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The biggest success of the Huffington Post happened after I collapsed and hit my head on my desk, broke my cheekbone and came to in a little pool of blood. That was the beginning of a journey to find out what was wrong with me.

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Ariana Huffington is one of the world's most powerful business leaders in media and.

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The co founder of the Huffington Post.

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Which under her innovative leadership, became the second most popular news site in the world before being sold for $315 million. What are the most important things I should be thinking about to be successful?

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One is when you overcome that fear of rejection, that fear of failure, we are much more likely to take bold moves.

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I mean, that's the story of your life. You got into Cambridge when only three colleges accepted women. You become the president of Cambridge Union and the third woman ever to lead the debating society.

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And also coming to New York and launching the Huffington Post, that happened because a man wouldn't marry me. Good to remember that. The next point. Culture makes us think that I have to achieve everything before 30. But I launched the Hoffington Post at 55, thrive global at 66, and now launched a new company with Hobben AI at 74. It's never too late.

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I want to talk to you about mistakes that you made.

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I had bought into this delusion that in order to be super founder and super mom, I didn't have the luxury to take care of myself. And then I was literally diagnosed with burnout. There was unnecessary suffering. But as I talked to a lot of scientists, it became very clear that there are five daily behaviors that makes everything you're doing even more successful. And the first is.

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This is a sentence I never thought I'd say in my life. We've just hit 7 million subscribers on YouTube. And I want to say a huge thank you to all of you that show up here every Monday and Thursday to watch our conversations from the bottom of my heart, but also on behalf of my team, who you don't always get to meet. There's almost 50 people now behind the diary of a CEO that work to put this together. So from all of us, thank you so much. We did a raffle last month and we gave away prizes for people that subscribed to the show up until 7 million subscribers. And you guys loved that raffle so much that we're going to continue it. So every single month we're giving away money, can't buy prizes, including meetings with me, invites to our events, and a thousand pound gift vouchers to anyone that subscribes to the diary of a CEO there's now more than 7 million of you. So if you make the decision to subscribe today, you can be one of those lucky people. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Let's get to the conversation.

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Ariana, what do I need to know about you and your earliest years to understand the woman that sat in front of me today? What was those formative early experiences that shaped you most profoundly?

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The most important formative experience was my mother. And so we lived, my mother, my sister and I, in a one bedroom apartment in Athens, Greece. We had very little money, but she always made us feel abandoned, partly by cooking. She was constantly cooking. I think she really believed that if you didn't eat every 20 minutes, something terrible would happen to you. And she created that sense of life as an adventure. And one story that kind of captures her is I was walking home from school one day and I saw a magazine that had a picture of Cambridge University on the COVID Something immediately connected with me. And I got home and I threw the magazine on the kitchen table and I said, I want to go there. And my mother said, oh, let's see how we can go visit. I said, no, no, no, I want to go study there. And everybody else has said that to said, don't be ridiculous. You don't speak English. We have no money and it's hard for english girls to get into Cambridge. My mother said, let's find out how you can go there. And the most amazing thing that sums her up and defines so much about my life is that she never made it seem onerous.

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She never made it seem like, oh, you must get there, you know, this is something that absolutely has to happen. It was more like, this is an adventure. We're going to give it 100%. But if you don't get in, there's going to be another adventure and I'm not going to love you any less. Because at the heart of everything was this unconditional loving that made us feel, my sister and I, that we could aim for the stars, but if we failed, it was fine.

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Were you ambitious at that age?

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Yes, I was ambitious, but also I was willing to fail because she used to say, failure is not the opposite of success, it's a stepping stone to success. So I was never afraid of failing. And I think so often people are reluctant to try something, to risk something, because anything really ambitious, anything really important you want to achieve, there are no guarantees. So if failure seems something overwhelming, you are less likely to try it.

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Mhm. I mean, thats the story of your life in many respects, taking quite audacious leaps forward into the unknown. I mean, as I went through your career, you ended up getting into Cambridge, which is pretty incredible because its not only difficult to get into Cambridge, but back then, sort of pre 1970s, only three colleges at Cambridge actually accepted women. And you got into one of those colleges. So from a very early age, you were kind of breaking the rules.

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It was the most amazing thing. Like, if you look back on your life, I'm sure there's an event, something that happened that led to a lot of other good things happening. And for me, if there was one thing, it was getting into Cambridge, because then I became president of the Cambridge Union, which led to my being offered a contract to write a book when I had no intention of being a writer. So there was a cascade of positive events in my life and my career that happened because I got into Cambridge.

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It's quite remarkable to me that you got into Cambridge because, you know, back in Greece, I think that was just after the civil war, you didn't have money. You're in a one bedroom apartment your father had left, and you set your sights on Cambridge because you saw it in a magazine. You then get into Cambridge, you become the president of the student union.

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Cambridge Union.

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Union. How? How did you become the president of the union?

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So the thing that I loved from the beginning, you know, there are so many clubs and places you can get involved in at Cambridge. I immediately gravitated to the debating society, which is what the Cambridge union is. I just was fascinated by the spectacle of people's hearts and minds being moved by words. And I had a few obstacles to overcome. I spoke with a heavy accent. I still speak with a heavy accent, but at the time, it mattered more. And there was a lot of snobbery at Cambridge about accents, and there was a lot of ridicule. And it was super hard because on top of everything else, I had this voice in my head that I now call the obnoxious roommate living in my head that would put me down, judge me, the kind of negative self talk. So it wasn't just that I wasn't successful as a speaker when I started. It was also that my own inner monolog was kind of devastating. But something made me persevere and learn and keep learning and learning and seeing some of the best speakers in the world speaking there.

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Your own inner monolog was devastating.

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Yes, I suppose I'm a ruminator. I've worked on it and I've dealt with it. But when I started in my career being a ruminator, was super hard. Like, anytime I would make a mistake, I would ruminate on it and overthink, overthink it and beat myself about it. And now it's so much better, because that voice, the obnoxious roommate, only makes guest appearances most of the time. I'm really good about making mistakes, learning from them, and moving on.

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And you overcame the skill of public speaking, which is pretty important skill to overcome for anybody. But that also something that I think really shines through your career is that you learned very early how to stand up and speak, and that.

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I loved it. I mean, I've written a lot of books, but I love nothing as much as speaking, because there's that connection, that direct connection with an audience and being able to see their eyes and being able to respond in the moment.

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And I found this picture that you might recognize of you with all of these men believe that might be. Do you know that picture?

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Yes. This is what they call, like, the standing committee of the union. So that was before each debate, there would be a picture. And at the time, Rajiv here was the president, and, you know, the. The treasurer, the secretary, and then behind there were members of the standing committee. And that's how I started. You know, you go up the ladder, standing committee, secretary, treasurer, president, if you are lucky.

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It's striking because you're the only woman in the image. And, you know, for much of your career, you walked through doors that mainly men walked through. And becoming the. I think president of the debating society is a. Is a role that very few women had ever occupied.

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I was the third.

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You were the third ever. What was it about you at that age that was already showing early signs of being able to break through doors that weren't supposed to be meant for women in particular at that time? Like getting into Cambridge University when there was only one college that three colleges that would accept it, or becoming the third woman ever to lead the debating society.

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Stephen, I really think it goes back to being willing to fail. There was absolutely no guarantee at all that I would get elected, but I was willing to fail, and there was no guarantee that I would get into Cambridge. So I like repeating that, because often, you know, I have two daughters. And part of the thing that I've tried to impress on my daughters is that they can go for their dreams, and if they fail, there will be another dream.

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One of your first, I guess, dreams. But one of your first aspirations was in writing, because you met someone. Who? A guy called Reg Davis Pointer.

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I had not met him, actually. He was the publisher of Germaine Greer's, who had written a book called the female Eunuch. And he happened to see the debate, which was televised, that I participated in when I was president of the union, on the topic of women's rights and the changes in women's rights. And he sent me a letter and asked if I would write a book on the views I'd expressed in the debate.

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What was the message, the central message that you were trying to communicate in this book?

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The central message was that you had to remember what life was like at the time. It was that women had to have a career.

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That was the movement.

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That was expected. That was the movement. It was a reaction to women not having careers and being stuck at home. So my message was really what's pretty much accepted now, but was pretty radical at the time, which is, yes, if you want to have a career, fantastic. Everything should be open to you. Equal opportunities, equal pay, everything. But if you want to bring up your children and you can afford to do it on one salary, that should also be given equal respect.

