Welcome to the Gavin Meenan Podcast; where I'll share the strategies and principles to help you become a more confident and resilient man in the 21st Century!
[MUSIC PLAYING]
James McCauley.
How's it going?
Very good, my man.
Delighted to have you in
the podcast here finally.
Good to be here.
For any of you who
don't know, myself and James
met a few months ago.
And some of you may have seen me doing
some breathwork on men
during my weekend retreats.
And all this is
happening thanks to James,
because I went to his
course a few months ago.
And he's given me a lot
of skills and strategies
to help me personally
uncover some of my underlying
difficulties, but also
to bring this to the men
and help them process their emotions.
So thank you for that
before I start, James.
That's good.
Look, I still watch your Instagram story.
We were just talking
about this before I started.
I watch your stories
with great satisfaction
when I see some pictures and stuff.
When you've got your hand--
I call it grabbing.
When you've got your hands on a man
and you're helping release anything,
look, we're evolving.
Slowly but surely, I had
two men in the training
there this weekend.
And Keith Dixon, who's a
coach and another guy, Aaron.
And there's 36 people.
There's largely women at these trainings.
It's increasing percentage there.
And it's so satisfying to see
another man willing just to--
and Aaron volunteers,
I'll get on Keith there.
And Keith is, I'll get on Aaron.
I'll get on Keith.
I need a hat or hammering.
And I was thinking, jeez, I
never thought I'd see that.
You told me like 10 years ago, you'd
be coaching men to grab other men
and to release a deep-seated trauma.
People are listening to
us going, what the fuck?
Where are these guys
going with this conversation?
Yeah, yeah.
Grabbing men, going deep, what the fuck?
Yeah, yeah.
But it's-- yeah, again,
it's amazing what I've
witnessed doing this breath work with men
and how they've been able
to release their own process
motions and just
unlocking that and to watch
the incredible fucking
relief that they feel afterwards.
Most of them not even
knowing that they've
been carrying this with
them for so many years
until you go deeper than--
can you give us a bit of an insight
in terms of what happens in that process
on a biological level?
Yeah, I can.
That's what I do, isn't it?
So largely, although there
are many names for the type
of breath work that we use-- we use
transformational breath work or
holotropic or rebirthing--
it's controlled hyperventilation.
Hyperventilation lowers the
level of CO2 in your blood,
changes the level of pH, and along
with all the hormones that
are released because you're
activating the
sympathetic nervous system,
you change the way the
blood flows to your brain.
So it stops flowing
to your frontal cortex.
It's called transient
hypofrontality, a fancy word.
And it goes to your limbic
system, not a fancy word.
That's where your memories and your
emotions are stored.
And so you shut down the monkey mind,
if you want to call it that, and you
activate your feelings.
And essentially, you
connect with your body.
So what happens with a lot of people,
and particularly men, but in our society,
is that we shut down our
connection with our body
and with our
emotions, and we repress them.
And our rational mind is
kind of there, overactive.
Protecting us from that.
Protecting us from knowing that.
And people when they're
doing the breath work,
it's like, I suddenly felt pain here.
It's not that you
suddenly felt the pain there.
That pain was there all along, but you
decided your nervous system
decided it doesn't serve me
to feel that anymore.
And so it's like a bomb of hormones
going off with this activation of the
limbic system, which
leads to some of these
releases and experiences, which
are wide ranging and
different for everybody.
And you could go through
this experience numerous times,
and every single experience would be
completely different,
because you've
deactivated an energy source where
there was pain stored.
Yeah.
I mean, first of all,
you're always a different person.
Every time you go back
in a different context.
But also, what I find happens-- and you
would have seen this
as well in the training session--
let's say you're
carrying around a lot of emotion
on a certain idea or memory
or in a part of your body,
and you release that, and
you cry, and you scream,
and it's gone.
And oftentimes, either
during the journey itself
or the second time someone has a journey,
they'll go back, and
they'll go back to that,
send a base pecking to
cry and roar and scream,
and they'll go back to the same scene,
and they'll see the
same scene, and then laugh.
That's one of the most
beautiful things, actually,
when someone cries, cries,
and then they start laughing,
because what held such
emotional charge for you?
You look at it and go, geez,
why was I so worried about that
thing?
That's just gone.
And so you're releasing
things, and it's always
a different trip every time,
and it's different depending
on the context of what you're feeling,
but releasing those charges
little by little or sometimes
a lot at the same time, it's very
satisfying as a facilitator
to be involved in that.
I mean, I was talking to--
I had this online course.
I was talking to my students yesterday,
and they were talking
about feeling the ego of being
the breath worker,
because you have this like--
Oh, yeah, I'm the breath worker.
Godlike concept.
Yeah, exactly.
And there is an ego element because
there's so much dopamine
being released, but I refrained a little
bit and say that it's
just satisfying to be
involved in something
that you can see the results of that
energetically unfolding
in front of you, and the person comes
back to you and says,
things like, I looked
at myself in the mirror,
and I saw me again.
I guess I get things thinking about it,
because I get that kind of thing a lot.
And facilitators, you'll
have had a conversation
with the guys you're
working with, things like that,
people reaching out and
saying, that was unbelievable.
Thank you very much.
And I don't think it's so much ego.
It's just a sense of
agency going, thank God,
I can actually do something useful,
because it's good to talk, as we know.
And therapy is good in all these things.
But having such a powerful
tool and being involved in it,
it's just really satisfying.
Do you sort of undermine
therapy or talk therapy
when you have this strategy that you feel
is a lot more powerful,
or does therapy you feel
play a part in the grand scheme
of things?
I have quite a few
therapists on my training courses,
on both the online
course and the weekend course.
And I asked them this as well.
