you take a deep breath and then continue speaking The reason people aren't comfortable with the pause is because they don't know what the pause is for Right The pause allows people to process what you're saying Think about it now Listeners as you're listening to that the moment I paused you had a moment to process the things that I was saying Do you want to be more charismatic You see in the world of communication there are two fundamental areas Didn't that just seem really important I was so bad at interactions with human beings There was just a period of my life where I I didn't understand what anybody was saying to me You're saying that everyone can go from being a shy unconfident speaker to being a prolific speaker like yourself Being a confident communicator that's just another series of behaviors that you can practice So when people say "Oh I'm shy." I always say to them "Oh that's because you've been practicing the shy behaviors for the last 15 20 30 40 years What are the top three things the practical problems that people are coming to solve when they come to the number one health and wellness podcast J Shetty J Shetty the one the only J Shetty What made you commit your life to helping people find their voice and find their confidence I always feel like the thing we end up doing in life tends to be something that had a massive impact on us when we were younger I don't know if you find the same to be true but for me man Jay when I was young I I was such a bad communicator I was so bad at interactions with human beings And the reason for that is because English is my third language So I grew up first learning a Chinese dialect called Dio And then I learned Vietnamese and then I learned English So there was just a period of my life where I I didn't understand what anybody was saying to me and I couldn't communicate with other people So I just went through a period of life where I felt really isolated I didn't realize that I was doing it in my career But as I learned how to communicate more effectively became a professional speaker all of this I went "Oh wow Now I have this skill that I can teach other people." So the moment I just tried teaching it I felt fulfillment And I never really felt that level of fulfillment before That's when I decided "Oh wow It's cool to do it yourself It's even cooler to help other people do it." And then that's kind of when I went allin with it and found so much fulfillment And again I'm sure you get this all the time but it's the comments the emails you get and you're like "Oh wow I I'm doing something that matters." Yeah Whereas before I was a magician so I did that for years And it feels weird to say it because I don't want to talk down on what magicians do Not at all which is for me the applause at times when I was doing magic it felt really empty to me because I did it for so long and it started to feel a little bit empty and then when I started teaching public speaking and communication skills it felt full it felt better it felt more fulfilling from the way you're talking about it you're saying that everyone can go from being a shy insecure unconfident speaker to being a prolific speaker like yourself yes because it's all just a series of behaviors Everything you and I are doing right now everything you see a great communicator do on stage everything you see a great creator do on video it's just a series of behaviors The way you're moving your mouth the way you're manipulating airflow the way you're moving your hands it's all just behaviors So when people say "Oh I'm shy." I always say to them "Oh that's because you've been practicing the shy behaviors for the last 15 20 30 40 years being a confident communicator." That's just another series of behaviors that you can practice And if you practice that for 10 20 30 you'd be a confident communicator right So it's just behaviors that we get attached to because it becomes a part of our identity And then I think when it becomes a part of our identity all of a sudden now we feel like we're stuck but you're not And then there's this really interesting concept I don't know if you've come across it before where it's where does your voice come from Where do you get your voice from You you learn how to communicate based on the people you were inspired by when you were young and you just learn behaviors from them Like I'm watching my daughter now my daughter Melody she's one and I can see her watch us and then start to mimic the things we do Right Right My my wife the other day met her spaghetti She wouldn't eat it So my wife was furious She was so upset She was like "Ah you're not eating it." And then she goes "Ah." She does the exact same thing Right And then my son he picks up the way I speak cuz he's seven now I notice he has certain nuances that I have So again the voice you currently have people think "Oh that's my natural voice." It's like "No no it's not your natural voice." Yeah You lost your natural voice when you were two or three years old right Whereas the voice you have now that's your habitual voice It's just a series of habits And the thing that I find the first most fascinating is that when the habits move from your conscious mind and it goes into your subconscious mind now you feel it's a part of you and now you're stuck with it But in the beginning of your life you have to consciously think "Oh oh dad speaks really softly so I'm going to speak really softly." But the moment you do that for 2 three years now it moves into your subconscious mind And then you go "Oh no that's me." No no it's it's still just a series of behaviors and that's all that it is Yeah I've always loved that model of unconscious incompetence to unconscious competence And for anyone who doesn't know it four stages right The four stages The the bottom stage is unconscious incompetence When you are unconscious of your incompetence you have no idea what you're doing wrong You probably don't know that you um are try and fill every pause say like at the end of every sentence whatever it may be And we all have an unconscious incompetence especially in the way we speak And that's when we have this mindset that you're saying where we think it's our voice but actually it's just practice behaviors M and then above from that which is what I love This is what you do so phenomenally well when you're with your audiences conscious incompetence You're helping people become aware of how our body language our voice our tonality affects us And then above that for everyone who doesn't know the model is conscious competence Correct where now you know why you move your hand that way and why you choose to lower your voice or lower your pitch or whatever it may be And that's kind of a frustrating part for people to be at stage three because they go I know it but V I still have to think about it So when they do it it's really interesting cuz I see my students do this all the time where they go "Hello everybody It's great to be here." And then they go "Vin this feels so fake It feels so phony." But I'm like "You have to go through that stage to get to stage four which is unconscious competence which is mastery." Yes And a lot of people aren't willing to push through that because they go "No it doesn't feel natural So that means it's not right." Let's talk about that That's a really I think that's one of the biggest challenges because I think we're both sitting here as people who've trained worked hard at our craft worked hard at our art Yeah And now at this point it does feel like unconscious competence Yeah But a lot of people say well no but if you had to learn it then it's fake It's unnatural It's not real It's phony But what's the difference between developing a skill versus faking it Like what's the difference I love your definition of home where you say home is the familiar right and to me the way you currently communicate you have a home and that is because those behaviors you've been repeating for the last 10 20 30 years right so that feels like home to you whereas what people don't realize is and I I don't mean to take a long explanation for I think it's important when you used to ask me what my home was when I was young I would say my suburb so I'd say Ssbury Downs then as I got older I started explor explore my city I I'll say Adelaide is my home South Australia right And then as I explored more of my state then I would say South Australia is my home Then I explore more of Australia I go Australia is my home Now I've lived in LA and and Southern California oh I kind of feel like America's my home too And then as I travel more of the world I go "Oh the world is my home." The same thing with your communication skills You have access to this incredible instrument but your home is such a small part of that instrument Say a piano has 88 keys right Right now home to you is five keys because you're only familiar with those five keys But as you start to realize you have access to this incredible instrument you start to play the other keys Home becomes the entire piano Whereas the struggle that people have is the moment they do something that they're unfamiliar with Instead of labeling it as unfamiliar they label it as fake and phony And what happens the moment you do that You stop exploring your instrument And now you are limited to the five keys you've been playing with your entire life And I think there's there's an overattachment to the familiar which keeps us the same Because when you think about this most people change the way they dress they change their glasses they change their house they change their car but they never change the way they talk They never change the way they communicate because we are way too attached to the familiar And I say to my students this all the time don't be so attached to who you are in the present you don't give the future version of you a chance There's a future version of you where the world is home There's a future version of you where you can play all 88 keys I love that concept of we change our hair we change our glasses change our clothes but we don't change the way we communicate And I was going to ask you when you have so many people coming to see you speak what are the top three things the practical problems that people are coming to solve when they come to you So when someone comes and says "Vin I need your help." Yeah What are they trying to solve in their life the top three things that you hear First thing would be they want to get from stage one unconscious incompetence to like you've made me aware of one thing How can I start to become aware of more things So again self-awareness So first thing they go is like how can I become more self-aware I've now been I'm awake now to the problem of my communication How can I begin that journey and become more aware And when they ask me that question then I share with them a very simple technique And a very simple technique that I share with them is record and review So the only way to become more aware is if you see yourself and most people hate watching themselves on video Most people hate listening to themselves on audio So that means they've been going through their entire life avoiding the two most critical things you need to develop self-awareness with your communication So and they hate this process So the process is record a video of you speaking for five minutes right And then when you review and reflect on that video leave it for a day so you're less critical of yourself And once you've left it for a day the first time you grab your phone to review the video put it on mute And then just look at yourself And then as you're looking at yourself take notes What am I doing with my hands How are my facial expressions What am I doing with my legs How am I moving Am I do I have any visual ticks So you take a whole bunch of notes That's the beginning process of self-awareness Then after that turn the volume up Just listen to yourself Now turn the phone around play Just listen And as you're listening now listen to the vocal qualities What do you like about your voice What don't you like What can you hear How's your rate of speech How's your volume What's your melody like Do you hear the passion If you're passionate about something you'll take so many notes when you do this What are your filler words nonwords Right You get all of that down Then the last step is get it transcribed So once you transcribe it now you can see the way you communicate in a completely different perspective You might notice you speak in circles I repeated the same thing four times What am I doing Right And you'll see different things If you just go through that process once you'll get a list of five to 10 things Right That's how you begin your journey of self-awareness Yet people will resist that because it's too uncomfortable They'll record it but they won't watch it But the ones that do Jay I immediately get a DM after shock I can't believe I do X And it's crazy cuz I I think of one of my students right now where he said "For 6 years I've been held back in my career because my managers and my leaders say that I lack clarity I lack authority and I lack confidence." And he goes "And they give me this feedback yet they don't tell me what I need to improve." And do you know what I realized through doing this recording review process the one thing that has robbed me of 6 years of progress is my ing and aaring I can't believe ing and aaring has held me back And he was so frustrated And I remember I had to tell him I look look that's I I get your frustration but at least it didn't hold you back for 20 years and you realized it now But something simple as ing and aing held him back for that long and destroyed his perception of being a great leader It's kind of crazy Yeah That's what I wanted to get to is that's the problem And I feel someone may see your work and they'll say "Well I don't want to be a public speaker." That's right That's not the point The point is there's a promotion that you're not getting because you don't have authority Or the challenge is you're not able to ask out the person on a date that you really want to take out on a date Like you don't feel that confidence Or there's the challenge of you're in a team meeting and you feel like your voice is never heard People always overlook your opinion They don't hear you What are some of those stories that you've heard of people that have those types