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The world has changed a lot, and it's funny because the world has kind of come back, especially in the last couple of years. It seems that there's been a real counter movement towards people thinking more deeply about the tradeoffs. Yes, I think that's the best way to say it. The trade offs of pursuing a, you know, really, really intense career for 40 years, then deciding in your, you know, in your early forties that you want to start thinking about children. It's funny, because I was reading some stats around things like IVF. IVF is exploding now. Lots of the conversations I have on my podcast are about the fertility issues people are facing, because we're waiting later and later and later and later to have kids, because I think we kind of think we can have it all.

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Yes.

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So where do you sit now on these issues of feminism, but also, you know, this idea of, can you have it all?

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I believe you can have it all, but maybe not at the same time. And I believe that there isn't one right way to do it. Like, you may want to focus on your career and then have children later, or you may want to have your children and then focus on your career. That's really what's changing, that there isn't one way to find fulfillment and contribute.

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How do you know which way is right for you, though? Because with so much noise outside, you know, it's hard, isn't it, to really sometimes listen to that voice inside you that's telling you what you want?

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Well, that's why it's so important to build that pathway to your heart, to your own knowing yourself. I mean, in your book, you write about these four pillars and you start with the self, right? And you quote Leonardo da Vinci, and so many of the wise men and women we admire talk about that. You know, know thyself. The unexamined life is not worth living. These are all ways of reminding us that if we are not connected with our own center, then we're at the mercy of every new fad and whatever is in social media that we're affected by. If we build that connection and strengthen that trust, then everything changes.

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What did you want to be in terms of your career and your profession at that age, when you met that young man and he asked you to write this book? What were your career aspirations?

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I wanted to be a journalist.

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Okay.

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And I had studied economics. And I think of everything I was taught in my economics degree. The thing that has still stayed with me is the concept of the opportunity cost, that anytime you do something, you are foregoing doing something else.

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Interesting. That's a term that my investment fund use a lot, but really, I've never heard anybody really use it in the context of life.

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Yeah. And it's so important in the context of life, like friendships, relationships, obviously, career choices, they are for their choices about what you are not doing while you're choosing to do this.

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And I mean, that's what makes them all so special. Right. Because they come at the expense of something else that you could have done.

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Absolutely, yes. And you can't keep all your options open forever because then you have too many plans. I mean, I love what you said in your book about go all in to plan a. Don't kind of keep a back door open for plan b.

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You talked a second ago about how life is about choices. You know, relationships, everything is about choices. And one of the choices that you made was, I guess it wasn't a choice, but was to be in a relationship in your early twenties with a guy called Bernard Levin.

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Levin.

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He is a special character in your life, your life story, isn't he? For many, many reasons, yes.

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I fell in love with him before I met him. He was. He was a famous columnist for the London Times. And I used to cut his columns and literally underline them, read them by heart because he was a phenomenal writer. He really taught me how to write. I mean, even before he knew me. And he was twice my age and half my size. But love is blind. And then there was a show on the BBC called Face the Music, and when I was elect president of the Cambridge Union, I was invited to take part. I was a classical music buff. So was he. And that's where we met. And he invited me to dinner two weeks later, and I prepped for dinner. Like, I read everything he was writing about Northern Ireland and the Soviet Union. Trust me, we didn't talk about any of that. But I had done all my prep, and we were together for seven years.

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Wow.

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And I definitely wanted to marry him and have children with him. He wanted to have cats. Cats he had. Knowing that he didn't want to get married, he would have been happy to stay with me for the rest of his life, but I really wanted to have children, and he didn't.

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How do you do that? How do you leave the situation where you're in love with someone? So you were with him from 23 to 30?

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Yes.

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And at 30, you leave him because he doesn't want to have children with you?

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I was very clear that I wanted to have children. I have a lot of great friends who don't want to have children, and they're perfectly happy. Not everybody wants or should have children, but I knew I wanted to have children. I knew that this was part of a fulfilling life for me.

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Did you try and persuade him?

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I did. Failed.

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What was his reason?

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He just didn't want to have children. He just. He really, he was very stuck on his life, you know, writing opera, travel, a lot of things we love doing together. So I took the decision, and because I didn't trust myself to stay in London, I knew I wouldn't. I wouldn't stay away. I literally left London and moved to.

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New York to get away from him.

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To get away from him. And again, you know how sometimes something in life that goes wrong leads to a lot of amazing things that go spectacularly right? And that's, in a way, what happened with me. I mean, obviously, it was incredibly hard and painful. I'm not minimizing it. But coming to New York led to meeting my husband, having my children, launching the Huffington Post, you know, launching thrive. So basically, so much that happened to me, so many great things that happened in my life happened because a man wouldn't marry me. Good to remember that.

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Were you, were you kind of grieving the relationship when you came to New York?

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Yes, definitely.

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He passed away of Alzheimer's.

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Yes.

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Which is a particularly evil disease.

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Yes. The last time I saw him, when I was in London, I arranged to see him. And it's a terrible disease because no matter what I said there was absolutely no recognition.

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He didn't recognize you. How does that feel?

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You know, it has gotten me extremely interested in any form of cognitive decline and learning a lot about it because millions of people are suffering from it and it's affecting everybody they love and who loves them. And what is so interesting is to see the impact that how we live has on cognitive decline. Obviously there are genetic factors, but behaviors, how we live, how we sleep, the stress levels in our lives, what we eat, also have a huge impact on dementia, Alzheimer's, any form of decline.

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Michael Huffington, he's the man you met when you went to New York that became the father of your two wonderful daughters.

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Yes. And our marriage lasted for eleven years. Nora Ephron, you know, who was this wonderful writer who was also an editor at the Huffington Post, she used to say, marriage comes and goes, but divorce is forever. And what she meant by that is that if you have children, the relationship never ends because you are still parenting together. And our marriage didn't work, but we have a great divorce. Like, we go on vacation together. We are really good friends, we are close as a family. So I think this is kind of really important given that 50% of marriages end in divorce. And the hardest thing is what happens to the children. And so anything we can do to give up our grudges and resentments, because obviously, if there were no grudges and resentments and problems, we would still be married. It's so interesting, Stephen, to look at the science of forgiveness. When we forgive, our stress levels go down. Can you believe our cholesterol levels go down? You know, the connection between forgiveness and our physical and mental health is enormous. And that's why I am so much against cancel culture, because it's a culture that gives up on forgiveness, on redemption, on giving people a chance to learn from mistakes and evolve and grow, which is, after all, what life is about.

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While you were in New York, before you, I guess, discovered and started leveraging the Internet with that website, which I think your first website was resignation.com. what were you doing in New York? What was your job?

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I was writing books. I've written 15 books altogether, a few.

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Ten of them here or something. But, yeah, three of them on the table and seven of them with me on the floor here. What was, you know, you're a writer, you're writing physical books, and at the time, I think you're 55 years old.

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Yes.

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And the Internet is this fairly kind of new thing that's starting to take off. What it's, it just seems to me to be slightly unusual for someone who's writing physical books to make the decision to investigate this new technology called the Internet, because most people are scared of new technologies. They run away from it. They criticize it, they say it will never work. They attack it, and they bury their head in the sand. But for some reason, you leaned in.

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Because all my life I've been fascinated by what we call the zeitgeist, like the spirit of the times. And I could see that everything was moving online and that conversations were moving online, and yet people were making fun of it. You remember it was the early days when people were joking about people who couldn't get a job blogging from their parents basements. And I wanted to bring my friends, people who were writing physical books who could be published by the New York Times or the London Times. I want to bring them online. And so I actually wrote an email to 500 friends, close and not so close, and invited them to write blog on the Huffington Post. And I said, on any thought you have any idea you have, you wake up and you want to react to the news of the day. You can just publish it on the Huffington Post. And we promise that we're going to treat it with respect. We had moderators from the beginning so that people couldn't just trash each other. What happened with the Internet down the road? And so when we launched day one, we had Larry David and Ellen DeGeneres and Nora Ephron and Walter Cronkite, who had like, an incredible lineup of people on the news of the day on things they cared about.

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And also on the same day, we had a review which was so devastating, I learned it by heart. It said, the Huffington Post is an unsurvivable failure. It is the movie equivalent of Gigi Ishtar and Heaven's Gate rolled into one. I don't know if you know any of these movies, but they were all flops. So that was kind of the, the opening review. A year later, the writer of this review emailed me and said, I was wrong. The Huffington Post changed how we consume news. And I would like to write for you. And again, going back to no grudges, no resentments, I said, we would love you to.