And I think it's very
complementary overall,
because you have a
tool to release emotions,
but stuff comes up.
And that stuff can be
processed on a somatic level,
but also needs to be
processed surrebrity, right?
It needs to be talked out, understood.
And so I think
they're very complementary.
I think that you release--
you've talked to someone
who doesn't understand,
doesn't have their emotions so repressed.
You're going, I'm fine.
I'm grand.
Then they release this,
and you can't escape the fact
that, oh, there is stuff there, because I
was crying and roaring
my eyes out, and stuff comes up.
And so it opens up, I think, portals
to make the therapy session more
valuable, more useful,
and more insightful.
That's what I like to think of it.
Now, a lot of the
therapists who take my course
will say, geez, James, none of my clients
want to do therapy anymore.
They just want to do the breath work now.
But I think it's very important to have--
it's not that you're going to be
transformational in breath work
every day of the week, is it?
You come, and let's say,
with your weekend warrior,
you do it in a ritual setting.
It's symbolic.
It's done in a group.
It's an important thing.
And then that releases--
and then there's obviously
a need for an
integration process, for follow-up,
for community, for taking forward steps
towards a better version
of yourself.
And that's when therapy and
all the other modalities step in.
It's just a powerful thing
for opening up and making
the rest more useful, I would say.
Yeah, almost as though talk therapy
can bring you to a certain level where
you then hit a ceiling,
but you know there's something more in
there to be accessed.
And then the breath
work can open that up.
And then as it opens that up, it opens up
something more for you
then to process through therapy or talk.
Exactly.
Because it's also very
confusing, I'd imagine,
for a lot of people who
go through breath work,
and then something opens up
there that they weren't even
aware of.
And as maybe relieving or
as satisfying as it may feel,
especially at the beginning, there's also
a sense of confusion
in terms of, oh, fuck, I
haven't dealt with this properly.
This has been a pain in my life.
And this is deep.
And this is-- exactly.
You open up a portal into
themselves, and they go,
all right, that's massive.
That's a thing I can't ignore anymore.
Like, I will do that.
That's something I need to deal with.
And yeah, it can be bewildering.
And even-- it doesn't necessarily always
need to be a huge transformational breath
recession to do that.
Sometimes just having
somebody sit and bringing awareness
to their breath can open up a bunch of
stuff as they connect.
We call it inter-reception, right?
Just connecting with
your internal bodily signals
can also be an unsettling process,
because you realize, shit,
my breath is up in my chest.
My hands are shaking.
I've got a lot of tightness
around here, here, and here.
And so oftentimes, I
think sometimes even the more
intimate one-on-one, just
basic breath work coaching
can be almost as powerful as
these huge explosive things,
because you're working
with subtleties as well there.
And again, those need to be untangled.
I have this online course.
And we finished eight
weeks with the course.
And obviously, in this
course, the facilitator
is doing a lot of breath work, and they
have a practice line.
But then, feel like,
week seven, yesterday, I
sat down and did a breath work.
I felt a whole bunch of crap inside me
that I did have thought I was over.
And I was like,
there's nothing you can hide.
Yeah, you can't hide from this shit.
You can't hide from it.
And you're unraveling
bits, and your nervous system
is adjusting and
playing catch up with itself.
And so it's an ongoing process.
But you really are
confronting reality in that sense.
You're learning how to first sense
reality, and go, OK,
if you don't know what
your inner world is like,
then what's the point
in picking a direction
and moving towards it?
And so becoming
friends, I used to think--
I used to say this,
master your nervous system.
Now I think of it,
befriend your nervous system.
How does it go on fuck today?
Let's go for a walk there.
We'll do breath work tomorrow.
You know, you're going to
do fucking breath work today.
And so I think, in general--
and you'll have seen this as well--
there's, I think, in this
whole wellness industry as well,
and particularly in male world, there's
a softening in the way
of the language we're
using towards
ourselves, and towards others,
and towards this hyper efficiency.
I'm going to kill it.
I'm going to slay it.
I'm going to master it.
It's like, all right, maybe
just take it for a cup of tea.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Avoiding.
Well, seeking is avoiding.
So often, for men
especially, we're seeking--
seeking the next
challenge, seeking the next job,
seeking the next
paycheck, seeking the next woman,
seeking the next beer,
and avoiding ourselves.
But I feel the breath work
brings all that attention
towards ourselves.
And then you begin to
realize, oh, fuck, OK,
this is why I'm running away from myself.
Because it is an
opportunity, as I see it,
through these weekends.
And as you see it yourself, of course,
when you're going through
that breath work practice,
you are by yourself, with yourself, 100%.
And of course, that's made sound
overwhelming to some people,
or scary for some people.
But of course, you've got someone
there who's guiding you
through this process and looking
after you.
Yeah, I would say you are--
I think of it more like this step.
And this is why the group
breath works are so useful,
is that the facilitator and
the other people in that room
are in a sense, they're
almost donating their energy
and their nervous
systems to your experience.
So you're by yourself
voyaging inside yourself,
but you're propelled by the
power of all the other energies
around you.
And I think--
I often think as a
breath work facilitator,
and as a coach and things, you're
donating your nervous system
to somebody.
You're saying, here, you need to go deep.
I have some spare capacity right now.
And I'll give you some of this.
And that'll be a rocket fuel
to go deeper inside of yourself.
And that's why when you
finish the breath work session,
even as a facilitator, you're like,
they'll be wrecked,
but you'll be wrecked.
Yeah.
Give me that back.
Fucking exhausting.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It is exhausting.
So to sort of part that for
the moment in terms of what's
happening right now and
how all the good work you do
at the moment and the breath work,
how did you find this place?
Or how did this place find you?
How did the breath
work find you and become
a massive part of your life?