of challenges that are coming to you exactly like the one you just told us They're like "Oh Vin this is actually solving a daily issue for me." The big one people keep interrupting me Not only do they not listen to my ideas they interrupt me And then my turn is gone now And the idea that I was going to share was one that was going to be able to change the course of the meeting But because they interrupted me now I'm invisible And that keeps happening to me And then when they ask me they go "Why do other people interrupt me Why does it happen?" The reason is something that I don't think you'd expect Because it comes down to vocal presence and physical presence And when I see them in the situations where people interrupt them the reason is because their vocal presence is low and their physical presence is low So for example everyone's sitting around a meeting table and and again I go look send me an example right where you're doing a big Zoom meeting and you're allowed to send me this send it to me let me see what's happening and when you see it everyone's sitting down and then the way she would bring up the question it was a woman who asked me this and I remember the way she'd ask it is very low volume so look I've just got a quick idea I would love to share with you all very small body language and if I was talking to you like this right now it is so easy for you to interrupt this version of me so easy whereas imagine instead I take control of this Stand Stand They go "Oh I feel a bit little bit weird." Well just prime the reason Just go "Look I've been sitting all day Do you mind if I stand for my part of the presentation?" "Oh great All right then you just stand." If you stand now all of a sudden you're in a position of more authority And if you use larger body language stronger volume the version of me right now this version is infinitely more difficult for you to interrupt Absolutely It's infinitely more difficult because you've got more authority You've got more credibility But again because a lot of people in those situations fall victim to a lower default volume a slower default rate of speech smaller body language and then all of a sudden people interrupt them Absolutely Or talk over them just completely ignored So I say I often say to my students the reason people interrupt you is because you're easy to interrupt Create a bit of that friction right Create a little bit of that authority And then again they try it It feels a little bit again they say fake and phony but I'm like reframe it reframe it It's just unfamiliar And then they start to do it They go "Oh it felt really unfamiliar." V but the moment they do it they go "Wow." People like just from standing alone V I felt like I stood I just had a bit of volume I didn't even use my body language but already people are not interrupting me So again it just goes to show that how you use your instrument and your voice lets other people know how they can treat you Yeah that's such a great point It's so true And I hope everyone who's listening and watching right now I want you to rewind back right Go backwards the last five minutes Everything that Vin said from the point of self-awareness through to just now and practice it in your next meeting right Listen to yourself in a meeting Even record yourself while you're in a meeting as you are normally as you are right now and then go listen back to that and then apply what Vin was saying because it's so interesting to me how daily our communication is impacting our lives And we think we're not getting promoted because we're not networking or we're notically brilliant technically great or whatever it may be Or maybe you're sitting there going J I'm actually one of the best in the company when it comes to XYZ But now I realize that it's my ability to coach people guide people because I have that influence I wanted to ask you how does an introvert get the courage to do what you just said Because I'm sure there's a lot of people listening right now they're introverted naturally I mean do you even believe in introverts or is that also a practice behavior Well there definitely is a difference Obviously I asked my vocal teacher the the same thing I said "What's the difference between an introvert and extrovert?" And she goes "The key thing is just how they get energy Are you introverted or are you extroverted?" I mean I I I know I'm very extroverted I get energy from being around people but she goes "Introverts they lose energy once they're around people." So she goes "Look that's the key difference Now let me ask you a question A pianist if they're an extrovert would they play differently to an introvert?" And I had to think about that for a while because I thought "Surely this is a trick question." And I I said "Yes." and she goes "No you're an idiot There's no difference You will not be able to tell who it is an introvert and who is an extrovert if you listen to a pianist Great music is great music Your voice is an instrument Great music is great music." She goes "The only difference is introverts have to be highly strategic with when they play their instrument Extroverts can play their instrument all day It's more difficult for an introvert because you have to be highly selective when you play your instrument." It's an excuse that I think some of my friends who are introverted used to give and where they say oh because I'm introvert I'm not going to play my instrument well at all And it's like no no no you still have energy you just have to use it much more strategically and you have to be highly aware of how you can rejuvenate that energy Yes you have to be very conscious It's harder for introverts It is harder for introverts to acknowledge that However if you've got great ways to be able to rejuvenate your energy and you have good menu items like good things you can go and snack on and recreate some of that energy and rejuvenate then you still have to learn how to play your instrument well Otherwise you will become that person that and again the majority of my students are the person you described It's the I'm way smarter than John I'm way smarter than Sarah but why did they get the promotion Why didn't I get it Well it's because if you are technically 10 out of 10 but your communication skills are a 3 out of 10 do you think your organization perceives you to be a 10 out of 10 or a three out of 10 You are only as good as you can communicate So as you improve your communication skills you start to shine your light more brightly in the world Whereas a lot of my students tend to think oh but it's my boss's responsibility to see the brilliance in me No no it's not It's your responsibility to shine brightly not their responsibility Yeah So when you take it upon yourself things change Filler words as well And so like do you know what I mean We do that because we don't understand the power of the pause Whereas the pause allows people to process what you're saying If there's one thing you do if you listen to this episode is record a video of yourself and and you'll thank Jay and I later because you'll see things that you didn't realize You know the reason we hate the sound of our voice is because when we hear ourselves on recording that's not what how we sound to ourselves And the reason you have a different sounding voice to yourself is when you're speaking the vibrations go through your bones and your muscles and then it hits your ears You know one thing I've learned on my journey is that education has the power to transform lives But for many traditional college just doesn't work with busy schedules and financial realities American Public University is designed to fit your life not the other way around With more than 200 online degree programs to choose from APU's eight-week courses start every month But what really stands out is the incredible value APU provides Beyond their already competitive tuition rates APU eliminates out-ofpocket costs like application fees and ebooks And most students can take advantage of their opportunity grant which gives you 10% off undergraduate and M's level tuition Plus you get access to comprehensive career and mental health resources to support your entire education journey Whether you're looking to expand your knowledge pivot to something new or finally complete that degree you started years ago American Public University makes it possible Remember investing in yourself is always worth it Take the next step in your journey by visiting apu.apus.edu There's such a need for ownership and accountability for our lives Because like you said and I've I've for a long time believed that someone was going to come and spot my talent and see it and nurture it and help me build up And I realized no one was coming and that no one could see it because they were too busy in their own lives It's not that they were bad people or they were bitter or they were wrong or they were not able to spot talent Everyone was busy People were just busy in their dayto-day They don't have time to spot your skill and your talent and nurture it If someone's listening to this right now and they're saying "Vin I love what you just said I'm an introvert I agree with you There are times when I can and can't perform or can't bring it out How do I hold energy How do I create energy If I have a meeting coming up today if I'm going to be on a Zoom call today what do I do in order to make sure I'm at my best Because right now I'm going from meeting to meeting to meeting to meeting Zoom call to Zoom call I'm just exhausted First thing is you have to learn how to protect your energy For example yesterday I was I was doing a couple of different podcasts while I'm here in LA and I didn't leave the hotel room The podcast wasn't until 4:00 I didn't leave the hotel room at all to the point where my videographer freaked out and and and just knocked on my door and said "Are you okay Are you still all right Are you all right?" I'm like "Yeah I'm conserving my energy." Yeah I'm a fairly high energy person So I have to conserve my energy So all morning is again I didn't talk to anyone this morning I had to wait to talk to you because if you don't conserve your energy and you just give it all the time everywhere then you won't have any So that's number one Got to conserve your energy right And then the second thing is have go to I call them menu items have some menu items that you can quickly reach for So one that I love is Wimhof the breathing technique right The the guided bubble breath Two cycles of that before a meeting My brain is oxygenated My body feels good I feel like I just I just feel revitalized Can you break the pattern down for us just in case Yeah Okay So if people don't know YouTuber but it's it's 30 deep breaths in and out So 30 of that And then after that at the end of the 30th one you breathe out and then hold your breath And you'll be shocked how long you can hold your breath for You'll be shocked The first time I did this I couldn't believe I could hold it for a minute and a half 2 minutes I thought I was going to die I thought I was dying And then at the end of you holding your breath for a minute or so as long as you can After that just take a deep breath in hold for 15 seconds and release And that breathing technique alone has energized me even when I am doing Zoom calls at 3:00 a.m in the morning cuz I work with some US clients It just gets me three cycles of that two cycles of that Incredible I was not a believer in that at all when I first learned I was like "Yeah surely that's not going to work." What Breathing I do that every day Changed my life Yeah I agree My goto technique to energize myself The next one to me is a snack something healthy I love blueberries raspberries with a little bit of cream Oh man a light meal I love it Right And then favorite beverage My go-to is coffee I don't know That's I feel like some people are going to tell me it's going to kill me but I love it So have your own go-to Yeah Right Have your own goine A routine I have a playlist of videos that crack me up I I don't know Have you seen videos that made you laugh Save them Save them because they're packed Put you in a great mood Put you in a great mood I'll give one last one for me is again I've just got so many things out of my menu items No I love it I also love orchestral war music Okay So like Han Zimmeresque And if you're listening to Interstellar Han Zimmer while you're doing Wimhof as you take a sip of coffee Oh man I'm going to try that Yeah give that a go I'm going to give that a go It's an intoxicating mix I love that Yeah my my routine is a lot more simple but but I love No but you're right Everyone needs one I I went on my world tour two years ago now We did 40 cities across 3 to four months around the world Got to come to Australia a place that I absolutely loved It was my first time there I didn't get to come to Adelaide I hope I do next time I know We're offended by the way Yeah Oh no God please don't be We we did Brisbane Sydney Melbourne And honestly there was something about the Australian people that stuck with me I was telling you this a bit earlier There was this banter back which I loved I would banter with people on stage I' I'd you know little quips and things and they'd come back at it and I loved it And the other thing was everyone was so grateful Everyone would just say to me they'd be like "Thank you for coming all this way." And I was like "Wait a minute you came to see my show I'm I should be thanking you." knew and I was I was so grateful that people turned up in you know the thousands that came out and it was just amazing Everyone was so grateful There was such a great energy But the reason I brought it up is I realized that my tour schedule was extremely different from a keynote because a keynote is I got to do it once and then it's done This was every night if not every other night if not sometimes in Australia I did two shows back toback in the same day on the same day because we we were at the Sydney Opera House for two days where we did two shows in one day one show the next day So three shows across two days and then went to I think it was Brisbane or Melbourne that was last And so my tour schedule was different but I realized I had to stop eating at 12 My show was at 8:00 p.m I had to stop eating at 12 I'd have a protein bar around 5 6 p.m to give me that little bit of boost of energy I'd have a