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When they wrote that review, how did it feel when you read it?

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Here's the thing. It felt bad. It felt really bad. But I think it's okay to feel bad again. Going back to your book. We want to be comfortable all the time. So what's wrong with feeling bad occasionally? I love the way children are do you notice how a child is upset about something? It could be as important as not being allowed to have this ice cream cone, or as equally important as falling, whatever. They cry, they rage, and two minutes later you look at them and it's over. I don't believe in growing a thick skin. I want to be permeable. Something bad happens, something upsetting happens. Experience it, feel it. Don't do what I call a spiritual bypass. People who consider themselves spiritual, as I do, often act as though nothing is bothering them. And that's not true. That's not human. So experiencing it, feeling it, and moving on. You know, Roger Federer gave a commensurate speech recently. I don't know if you saw it, which was amazing.

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I saw it on your LinkedIn.

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Yeah. Because he talked about how he only made half the shots, half the points, you know, and with, here's this great tennis player, and you're not going to get them all right. He said the most important thing is to be 100% focused on the point and then the next point, not to carry it with you.

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It was so powerful that I actually saved it.

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Yes, it's really powerful. It's really powerful when it comes from a master, somebody who's so incredibly successful at his game.

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It was shocking to me because he says he won 80% of the matches he played in tennis, but only 54% of the points. And I found that really, really interesting. My brain almost like struggled with the numbers there. You're winning 80% of the matches, but you're only winning 54% of the points, which means you're only basically still winning half of the points, but you win the match. But you win the match because you just. Now, that's mindset.

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But you win the match because you don't carry the points you missed with you to the next point you are playing. And a lot of the best athletes, we have, a lot of athletes who are investors in thrive because I believe athletes are a great role model for what we are teaching, which is that recovery is part of peak performance. And like Andrei Goodalla, who is an investor, he talks about the same thing that Roger Federer talks about. It's very important when he makes a mistake, when he misses something, not to ruminate about it, because when you ruminate about it, then you are not fully present for the next opportunity, for the next opportunity. So you're more likely to miss it.

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Huffington Post was that your first big foray into business?

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Yes.

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I think this is one of the things that, you know, from speaking to a lot of people in my life that they find exceptionally inspiring about you was typically, this is being very intentionally stereotypical. People that build tech companies, which is.

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What you did, do it in their twenties.

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And their men, they're young men in their twenties, typically, especially at that time. You know, it's changing a little bit now, which is great, but it, but especially at that time, which was 2005, it was very atypical for a 55 year old woman to build a tech company.

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Yes.

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Did you see that as, did you feel that resistance at all?

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I didn't, actually. I think what happened is that we made it work. We showed it worked very quickly despite that bad review, and we kept experimenting. I think the mistake often is you build something successful and you stay there. And we never stayed there. Like, we launched with politics and news, but very quickly, we had a dozen other verticals, including sleep. We had a vertical on sleep. We had lifestyle verticals. We had sports verticals. We had a gay vertical. We kept expanding. And then we built our journalism operation. We won a Pulitzer. We launched in 18 countries. So it was a constant expansion. And what happened is that, again, you know the Clay Christensen book, the innovator's dilemma?

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Yeah. It's one of my favorite books.

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It's amazing. So, you know, if the New York Times had done then what it's doing now, so successfully having a great digital presence, there would have been no room for the Huffington Post. So basically, that's the innovator's dilemma. Super successful incumbents miss the moment because they're super successful incumbents.

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Yeah. And you were young, you were scrappy as a company, so you weren't encumbered by an old way of doing things and old revenue models. You could come into the market with a fresh new idea, and off it went. And it went so far, went to the UK. And I was 18 years old when I applied to write on the Huffington Post.

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That's amazing.

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I got accepted and I submitted how many articles, maybe four or five articles that got published on there. But I want to talk about business. I want to talk about building a business and what you learned about building a business from the rise of the Huffington Post. What are the most important? If I was one of your daughters and I came to you and I said, mom, listen, I want to build a business and I want it to be even bigger than the Huffington Post grew to be. What are the most important things I should be thinking about to be successful?

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So I would now start with the founder or the CEO, which is put your own oxygen mask on first very often. You know, you're a founder, you think I need to stay up? Stephen, is that you?

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No. What are we talking about? I don't know what you're talking about. I go to sleep every day.

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I need to stay up all day and night, sleep with my phone in case something happens in the middle of the night. And all the science now makes it very clear that when we are depleted, we are going to make bad decisions. It's so funny because one night I was at a dinner and Jeff Bezos, that was when I was writing my book on sleep. And so I was asking everybody about their sleep habits. So I asked him about his sleep habits and he said, I sleep 8 hours a night. I said, you do? Tell me about it. Why? He said, because I'm judged by the quality of my decisions, not the quantity of my decisions. And I have noticed the difference because he's very data driven. When I have 6 hours of sleep, my decisions are not as good. So I said to him, you must write about it. He said, which I used to say to everybody. And he said, no, no, no. He said, I'm a private man. I don't need to write about it. I said, please write about it. It's not for you. It's going to help so many people who want to be you to realize that they don't need to be sleep deprived and exhausted.

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So I literally bugged him, texted him for like three months until finally he wrote about it, I think to get me off his back. And it was amazing. He wrote about it on thrive that we had just launched thrive. It was everywhere. CNBC, the Wall Street Journal. He was one of the first CEO's to write about sleep as a performance multiplier, a productivity multiplier. Since then, you know, Satya Natella has written about it. A lot of CEO's have written about a lot of founders in Silicon Valley now. People have gone from bragging about how sleep deprived they are. I'm wearing my aura ring.

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Nice looking now.

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Yeah, you're wearing your hoop and you're an investor. I love hoop. Fantastic. Everything has changed, but it's changed very fast. 2016, when I wrote the book, people were still bragging about sleep deprivation.

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You know sleep deprivation.

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Well, I do. I mean, I collapsed. But from sleep deprivation and from buying into this collective delusion that in order to succeed, it was two years into building the Huffington Post, I was the divorced mother of two little girls. And I had bought into this delusion that in order to be superficial founder and super mom, I didn't have the luxury to take care of myself, take.

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Me into that moment. If I was a fly on the wall, what would I have seen in that moment?

[00:37:34]

So I literally woke up that morning, went to CNN to do a news hit, came back and sat at my desk, felt called, got up to go get a sweater and collapsed and hit my head on my desk, broke my cheekbone and came to in a little pool of blood. And that was the beginning of a journey of going from doctor to doctor, from echocardiogram to MRI to find out what was wrong with me. Because literally people thought that she had a heart defect, a brain tumor. Why did she just collapse? And then I was literally diagnosed with burnout. Now, 2007, burnout was not a term much in use, but it turned out to be an incredible gift because I decided that I really now wanted to make this part of my life, help the world see that. This epidemic of burnout that I started seeing was everywhere, was completely unnecessary. It was unnecessary suffering that we didn't need to buy into this collective delusion in order to succeed.

[00:39:07]

Could you have become successful without that high intensity work?

[00:39:11]

Absolutely. I think the biggest success of the Huffington Post actually happened after that. And let me just make that very clear, Stephen. Taking care of yourself doesnt mean you dont work with intensity. In fact, when we launched thrive and were interviewing people to hire, we realized early on that there were people who thought, oh, they could go work for thrive, and it would be like chilling under the mango tree. So we had to explain to them, no, no, we're a very ambitious, high charging company, and if you want to chill under the mango tree, that's not a good place to be. And we tell everybody there will be times when you have to deliver a product or meet a deadline, and you may have to work late or work a weekend. But what we do then, we give people thrive time immediately after. Like, if you've worked extra hard to meet a deadline, then take thrive time to recharge. And you know, Stephen, that's actually good for the business because very often people get sick or make their biggest mistakes when they are completely depleted. So it's not about lack of intensity, it's about taking time to refuel, recharge, and be at your best.

[00:40:40]

Do you think this collective delusion that you describe, which I'm defining as this notion that you have to sacrifice your well being to be successful?

[00:40:48]

Yes.

[00:40:49]

Who is it letting down more men or women?