I think it's a classic one.
In many senses, it's a classic one.
I had a couple of advantages.
So 15 or 13.
13, you start drinking.
There you go.
13.
So I would say that I
was quite a bookworm,
hit 13, 14, started
drinking, drinking, drinking.
That took over.
You were a bookworm up until 13?
Yeah.
OK.
I was kind of reclusive just
reading a lot, reading a lot,
reading a lot.
Those were me enjoying
the social interactions.
Big into school, or were you--
Not school, per se.
I was usually intellectually driven.
Now when I look back on it, I think
that intellectual curiosity was almost
like an escape for me
to escape maybe some emotional stuff that
I wasn't able to deal
with or wasn't feeling belong, or
connected in some ways.
And I escaped into my
mind and into my imagination.
OK.
I'm not saying it.
Small talk is awful.
Yes.
Indeed.
I hear.
Yeah.
Just in the way most people are escaping
through their screens
today, you're escaping through books.
Yeah.
But there was a curiosity
underlying that as well.
But at the same time, yeah.
Then I found alcohol.
That drove everything until I was 22.
Everyone says I was drinking, but I
flipped off the bridge in N.
Escorti when I was 15, 16 maybe.
First my kidney.
Flipped off the bridge.
I was sitting on a
bridge eating a bag of chips.
Drunk.
Mine drunk on vodka.
And I actually fell off the bridge.
My friends dragged me home.
You fell off a bridge?
What are we talking about?
In N. Escorti bridge.
How do you say it?
In N. Escorti.
The old bridge in N. Escorti.
It's high.
Right.
It's high, but I landed on the bank.
And--
Fuck.
My friends dragged me home.
And I woke up in the morning.
This is one story of
many, but I like this one.
And I come out, and I look around,
and I see that there's literally like--
it was like a murder show or something.
I had-- there was a palm of
blood running up the walls.
I made myself.
And I go, how am I going to
clean that before mom and dad
wake up?
I go to the bathroom.
I'm peeing blood.
And I go, I'm not
getting away with this one.
And I go into my parents.
And they're like, oh, shit.
I think I fell off a
bridge in N. Escorti.
The boys dragged me home
like a kilometer and a half out
to the cloud house.
No one ever told me then to stop
drinking, by the way.
You know what I mean?
And I had multiple-- a factory room
just got a little bit of it.
I jumped out of a moving taxi.
I fell in.
All in your teen years?
All up until about 22.
It was wild.
Was this an addiction to alcohol,
if you look back at it?
Yeah, I would say.
I mean, it's more than just--
it's similar to like--
once you start to cancel out.
But I wanted to do it.
I wanted to drive.
And probably, it was bored out of my mind
of the normal types of
conversation you have.
But yeah, running my family now.
Interesting.
Yeah, yeah.
That was quite similar to my own.
Alcohol journey.
Once I stop, I don't
give a fuck what happens.
I'm just going to drink
until whatever the fuck.
Till 8 AM and you all by yourself
wander around some random city in Asia.
Yeah. Oh, fuck yeah, yeah.
In Asia, yeah.
How did I get to Asia?
[LAUGHTER]
And so then one day, I was 22.
And I was living in Taipei.
My brothers all live
in Taiwan for reasons
that go down this couple of days.
So I moved to Taiwan for
a year, drank like crazy.
I have two older brothers.
And we're all living in
Taiwan, teaching kindergarten.
So we're going to have to run
away off of a mission route.
That's what you did after school?
After school, yeah.
And when I finished, I went off.
Because you had a desire to travel?
Oh, yeah.
Can we all stay again?
Yeah, well, I dropped out
of university when I was 18.
Because I was studying
engineer and I ended up
moving to Boston for somewhere.
I was always traveling.
So doing demolition and stuff.
Loads of stories there of me
vomiting on walls and things.
Lovely.
[LAUGHTER]
Anyway, I was teaching English in--
in a school in Taipei,
which is capital of Taiwan.
And I went out drinking.
I spent the whole day drinking and went
into work the next day
still from the night
before, wearing the same clothes.
Taught six hours of private glasses.
And then the very
last glass, I fell asleep
in front of this tiny little old
Taiwanese lady, you know?
Like just-- and it was a glass office.
So everyone could see that.
I was just falling asleep.
And when I woke up from that,
I went, OK, I think this is--
this is the thing.
And they said, themselves,
I'll take 30 days off drinking.
Just--
30 days.
Just an idea.
And there was a
website called 30sleeps.com.
Thank you very much,
30sleeps, if you're still there.
Because that was--
that was the beginning.
Took that off.
And I said, right.
All I have to do for the
next 30 days is not drink.
And you know the way
you're old when you're drinking.
You're always trying to fix,
I want to-- you want to be--
better friend.
You want to be fitter.
You want to save money.
You want to do all that thing.
But doesn't matter if
fuck, because you're drinking.
So all the shit goes out the window.
And after 30 days, I
realized all the other elements
of my life have just
improved so dramatically.
I said, all right,
I'll do another 30 days.
And I was out of my context as well.
I was out of the Irish
context that says you have to drink.
I'm just some random white guy in Asia.
So I was just reinventing myself.
And so-- and then I went into--
I was going to this gym every day.
And in Taipei, I remember really well.
And one day I was walking
in, I looked into the gym,
and I just saw a classically just
strangely jacked Asian men
and some whiteys around.
I said, you don't want to go in here.
But I know I have to
go to get my dopamine.
And then I heard this like,
man, this floaty soft music.
And I wandered over.
I looked in the mirror.
And sometimes they're not
the greatest motivations.
But I looked in the
mirror, and there was about 25
beautiful Asian women all
stretching around in the room.
And I went, fuck it.
And I just opened the door.
What's going on in here?