sparkling water because I preferred that just before I went on and then I would have to eat I'd get off stage at 10 do a meet and greet for two hours and then I'd eat at midnight every day Now that's not my normal schedule at all Like that's completely against my normal schedule But I had to find that And I think that's what's so interesting about this is that I'm not So I sleep at 9:00 9:30 every night That's when I'm in bed So for me to be having to eat dinner at midnight is so abnormal But I found that there was a different routine I also didn't go out to any noisy places before or after the show because I had to be on vocal rest I knew I'd lose my voice if I went to a restaurant or whatever So for three four months I didn't go to a restaurant while I was out in all these cool cities Everyone's like "Oh did you go to this place Did you?" I was like "No I didn't go to any of those places because I would have lost my voice and then I wouldn't been able to perform." And I think that's the important part of the craft that there's a dedication and a surrender to this is what matters and therefore some of this other stuff is going to have to fall by the wayside And what you just said made me think the importance of finding what works for you Yes I I feel like people have this misunderstanding that I should just have this energy naturally Yes Back to your original question right I should just have it naturally and if I don't have it naturally there's something wrong with me It's like no you had to not eat for 8 hours to get yourself into the right state And I think that fasted state helps us think more sharp and helps us be more on point right And it takes work to show up with energy intention and purpose Mhm Whereas I think people have this illusion in their minds oh it should be easy and weak Yeah Or there's something wrong No no no no no There's a craft to it Like even preparing for a Zoom call some people go oh is that a bit much But that's how you show up Three Zoom calls back to back like structure it with 15 minutes in between You have to reset Mhm Even for me it's doing these podcasts traveling overseas I'm exhausted But then again if I choose to give this energy I need to conserve it I need to have ways to rejuvenate it And I have to go through the process And you have to commit to the craft You have to commit to that discipline Whereas if you one night did eat at 6:00 p.m well then that show wouldn't be as great But you were dedicated and I think that that is what people have to really understand is there are ways to do it but you've got to take yourself through the process Yeah Absolutely For someone who's listening to their voice now they they listen to us They they're like "V I'm going to listen to this." They start listening back to their voice and they cringe at their voice because we all have this strange and by the way we all have it I have and I want to say that here I have that too No one likes listening to the sound of their own voice There's something uncomfortable about it First of all do you know where that comes from And then what do we do about that When you're listening back and you just you know your whole body your face everything It's not just listening is when you look at yourself on video too And there's a reason for that The reason we hate the sound of our voice is because when we hear ourselves on a recording that's not what how we sound to ourselves The way you sound to yourself you have a deep rich barry wide voice right And the reason you have a different sounding voice to yourself is when you're speaking the vibrations go through your bones and your muscles and then it hits your ears The vibrations of the sound is going through a more dense medium which creates a lower pitch sound So when you hear yourself via an audio replay that's going through the airwaves So your voice sounds thinner and higher pitch So you immediately go "No no no I don't I don't sound like that I sound like this I don't sound like this." And they freak out So that difference in the medium in which you're receiving the sound causes people immediately to reject because it actually does sound different The reason why people are like looking at the on video is because it's flipped the other way Yeah They go "Oh I don't look like that." Because you look at yourself in the mirror every day Whereas on camera it shows the way other people see you Whereas when you look at yourself in the mirror it's flipped So your entire life you've seen yourself a certain way right Unless your face is perfectly symmetrical right Then you go "Oh no I don't look like that." So immediately people go "I look weird I sound weird So the thing you need to do there is desensitize it mate Just listen to yourself over and over Like do you listen to a podcast now and do you still freak out about your voice Not anymore Not anymore Right Because you're desensitized So what happens is the calibration happens What you hear in your head and what you hear on an audio replay the calibration starts to just do this And then gradually you can't hear the difference anymore And then when you look at yourself enough on camera and also in the mirror the calibration starts to happen You go "Oh that's me Oh that's just me." Yeah It's painful but if you go through that you get over it Yeah It's all that discomfort in the beginning that we all need to go through I was we were talking about this earlier So I was really fortunate because when I was 11 years old my parents were so scared that I was so shy and so insecure that they forced me to go to public speaking school And so my school had an extracurricular activity with the London Academy of Music Drama and Arts For seven years I had about three sessions a week of 2 to three hours each It was fairly rigorous and you'd have to take exams and the exams were pretty rigorous too So every year you'd go to this exam and you turn up and the examiner would be in a room and before you even meet the examiner you'd get you could take a book Yeah It could be any book you wanted but they were going to pick any page and ask you to read it in a emotive dramatic and powerful way Ooh And so they could pick any any page out of a book The next part of the test was they would give you a topic 15 minutes before You'd be in a library This is when we didn't have you know Yeah Exactly There probably was the internet but there wasn't this They wanted to keep you away from all of that You'd be in a library and you'd have 15 minutes to prep a talk about the dangers of smoking or whatever it was a topic that they' picked and you had to structure a talk out And the talk had to be 5 minutes long And so you had to do that The third part of it was you had a prepared presentation with visual aids This is when we still use projector screens and the slides Yeah And then you were tested on that including the visual aids that you used And I'm sure there were a couple of other things as well And then you'd get graded and it was uncomfortable We'd be sitting in a class and remember we're all like young teenagers at this point So everyone's even more judgmental and more you know and you get into the class and you're all making these weird faces to try and warm yourselves up and they're telling you to enunciate and pronounce all of the letters differently and you're doing all these silly things Your friends are laughing at you and it's exactly what you're saying The reason I brought it up is that it was years of discomfort It was just years of looking silly looking stupid sounding bad Yeah Giving a bad talk giving a bad presentation walking into a room to then all of a sudden that discomfort changed to confidence And I find that for most of us especially as you get older going through that discomfort becomes harder For example if me and you I don't know how old you are but I tried to pick up a sport a couple of years ago in the pandemic It was much harder for me to learn a sport at this age than if I played it in my teens So when you're meeting people in their 20s 30s maybe 40s 50s and they're trying to change their instrument they're trying to change their voice that discomfort is so much harder than when I started at 11 or whatever age you started at How do you encourage people to sit with that discomfort to go through that Because it is harder Such a beautiful insight that you shared there The reason it was easier for you at 11 is because you were new to a lot of these behaviors completely The behaviors haven't been ingrained in you yet Whereas when you're 40 now and I'm 38 So once I'm 37 so yeah So So once you're 40 and you realize this you've done 40 years of repeating one behavior two behaviors a series of behaviors over and over and over and over again That's why it becomes harder right And all of a sudden it becomes way more difficult because now you have to unlearn something that you've been repeating for that long So I think there's really difficult there One other point I wanted to mention what you said there too is that you said you went through years of discomfort A lot of people have this idea that again it should just be a quick process And if I'm struggling for a period then something's not right It's like no no no struggle that's good That it means you're in the process of change right You're going through the process of change and you have to be willing to put in that effort go through the struggle and I think the thing that people are resistant to is failing because I I believe and I want to ask you this question Did you learn more from your successes in those situations in those public speaking exams or did you learn more from your failures Failures People don't want to fail now I don't want to make a video put it out on Instagram where I've made a fool out of myself But that's how we learn right I don't want to do a speech where I I forget what I'm going to say But that's how you learn You have it happen Then you go back and you go "Okay why did I forget Oh it wasn't well rehearsed Right Why did I forget I didn't know how to deal with my nerves Now you need to learn how to rehearse Now you need to learn how to manage your nerves So all of a sudden if you don't fail you don't know where your weakness is And then you don't know what to work on So you got to pay the price I think I think you've got to pay the price Back to your original question No that's a great I am so glad you brought that up Yeah just so important because I think people just now are resistant to failing yet we learn far more from our failures than we do from our successes For sure So for the person who's 40 oh my god Vin how do I now How do what do I do Am I doomed No no you're not It's just when Jay was 11 he was able to work on three or four different behaviors at the same time because you're so elastic right There's so many things that could change about you when you're at that age But when you're less elastic in your older years you just now have to focus on one thing at a time So I've coached a few CEOs of some pretty big companies here in the US And it's so funny because when I map out their I used to do I don't do it anymore but when I did it and I mapped out their their coaching program and I showed it to them they got upset cuz they're like "Wait you're making me work on my volume for 4 weeks and that's all we're doing?" This feels stupid And and in those moments I just had the courage to go "Well look you then pick somebody else It's okay Get a refund Pick somebody else." Because I kind of said to them you're 50 and you've been speaking with a very default quiet volume for 50 years Do you expect to be able to change that in 48 hours Because every cuz I get them to send me a video every day right And when they every time they send me a video I go "Watch what you're doing for the first seven days." Even though you know we're working on volume your default volume is like a 4 out of 10 And that's when they go "Oh far out I keep defaulting back to it." So the older you are you've got to realize one thing at a time One thing at a time It but it drives people crazy I want to do seven things I want to do hand gestures I want to learn how to storyt tell I want to use volume I want to add pitch and melody I want to do all of it But that's also what leads to no change That's why most people never change the way they sound because they're not willing to sit and be patient and do one thing at a time Yeah A good example is thinking about it like driving Yes How many bad driving habits have we picked up in the last 20 years because we haven't been tested We haven't reviewed it Scary right And I had to I recently had to redo my uh driving test because of moving here and you know getting a state ID and all that kind of stuff And I realized just how many bad habits you pick up Now I've believed myself to be a safe driver and a good driver and a responsible driver But still the fact that for 20 years no one's watched me and checked on me driving You lose that And so that's 20 years of driving which is something we do every day which is similar to speaking You're doing it every day but no one's doing what you you're not right You're not recording yourself driving and sending it to someone You just made me think of something when you said driving as well I mean when you think back to the four stages of learning we talked about before and you talk about unconscious competence to give people a sense of what's possible once you really go down the path of mastery of communication skills Think of an area in your life where you have achieved unconscious competence It's driving Mhm Whether we're good or not that's another thing right But but most people I would dare say sometimes too you're kind of unconscious when you're driving because you you're so good at it You've done it every single day of your adult life So you've gotten to a point where you are unconsciously competent right And then people always ask me now they go "Oh when you communicate now are you thinking about gesturing Are you thinking about storytelling Are you thinking about I go "No I I don't." Because like with the car when you think you want to go to the grocery store do you have any thought now into "Oh I need to open the door Oh I need to check my blind spot Oh I need to adjust my No it's all automatic." So the reason why I try to inspire my students to improve their communication skills because I I say