[00:40:53]

Okay, obviously there are more men who've succeeded, and therefore there are numerically more Mendez who believe and practice that. But I think a lot of women, too, who want to make sure they are not seen as being on the mommy truck or not being as passionate or intense about their work, have bought into the delusion. But what I found very interesting is to try and see what was the beginning of that delusion. And I trace it back to the first industrial revolution, when people started revering machines and after machines, software, and what is basically the essence of machines and software. No downtime. You have Salesforce bringing out a new piece of software and saying, 99.999,999% uptime. Well, the human operating system is different. For the human operating system, downtime is a feature, not a bug. And the science is so clear and unequivocal about it.

[00:42:12]

Is that why you called your, you came up with this notion called the third women's revolution? What is the third women's revolution?

[00:42:22]

The first women's revolution was about giving us the vote. The second women's revolution was about equal pay and equal opportunities. The third women's revolution was about making it clear that we can succeed without burning out, that we don't have to sacrifice our well being, our relationships on the altar of success. I believe that as we are doing it now, we're in the middle of it, and a lot of men are a big part of it, that it's good for everybody. I mean, look at the number of men who end up with heart attacks, high cholesterol, hypertension, all because they think that's the only way to succeed.

[00:43:18]

The traditional models don't work for women because women burn out faster than men. Is that true?

[00:43:23]

I don't think women burn out faster than men. Most women, first of all, still do the bulk of work at home in terms of children and child, that we theoretically believe that men are equally engaged, but the data doesn't bear that out. But what I was saying in thrive, I see you're holding the thrive book, is really about that third metric of success. I obviously like thirds. If you think of the first two metrics of success, money and power slash status. And most people think that's life, but it's not. It's like trying to sit on a two legged stool. Sooner or later, you fall off. The third leg of the stool is everything else. It's our health and well being. It's our capacity to connect with ourselves and our wisdom. It's our capacity for a sense of wonder and the mystery of life and the small joys of life, and then giving. So these four other areas are what make a complete and whole life in thrive.

[00:44:40]

There's a stat which stood out to me. It says women in stressful jobs have a 40% increased risk of heart disease and a 60% greater risk of diabetes, which is a pretty shocking stat.

[00:44:52]

Yes.

[00:44:52]

And it begs the question why.

[00:44:54]

One of the reasons is that women internalize mistakes more. What I said about myself is true about many successful women. We are ruminators. We tend to go over and over in our minds any mistake we made, and men have a much easier time just moving on. They have a much easier time being Roger Federer. So that's a big problem. The other is this perfectionism and the fact that, but they still have a larger percentage of work at home, and even if they get a lot of help from their partner, they mind share. They still are thinking, oh, my partner is picking up the child for the doctor's appointment. But I still think about it.

[00:45:51]

You're still holding that burden, whereas maybe men don't always hold it in such a way. It's interesting that you reference giving as being one of the most important elements of the, the third metric. I read a study in the book that says a 2013 study by the University of Wisconsin found that employees who give back to society, for example, through volunteering, are less likely to quit their job, which I thought was really interesting as an employer, as a way to drive retention in the team. But I also pondered why that might be. Why is it that when people give, they're more likely to stay in their job?

[00:46:30]

Well, if you think of what makes a fulfilling life, what gives you meaning and purpose, and all the things that make it more likely that a company culture will succeed. If you're in a company culture that encourages giving. I mean, at thrive, we have giving days, we match donations, and this creates a kind of giving culture which makes it more likely that people working in that company are going to feel fulfilled. Because fulfillment is not just a function of your job, it's a function of everything around it.

[00:47:11]

Yeah. And so if you feel fulfilled, you'll just be happier in your life and you'll be less likely to want to change things.

[00:47:15]

Exactly. Because very often, you know, if you are unhappy in your life, changing the job might be the easiest thing that you think may change outcomes.

[00:47:25]

When you had your burnout diagnosis, did that change anything for you?

[00:47:30]

Everything did it.

[00:47:31]

How quickly did it change?

[00:47:33]

So quickly?

[00:47:34]

Really?

[00:47:34]

You know, it's pretty dramatic when you break your cheekbone, and it's equally dramatic when you spend a lot of time in doctors waiting rooms wondering what's wrong with you? So, yes, it. It changed a lot of things. The keystone habit that it changed was sleep.

[00:47:55]

Okay?

[00:47:56]

And then as I studied the phenomenon of burnout and talked to a lot of scientists and wrote a sleep book, it became very clear that there are five critical behaviors, five daily behaviors that affect our health, both physical health and mental health. Sleep, food, what we eat. You know, again, just keeping it simple. Can we reduce ultra processed foods? Can we reduce sugar, movement, exercise, stress management and connection. Connection to ourselves, connection with each other. So these five behaviors, now, Steve, and are seen, are more critical to our health and our longevity than genes and medical care. Genes, you know, there's nothing we can do about it. Medical care, obviously, is imperative when we're really sick, but health is really what happens between doctor visits, like what we do every day. Because just think of it, the idea that you have your annual physical and that's your healthcare, what are you doing every day? Are you stressed out? Are you sleep deprived? Are you eating junk?

[00:49:35]

It's interesting because you, you're speaking from a place of someone who was wildly successful in a monetary sense as well, because you have that sort of breaking point. I think it was in April 2007 when you collapsed. And then the Huffington Post continues to grow and continues to become successful all over the world. It expands across the world. I think in the year when you had the, you collapsed on the desk, you had 3.5 million users accessing the website. At roughly around that time, it expands around the world. It's ranked as the most powerful blog in the world. In 2008, by 2009, Huffington Post integrated into Facebook, and by 2011, you sold Huffington Post to AWOL for $300 million.

[00:50:23]

315.

[00:50:25]

Oh, and the rest? And the rest, $315 million. And became president and editor in chief of the newly formed Huffington Post Media Group. Now, at that point, that's a lot of money, right? However much money you made from the deal, that's a lot of money. And you get the forbidden fruits that many people in their lives right now think they're chasing. You get that? You know, that big financial freedom windfall. What does it change?

[00:50:54]

Nothing, really, because my books have been very successful, and I feel there's a certain amount of money that changes your life. And after that, there isn't really much change. I mean, I remember the first time I felt rich was when I could go into a bookstore and buy a book without looking at the price. You know, when you would go to a bookstore and I'll wait for you to come out and pay for. There are different levels like that.

[00:51:36]

Are you happier now than you were then in that bookstore when you didn't have to look at the price?

[00:51:40]

Oh, I'm definitely happier. Not because of money. I'm happier because I'm much more connected to myself because I'm constantly growing as a human being. And that's for me, the key. That sense of evolution and growth is ultimately what defines my life. It's not my work. I think that's so Keystone because so many people stay in jobs they no longer love, because they are big jobs, they have a big title, and they feel if I give up that job, who am I going to be? I mean, listen, when I left the Huffington Post, I left a very successful multimedia company all around the world with 850 journalists to start again, literally to raise money, hire people. But I was so clear that what I wanted to do is to help people lead healthier lives.

[00:52:41]

What age were you when you left Huffington Post?

[00:52:43]

I launched, as you said, I launched the Huffington Post at 55 and I launched Thrive Global at 66, and now I'm now 74. We launched a new company with Sam Altman and OpenAI that is thrive AI health to help democratize everything we've brought to thrive about these five behaviors, because that's kind of the ultimate inequality. Like as you kind of were alluding, people with resources know about these five behaviors. They may not know all the science behind it, but now we see it. We see people prioritizing their sleep, what they're eating, exercise, stress management, listening to Peter Attia and Andrew Hubermande. And we need to democratize this knowledge and also help people adopt these healthier habits. And over the last seven years that I've been building thrive, working with a great group of scientists, I really believe we've cracked the code on behavior change. You know, behavior change is supposed to be very hard, right? But the way to make it achievable is through what we call micro steps. And interestingly enough, you write in your book about making everything small, the progress principle and.

[00:54:27]

Yeah, yeah, and the one percents.

[00:54:28]

Yeah, kind of small. Little improvements. If you think of it, behavior change in our culture was seen as new year resolutions. Yeah, I'm going to go to the gym an hour a day. I'm going to give up all sugar. Two to three weeks later, these resolutions are abandoned. People have a sense of failure. They feel shame. So the alternative is what we're doing, which is micro steps too small to fail. We'll never tell people meditate for 20 minutes in the morning. No, we say when you wake up in the morning, can you take 60 seconds before you go to your phone to breathe consciously or to remind yourself what you are grateful for or to set your intention for the day? The point is, can you break it down into the smallest possible component? And what happens? People build a sense of success. And we see that, you know, working with Walmart, Walmart is one of our customers. They have 1.6 million associates, as they call their employees, in the United States alone. And we work with them, and they actually give us a million dollars a year to spend in financial rewards to help people have another incentive, because incentives are superpowers.