And the lady came over.
And she said, this is yoga.
And I was like, can I try?
She said, yeah.
She said, no, we're just
going to do really simple.
Touch your toes.
And so I went to touch my toes.
And I stopped at this kind of angle.
And she went, no, no.
And she came around to my back.
And she put her hands on my back.
And she went, I could
hear a wobble about something
in Chinese.
And I was like, what's
wrong with your back?
And I was like, I've been
playing rugby for years.
I couldn't bet.
And I was probably stressed
out of my mind and all sorts.
Maybe that time you
fucking fell off the bridge.
I get a hold of the back.
It was like that.
And so I spent kind of five months
then in this class, I
got three times a week,
with all these girls.
I was so inflexible that
they would build little castles
and contraptions.
All the blocks there and the
blankets and pulley systems.
So everyone else would be
folded over in a pancake.
And I'd be there like this.
I was not going to dare
and even go, good boy.
And I was like, they're pumped.
And they--
Being mothered.
Being mothered.
But the breathing in that--
she was really big on that.
You're like, slow down your breathing.
Slow down your breathing.
And I kind of thought that
was-- I just looked at it.
Holy fuck.
I feel.
I feel.
I was in my body.
I was stuck at that for years.
The other thing that happened was when
I was in Taiwan that first year, I
had an operation on my vocal cords
because I had a vocal polyp.
You heard those?
No.
Basically, I was singing in a rock band,
teaching kindergarten, smoking
cigarettes, drinking beer,
and I'm a loud fucker anyway.
And so I developed a polyp.
We were singing-- we were
recording an album in Taiwan.
My brother and his band were in the
idiots, it was called.
The Idiots.
The Idiots.
Your band was called The Idiots.
Yeah.
We used to tour--
I was fun.
That was the first of the while.
But we used to tour around
the little shows and stuff.
They were all right.
But I wasn't all right.
Everyone else was decent musicians.
I was writing and singing.
I was good.
And they cut off the vocal polyp when
I was in Taipei at the same time as I was
doing this yoga course.
They cut that off, and then I couldn't
speak for three weeks.
So I had to stop working.
I was working third or four
months into the yoga thing.
So I couldn't talk for three weeks.
And they also gave me breath
rehabilitation classes
for eight weeks because the
Taiwanese medical system is
amazing.
And so they taught me how to breathe
and how to speak and how
to sing using my diaphragm.
And so this with the yoga was like--
All just fun to play.
All just fun, I guess.
After everything being like this forever,
it was like, OK, it's difficult.
Not easy now.
It's not easy going in and
breathing and doing stretching
and being the useless one.
But it's a lot easier
than what I have been doing.
Parking your ego.
And also, again, being
free of all these things.
Because this is 19 years ago.
This has been 18 years ago.
And so there was no
Irishman doing yoga 18 years ago.
No chance in Ireland at doing that.
But there it was, free from
these kind of cultural identities
and these different things.
But I was still struggling because you
rely on your identity.
You rely on how do you get your release?
How do you talk to people?
I didn't know how to do anything.
I didn't know how to
talk to anyone anymore.
Because you didn't have alcohol to--
You didn't have alcohol
in my whole social system.
I've been bent on that forever.
So it was largely just
reclusive going to yoga.
And then one day I was sitting in a cafe
and the guy had a book.
And they said, NLP on it.
And I said, what's that?
I said, it's a way of
reframing your mindset.
And I went, would it work for alcohol?
And he went, yeah, probably.
Let's give it a go.
Went over to his place.
And he did something
called future sourcing.
And future sourcing is where you
visualize two future versions
of yourself.
One version I visualized
of the drinking version.
And one version was made
the non-drinking version.
And you look back over
your life from 60 years.
You look down at your body and you
viscerally feel what it's like to be
drinking James at 65.
No money, shitty relationships, fat.
No realities.
Fat as fuck if you're still alive,
which I doubt I would have.
And my sister always
says, it's mercury life.
And then the second one is
James, non-drinking James,
fit as fuck, sticks with the yoga,
probably had some hard moments as well,
had to go through it,
whatever, looks back.
Maybe he has a family, who knows?
And he said, now take that
information back from you.
That was the end of drinking.
And that shifted everything for me.
Because it gave me a meaning.
It gave me something to move towards.
It gave me a visceral
feeling, a connection with it.
And it reminded me of the
power of the imagination.
So that was kind of--
from then on, I just went
on exploring, exploring,
exploring all that.
NLP, hypnosis, the
physical stuff, all that stuff.
What about the social game?
Social game, to be honest?
Not great.
In the sense of, as a drinker, you
used to have lots of friends
and have a big group of people
around you.
And so it took me a
long time to just accept
that you're always going to have a
smaller group of friends
if you're not using the
substances to get you there.
And so when I say not great, I mean,
it's just there's a part of me that says,
I miss the days when I could
just be in a big group of people
and party in a way.
Just bounce off each other.
But then I have these
weekends of training,
and they're way more
mental than ending the week.
You know what I mean?
So that's shifted for me.
And I think about this a lot.
So you can think about
things like porn and social media
and violent movies or
these different things.
They're kind of like bams that you
put over something that
needs to be addressed.
And you use porn to go, I don't need
a meaningful sexual relationship.
You use social media, I
don't need friendships.
And so you just get enough to keep you--
Text that box.
Kick that box, and you
just keep going like that.
And you think, I'll
just keep going like that.
But you don't keep going like that.
You go like this.
Yeah, dipping.
Dipping.
And so whereas if you
don't put those things on,
there's no plaster, there's
no bandaid, there's no cam,
you can't ignore that that is something
you have to address.
You don't have social
media, and you're sitting alone
in your room.