to them that means in the very next conversation you have with a client a customer a family member you can just think I want this outcome I want to be able to help them in this way Your skills and abilities will just take you there Mhm And that's why you come across in these podcasts and the professional people who do this it's so natural And when people are sitting there going I want to be that natural but it requires a dedication to mastery Yeah And that's the point that I really want people to get I remember sitting and watching one of my favorite comedians who became a friend and he was just brilliant Like he would have the audience laughing and in raptures like in the palm of his hand right And but everything looked and felt completely off the cuff So he'd literally just turn up on stage It wasn't like he wasn't in the flow Sometimes you watch a comedian and you can tell there's an arc and you can tell there's a story and you can tell it's planned Yeah This guy would literally come up He'd be like "Hey does anyone has anyone read any books lately?" And like someone would name a book He'd be like "Oh yeah I read that page." And he make a joke out of it And then someone else and he'd be like "Oh what's your favorite song right now?" And it's all a conversation Brings out a song Oh yeah I can't believe he said that lyric Makes a joke about the lyric And it was unbelievable to watch And I spoke to him afterwards and I said to him I said "Who did you learn that from like where did that come from He said I've practiced it so much that it looks spontaneous but it's completely trained And I think that's what everyone wants Everyone wants for it to look spontaneous But that took years of discomfort courage failure training mastery When I'm telling a story or hosting a podcast I'm not trying to sound like anything because your voice has for so many years become that way And I'm at a point in my career for sure I was asked to give I just gave three keynotes in the Middle East in January and in Dubai and I said to myself I'm going to walk into these and just channel Like I just want to go in there and just be I'm not going to I'm going to have some notes I know what I need to talk about I know the the title of the talk but I'm just going to be and I had so much fun there I I had so much fun and it seemed like the feedback was great from the audience whatever but it was just so much fun for me because I was like I just want to feed off the energy in the room and they were all and my friend my one of my best friends he came with me and he was like JJ every talk was different He goes at the 1 billion summit you were hilarious like it was like watching a comedian and then he goes at Mind Valley it was really deep and like you know philosophical and then at the other place the corporate event it was very professional He was like there were three talks in three days and they were all completely different I was like because I was just feeling the energy of the room and I love that Walk me through how many hours how much time how many years have you seen people take to get to a point where they feel that sense of unconscious competence not of not of mastery because that can take many years but of a sense of comfortability where it's flowing and they don't feel phony and contrived anymore Where what have you seen It depends on your What have you seen I I I've seen unbelievable change within 6 months and this is someone who has become problem aware that this thing has been destroying my relationships destroying my career growth And when that pain becomes that great and you become problem aware I can't believe how quickly some of my students have been able to change And then I've seen it take as long as three or four years And where I still Yeah Yeah Exactly where I'll get an email 3 to 4 years later and they go I can't believe it's taken me this long to email you I almost feel a little bit ashamed I'm like no No because it took me 10 So that's amazing That's incredible right Because it ranges so much depending on the intensity of the pain they feel and and the realizations they have Mhm I have to bring it back to what you said before because what you said before about you going to three events and just going with the flow I know the people listening to this right now while you were saying that they were clenching their butt cheeks because they were like "Ah that's so that's so freaky." And I wanted to speak to that because what you just described to me is one of the ultimate benefits of mastery in this arena and it's freedom You were free in each one of those speeches You were free to go where the audience wanted to go That's one of the things I I I rarely ever get to even talk about because I don't get to speak to others usually who who are so proficient at this skill set That's ultimate freedom Jay When you feel something you think something and you're immediately in the moment able to articulate it with clarity and make people laugh at the same time That is so powerful man I'm getting shivers just you saying it It's like goosebumps And to know you're going into that being able to do that like again it's achievable for you listening to this too What I love about it is that there was so much discovery for me on that stage And that's what I do it for I don't do it to show off or or be like "Oh look I don't need to prepare or be lazy or not respect my client." I do it for discovery And what I mean by that is when I don't plan to that 100% I now have the opportunity to find and discover in the moment So there were so many things that I said in those three keynotes that I've never said in my life and that's where I get joy Yeah You create and I said that first because I wanted to take it back and say my first experience of public speaking I want to ask you about yours I was around seven years old Yeah And my mom always wanted to me to be on stage and do things like that and I didn't And so it was a religious assembly and I was dressed as people from my culture and I was asked to go and sing and speak on this prayer in front of my class Now I grew up in London I grew up in an area where there weren't loads of Indian people like me I'm stage wrapped in a me the part and it it didn't help Okay And then I'm on stage in front of all my friends I'm seven eight years old something like that And I stand up there with this prayer that I'm not that wellversed in or practiced And I start singing it I have a terrible singing voice And that's not humble There's a difference between a speaking voice and a singing voice I can't I can't sing to save my life And I start singing and the whole audience starts laughing immediately Like just like literally all my friends are rolling on the floor laughing And now I'm starting to cry cuz I felt really embarrassed And I look down because I forgot the words And now I can't see the words because my tears have blurred the words in my paper So I've lost the notes So I also don't know the words And then to make it even worse than that my teacher walks on stage She puts her arm around me and walks me off which is the most embarrassing thing in the world And so I go from that at 8 years old And this is why I love what you're doing for the world because you're showing and proving you can build this skill It is a muscle And that was my first experience of public speaking A few years after that after all the training as well I was probably speaking to rooms of zero to five people and pouring my heart out into just five people And even now when I look back I loved it because I just got to be so proficient and practiced And so when someone's saying "Oh do I have to do this for four weeks?" Or "Wait only five people are showing up or whatever those things are." Those are actually really really beautiful moments I wanted to ask you what was your first time public speaking That was the first ever experience on stage Have you recovered from that experience I have now I have now But even though I started getting trained when I was 11 I probably didn't get half decent until I was like 17 or 18 Like that's why when you said you can get people then 3 to four years I'm like that's pretty good because if I started 11 I probably got half decent at 16 to 18 I wasn't good when I was like 12 13 14 All those years were just you know it's such a common story among many of the students that I coach there usually is some kind of event when they were younger that has led them to believe that I'm terrible at this thing because there wasn't the right support they you were thrown into that you you didn't even practice you would even you didn't even learn the words right so so again like you you were set up to almost fail when a lot of the oral presentations that we do when we're young that's what they're called right oh you got to do a presentation we're set up to fail when you're 11 and you have to do this presentation in front of your class do they teach you how to use your hands Do they teach you where to put your notes Do they teach you how to summarize notes and not write the whole damn thing on Q cards No They're setting you up to fail So this is such a common story because our school system the entire year has one day where we have to go on in front of the class do and guess what What Guess what happens that day I'm sick mom I can't go to school I'm sorry And then you say then you miss the one day you have training And then if you do the training you're all set up to fail You're all set up to So every person has a version of this My version of this is a little more dramatic because I was older I was in university and we had to do a presentation for accounting and I was so nervous I remember going to the toilet 10 12 times So nervous And then I got up on stage and I had a sniffle So I kept I kept touching my nose I had a sniffle and then I got a blood nose And then and I didn't realize I had a blood nose cuz I thought it was I thought it was I was just I thought it was just booger So I didn't know So I I wiped it Blood comes across my face I don't know I have blood on my face while you're speaking While I'm speaking I didn't know it was blood right And then I obviously a blood vessel went I was so nervous Everything was going and then I didn't realize it was blood and I was still talking and then people started laughing and then I tasted blood and the moment I tasted blood I looked on my hands there was blood everywhere I start freaking out I didn't know what to do The teachers didn't even know what to do either Do you know what I had to do I finished the talk and it was well it was only a fiveminute presentation but I finished it because I didn't know what to do and I panicked and it was just the worst presentation I'd ever given from that point I just thought yep you know what I'm going to avoid this at all costs I'm never going to do it ever again this is the worst experience of my life yeah just and I walked off it just yeah I'm glad there were no videos back then and no photos there's no that's so traumatic well that is traumatic man to actually bleed to be that nervous to be that stressed Yeah That's how stressed I was Yeah Yeah Yeah To experience that that's I love that That's where you started And now if someone watch like when I watch your videos I'm like "This guy's a genius." And and it's one of the things I was thinking about as we're doing this and I'm really trying to put myself in your audience's shoes my audience's shoes the community that struggles with this One thing that I've definitely seen as I've traveled and we both have international audiences is this fear that people have around their accents and that can often make people quite unconfident Yeah And it's really interesting because obviously when I moved to the States people really enjoy listening to a British accent in the States but where I was growing up in London to me the smartest people sounded American accents professors Harvard Princeton Stanford when you heard these professors do TED talks or whatever it was it was always in an American accent And it's almost like in England we grew up on American rap music you grow up to such a culture that our feelings are skewed towards certain accents And so if you're from a country where you feel or or a state or anywhere even in the United States you may feel like your accent isn't wellreceived How does how does someone deal with that kind of pressure I just believe accents are really a problem It's it's really the articulation and the pronunciation that lets people down because I I I just feel that accents are beautiful I've got students from all over the world Jay and I love I love listening to the accent because it tells a story It tells me who you are Where it lets you down is like when I first came to the US I didn't realize I had so much Australian slang And Australians use like we shorten all of our words He's like "Yeah man I want to Yeah maybe I won't." You know Yeah All right Like it's just I didn't realize I was doing so much of that And people go "Oh Australian accent is awesome." Yeah If I if I talk for a sec you won't even understand what I'm saying if I don't articulate and pronounce my words correctly Yeah So I I really believe that and I have this happen all the time in my inerson classes where someone will come and ask that very question and they'll have a Polish accent or or maybe they'll have an Indian accent and then the moment I just get them to overarticulate and practice all of a sudden it completely changes how they sound and and here's where it happens Jay it's because for me for example right I learned the Vietnamese language so I learned a set of Vietnamese mouth movements my big mistake was when I learned English I used the same set of mouth movements in the Vietnamese language to go speak the English language Fascinating right So then all of a sudden now when I speak English my accent wasn't the problem The problem was I wasn't articulating correctly So people didn't understand me I used to not pronounce my T's British people are good with this but Australians and even Asians I I didn't do it So I would say things like I can't I wouldn't pronounce I can't I wouldn't pronounce that And then my my T's I would say free Oh can I have three of those instead of three of those Yeah And then what people were associating with low levels of intelligence was not so much my accent but it was