[00:56:02]

And we've had people reverse diabetes, reverse hypertension, but it was all one little microstep at a time.

[00:56:12]

It's remarkable how small steps done continuously can really change your life, but nobody believes in them because you don't see huge rewards from a micro step in life.

[00:56:20]

Cumulatively, you do.

[00:56:22]

Yeah. Which requires faith.

[00:56:25]

Faith. But also what helps is when you see other people having achieved it. So we, part of it is the storytelling. So we take all the stories in all the companies we work with and publicize them. We put them on the platform. So if you see that somebody who has a similar job to you can do it, you feel more optimistic that you can do it. And also, so removing judgments, you know, often self judgments get in the way of behavior change. And if we say this is a judgment free zone, you're going to fall off the wagon. You're going to make mistakes, but one little step at a time. BJ Fogg, who is the chair of our scientific board and from Stanford, he wrote a book called tiny Habits. And it's the same idea, tiny habits, micro steps, making small progress, that becomes cumulatively healthier habits.

[00:57:30]

I want to talk to you about mistakes. The Huffington Post becomes, I think, at its peak, and correct me if I'm wrong here, the second biggest news website on the earth, is that correct?

[00:57:43]

I don't know. It sounds good.

[00:57:46]

I read in 2014, when you were 64 years old, the Huffington Post became the second most popular news site in the world. That was an article written by the Guardian that it said that in. But it sounds, I mean, it sounds great, but I'm sure along the way, you know, you said you talked about failure earlier. There was a lot of mistakes made in that journey. Now, as a person in business, and I'm 31, so I'm in my.

[00:58:09]

I think what you're going to build by the time you're 66, if I'm.

[00:58:12]

Still alive, if I start putting that phone away, what are the mistakes that you made in that business?

[00:58:18]

I don't think there are bigger mistakes for a founder than hiring mistakes. So I've kind of created a little rule book about hiring. Like, number one, never interview when you're tired. I find that when I interview and I'm tired, I just really want to say yes. I want to just kind of cross one more thing off my to do list. I don't want to go interview one more person. So that's subconscious. It's not that you're consciously thinking that, but so increasing the chances of not making hiring mistakes is huge also. So there were times when I kind of knew instinctively that there was something wrong about this hire, but mentally, I could not give myself reasons. You know that time when you feel that's not quite right, but the resume is amazing. The references are incredible. My board likes them. But something in me. No, follow that, because it's so much more important not to hire the wrong person than to miss someone.

[00:59:49]

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, there's the phrase, isn't there, that a bad apple spoils the barrel or something? Yes, and that's certainly the case in business, that one bad apple can really ruin a great culture of people.

[01:00:05]

Yes. And listen, when I was on the board of Uber, during the height of the bad culture problems, I saw how a culture is really the company's immune system. You know, there are always going to be bad apples. You know, it's humanity. But if you have a good, thriving culture, the bad apples can be removed without infecting the culture. If the culture is not strong, it's the other way around.

[01:00:38]

Are there any other decisions that if you could go back in time with the Huffington Post, you would have made differently outside of just purely who you hired?

[01:00:49]

I would say that.

[01:00:56]

You'Re hesitating.

[01:00:58]

No, I'm hesitating because what came to me is an amazing decision that I was that everybody thought I was wrong on. And I don't want to say that because it's also something else that's very important, I think, for anyone starting a business, which is my incredible belief in partnerships, you know, very often when you are building a company, you think that you have to do everything. But speed is incredibly important. Being a first mover is incredibly important, and it's very hard to do that if you want to do everything yourself, yourself as a company. So when the Huffington Post was bought by Aole, the CFO, the board, everybody wanted us to go internationally alone, and I wanted to do it through partners. I felt that we're going to be able to move so much faster if we go as we did to France in partnership with Le Monde. That means we don't have to learn about french labor laws. We don't have to find an office space. You know, we kind of, there's so much the partner would bring, plus, of course, the reputation. So I prevailed, which was touch and go. And within just over a year, we're in 18 countries that would never have happened.

[01:02:37]

Everybody who wanted to do it after us. Buzzfeed Business Insider it was too late. We had already established ourselves in these countries.

[01:02:47]

Did you sell the Huffington Post at the right time?

[01:02:51]

Absolutely. Absolutely. Look at what's happening now. I would say that I sold too soon, but I'm a big believer in selling too soon rather than too late, if you're going to pick something, sell too soon. And also, I'm a big believer in good acquisitions. A lot of acquisitions fail. The acquisition by AOL was a huge success because we suddenly had all these resources to grow a lot faster.

[01:03:27]

What have you come to learn? That the point of life is because you've lived such a varied life, you've traveled all over the world, you've climbed many mountains. And I wonder now, as you sit here, like, what is the thing that you know that I don't know. I'm 31. So there's clearly some things that you really, really know well that I'm going to unfortunately have to find out through failure, painful failure that maybe I can avoid if you tell me.

[01:03:55]

Okay, just a few things.

[01:03:57]

Okay. I'm going to get my going to write down so I don't forget.

[01:04:01]

But one is not to look over our shoulder for approval, not to indulge in unnecessary worries and negative fantasies. When I look back at my journals, you know, I like to journal a lot. And when I look back at my journal, so many of my worries were truly negative fantasies. Negative fantasies meaning imagining the worst about the future. And one other little saying I have on my desk is by the french philosopher Montaigne, who said there were many terrible things in my life, but most of them never happened. So that's just as depleting, believe it or not, as things, really bad things that do happen, because that's how we process information and so trust. One of the things that my mother totally instilled in my sister and me was the sense that we are living in a benevolent universe.

[01:05:14]

What does that mean?

[01:05:15]

It means that life is on our side. You know, there are people who go through life, think that at best we're living in an indifferent universe, that the higher power or God or whatever you want to call it, the order of the universe, doesn't care. There are people who think it's a hostile universe. I believe profoundly that it's a benevolent universe. I trust that whatever happens has a reason and a purpose. And that's the Rumi quote, live life as if everything is rigged in your favor. Now, that doesn't mean only good things happened. Absolutely not. A lot of bad things happened in my life, starting with losing my first child that was born stillborn, you know, so it's not like bad things didn't happen, but it's like, what is it teaching us? Like, life is a schoolroom and we are constantly learning. And that's for me in the end, that sense of evolution and growth that in one of the books I wrote, I called the fourth instinct. You know, the first three instincts being survival, sex and status, power. The fourth instinct being an instinct for meaning, purpose, transcendence. And that's something which, when it's integrated in our lives, gives life so much more depth and richness.

[01:07:10]

That first moment of struggle you cited there, when your child was born, still, how old were you?

[01:07:17]

36.

[01:07:18]

36. How does one process that?

[01:07:23]

Well, it's enormous pain and grief and staying with it and living with it. And also, I was 36. I didn't know if I could have a child. Nobody quite knew why I lost that child. But also that trust again, underneath the grief there was that sense that I would have a child, that I would move beyond this pain, that the pain would not define me.

[01:08:08]

Is it hard to have that faith and that perspective in the moment?

[01:08:12]

Well, the people that I most admire, you know, the writers that I learned so much from, writers who have that faith. I mean, look at Holocaust survivors.

[01:08:30]

Wasn't you your father?

[01:08:33]

My father was in a concentration camp because he was publishing an underground newspaper during the german occupation of Greece. And he was arrested and spent the war in a concentration camp in Germany. My mother was in the Red Cross hiding jewish girls during that occupation. So they both had this kind of extraordinary life and faith that kept them going in the middle of incredible horror.

[01:09:16]

Your mother?

[01:09:21]

Yes, she's beautiful and strong. She definitely brought us up with this fearlessness. But she would always say, fearlessness is not an absence of fear. It's like going ahead and doing what you think you should do even while you're afraid. It's like a muscle that you exercise.

[01:09:50]

She passed away before the success of the huffington post had really?

[01:09:53]

Before it existed? Yes. She passed away in 2000.

[01:09:59]

There's not a single day that I don't feel my mother's presence with me. You wrote onto the huffington Post. What do you think she would have thought of the huffington Post had she been able to see the success that it became?