You're sitting alone in your room,
and you're a lonely person.
And so maybe you wouldn't
go out and deal with that.
And so even on the social level,
I suppose the work that I do
now fulfills such a huge part
of having-- it's meaningful,
it's real, it's raw as fuck.
And I was thinking about
even talking to my online group
there, you know?
I finished the first
online cohort yesterday,
and I started another one today.
I love those calls.
Because people-- I
set the tone very clear.
Hey, guys, I don't want any fucking--
oh, my god, here, that'll--
it's going to be an ego thing.
Let's not share it.
Let's be as honest as
possible and be open about it.
No small talk about it.
No small-- you can have it.
It's hard to make a joke, but like--
And so I have a guy, Fergus,
who's on the online program.
Actually, I was down at Ferry character,
and he came into Ferry character hotel
and then scored a complete--
I mean, it's just not the day before.
And he's like, Jesus, James,
sometimes when I run these--
not me, he said to everybody in the
group, there was 12 of us,
and he said, I can feel my ego.
I feel like it's not.
It's great that people share that,
though, just to admit it,
and go, OK, now, guys--
Own it.
That's a real thing.
That's a real thing we
have to do, but that happens.
And so those are real--
that's real.
I hope that people are going, guys,
I look forward to those calls.
Because they're real calls, and people
who are pushing their
boundaries were like--
they did my first transformational,
but I got scared, or I got nervous,
so I wondered what she was thinking.
They're the things that
I always wanted people
to be talking about when I was a kid.
I was like, what the fuck
are we talking about here?
It's in all sense.
Give me more fucking alcohol.
Give me some more alcohol.
Exactly.
Or give you some more alcohol.
Maybe it'll say something real.
So I can not mess up from
this boring conversation.
Yeah.
And so I think you never know how long
that timeline is going
to be, because I don't--
I have friends.
I have meaningful relationships, but also
because of the lifestyle
I've had.
They're scattered around the world.
I've got one in Austria.
I go on New Zealand.
I've got one over here, one over there.
So it's hard for me
to find that community.
But then when I look around, I look at
the weekends I'm having,
I'm doing a training with that.
That is my community.
And I wasn't big--
community was never a word
I thought I'd be preaching.
I was more the loner in the hills,
but now I see it as like when you find
some meaningful work
and you share it with
people, that's community.
Yeah, it is a big
transition from the kid who
spent a lot of time on
his own reading books,
being this guy in a room full of people.
In Ireland as well, those are the things.
A few people say, one
thing doing this work,
you're often in Spain or you're out in
Beijing or any space.
It's very different to bring it home
and to be there with your kin, as it
were, and sharing it.
And to be real and raw
and honest in this country.
Real and raw and honest, yeah.
Yeah, it's been-- honestly, yeah.
It's been really--
You find it more challenging
in this country, obviously.
I thought I would.
I thought I would.
But you get more pushback.
You get more criticism or
death stares thrown toward you.
Do you know--
This is an interesting one for me.
Because again, you are
very outgoing person.
You do have a high level of energy.
In this sense, so this
is slightly different.
Yeah.
I remember a few years ago, I came home.
And I used to dress like all sorts.
I remember I came home a few years ago
and I was walking down my block.
And I was doing--
I dance when I'm walking sometimes.
I do a whole lot of weird stuff.
But I was dancing.
This is my music.
And I heard teenage voices on a bike.
And the freeze instinct kicked in.
You know, I said, oh, fucking teenagers.
And I went, no.
So those types of things are still there.
And they still flash through me.
Those types of things when
I'm out and about in Ireland.
But I've kind of outgrown
it lately at this point.
It's a massive thing, man.
Because the work they
do is real, you know?
Because there's no--
if I was just some
fella, if I want just some--
my work was just about
making myself look cool and going,
yeah, yeah, yeah.
Then I wouldn't be all right with myself.
Yeah, of course.
But because I'm there in
the trenches, in a sense,
when there's real people going, I'm
going, no, this is real.
This is stuff.
There's definitely stuff here.
No doubt about it.
And the thing I find about
Irish people, a couple of things.
But we're great.
Once the general
consensus shifts that something
needs to shift, then it moves.
You think about abortion or gay marriage
or any of these kind
of things, no, no, no, no, no.
51% of people believe, yeah.
Then they've got a grandeur.
Same with emotional release
or the need to talk therapy.
When I started doing this a couple of
years ago in Ireland,
I thought, geez, they're
not going to go for this.
I was way wrong about that.
They're loving it.
They just need-- they and we.
You need permission.
You need a platform.
You need a structure.
And you say, here,
this is what we're doing.
36 people have trained
this weekend in my mind.
And some people have never touched
another body before,
other than their significant other.
I've had a few people saying that to me.
But you give them two.
Within two hours, you have someone
sitting on someone's
chest banging on their head,
but you're holding them as they cry.
And they're all delighted
that they got the opportunity.
And so I actually think Ireland is still
such a strange place,
because we use stoicism and humor.
Those are our two
weapons, or two defense.
I'll be grand.
Protective mechanisms.
Well, and they're actually still great.
They're great mechanisms.
If you can give
access to some deeper stuff
and some sharing there,
people will go for it,
because they're aware we're not done.
At a certain point, you go,
look, this needs to be done.
You feel the shift
then, so in terms of people
dissolving the shame to
go deeper within the pain?
Yeah, I think so.
And I think I see kind of these acts--
but my similar act, and
probably an act that you've been on
as well, that you have the
sensitivity and the shame,
then you find some sort
of substance or some sort
of addiction that covers that up.
Then you might shift out of that.
In the first place, you
started with your body,
and you start working out, and you
started eating well.
And you say, OK, I'm getting better.
This makes sense.
And you get to a certain point with it.