just because I didn't articulate my words well And this can happen in any culture This can happen in any with any accent I've heard people with Chinese accents Indian accents Polish accents Russian accents but when they articulate their words beautifully oh man it's it's like you get to listen to a different genre of music Otherwise imagine everyone sounded like us Yeah There's no flavor There's no personality Personality Again I do not believe accents are a problem I believe the problem lies in your ability to articulate and your pronunciation And here's a quick activity that you can do to help Yeah go for it One of the greatest things I learned that my speech pathologist made me do was first of all grab a book and every single day you grab a book for 5 minutes four times a day if you want to take it real seriously Every time for 5 minutes read the book and overdo your lip movements Overdo the tongue movements And then if you want to take it to the next level put a pen in your mouth Because if you put a pen in your mouth you're forced to overart articulate and do it out loud And by doing this you'll start to learn and record yourself while you're doing it too You'll start to learn oh wow I struggle with this sound this consonant this vowel And as you start to bring a little bit of awareness to it you go all right I need to change the way I'm shaping my lips I need to change the way And just going through that process alone I remember doing that for 3 months Wow And I had to do that when I came here to the US because I slurred my words a lot And in Australia you fully understand me Far right Yeah There's no dramas with that eh But over here all of a sudden I was speaking in Texas and I still remember speaking in Texas for the first time But it was so sweet They're like "I love the guy but I I ain't got no idea what he's saying right?" And it was like this weird thing where and then I literally had to go see a speech pathologist even later in my life because in Australia it wasn't a problem And I didn't realize it too but when I slurred my words that much it made people think I wasn't smart Right Right And this is why people in the world think the British are so smart I Is it just the accent or is it because they articulate extremely well Right Right So you can sound smart in any culture in any with any accent Should we get a couple of pens Can you pass Can you pass us a couple of pens Okay Just just so that people realize see what it is Yeah And that we also need to do these like I'm I'm I'm probably going to contact you straight after this and go Vin I'm I'm not kidding you I mean this Thank you so much What type of pen Does it matter Oh it doesn't matter It doesn't matter It could be a Sharpie Yeah Yeah I think the pen the more challenging it is That one I think I've already chewed off Let's not give you one that I've already There we go This one does not have black marks No no no Exactly Look you can see what I've done with this Wait one second We'll do this for a segment Yeah But what I was saying as soon as we finish this podcast I'm probably going to message you and say "Vin can you please I'm going to send you a speech and and ask you to help me get better?" Because I think the mistake is also that you get there and then you don't need these techniques or that you don't need to improve and that you don't need to work on it Practice anymore I think about it all the time So anyway let's let's Yeah Yeah Can you see how difficult this is Very difficult Yeah all of a sudden right And I want people to think about this Who can you understand better right now I'm not sure You got to give me more than that Jay Okay So Vin how are you today Feeling a little bit jetlagged Okay Because I came all the way from Australia Yeah I just got back from Mexico yesterday Oh that's great And I went to a friend's wedding and we had a really good time Oh that's beautiful I'm really happy for him Oh so happy for you It's in doing these things that you start all of a sudden now that I now when I speak I feel like oh I'm so sharp Totally I can feel it too Even just from a few moments because you're forced to stretch your mouth so much bigger to make the shapes to be able to create the sounds Whereas the biggest problem and again this happens in the English language When you think about the European languages the Asian languages we actually don't have to drop our jaw a lot to speak those languages Interesting Because when I speak Vietnamese you know I can do a lot of Vietnamese with my mouth closed I barely have to move my jaw English is one of the very few languages where where when you think about consciously how you're speaking you have to drop your jaw so much to speak the English language Well whereas again the Asian cultures European languages you don't have to Yes Again each language has a different set of mouth movements So by doing that simply alone you felt it straight away because you had to move your jaw so much Totally I can actually feel like we've worked out Like that's what it feels like And that we did it for 30 seconds Absolutely And you can keep that pen Oh thank you Thank you I didn't think you wanted it back I genuinely feel the difference from such a short period of time and I could tell if I did it for longer it would make a even bigger difference Imagine you did that for 5 minutes and you started dedicating yourself to that My goodness within a week yes you'll notice your mouth moving differently and you'll notice yourself sounding more clear I accents are not a problem You got to you got to stop thinking that People always go "Oh I hate my accent." That tells a story It's your culture It's your history It's what makes you unique And I always love to think of it as it's different genres of music Yeah Yes And that's what we're seeing in music in the world right now anyway you're seeing languages pour in through different artists and people and it's such a need for that I wanted to ask you something because this was a big evolution point for me So from 11 to 18 I went to public speaking school I got the tools is how I like to see it But it was only when I met the monks and I started to learn about Eastern wisdom and philosophy that I felt I had something to talk about And I wanted to ask you how much you weight the balance between what you have to say and how you say it Both equally important I I see some books where I read where they go no what you say is more important and then some books say no how you say isn't more important And I think they they kind of have to do that sometimes because they are an expert in one particular arena But again I believe the answer is not which one it's both Both just as critical Same with me I think until I found the purpose and the fulfillment from teaching public speaking I didn't really have much to talk about right I didn't And until I found that then all of a sudden I started creating content Then the content started to take off And I think it's because I love how you've positioned what you do here It's on purpose When I found that purpose and I had the tools and I was able to use my instrument that all of a sudden the world resonated with that Yes Whereas before I did make YouTube videos back in 2008 2009 just for fun but they didn't really go anywhere because even though I had decent access to my instrument it just didn't go anywhere because I wasn't aligned I you could hear it It wasn't It wasn't on purpose Yeah No I'm glad I'm glad I brought that up because I think a lot of people are are struggling with either or Like someone may come to you they may learn all the tools but then they're going to have to find what they use it for And like you said there may be someone else who actually has lots of knowledge Yeah but then they don't have the share wisdom or the insight and that's generally the student that somehow discovers me Right It's the one that is I have something to share with the world Right But some reason every time I share it people misunderstand me Every time I share it it doesn't get the impact that I desire And and it's the truth because you have you could have the greatest piece of music written by Beethoven But if you play it poorly is it the greatest music And again it's so interesting because I understand my students so intimately now where I know what they'll say They say things in their life like they go I'm just going to let my work speak for herself Why Why not speak for your work too Right Well why can't we do both Why why are we so linear Why can't we do both So good Right And when they realize that they go "Oh okay." Right It opens their mind to the whole idea of I kind of have to take responsibility to shine my light I can't wait for someone again And I remember we have a mutual friend Mel Robbins right Mel helped him in my speaking career At the start of my speaking career Mel used to flick me the gigs I couldn't afford her And and I became the cheap Mel Robbins for a period So so I was the cheap Mel Robbins and she was she was amazing and so gracious where cuz she she couldn't do those gigs but maybe she was busy as well and she flicked them to me That's how she started my career here in the US That's awesome I didn't know that And and she was one of the people that that I saw from her content as well early on where she said "No one's coming to help you." Mhm No one's coming to save you That that's when it really hit home for me too I went "Okay I'm going to have to go do this myself." Right And and you take ownership for that And yeah because when you take ownership you step into your power When you blame others you kind of lose all of it Yeah What about someone who comes to you and says "I talk too fast." How do you teach people to slow down Because I think that we're all scared of pauses right Everyone's always trying to fill the gaps even if you're in a conversation with someone We don't like pauses I've for years had to practice the ability to say it's okay if I need to look away if I need to think if I need to reflect if I actually just need to take something in whether I'm on a podcast on stage or in a private meeting How do we get comfortable with slowing down and pausing rather than trying to fill all the space because that's such a natural thing to do The first thing I would say if you speak really fast well done for being aware that you do Most people are not aware of it is a lot of it is to do with your mindset and the state of mind that you're in When do you think people speak really fast when they're feeling what When they're nervous anxious etc Right So you've got to you kind of kind of have to address it at the core there So what you need to do is you have to identify when are you speaking fast In which situations are you speaking fast Oh it's when I'm in a job interview Oh it's when I'm going in for my quarterly review Well great Now you know in these isolated situations the triggers are high pressure situations Okay cool That means before you go into those situations you need to still your mind and your body Again it comes back to breathing right I I I couldn't believe it but there were workshops that I was invited to and I did some of them It was I couldn't believe we could spend 3 to 4 days on breathing And then I found out there was a 7-day workshop on breathing I went 7 days There's so much profound wisdom in the breath Mhm And I I did not understand it until I started learning more about it So again breathing before you go in go with the Wimhof breathing And that will slow down your mind and slow down your your body and then all of a sudden it slows down your speech The next thing is adrenaline also causes you to speed and speak really quickly So before you go into a a presentation or something that's making you nervous get rid of the adrenaline Some brisk walking do a couple of push-ups do some star jumps I know you call them jumping jacks here in the US Yeah mate It's not called a jumping jack It's a star jump mate So do we call it star jumps in England Oh you do Yeah The Americans have it wrong Obviously who the hell's Jack So all of a sudden do 20 star jumps right And when you do that you get rid of all the adrenaline The adrenaline is what makes you shake and also what makes you speak really quickly because when you start to shake it's sending signals to your brain that you're nervous now you start to think you're nervous and then when you think you're nervous now you're speaking really quickly right So again these things help slow you down Now those are things you can do before you go in One last thing you can do before you go in actually is what makes us really nervous is being self-conscious But you can only be self-conscious if you're thinking about yourself So then stop thinking about yourself and realize it was not about you If you're going on stage it's not about you It's about every single person you're going to serve And I'll be honest with you too coming here I felt a bit nervous right But then I thought to myself well it's not about me It's about me trying to add as much value as I can to Jay's audience And it's about Jay I want to connect with Jay And the moment I made it about you and I made it about the audience we're about to serve I had no cognitive capacity left to be nervous because I'm not thinking about myself So to me the these three small tools you got the breathing get rid of the adrenaline and mindset shift it helps calm you down And now when you go in if you find yourself racing in it then pause and take a deep breath And that's how you can remedy it Cuz if you go in you're like "Oh I'm here I'm really excited." You take a deep breath and then continue speaking And right after the deep breath it's going to slow your speech right down Even when I did it there I all of a sudden feel more relaxed now Yeah The reason people aren't comfortable with the pause is because they don't know what the pause is for right And when you think the pause is useless that's why you develop the behavior of filling the pause always talking Um uh non filler words as well And so like do you know what I mean We do that because we don't understand the power of the pause Whereas the pause allows people to process what you're saying Think about it Now listeners as you're listening to that the moment I paused you just did it again You had a moment to process the things that I was saying If I just talk really quickly and