 00:46:44
up quite a few times.
at 6 00:46:45
I, I find that often in the mornings, yeah, I'm
at 6 00:46:49
struggling in the mornings to get them both ready
at 6 00:46:51
and out and everything.
at 6 00:46:52
Um, and I think sometimes when I'm in that position I
at 6 00:46:56
just apolo I do apologize, which I, I'm not sure my
at 6 00:46:58
parents did that often.
at 6 00:47:00
You know, they didn't, if they did screw up, um, yeah.
at 6 00:47:03
Well, it's, I think it's about being human and
at 6 00:47:05
letting them know that we are human as well.
at 6 00:47:07
'cause then they don't feel like a, we're on this massive
at 6 00:47:10
pedestal and though everything that we say is gospel.
at 6 00:47:13
Um.
at 6 00:47:13
Yeah,
at 6 00:47:14
I think there's an element of love, respect, but
at 6 00:47:16
also them to realize that it's okay to get it wrong.
at 6 00:47:20
Because if they don't think that it's okay to get it
at 6 00:47:22
wrong, you know, the classic thing you won't learn.
at 6 00:47:25
I'm conscious of time and then Laurence needs to go
at 6 00:47:28
and pick up his son to be a, a responsible father.
at 6 00:47:32
Um, is there anything that's happening in that you'd like
at 6 00:47:36
to point people towards?
at 6 00:47:37
If people wanna get to know you, where
at 6 00:47:39
would you like to go?
at 6 00:47:40
To the best place?
at 6 00:47:40
Well, if they could, I would love it if they
at 6 00:47:42
could go on Amazon and they'll, they'll see a,
at 6 00:47:45
an array of books there.
at 6 00:47:46
Um, they can pre-order one of my books, um,
at 6 00:47:49
which is out in August.
at 6 00:47:51
That would be fab, um.
at 6 00:47:52
Nice.
at 6 00:47:52
It's a big quit.
at 6 00:47:54
If they wanna just have a bit of a laugh, then I would
at 6 00:47:56
say, go on my Instagram, which is just at Anniki
at 6 00:47:58
Sommerville, all one word.
at 6 00:48:00
Um, because basically you can just watch a woman
at 6 00:48:02
in wigs tending to be different on WhatsApp.
at 6 00:48:06
Brilliant.
at 6 00:48:06
I think that's, that's probably, it's a
at 6 00:48:08
bit of light relief.
at 6 00:48:09
I mean, that's something we didn't touch on, but
at 6 00:48:11
that is very important too sometimes is not to take
at 6 00:48:14
ourselves too seriously.
at 6 00:48:15
Well, if we can't laugh of half, uh, half of the things
at 6 00:48:18
that we have to experience, particularly as parents and
at 6 00:48:20
the challenges we have to face and doing the Work Parenthood
at 6 00:48:23
balance, um, yeah, it's just, it gets desperate then.
at 6 00:48:27
Uh, so, well, thank you very much Anniki.
at 6 00:48:30
Uh, if anyone listening to this is curious
at 6 00:48:33
about, Anikki's work, the links are in the chat.
at 6 00:48:35
Being amongst other people who are navigating this
at 6 00:48:38
whole thing as well.
at 6 00:48:39
Um, to feel connected, I think is the other thing
at 6 00:48:41
we want to, to create with this conversation.
at 6 00:48:44
Awesome.
at 6 00:48:44
Thanks Nikki.
at 6 00:48:45
Thanks everyone.
at 6 00:48:46
Until next time.
at 6 00:48:46
See you everyone.
at 6 00:48:47
You take care.
at 6 00:48:48
Thank you.