Then there are two potentials.
One, you just double down on your body,
and you become obsessed with it.
It becomes your identity.
It becomes your identity, and it turns
into a version of the other thing.
Because you received so
much validation and praise
and respect.
And because it got you so
far, and then you keep pushing
and trying to do another
push-up or another pull-up
and trying to get another 1% on.
But the marginal value, and
it's like the additional value
you get after a certain
point from getting fitter
isn't there.
In fact, it turns around
and bites you in the ass
because you become this
obsessive motherfucker
that no one's spent time
with because you're painful.
And I've been that guy
as well, for a while.
And then I think maybe there's a shift,
like an intellectual
shift, where you start exploring
some different things.
And then I think ultimately,
you're led to this, all right.
There's an emotional world in there that
has to be dealt with.
There's a community
element of that as well
that has to be dealt with.
I need that sense of connection,
and I need to understand myself, and I
want to connect with
myself and with other people.
But it's not as easy to go and do that.
It's not like I can look up
a YouTube video and it says,
here's how you deal with your emotions.
You're not going anywhere with that.
That's why this sense of
community is so important.
You feel safe.
And you have to feel safe.
And people have to be present.
And there's a lot of
what I teach in the courses
about how to make people feel safe,
how to show you're present.
And then to kind of push
people or to guide them
into feeling it, I call
it courageous curiosity.
Just be curious and fuck with that.
I have moments here
in Ireland, by the way,
that I can avoid all sorts of shit
when I'm traveling around
and running my workshops.
And then I come back to
Ireland and I go, oh, there it is.
He's over there.
The voice or little fragment
or a memory from me, oh, yeah.
Comes back.
Comes back.
But I think Irish people are great once
they grasp something
that this is important.
And they're great fun,
like great community,
like really just good
people to be around.
We're definitely missing that.
Yeah. Yeah, we've lost it.
But it's there still.
It's in our nature.
You know, I've been
running these weekend trains
and they've been amazing.
And I'm blown away.
And there's no bullshit here.
I'm blown away what
fucking good people they are
and how decent they are and
how open to stuff they are
and how much they're ready for it.
And so it's been, for me, it's just huge.
I think I'm on a motile level.
I was talking about this yesterday.
I was driving back.
I was like, oh my God, I actually have.
I have a community that
is based on the values
that I find important and interesting.
And we have really
meaningful conversations.
There was a girl there on the last call.
We had the call.
I was there visiting
my sister in Kilkenny.
We had the last call
of the online program.
And it was really nice, you know.
And I drove back down from Kilkenny
and one of the girls just
sent me a message saying,
"Hey, you know, after that training,
"I was driving home and I
was full of bliss and love out.
"You know, I was
feeling what a great life.
"And then I saw my
neighbor and I knew his dad
"or his family member
had passed recently,
"you know, like two days ago.
"So I pulled over and I
just gave him a big hug
"and I send him all, I get insurance now,
"I send him all the energy I
collected from the weekend.
"And he said, you know, you must have
come out of the heavens
"to give me the hug
because I can feel all this,
"I can feel such love in
that hug, he said, you know."
I started crying.
Wow.
I'd drink better.
I drive me man's car down from Kilkenny
to go home to me folks, you know.
Start crying and I go like, and you know,
I went, "Brilliant."
Trust the power of it.
Brilliant, I'm
crying, thank fuck for that.
Yeah.
You know, like, because
how often you cry, you know?
Yeah, of course.
Like, something comes like that.
And so look, I could say so many things,
but like Ireland is fucking
great, ready for this shit.
And you know, you don't
find yourself, you know,
take these men away for these weekends.
But I said, "Thank you very much, please,
"I need some of that."
That's an amazing
shift culturally as well,
that that's-
For men especially.
For men, yeah, for men.
How do you compare it then in terms of,
I mean, you do a lot of
traveling around the world,
in terms of where we're at
as a culture, as a society,
as a society that's willing to heal,
that's willing to open up
compared to some of these other
places that you've visited?
Look, I remember when I
first ran my first session,
because I avoided
Ireland with this stuff,
do you know what I mean?
I was like, "Well, I don't
know if I'm gonna do this now."
Because also for me,
it's touching on stuff.
And I ran my first session down in the
Ferry Carrick Hotel.
Hi, Lina, she's amazing.
She runs the center down there.
And I was like, "All right, let's do it."
We sat in a group and we've been kind of
14, 15 people there.
And one of the things you
do, top tip for facilitators,
at the start of a session,
you want to set the tone.
I want to set the tone, A,
that this is a safe place,
and B, I don't want any
bullshit, just give me,
we're all, we all got that shit.
And I know probably,
and you know as well,
because people who come to your trains,
they'll probably tell
you, "Hey, by the way,
this thing has happened for me.
Is it okay if we come to the train?"
And so like, I get the
full download of what,
and everybody's going through shit.
Everybody's got something going on.
And so what you do is you pick one person
who you think looks
like they'd be honest,
and set the tone and
say, "All right guys,
now I'm just going to go around.
And I'm going to ask you, is there
anything in your life
that you'd really like to just let go of?
If you had a magic
wand, what would you change?
Or something you want to
just share with the group?
This is safe.
You don't have to, it
doesn't have to be a monologue,
can just be a couple of sentences,
and we're all here, it's all good."
And there's an art in
picking that person.
And the dark shit gets it,
incest to sue's little
thoughts to whatever.
But when you get the right person,
who's not a complete lula,
you know, who's like
really credible enough.
And they say, "Yeah, I
was molested by my uncle
when I was a kid and
it's always haunted."
That person is here.
The next person who was
probably thinking about saying,
"I get tired on the weekends."
(all laughing) Oh, she goes, "I got crippling anxiety."