I don't pause at all when I'm talking all of a sudden now everything that I say has no clear points because you don't have any time to process anything that I'm saying all of a sudden everything after a while becomes mumbo jumbo right It just becomes nothing 100% Whereas pausing gives people time to process Pausing gives you time to breathe so that you can relax so that you don't speak too quickly There are so many benefits to I mean think of music again I love using music analogies because the most important note in an orchestra happens after a crescendo which is what Silence They'll build the peak and then all of a sudden the musicians will play and play and it gets to this peak moment and then just nothing and the audience is in awe of what they just experienced You speak about it so powerfully and it's so convincing I'm like this is this this has to hit because I I applied that even and that come come back to Zoom calls meetings everything I think it's so important to not feel that the person who talks the fastest is the one who will get their point in And I think that's sometimes the thing of like hey guys so I just really want to share this with you because if we just if we just did this this would solve everything Like this is the thing And it's almost like you've actually lost all importance because of that pace Also because there's no clarity Yes If people don't process anything that you say there's no clarity Yes You have to think about communication is not what I just send It's how it's being received right It's not "Oh I've sent it It's done It's out there What do you think?" I I don't even remember what you said Yeah And I think I think that's a that's a big mistake And And often people do that again because they don't understand that the way you deliver has an impact on how others receive Yeah I really appreciate your switch to the audience consciousness versus the us consciousness because it seems really small It seems really obvious It seems kind of that makes sense Yeah But it really is everything Yeah Because all of a sudden if you're thinking about being impressive that's a really hard place to live from because now you're judging every word that comes out of your mouth and judging whether it's impressive whether it's powerful whether it's profound whether it's whatever it is And now you actually have no thinking space to actually be profound impressive and all those things you wanted to be It's just not possible Whereas if you were thinking hey what's that person in the audience struggling with Mhm Like what are they really struggling with What's their challenge What's what's the thing that and that's why that's how we started this conversation I was like what's everyone worried about when they come to you Because to me that's the most important thing And if I know that what they're worried about is their accent their voice their whatever it may be now all of a sudden I can address that Yeah And I can speak to that And actually I can make them aware that I'm aware of that And that's the same in a meeting I think sometimes if someone said to me in a meeting Jay I know that you really want the podcast to be a special place for people to really learn grow and heal I know that it's a big priority in your life and I know that it's something that you put your heart into for 6 years This is how to make it better All of a sudden I'm like I'm all ears because I feel like you actually get where I'm at and where I'm coming from Whereas if someone said "Hey you know what I've just got this really great idea I want to share with you." All of us I'm like "Well I don't know if it's a great idea or not because I don't even know if we're on the same page." Yeah And so walk me through some of the ways people can establish by what they're saying and how they one you did this beautiful video Well you're on stage but I loved it I absolutely loved it and I realized I do it unconsciously and when I saw you explain it I was like there you go That's why that's why you're such a great coach and such a great teacher It was that idea of meeting people where they're at and you were saying that when people come to you and they're like "Oh Vin you're amazing on stage and you were great." and they speak really quietly and you said if you come back to that and go yeah what did you like about it Yeah Or even worse like oh thank you so much Oh because you bring sometimes you bring that stage persona straight down Yeah Oh and and and how did I learn that Because that's what I started with Yeah And you see them just and then they freak out But that's what I wanted to ask you So how do we do that in a meeting How do we do that in our daily life Yeah where sometimes what we're saying but also how we're saying it we're not even giving it the importance it deserves How do we establish more authority and influence when we are sharing an idea when we are proposing a method You've heard a lot of body language experts say you match and mirror people Yes Right To build rapport to make it about them to build a connection you you you match and mirror their body language But what a lot of people don't realize is you can also match and mirror their vocal foundations So when you think about the voice and you divide it into five different categories and you think it from the the perspective of rate of speech volume pitch and melody tonality and the pause now all of a sudden you have these five factors that you can start to think about when you're talking to people So if someone comes up to you and they're naturally speaking a little bit quickly because they're nervous right like that and they're speaking a little bit lower volume and the melody is not as great of a range and and you notice these things then you match and you mirror where they are with their voice too And then people immediately feel like oh you're approachable Yes And it's not that we stay there because some people go "Oh but that's that's inauthentic That's not right." No no That that's you being a great and dynamic communicator That's you going hey I'm going to meet you where you are to make you feel comfortable to build connection to make it about you Meet them where they are And then slowly you take them back out So if you're meeting them where they are you go "Oh hey thank you for coming up and saying hello But hey can I can I just ask you quickly too What did you really take away What was the key thing you took away Oh you took that away Oh that's awesome Hey I'm so happy that you came up and and had a chat with me All of a sudden now once you're in rapport you can take them to where you want to go And that's something you can take on a Zoom call You meet them where they are right If someone's really excited about an idea they want to bring to you you can meet them there with that excitement to show them respect right As opposed to a lot of the times previously in my life someone will come to me really excited and I have one gear Jay and I'm I'm just one gear I'm like "Oh that sounds really cool Yeah that's great Awesome man." And I didn't realize that Then all of a sudden I made them feel less important Whereas now all of a sudden I've learned that ah when someone comes to me with a peak emotion even if it's frustration I will mirror that for them to show them that hey I feel you It's like ah man that sucks Right So it's not just in the words that I use I deliver it in a way so they can hear that I'm with you and I'm on the same page Yes It's one of the fastest ways to build rapport with people Yeah I think that's so important because you could start up a Zoom call and someone turns up and they're in a really sad low mood and in your head you're thinking "Come on." Like "Come on bring more energy." Right And it and then you get frustrated and now you feel you're dragging them up a hill Whereas if you were like "Hey I just wanted to check in with you." Like "You're all right Yeah How's it going?" You lower your volume too You meet them where they are You're like "Hey you know I noticed on the other call you weren't are you okay?" And all of a sudden people are way more likely to open up if you used your instrument that way as opposed to "Oh mate what's going on?" Yeah What's going on man Come on Look at the weather outside It's amazing today What's going on They're definitely not opening up to that person But I didn't have that sensitivity growing up No sensitivity I didn't know why so many of my relationships when I was young would fail Like I remember one of my partners when I was really young where I would ask her I'd say to her on a Friday night I'm like hey I know we got dinner plans tonight but the guys are doing a land party and we're going to go play CSGO Can I go And she'll go yeah fine just go then And I just went you are the most amazing girlfriend in I I thought you would have said no And then I went next day she broke up with me and I was like why And I'd listen to Backstreet Boys and I'll be like why did she break up with she But she said yes And that's when I went through that era I was like "Women it's so confusing It doesn't make sense You said I could go." And and it was because I wasn't listening to the emotion in the voice I didn't even have that gear man I just thought what people said "Oh that's it I take you for you said so It's fine So it's fine." And we justify it Yeah What do you think No but you did say that But you said yes Yeah I I know I did but but that's not the point And And then Yeah Yeah But but again all of a sudden having this sensitivity now I've got so many different gears now Jay And and that's the the analogy I love to use too is that because sometimes a lot of people feel that oh there's only one version of me and J this is the only version of me and I'm this version of me in every situation That's like having a car with one gear We are so much more dynamic than as a human being And I get my students to think about this all the time Think about when you're angry you use your voice differently You use your body language differently When you've done something wrong and when I've done something like I've maybe stayed out with the the guys too late one night I come home I talk different to my wife I'm like I know Yep I'm sorry And I'm very sheepish You're you're different when you've done something wrong We use our instrument differently in every single one of those situations But when we don't consciously think about it sometimes we can default to just one gear I show up to the interview the exact same way I shopped and we show up in just one rigid gear and we go why am I not standing out Why don't I get more attention Why don't I get that promotion that I deserve Yeah You've got to learn to be more dynamic I'm I'm really glad you made that point because I was saying that to you earlier When I'm on the podcast I'm a certain way because it's a conversation But when I'm on stage I get the license to be funny and uh banter with people and bring people in the audience into that conversation because I can Yeah You're a big version of you Totally I I always say that when I'm on stage I'm the 360 version of myself because I get to be all things to everyone that I want to be Whereas here I'm I'm having a onetoone conversation This is kind of what I'm like when I'm having a one-to-one conversation with a friend a family member whatever it may be because that's my natural way of being And then if I'm making a video where there's no people Yeah I find it that's like the most minimal version of me Really Yeah Because it's to me it's all about energy exchange So if I'm in a room full of 10 20 30 people maybe 10,000 people there's so much energy to play with It can be fun it can be this it can be that When I'm with you we're matching each other's energy And then if I'm on my own and it's just a camera then I can think about who's going to watch it But really I'm only letting one% of me be me For me for me I'm saying I'm not saying that's the way for everyone Yeah No but it it brings up a really important insight that I learned along the way and it's that be as big as the room Yes And and and you notice how sometimes people do this incorrectly and I used to be one of those people Tell me how you do that incorrectly Well well because I when I first learned about all this I went "Oh wow This is amazing I'm going to bring this." And and then and I would bring this to this and then people like "Ah it's a little bit of a wanker Oh that's that's a bit much don't you think?" And I used to do that because I I had no sensitivity I just thought "Oh no This is really good I I should be like this all the time." And then I realized "Oh wow No no no Just that simple rule of be as big as the room." Again the version of you I'm assuming if you're in front of 10,000 people imagine we're in front of 10,000 people We went out we're like "Oh hey everyone It's great to be here and I'm excited to." It won't work It won't work right where unless you're echoi then it's totally fine that's on brand right whereas all of a sudden you need to bring a much bigger version of you but you have to develop that sensitivity whereas I see sometimes when my students who are new to communication skills they they miss the mark and usually they're too small yes more often than not they have this fear I'm going to be too much no no the danger is not you're too much the danger is that you've been living way too small for me it's always about pushing them up but the fear they have is oh but it's too much I'm like no no no it's too little you're playing too small right So again that sensitivity is important to develop when when you're with 30 people It's a different version of you and it's okay because you you have to be a bigger version of you to be effective in that medium Yes Otherwise it will seem like you you don't care Otherwise sometimes it can come across like you don't care It's such an art and what we're talking about is obviously the spectrum of you know the the kind of like the expertise the mastery all the way through to the challenge And it and it does blow my mind that public speaking comes out as the number one fear in the world And 75% of the world's population is scared of public speaking And it's something we have to do every single day And people think "But I'm not on stage." Yeah but anytime you open your mouth in public that's public speaking right It is public speaking