[01:10:14]

You know what is interesting, stephen, when people would say to her, you, proud of your daughter? She would always say, I don't use that term. I'm not proud. I just love what she's doing and contributing. You know, she didn't see it as a pride. She saw it more as that journey. And that's kind of really important to understand what I learned from her, that it isn't just about achieving, it's about joy while you're achieving. And now that's kind of my barometer. Like, it's not just about being productive. Kind of. I prove to myself that I can be productive, but if I don't feel that joy, it means there's something off that I need to recalibrate.

[01:11:09]

It's interesting because that's kind of what the mission of thrive is about. From what I was reading when I was on the website, it's not the idea of becoming unproductive, which is sometimes associated with well being. It's sometimes thought that if you focus on your well being, you become an unproductive person, which is completely false.

[01:11:26]

I mean, scientifically false. And that's what I'm so passionate about, convincing more and more people about. And that's why I love using examples of athletes who prioritize their well being because it improves their performance. So if we see well being as a productivity multiplier, if we see what we are doing now, for example, is optimizing the health of executives in companies. You know, we talk about longevity. We talk about health span. If these are optimized within a company, productivity is going to increase.

[01:12:14]

She was a very interesting woman, your mother, from everything that I read and researched about her. On the day that she died, she demanded that you leave the hospital to go to a food market to prepare lunch for the family. And I read that she fell over in the evening but didn't let anyone call an ambulance.

[01:12:30]

Yeah, she, in the evening, you know, after she had prepared this feast for everybody, she fell and she said, let's all gather around with her on the floor. She said to me with this incredible authority, do not call the paramedics. And she said it with such authority that I didn't. I called the nurse who had taken care of her at home, and we sat around and she said, let's open a bottle of wine. And we opened a bottle of wine and we sat there and talked and my two daughters were scootering around inside the house. And then she killed over and died. She had told a housekeeper earlier that she knew the time had come and she wanted to die at home, surrounded by her family.

[01:13:35]

How did she know?

[01:13:37]

I believe. We know. I believe when we are connected with. With our own truth, we know.

[01:13:49]

So she fell. She told you not to call the paramedics in the ambulance. She asked all of you to gather round and to bring some champagne.

[01:13:59]

Red wine.

[01:14:00]

Some red wine. And she passed away shortly after. There on the floor?

[01:14:03]

Yes. And the way she said to me, do not call the ambulance made me not call the ambulance. You know, there was so much authority behind it that that's what she wanted. And of course, I didn't know she would die.

[01:14:24]

Had you have known, would you have called the ambulance?

[01:14:26]

I would.

[01:14:27]

Even though she told you not to?

[01:14:29]

Yeah, it's hard not to.

[01:14:34]

How did that change things for you? What's the aftermath of the loss of a woman that meant so much to you? Like.

[01:14:43]

It was incredibly painful because she really was the foundation of my life. And, you know, she lived with me, she helped me bring up my children. She was an integral part of everything in my life and my sister's life. But what you just read is true. I mean, I do feel her presence so much and I really. I really feel that when we integrate death in our lives, it enriches our lives. You know, the Socrates said, practice death daily, not in a morbid sense, but in the sense that the Romans would carve. M m memento mori. Remember? Death on statues, on trees. Not in order to be obsessed with death, but in order to put life in perspective. So often we just worry about trivial things, we get upset about minor things, and if we kind of remember that life is a terminal condition and that. But death is the one certainty, it just changes how we perceive what happens in our lives.

[01:16:09]

What else, then, for me? So you gave me two pieces of advice there for my life.

[01:16:14]

I think you're going to be a great dad, Stephen. I really do. And I think having children also puts everything in perspective, because there's something magical about these little beings and the continuity of life. And, I mean, you are so creative and constantly launching new projects, which is fantastic. But learning also to disconnect from that and fully connect with yourself, your loved ones, your children, when you have them, I think is game changing. And I believe it also makes us better at our jobs because it gives us that perspective. You have these moments, these flashes of intuition, new ideas that are so much easier when we are recharged and not running on empty.

[01:17:32]

In terms of those different seasons of life that we go through, how have you had to show up differently in the different seasons of your life? And I've been thinking a lot about this lately, because someone said to me, when they likened it to doing a triathlon, they said, in a triathlon, what you want to do, because there's 400 people jumping in the water for the initial part, is you want to swim like crazy at the start to just get ahead. And then you can kind of calm down a little bit once you've got away from the crowd. And he was making the analogy that this is very much like life in your early twenties. You kind of want to go for it a little bit, say yes to a lot of things, and then as you kind of go through these different seasons of life, you play a slightly different game. I don't know if you can relate to any of that. Really at the heart of what I want to know is, you know, it's atypical for a. When did you launch your most recent company?

[01:18:23]

You mean the thrive.

[01:18:24]

Thrive AI health was like this week, wasn't it?

[01:18:26]

I saw it online two weeks ago.

[01:18:28]

Two weeks ago, right. So you're launching an AI company at 74 years old.

[01:18:33]

I was 73 at the time.

[01:18:35]

73, which is atypical. Right. This is what I want to get to, is you're in a different season of life.

[01:18:43]

Yes, but in whatever season of life you can keep creating. And that's partly what I'd love people to look at. There is definitely something in our culture that makes us think that we have to achieve everything before we are 30 or maybe before we are 40. You know, you have the 30 under thirties and the 20 under twenties, and soon we are going to have the five under fives. And the fact is that if you take care of yourself, and that's the big if, you know, if you focus on these five behaviors and your health is sustained and you feel vital, then you can keep creating until the end. You know, I cannot imagine retiring because I love what I'm doing and because I love building, and there's no end to when you build. So the one thing that I don't think I've convinced you about, but I want to have one more go, is that you really think that taking care of yourself is kind of a luxury for later in life. It's like a little bit of a luxury for when you are not, like, launching new companies and being all in swimming really fast.

[01:20:23]

And what I. I want to at least take on trust for a minute, but explore it, is that that's not true. That I 1000% believe that when you prioritize these five behaviors, not in any dogmatic way, we're all works in progress. I mean, I talk about it all the time and am I doing it perfectly? Of course not. Nobody is. But if you really prioritize these five behaviors, how you sleep and what you eat and how you exercise and how you manage your stress, and how you stay connected with yourself and your loved ones, I promise you that everything you're doing will be even more successful. That is an absolute guarantee. It doesn't mean that you wouldn't be successful the other way, of course. I mean, there are in large number of burnt out people who have succeeded, but they. What else could they have done if they were more connected with their creativity, their intuition, if they didn't spend as much time ruminating over mistakes, or making bad hiring decisions as I did, or making bad decisions generally, or refusing to delegate? That's another issue. Definitely. When you ask me about mistakes, I think it took me a long time to learn to delegate.

[01:22:06]

And that's partly because we feel nobody can do it as well. And maybe that's true. But then there was one day when I realized, you know, if somebody does it 60% as well, and I can be freed up to do higher order things, fantastic. Let them do it 60% as well and learn two more things. On the business side, if you're going to build this culture that I know you believe in, that can be game changing for the success of a company. One thing that we recommend is the first day of somebody's new job. In your company, have the manager conduct an entry interview.

[01:22:54]

An entry interview.

[01:22:56]

We conduct exit interviews. But what about entry interviews? And it doesn't have to be long, it can be 15 minutes. And the first question of the entry interview. Stephen, welcome. What's important to you outside of work, and how can I support you? Suddenly you hear about what matters to them. They feel if what matters to them is to take their kid to school at eight in the morning, or they have an elderly parent they're taking care of, or whatever it is, or they have a flute lesson they want to go to at seven on a Thursday, they don't have to hide. It can be baked into the job. The manager knows. It creates more intimacy, it creates more connection, especially since so many of us are in hybrid environments. And the other thing is compassionate directness is our number one value at thrive, which means encouraging people to speak up when they are not happy. When something is a problem, so often people sit on that and it festers. And if they have permission to express it, to express dissatisfaction, to express something that's not working, it's so much easier to solve the problem.

[01:24:23]

Amen. Amen. You're an icon for many, many people. And specifically, when I spoke to some of the people in my company that you were coming and I was going to speak to you today, there was a lot of excitement from everybody, but particularly a faction of women who are high performing business women and are doing exceptionally well in their careers. And I spoke to one of those women and she said that she really looked up to you because you were able to achieve so much in spite of prejudice. Prejudice that is inevitably there. It's funny, interesting that you say you didn't really think about it or notice in that way, but a prejudice towards women in business that is still prevalent today, but was certainly more prevalent when you launch the Huffington Post. Is there anything at all that we should be thinking about? Whether it's because I was a young black kid or whether it's because I'm a woman that's building a technology company, what relationship should we have with our prejudice?