(all laughing)
Doo, doo, doo, doo, doo, doo, doo.
You don't always get it right.
So when you do it, it's like boom, boom,
when everyone's sitting there on,
great, all right.
So now we're all gonna let it go guys,
because we can see there's
some shit in here and ago.
Yeah, and you don't have to let it go,
you've got to be on, but you
know, if you want to, go for it.
Here's an opportunity.
Here's an opportunity.
And that was, at that moment,
when that cracked open and
went boom, boom, boom, boom,
boom, I went, "I got Ireland wrong.
I got it wrong."
So it's ready for that, you know?
And for the trainings, okay, so these
trains are like crazy.
And people come to it and
they're like, "I want this."
So I think we're much more,
or at least there's a
segment of society there.
I'm not saying it's everybody,
it's probably not
representative of everybody,
but there's clearly significant
proportion of people
who are ready for that.
So yeah.
What's your relationship
with alcoholic now then?
Just don't think about it.
Just think, "Fuck, I don't."
It doesn't, it doesn't occur to me.
Do you see it as a problem in society
or do you see it as something
that's feeding a problem in society?
Overall, oh God, it's hard to,
I'd say, yeah, it is a problem.
Just in terms of all the drugs,
it's the one that takes the
toll the most on your body,
for that.
It's probably the one that leads to
lowering of inhibitions,
but doesn't give you any
other benefits or insights really,
you know?
And it starts the same
thing as alcohol means
you can lower your
inhibitions and go, "Oh, I'm wild."
And then you don't feel the need
to express yourself during your week.
Say going to festivals,
people are just going,
"No problem, I love fucking festivals."
But if you do, if your festival week
is the time when you go wild and you
express your true self
and you spend the rest of
the 51 weeks of the year
not doing that because you have this
and you have your one month,
also older boys now,
the boys go once a month,
you know, and they get hammered.
And it's just the toll
it has physically as well.
I don't look at a boy like,
"Look, I've been blessed now in 40
"and I've been drinking
for God knows how long."
And so physically I'm in
great shape just from that alone.
They own all the other stuff.
Whereas you compare
it to anyone else at 40
who hasn't got the alcohol under control.
It's tough.
You can certainly see
the difference there.
You can see it in them.
So yeah, overall, and I love,
of course they still have these
associations of like,
because I was wild and I love that.
No one ever wanted me to stop drinking.
No one ever wanted me
because of a crack crack.
You know, like drinking, you know,
that morning drinking and
day drinking, we call all that.
There was a wildness to it.
But the wildness I'm
getting now out of those weekends
is incomparable to what it would be,
drinking some wines on a Sunday
afternoon, you know?
And I think that's the,
it's a short term trade off.
That, you know, you trade
off the easy highs and the,
Yeah.
But it forces you to
build something meaningful.
I hear, yeah.
What do you think about it?
I believe it's based on the
intention behind the usage.
So, I mean, if you're depressed,
stressed out, pissed off at life,
and you use drinking as
a way to express that,
or project that, or release that,
then, you know, that's an
unhealthy use of the substance.
For others, it could
potentially compliment
the happiness or joy or the peace
that you've already
cultivated in your life.
So it's interesting
because I know people who,
are in both of those avenues.
So there's people
there who use it to release
on process emotions at the weekend.
And all of a sudden
they're picking fights
with random strangers on the street.
And they're ultimately
fighting with their fathers,
not fighting with some stranger,
or they're fighting with themselves
because of something
they've done in the past.
It's an expression of anger,
where it's permissionable to do so.
But then there's others
then who I see are quite,
peaceful and happy and
content in their life,
and use alcohol as a way
to sort of compliment this.
So it's interesting now, in
the grand scheme of things,
I haven't drank in over three years.
I have no interest in
going back to it because to me,
alcohol is an absolute energy drainer.
And I'm very protective over my energy
in terms of how I use
it, how I express it,
in terms of my environment,
and the people I surround myself with,
and staying away from
potential energy vampires,
or not that there's
anything wrong with anyone,
but when, like yourself, when
we do have a higher purpose,
we do have others who are depending on us
to show up for us every single day.
And if I'm showing up
for my lack of energy
because I've had 15 beers the weekend,
then I'm not serving me and
therefore not serving you.
And I'm being a
disservice to the people who are,
depending on me, to help them out.
So it's a squandering of that purpose
that I feel is now an
important part of my life,
or a huge part of my life.
So that's the main reason I cut it out.
Now, of course, there's the
times when you reflect back
and you remember the
good times and the crack
and the parties and, like
yourself, I was the party animal.
I'd be the guy standing
on top of the bar counter
with the top off and
everyone else fucking shouting
and screaming up at me or spinning around
the fucking dance pool or whatever.
But this was also something in me
that I wanted to make others happy.
I wanted other people to feel good.
And my way to help them feel good
was to be this party
animal who was fun, loving,
and yeah, just fucking
great crack to be around.
So I've taken that part and I say, okay,
I can still be this individual
who helps others feel better,
but I'm gonna do this in a healthier way
and a more meaningful
way and a deeper way.
And this is a huge part of
why I do the work I do today.
But it's, of course, it's much more depth
and that is not just a one night thing.
Yeah, I think very interesting
that we have a
similar background with that
because the people pleasing
thing is very interesting.
And so for me, quitting alcohol,
and I remember this
progression very viscerally
because it's something
that you feel distinctly.
So you quit drinking
and someone says to you,
do you want a drink?
And you go, no, I'm
sorry, I'm sorry, I'm so sorry.
I'm so sorry, but if I drink, I'll die.
And you go, come on, have a drink.
No, look, listen, I'll die.
And then after a couple
of months go by and you go,
no, no, you're sorry, don't want a drink.