You're publicly speaking every single day And and that also shows an opportunity Jay If 75% of people fear it that means only one in four people kind of do it So if you can get good at this skill you now have a competitive edge And one of the greatest things that I've noticed is that why do creators become such great communicators They do I mean watch watch creators Why do they become such great communicators It's because they film themselves every single day and they watch it back and they notice behaviors that serve them and they notice behaviors that don't serve them and then they remove the behaviors that don't serve them Because one of these things that I ask a lot of creators I always ask them like "So what formal communication training did you do?" They're like "What What are you talking about?" I'm like "I had to learn so many years to learn how." And from that simple pro that's why I want to bring it back again for the listeners right that simple process If you just committed to the process of recording yourself once a week you will now have one of the competitive edges that all creators have They're impeccable communicators And why do you keep going back to the creators that you love every single week You keep watching every video It's because they're able to form a connection with you What skill are they using to form that connection with you The ability to communicate and articulate ideas with clarity So all of a sudden now you kind of see that hidden secret there Yeah where it's about they just keep putting in the reps It's I never even put two and two together It's such a great point that they're actually practicing that exact method and and that videoing yourself I did it when I left the monastery and I got a job at Accenture We had someone come and do public speaking training while we were at the company I wish it was you It wasn't I would have been Yeah I would have been terrible at it at the time No No But they had us film ourselves and it was really interesting to me I believed at that point that I was I was I was I wouldn't say I was a seasoned speaker but I was a very experienced speaker because even as a monk I gave you know three-hour lectures every day and so there was a lot of speaking involved in teaching from scripture and wisdom and uh the literatures that we had but it was really interesting I as a monk I would sit and speak like you'd sit on a a low it's called a vasasan in the Indian language I don't know what it would be described as I It's a very low bench like you may have seen it in movies or whatever it may be It's just very very low and it's it's a small seat and so you're sitting cross-legged lotus position and your hands are usually in there and you may use some hand gestures but generally they're rested and it's a smaller group I would stand and talk if I was giving a talk to university students which I did while I was a monk as well and maybe there'd be a circle of people but then we videoed ourselves and it was really interesting I found myself in that video just doing this the whole time And then I watched that video back and I found that that's all I did with my hands at that time and it was so powerful to be able to see how you and it looked so cringe right it just but it was like every time I made a point I'd do this and then I'd come back to here and that's a very like you know as as a monk our palms would naturally be rested meditation whatever and it was so interesting how I'd taken that habit into my work life All right Right And and I was giving a corporate talk at the time and but what I'm saying is I'm re reiterating the point of needing to film yourself speaking like I I stand by it fully and I think you're spot on making people do it It's so cool to geek out on this because you've had so much training in this arena right now Even as you listen to this to the listener you already know what great communication looks like because you've been to a conference and a speaker walks out on stage within 10 seconds you now make a decision whether you're listening or you're not 100% and you make a big decision whether you you're going to go to your now social media feed or not right so there are certain cues that you recognize as being cues that are engaging oh the way they're using their voice I'm in the way they're using their body language oh I'm in right so you already have all of that information on in your mind but here's where it gets interesting you've never applied any of those ideas in your head to yourself so you'll shocked because again when you all of a sudden watch yourself you go oh no I come across like Barry oh no sorry to the Barry's out there just picked a random name but again they go oh no I come across like Barry oh but that's because again you've been avoiding this your entire life and the reason why I wanted to bring it up again I'm so glad you brought it up again is because if there's one thing you do if you listen to this episode is record a video of yourself and and you'll thank Jay and I later because you will see things that you didn't realize you know you have so much beautiful knowledge already in your mind about what makes a great communicator because why are you drawn to a certain YouTube video and a certain creator You've already have these internal references in your mind of what great communication is for you Yes And all of a sudden now you get to apply the same list of things to yourself Do you know how cool that is That is so cool And and and which brings me to my next point where my students ask me they go "Well well then how do I become myself though How do I find my because I always talk about this present version of you and you're way too attached to it Let go of the present version of you Give the future version of you a chance And they go well how do we make that transition Well I say look first of all just record yourself But then after that as you begin this journey I I view the the journey of being a great communicator like the journey of becoming a great chef So how would you become a great chef You you you would go out and you would look for a great chef and you would look for one of the recipes You buy the recipe book and then you would copy the recipe right And then at the beginning you copy the recipe almost exactly and then you start cooking it and you eat it and you go "I didn't think that's what the chef was intending." So you copy a little closer and you go "Oh I did the method wrong." And then as you copy closer you go "Oh wow That tastes amazing." And then as you cook it a few more times you gain the confidence now to go "You know what I'm going to add a little more chili I got to say that the chef didn't put enough chili." You put a bit more chili You put a little lemon You put a little bit of more garlic onion everything And now you make it your own Same thing with communication skills Yes If you want to get some inspiration go look up your top five communicators Yeah And then sit down watch a video break it down What are they doing that you love so much Try those behaviors on Now you have an ocean of different behaviors to play with Yeah And you'll try some of them on you go that's not me Like same with me I I when I first started speaking on stage I admired Anthony Robbins so much I was like wow Cuz I read his books It changed my life And I was like I'm going to try to be like Anthony Robbins And I jumped up and I did it And it felt so wrong because I was like this is not me But that was okay I had to have done that to know it wasn't for me I had to have eaten that dish to know I didn't like the flavor But too many of us judge it before we try it Absolutely I'm not even going to try that dish No Try it Yeah Because that's how I discovered some of my favorite dishes in my life was I I resisted it I tried it Loved it Loved it after that Right So again start looking up a list of five communicators that you love and then just pick a few different things from them and try it on It's all right We share one of our favorite communicators which is a bit more obscure that most people may not be aware of or may not see him as a communicator It's Darren Brown I think Darren is absolutely Darren is my favorite person on stage to watch Showmanship Yeah showmanship is a magician's fancy word for communication skills right Unbelievable Unbelievable Showmanship Unbelievable Everything from the humor to the pacing to the body language to when to sit when to stand Stage craft mastery Yeah Yeah Yeah It makes you want to give up magic when you see someone like that cuz you go "He's too good He's too good." For sure For sure And I I remember doing a trip to the UK My wife My wife likes Darren Brown Not she doesn't love Darren Brown like me Same same We followed him to three cities Wow To watch the same show So that's why my wife couldn't stand it anymore by the end of it But I watched the same show three times I loved it even more the third time What you talked about before his ability to execute what they call plan spontaneity is unbelievable That is such a skill Like your comedian friend Yes Even though it happens nearly every night people think it's random Yes But it happens every night Plan spontaneity He made it look spontaneous every single time And I appreciated every moment of that Yeah I was like "How did you make that look even more fresh than the first two times?" It's incredible But that's what it is It's I love hearing that story that you went there three times even though you knew what trick it was going to do because that's what you're doing You're studying the art of what worked And then the other speech that I love probably my favorite favorite favorite speech of all time that I've listened to the most at least is Steve Jobs's Stanford commencement speech Oh wow And it's a really interesting speech because there's no body gestures There's no use of hands There's nothing It's potentially even monotonous I think he speaks at the same volume pretty much the whole time Yeah But there's something just so profound His voice is phenomenal What Talk to me through why that works Why are so many people love that speech apart from it being Steve Jobs Because I I don't I don't like to be like "Oh it was a good speech because it was Steve Everyone loved it." No no no There was still something I mean the content's insane but again think of think of it from the perspective of music Yeah Right There are times that lyrics can be so powerful Yeah that the way you play that song is irrelevant because the lyrics of it speak to your heart Yes It's so strong that it doesn't matter how you play it hits you And that's where you can lean into the content There is some content that is just so powerful that regardless of delivery it hits because of the profound nature that exists within the lyrics And then I've seen pianists play Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and I was flabbergasted One of the most basic songs you've ever heard And the way they added chords to it and the rhythm and the way they re un I've never heard Twinkle style like that So you can take something basic and use delivery to make it amazing or you could take something truly profound and have no delivery and is just as amazing And that's the beauty of music That's the beauty of poetry and art And it's the beauty of that right And and you just have to determine for you with what you're currently doing Does it have that level of profoundness And can you keep that level of profoundness that consistently throughout this life where you can just forget about delivery And if you can damn good for you That's amazing Steve Jobs Yeah Steve Jobs That's incredible When everything you say is that potent then you don't have to worry about your communication skills because one of one of the I'm sure you get this You get trolls but I always have trolls on my content where they're like "Oh yeah but then what about Elon Musk He doesn't have to work What about his communication skills?" And I always say and I shouldn't ever respond to this but sometimes I get a bit cheeky and I do And I go "Listen mate if you're as smart and intelligent as Elon Musk forget about communication skills Just get us to Musk Make us a multilanetary species right like forget about it Please please save the human race But if you're a mere mortal like me then you probably should work on this skill But do you know what I mean Yeah So again and and sometimes and sometimes you're right Sometimes when you have something that profound you also want to let go of some of the bells and whistles I agree Yeah You want to let go of some of that Yes It's a delivery choice and a delivery style Yeah A good balance one that I've seen is Matthew McConnA's Oscar speech when he accepted for Dallas Buyers Club Yeah it's like that perfect balance between I mean he's got an amazing voice phenomenal and communicator and at the same time the content so profound and so you see a great marriage of the two in that one where there's showmanship there's performance and there's potency Yeah And and you're right I I agree with you I I only brought up the Steve Jobs one because and I and I love the way you explained it I'm so glad I asked it because that idea of the lyrics just being so profound and just read it Realize he literally read it off a piece of paper and you're listening to every single word I mean you know it's it's so powerful I was going to ask you people can sense when something feels inauthentic What are we sensing Misalignment However when it comes to communication alone it's usually people trying something out that they haven't really ironed out yet And I I hope this is not nauseating and people are starting to vomit in the back of their throats at this point but when somebody first plays the saxophone how does it sound J Yeah No Great Yeah I have one of those neighbors Yeah It's fine It's fine I find it very sweet as a young kid learning how to play Right And do you ever sit for a moment and going that is the most inauthentic saxophone player I've ever heard in my life No What a fake saxophone player No You go that person's learning and I'm just making it communication related Yeah I love it So when I have my students try out things for the first time and they're doing things like this right So they first learn volume They go "Ah I've been speaking with a low volume my whole life." So then they go "Okay I'm