[01:25:30]

Well, there's no question that even though none of that stopped me, the language used towards me or towards some of the women I'm sure that you are talking to who are building successful businesses is different. Like a man is much more likely to be called bald or audacious when a woman is going to be called pushy or aggressive or bossy. And these are definite prejudices in our culture. And the question is, are we going to let them stop us while we are trying to change the culture for everybody, how can we move on and not let these things derail us?

[01:26:25]

You don't strike me as a person that spends much time caring about things that might stand in your way.

[01:26:31]

Well, that's what I said earlier about not looking over our shoulder for approval. You know, it's been very easy historically for women to be liked and admired if they didn't try to build something, if they were kind of pretty and well dressed and didn't break with conventions. But is that something that we want to do? I think I don't really know any young women who want to be in that place.

[01:27:12]

Now, what kind of leader are you in business? If I asked your team members, if I said what is she like. Because I got some of them in the back there. We're actually interviewing them as we speak. So we're going to get their answers, then we're going to play it against your answers. They're being interviewed right now. What do you think they're saying in there?

[01:27:29]

I feel that we're a bit of a family, which means that I'm going to express what I'm going through. They will express what they're going through. We work hard, we celebrate small victories. I think that's really important. We don't wait for just the big breakthroughs. And because everybody's so much younger than me, I do have that maternal sense for the people I'm working with. And a lot of the people I'm working with have been with me since the Huffington Post. Like our chief brand officer joined me as an intern from Princeton at the Huffington Post, helped me build the Huffington Post, came with me to thrive. So these are sort of very long relationships.

[01:28:27]

You said family. I can confirm in my earpiece they've likened it to Guantanamo Bay.

[01:28:37]

But they love it, right?

[01:28:39]

Well, they have no choice.

[01:28:39]

Guantanamo Bay, but great food.

[01:28:43]

Great food. Was there luck in your journey? Was there moments of luck that you look back on and say, that was truly outside of my control. But if that hadn't have happened, I wouldn't have been the success that I am.

[01:28:58]

Oh my God, so much luck.

[01:29:00]

What is the piece of luck that comes to mind?

[01:29:03]

So after my first book, which I wrote when I was 23 and was a big success, I wrote a book on leadership when I was 27. I took a lot of time writing it, and I ran out of money, all the money I had made from the female woman, my first book. But I was determined not to write another book on women. After that first book, everybody wanted me to keep writing on women. And trust me, I had said everything I needed to say, everything I knew and beyond on women, and I wanted to move on. As you can see from the topics of my books, I like to move on because I learn through writing a book, and that's very important to me. So I ran out of money. And so I remember being really depressed, walking down St. James's street in London and thinking, well, you know, maybe my first book was a fluke. This book has been rejected by 37 publishers. So.

[01:30:12]

37 publishers rejected your book?

[01:30:14]

Yes. Rejection after rejection after rejection.

[01:30:18]

Why didn't you give up?

[01:30:19]

I said, maybe it's time to give up and go get a go get a real job. And I went. I was going by Barclays bank in the corner of St. James Street. I don't know if it's still there. And something made me get into the bank and ask to see the bank manager. And the bank manager, whose name was Ian Bell, came and I told him my story and I asked for an overdraft. I had no assets, and he gave it to me. Now, that's luck, right? He had no earthly banking reason to give me that overdraft. I still sent him a holiday card every year, but it reminded me of fairy tales, you know, when the Hero or the heroine is stuck in a dark forest and then these helpful animals come out to guide them out of the forest. Well, that's back to trust. I believe in life. There are these helpful animals in the form of a bank manager or whatever, and you can call it luck, but I also call it part of the benevolent universe we live in.

[01:31:32]

Steven, can you influence the benevolent universe? Because you point at these moments and say, look. But in there I see so much intention, and I see also see someone who I imagine from meeting you today, even though we've spent 2 hours together, has an ability to win people over. I want to know how you can influence the benevolent universe.

[01:31:55]

Absolutely. You influence the benevolent universe by taking action like I took action. I went to the bank.

[01:32:05]

The bank didn't come to you.

[01:32:06]

The bank didn't come to me. But beyond that, it was out of my hands. And very often people don't go to the bank because they're afraid of rejection. So when we've overcome that fear of rejection, that fear of failure, we are much more likely to take bold moves. And also, if you look at your life and if I look at mine, there are so many so called coincidences, serendipity, you know, somebody you meet. I mean, I loved your conversation with Whitney Wolf. You know, she was at a dinner and they, and they offered her a job. Sure, she called them to follow up on the job, but that, you could say, was just a coincidence that she met that person at the dinner. And I call coincidences the miracles that God performs anonymously. And if you don't like using the term God, it doesn't matter. Whatever term you use, it's basically that benevolent universe. There is a phrase, there is a verse in the Bible that I love, which is not a sparrow falls, but God is behind it like nothing happens. Nothing happens, however trivial, that doesn't have some divine purpose behind it.

[01:33:33]

Do you believe that?

[01:33:34]

I do. Actually, Stephen, I don't believe. I know.

[01:33:42]

How can you be so sure?

[01:33:45]

I bet there are many things you are sure of. Aren't you sure of the impact you are having with your work? Don't be modest.

[01:33:59]

Am I sure of the impact? No, I don't think it's possible to be. I know that we're doing good work for sure. For sure, because people come up and.

[01:34:05]

Tell me, well, isn't that impact?

[01:34:08]

Yeah. Yeah, I'm sure. Yeah, I'm sure that that's a positive force for sure. Yeah, but that's because someone's come up and told me.

[01:34:19]

Right.

[01:34:19]

But nobody's come up to me and told me that, you know, there's divinity, there's something divine in everything that happens. Because the minute you say that, I think of all the bad things that happen, I think I'm just going to be honest. One of the first things that I thought about was what happened in Nazi Germany. I thought about the suffering.

[01:34:35]

There is an enormous amount of suffering. But the question is, do you trust that it's not because there is an indifferent or male level and force in the universe, but because so much of what happens is beyond our understanding that we cannot comprehend the mystery of the universe just through our minds alone?

[01:35:00]

I do trust that.

[01:35:01]

And so the more we can connect with our spirit, our soul, the more we can be in touch with meaning and purpose. But if we try to comprehend everything through our minds, they're so limited.

[01:35:17]

What was the advice that you wish you'd got when you were that young woman who wrote her first, around the age, in your early twenties, when you wrote your first book? What is the advice that you wish someone had given you that you weren't given?

[01:35:31]

Definitely. Definitely not to worry so much.

[01:35:38]

Was that really the sort of bane of your.

[01:35:41]

Because so many of my worries were so unnecessary and so depleting.

[01:35:50]

It seems that you took a lot of action in spite of your worries, though.

[01:35:53]

I did.

[01:35:53]

Kind of comes back to your mother's advice.

[01:35:55]

Yeah, but I.

[01:35:56]

In spite of fear there would have.

[01:35:58]

Been more joyous if I had worried less, acted as I did. But the rumination that I mentioned and the negative fantasies about the future, these are the things that most depleted me when I was young.

[01:36:22]

When you're trying to build something, the problem that we all face is we need talent and skills that we don't have ourselves. And we can waste so much time trying to learn a new skill when really what we should be doing is using a platform like Fiverr.com, where you have global access to reviewed, tried and tested world class talent at your fingertips that you can access in a flexible and affordable way. Fiverr for me, when I was starting out in business was a real unlock. It was a bit of a hackath because I used to think that the only way for me to add skills to my project was by hiring full time staff and bringing them into the office. Fiverr.com changes that. And if you're in that position now where there's a skill you're missing for a project that matters to you, here's what you have to do. Visit fiverr.com diary to learn more. And here's the great thing, if it doesn't go well, fiverr offer a pretty amazing money back guarantee. So what are you waiting for? Everything I am, every goal I have, every company I founded, this podcast all rests on this tectonic plate I didnt even know existed, which is my health.

[01:37:27]

You remove my health, you remove everything I have. You remove my dog, I still have myself. You remove my girlfriend, I still have myself. But if you remove my health, I lose everything. So it has to be my first priority. It has to be number one. And ive orientated my life around that. One area of my health that people often overlook is my oral health. And a game changer for my routine has been Colgate Total, who are a sponsor of this podcast. Unlike ordinary toothpaste that only clean, Colgate total really does provide superior 24 hours protection for your whole mouth. Colgate is the number one brand recommended by dentists. So join me in prioritizing your oral health. To learn more about Colgate Total's superior science, visit the link in the episode description below. Thrive AO has just launched in partnership with OpenAI and you've worked closely with the CEO of OpenAI, Sam Altman, on this. So I highly recommend everybody goes and checks it out. Rummaging around the website earlier on and I found it to be truly, truly fascinating. It is an AI powered health app that encourages people to make healthy habits across the five areas that you talked about, from connection to sleep, distress management and food and so on.