going to try to talk like this." Okay And I've just learned hand gestures so I'm gonna I'm gonna try to People immediately look at that and go "Inauthentic." Yes you're doing something that's not authentic to you No no no no I'm like "Stop That is someone just starting to learn how to play the saxophone." And the moment you call them inauthentic and fake do you know what happens to them They now revert to the same behaviors they've been repeating for the last 30 years of their life M it's such an intricate moment for someone when they're choosing to play their instrument in a different way that you've got to help them move towards the future version of them Jay right And that's where we sense that in that that inauthentic part where we go "Ah this person I feel like they're being inauthentic You don't know the backstory Maybe this person is trying to be heard because their entire life they've been invisible and the way that they're trying on this new way of speaking is because they're just testing out the instrument in a different way and you just caught them on a bad day You just caught them when they were playing poorly And I think we need a little more of that compassion Yeah We need a little more of that empathy because I've I've approached that and I've made those judgments before myself too Yeah But I've also been through that messy middle where when I spoke again I was like a robot I I I and and again I knew that people were judging me but if I didn't have the courage in that moment to push through then I'd still be the same version of me from 15 years ago So I feel that from a communication context when you're trying to improve when people sense that in you it's just you learning how to play this saxophone Yeah it's okay So all you got to do is this All you got to do is this Before you start to play with your voice and your body differently and and you start to improve the way you communicate prime your conversations Say say to your partner say to your neighbor before you learn the saxophone say "Hey listen I've been inspired by listening to Vin and Jay on the podcast and I want to I want to change the way I use my voice." Okay I've been quiet my entire life I want to give you and the kids more energy If you see me speaking with more volume can you encourage me because I want to be more I want to give more Yeah All of a sudden if you give that context now the next time you're like "Hey honey I'm home." And she was like "Oh hey it's so good to see you trying." Now with that context they support you Without the context if you just immediately come home they go I know what they'll say They go "Why are you doing that with your voice Why are you doing that with Why are you doing that?" Yeah And it's because something my my vocal coach used to say too She used to say this She goes "Your voice is your personality." And I used to I'm like "What?" And she goes "No no no Your voice is your personality Vinn When people compliment you on your personality the literal thing they're complimenting is how you're playing your instrument." Interesting Because that's how we perceive personality We perceive personality through the use of the instrument Yeah Personality comes through music That's why you can listen to a soundtrack I do this experiment with my kids uh not only my kids but my students too I love doing this experiment where I just play a piano track and I get them to listen to it and I go "What words come to mind?" And it's crazy They'll say things like my students will say things like "Oh I I hear complexity I hear drama I hear Oh I hear pain I hear misery I hear nostalgia and and and I always wake them up to it and I go "Do you know there were no words in that?" None None whatsoever Yet you got a world of meaning from that People get a world of meaning just from the sound of your voice and how you use your voice So if you pay no attention to that that means you're putting no intention into how you're coming across Yeah And I love that point man I love your heart for saying that too that so much of the time when we think someone's inauthentic it's really just inexperience They're trying something new Yeah They're trying something new They're exploring And we always look at it and we judge them and we think "Oh they're fake." That you know and half the time it's just someone trying to figure something out And then what we don't realize we're doing is then we give them negative feedback that immediately puts them into the same patterns of behavior that has been causing them pain because we're not as compassionate We see what they do We don't see why they do what they do Mhm Right Right Whereas I think if we took a moment to go why would that person do that Oh maybe they're exploring their instrument Right And I think I think it was Kyung that said that again We we see what people do We don't see why they do what they do Vin it's been uh such a joy talking to you man You are you're brilliant You're you're not just a brilliant communicator You've got a great heart too And it comes across in the way you want to help people and see them grow and and the amount that you've thought through the challenges the trip ups the all the blocks that we run into man It's it's really beautiful and I really thank you and commend you for your amazing work and it's uh it's very special So thank you man Jay thank you for giving me the opportunity I I'm from Adelaide South Australia I I never thought that I'd ever be able to connect with you in person and hang out with you Jay This is this is unreal Thank you for the opportunity No I'm a fan so it's easy Uh we end every episode of On Purpose with a final five These have to be answered in one word to one sentence maximum Are you serious Yeah So you can't This is my kryptonite So you can't You can't You can't Yeah I'll probably break it for you because you're such a good explainer Sure Sure I'll let you do it No no no no I won't I'm going to try to stick to Hey rules are rules Rules are rules The first question what's the best piece of communication advice you've ever heard or received Your voice is an instrument Play all of the songs that are trapped within you Don't die with all your music trapped inside That was a great sentence It's a long sentence It's a great sentence Long sentences are fine Uh second question What's the worst communication advice you've ever heard received or given If you're nervous just look over their heads I was literally given that advice What What are you meant You can expand What are you meant to do Well well again you want to look at people Look at them in the eyes because the advice was look over their heads they won't be able to tell And this was my first piece of advice I was given when I was going on stage And I started looking over people's heads and it just looked like I was arrogant right Cuz I was like "Oh hey everyone Good to see you." And I wasn't looking them in the eyes Terrible And also you get no feedback You have no energetic exchange You don't have a clue Yeah Well the worst thing is it's that and then you look like an arrogant person Arrogant Yeah that's interesting I never thought about that All right Uh question number three on that point Why does our body and our hands shake when we're nervous is the excess adrenaline and you have the remedy to that in this episode already Star jumps I love it Uh question number four What's something that you used to believe was true about communication but not anymore That I was stuck with the sound of my voice It's just a series of behaviors If you change the behaviors you change the sound Example when I told my dad I wanted to leave accounting to become a magician I remember what he said He said "What in the hell you want to be to Harry Potter?" Literally what he said to me "I just changed the way I moved my mouth I just changed a series of behaviors I changed the sound I was able to create It's just behaviors." Walk me through that conversation Yeah So my my mom and dad are refugees from Vietnam and they're they cling to safety and security because of fear and they've known fear all of their lives So I remember coming home saying to mom and dad I said "Mom dad I I really want to quit university." And obviously they wanted me to fulfill the Asian prophecy obviously Same with your parents I'm sure I had this really heart-to-he heart conversation with them where I said "Mom dad you why did you escape the war Why?" And they said "We escaped because we want to find a better home for you." I'm like "Yeah yeah but why why was Vietnam at the time not a good home Why is Australia a better home?" And they said "Freedom." And I said "Oh great So so you you made the made the decision to to flee to Australia for freedom Then do you want to force me into a career that's going to create misery for me Is Is that what you want?" And I know why you're doing this Because of love Mom and and Dad because you're you're you're so afraid But we're not in Vietnam anymore We're in Australia and we're free And I know that the reason you came here is to give me the freedom to do what I love And I was able to wake them up from fear and remember the main reason why they came here in the first place because their lives were driven by fear of not enough of we're in danger And they they still carried all of that fear They didn't realize it And when I woke them up to that it was such a beautiful conversation because it was almost like my parents were reminded They're like "No no thank you for reminding us We've been so driven by fear our entire lives." Cuz I said to them I did work experience at an accounting firm and dad do you know what they all do on a Friday night They go drinking because they're drowning their sorrows in something they don't like And I'm sure people love accounting It's just where I do work experience They didn't love it They dread it every day right And I said "That's me That's going to be me That that's the path I'm walking So I already know that's not the path you And then the most beautiful thing my dad said to me after realizing all of this is he goes "You still owe me one thing though boy In this life you have to jump as high as you can And as long as I'm alive I'll forever be your net." Wow And I needed that net a lot of times Oh yeah I tested that net many times And and I I I share this now in a long answer because Jay I'm sitting here having achieved the things I've achieved because of my mom and my dad without that net without their support without their love without their guidance I wouldn't be here I wouldn't have been able to do this And I think this is true for those listening too You would not be where you are if it wasn't for whether it's the families we choose or the families were born into Mhm If it wasn't for them we we would not be who we are We would not be where we are They must be really proud now Yeah They they they still And then you quit magic The first time my dad came and saw me speak at the end of it the funniest thing he comes up to me he goes "They they they pay you for this?" And he was so mindblown because he goes cuz I wouldn't He just he was so shocked He couldn't believe that they he couldn't believe it was a thing He couldn't believe that professional speaking was a career path So but it's so beautiful to see their mind open up And and then the most beautiful thing my dad said to me recently this was maybe in the last 5 years where he he came up to me and he said "Thanks for not giving up on me." Because because there was a lot of conversations at the time in many different Vietnamese families where the kids would give up on their parents where it would be like "You know what If you're not supporting me stuff you I'm out." Whereas I I I I really didn't give up on my parents I I remember my first magic gig I did and I made like 1,500 bucks for performing for an hour This was like outrageous This is a week's worth of work right And I bought home the cash and I was like "Dad look I I got this in an hour." And I celebrated that moment with him I made him a part of that because I knew that I had to slowly show him what's possible I couldn't all of a sudden go "Dad refugee been through the war." And immediately say "Magician." To him it's like "What the freak is that That doesn't make sense." But as I slowly shared my wins with him on my journey I was able to open my dad's mind So my dad got to be a part of the journey with me and my mom And when he thanked me for that it was one of the sweetest moments because you could have very easily gave up on me And now we have this beautiful relationship and it's one of my most important relationships Yeah that's beautiful man Thank you for sharing that That counts as one word No no no I wanted I wanted to hear it I wanted to uh fifth and final question We ask this to every guest who's ever been on the show If you could create one law that everyone in the world had to follow what would it be Use your instrument to spread more love kindness and compassion Vin Jiang thank you so much Uh such an honor having you here I hope we get to do this many many more times together Thank you Jay Uh if all of you are listening and watching if you don't already follow Vin on social media We will put all the links in the comments Go and follow him across Tik Tok Instagram all platforms Uh I really hope that this episode makes you a better communicator to your partner your parents in your profession in all areas of your life It's such a key skill that's needed And I would love to see on Instagram and Tik Tok the clips the moments the parts that really stood out to you tag us both so we can see what you're practicing If you do a video of yourself every day and start posting or practicing tag us in it I want to see it I really really want to see it I really really want to see it It would be so awesome I'd love to be able to interact with you all and see how much you've grown from it And again Vin I you are welcome back to OnPurpose anytime you want So I hope you'll come back and uh we'll see you again 100% Thank you man Cheers brother Thank you If you love this episode you'll love my interview with Dr Gab Mate on understanding your trauma and how to heal emotional wounds to start moving on from the past Everything in nature grows only where it's vulnerable So a tree doesn't grow where it's hard and thick does it It goes where it's soft and green and vulnerable