[01:38:29]

A really, really interesting application of AI. There's so much negativity around AI, so it's so wonderful to see people doing positive things with the technology. A technology that does stand a chance of really changing our lives. Ariana, what is the most important thing that we haven't talked about that we should have talked about?

[01:38:50]

The one thing we haven't talked about is what you alluded to right now, which is we have the opportunity now to use technology for our good. You know, technology, so much of technology through algorithms and the early, more primitive forms of AI has led to bringing the worst out in us.

[01:39:19]

Well, I actually have this, which I found. Do you know what this is? It's from the Cambridge Union Society 7th debate on Tuesday, the 12 May 1970, at 08:00 p.m. it's a little flyer, and it says, the quote is, this house believes that technological advance threatens the individuality of Mandev and is becoming his master. And I believe, if I'm not mistaken, there you are speaking, proposed by Ariana Stasinopoulos.

[01:39:54]

Very good, Stephen.

[01:39:55]

Thank you so much. So that was a leaflet from the 1970s where you were proposing good research that technological advancement threatens individuality of man and is becoming his master.

[01:40:08]

Yes.

[01:40:08]

That was your proposal.

[01:40:09]

I've changed my mind.

[01:40:09]

You've changed your mind? Okay. You're building an AI company 50 years later.

[01:40:16]

It's funny that you had Prince Charles speaking from the crossbenches, meaning neither side, because that was the royal prerogative.

[01:40:28]

His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales will be in attendance.

[01:40:32]

He actually spoke.

[01:40:34]

Oh, wow.

[01:40:35]

But because he was at King's College at the time when I was there. But I actually believe that we now have the opportunity to use what AI makes possible, which above all in terms of health, is hyper personalization. Like, it can have what they call a context window of billions and billions of data points. So it can know everything about Steven, not just your biometric data, your lab data, your medical data, but your preferences, what foods you like, how you like to sleep with, your phone, and how we're going to change that, but also, what poems do you like? Are there any sacred texts that you like? Is there any music that you love? Any nature, and at the right moment, give you the right nudges and recommendations to move you towards the best version of yourself. And one of the things I'm focusing a lot now at thrive, this company I founded after I left the Huffington Post, was how to help people make that connection. And one of the ways we are doing it is through the 62nd resets.

[01:41:53]

60 seconds.

[01:41:54]

Second reset resets. Stress is an unavoidable part of life. Like, there is nobody who doesn't have stress in their life. But cumulative stress is avoidable. And the way to avoid cumulative stress is to read the neuroscience that tells us that in 60 to 90 seconds, we can go from the sympathetic to the parasympathetic nervous system. The sympathetic is fight or flight in 60 to 90 seconds. Steven, that is kind of amazing. And the reason that is true is because we all have that place in us, we don't have to invent it or create it. And our breathing is a superpower. You know, most of us forget that we breathe all the time. So how do we breathe consciously? So we now have hundreds of resets on our platform that focus on conscious breathing, gratitude, images. But my favorite thing is creating our personalized reset.

[01:43:05]

Well, as you say that I am, I actually found your personal reset. I have it here on my iPad, which is a video that I guess, which is this video here. I can put it up on the screen for anybody that doesn't have it. This is the video.

[01:43:21]

And it's 60 seconds.

[01:43:22]

Exactly 60 seconds long.

[01:43:24]

Yeah. Yes.

[01:43:24]

Did you make this video yourself?

[01:43:26]

Yes, we can make it very easily on our platform. It takes five minutes because everybody has pictures they love stored together, music they love. And we also offer different quotes if you want to use quotes.

[01:43:41]

So I'm gonna put this video on the screen so everybody can see it that's watching on video. But this video, could you explain it to me then? What is it?

[01:43:49]

So, basically, it has pictures of my children at different ages, my dog. It has favorite quotes like, be willing to be a beginner every single morning. That means something to me. It has music that I love, and it ends with my absolute favorite quote, which is, Rumi, live life as if everything is rigged in your face.

[01:44:20]

Love that quote. And how many times have you watched this video?

[01:44:25]

I would say hundreds and hundreds. It could be a thousand times. And it never fails to have that impact on me. Now, a lot of people create multiple videos, you know, different music, different moods. But the point is bringing together things you are grateful for and based on the science that gratitude and stress and anxiety cannot coexist.

[01:44:53]

Interesting.

[01:44:55]

So what I love about this is that it may sound warm, and it may sound like a warm and fuzzy thing, but it's based on hardcore science. And that's very important to me, because if we are going to help people adopt these healthier habits, we need to convince them that they're based on rigor and data and they are not just random things that we came up with.

[01:45:24]

We have a closing tradition where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest, not knowing who they're going to be leaving it for. And the question left for you is, when was the last time you were so proud of yourself that you could have thrown a parade?

[01:45:41]

What an amazing question. I think actually very recently, and we talked about it, but I was proud that we're addressing a big, hairy problem, which is healthcare. That so often these problems seem so intractable that we shy away from looking at solutions. And so the fact that we brought together a great team, the fact that we found a great CEO, and that we convinced him to leave Google to run this project, that he's building an amazing rock star team, and that we may be able to have a real impact on the lives of people who don't have the resources to actually take care of themselves in a way that so many people with resources are already doing. I'm just really excited about it. I don't know if my mother would like me to use the word proud because she didn't like that word, but I'm really excited and I want to devote the rest of my life to that.

[01:47:05]

I'm so excited to watch that journey play out. And for you to be the spearhead of such an exciting project along the way at 74 is the most incredible thing.

[01:47:14]

And I want everybody listening and watching to realize how much time, guys, you have left and how much you can do during this time.

[01:47:26]

You dont think people realize that?

[01:47:28]

I think a lot of people feel that there are deadlines that I have to achieve. X by 30 and Y by 40. And that creates a certain pressure. And I know you say pressure is okay and pressure is okay, but not when it comes with a lot of stress and not when it robs us of joy.

[01:47:54]

I'm going to ask you to finish on your favorite quote of all the quotes that you've. Because you're a fan of quotes, I can tell. And you can't use any that you've used thus far. It can't be the one about life being rigged in your favor by Rumi. It has to be a different one. What is your favorite quote? We'll end there.

[01:48:08]

So it can't be Rumi and it can't be Montaigne. So it's got to be be a beginner every single morning. The fact that we can start every morning fresh. So, you know, every day is a mixture of good things and bad things. And often we wake up in the morning and we carry the burden of the bad things that happened the day before. So if we can wake up every morning and have that sense of new beginnings, you know, like the first morning of creation, whatever term you want to use. Fresh.

[01:48:52]

Ariana, thank you. Thank you for being such an inspiration to me and so many other people. Thank you for your wisdom and thank you for your unrelenting energy towards solving some of society's biggest issues and maybe society's biggest issues, which is our health and our happiness, which is exactly what you're doing through the work you've done with thrive and continue to do with thrive AI now. And it's a service to humanity that is very much needed at this particular time as we find ourselves in society. So thank you so much, Ariana, you're an absolute wonderful force in the world, and I'm so honored to have met you today.

[01:49:23]

Thank you so much, Stephen. And thank you for all you are doing to have this remarkable impact.

[01:49:32]

Every single time you eat, you have an opportunity to improve your health. And that's why I love Zoe, because Zoe helps me to make the smartest food choices for me and my body. And as you guys will know by now, Zoe is a sponsor of this podcast, and I'm an investor in the company. And if you haven't tried Zoe, I highly recommend you do. Because Zoe combines my health data with Zoe's world class science. And using those two things, Zoe guides me to better health every single time I make a food choice and eat, which means that I have more energy, better sleep, better mood, and I'm less hungry. And the most important thing is Zoe actually works. It's backed by their recent clinical trial, something called the method study, which is the gold standard of scientific research. I started Zoe just over a year ago now, and I've been able to track my progress week after week so I can learn how to be even smarter the following week. And if you haven't joined Zoe yet, I'm giving you 10% off. When you join Zoe now, just use the code, CEO ten at checkout.