And you progress over time, you rest.
I'm telling people that I'll die
and they give such a little fuck about it
that they'd actually
happily have me kill myself
for their need to have whatever
confirmation they need.
And that process of
time is so interesting
because no one ever
offers me a drink anymore.
Not because I'm a wanker possibly,
but also just because you carry yourself
which is such security
that they look at you.
But when you show the weakness and the
need to please them,
that's when people push.
Yeah, of course.
And so as you get
more confident over time,
that disappears and you
forget that was everything.
But my lesson was that.
The biggest lesson I learned
and it's still a lesson I work on
is that there's an element of that in me.
I want to please people.
And that boundary setting that comes in,
not pleasing people and
learning to take satisfaction
in setting boundaries and
looking at someone going, no.
Yeah.
You know, and just from a
place of just stability,
not anger, nothing
else, no, sorry, sorry.
Yeah, the people-pleasing
aspect is very interesting
because that's a lack of
acceptance we have for ourselves.
And then we're looking for this
acceptance from others
so we can feel
accepted and loved in here.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, great.
But it's still, I still
believe it's worth flipping that
and realizing there's still that,
you don't want to
call it people-pleasing,
but there's still a level
of satisfaction you gain
from helping others feel better,
but not to compromise your
own values and your own health
in order to do so, true alcohol.
So I see it as I have taken so much value
from my hardships and difficulties
and problems in the past,
that this level of
value is not for me to keep.
You know, it's like me
keeping a million Euro to myself
and never giving any of it to
charity or helping others out.
It's like, I don't want to,
I don't want to fucking do all this.
This is not for me to
keep, I want to give it away.
And then as you give
it away, as you know,
as you give it away, it's
reciprocated back in terms
of the love and the
amazing transformations
that you witnessed through
the great work you're doing.
So, and also being careful that,
that doesn't become another dependency
or doesn't become
another addiction where you're,
again, your whole
identity is tied up in giving,
giving, giving, giving, giving.
And if I can give, give,
give, I will take, take, take.
It's like, no, no, no,
the realization is I have it
and it's my purpose to give it back.
So I don't need anything from you.
I don't need anything from my client.
I don't need anything from anybody else.
I have it.
I don't want to, I
truly want to give you this.
I want you to receive this because I've,
it's been given to me
through my lessons or true God
or whatever you believe in, through God,
and it's mine now to give back to you.
So that's the way I live my life.
And of course there's
challenges, there's pushbacks,
there's temptations to go elsewhere.
There's all of that still comes up.
But when you have this higher purpose
and you're allowing
yourself this higher purpose,
you're less likely to
indulge in these pleasures
because you can understand
that these pleasures actually
take you away from that purpose
and dissolve your
energy and time to continue
on this journey.
So much to say with that.
Yeah, yeah.
I go over two things
that stick in my mind.
One, I'm going to come back
to the higher purpose thing
in a second.
Valuing yourself and
understanding your inherent value
and the experiences and all
the shit that you've been through
and all these things,
how these have accumulated
to make you a unique person in many ways
that is uniquely served and
suited to serving something.
I remember when I was in,
I was in Thailand
during COVID, look at me.
And I was, whatever I was doing,
but I was in, I was in Chiang Mai.
Keep it PG.
Let's keep it PG.
(laughing) You also talked a bit about the LSD.
And this girl came
over from Coppang Island
and she said, "James, I have this LSD
and everybody who takes this LSD
has a very interesting experience."
I was like, "I know LSD,
I know it's no problem."
I said, "I'll go around and take someone
and go around the lake."
I took the LSD and walked around the lake
and I was walking around for ages,
this lake in Chiang Mai
just in the university there.
And I just walked around, walked around
and then somehow I
felt like inside myself.
And this isn't like an ego thing.
This is like, I am a prince in the sense
of all these
experiences and all these things
and energies and things
that I've been through
have created this unique store of value.
And I should treat myself
like a prince, whatever,
and treat others as if I were a prince.
And because I felt for the first time,
and I think I've always
not been able to recognize
your own values, not being worthy.
And I use this prince, you
can take it out of context
every on, but there's just
a way of expressing that.
A man of value.
A man of value, but then in that state,
that's what it came to me.
And do I treat myself like prince?
I do not.
And do I treat other
people as if I were a prince?
I do not.
And I think bringing
people back to that feeling
of their inner value, that's one thing
is to recognize your darkness and to
release those things.
But, and we do, with the timeline therapy
and these different
things, it's literally that.
It's like, you have value
and you are the one of us
to recognize your value,
not the people outside of you.
And that's a big part of the work.
One is ripping down the
walls and then build them back up
and saying, "Hey, there's a
lot of good shit in here."
And you can take that.
And the second thing
you're talking about purpose,
remember in the training we did, the
stills logical levels,
you know, the questions
that you ask your partner
where you go from
environment to behavior,
to skills, to values, and
on top of that is purpose.
What are you here for?
Because once you've
helped somebody understand
what they're here for,
define it, to make that,
I'm here for this, I mean,
that can change over time.
But if you can give
somebody that sense of purpose,
and I think that's a lot
of your work, I'm sure,
is based around that idea, right?
That the other stuff kind of, you know,
I just think this is for
you very clear that, you know,
I have this purpose, I
want to help men, you know,
discover their true selves,
whatever your version of that is.
Then all the other
decisions that you make
are based on whether that's moving
toward your mountain or not.
And then the other things make sense.
If you don't have a mountain,
so why not fucking drink your face off?
What does it matter?
You wake up in the morning,
you're not an else plant anyway.
It's all meaningless crap anyway.
And that is also what shifted for me.
And very, you know, recently,
even in the last couple of
years, like, all right, look,
I actually have value
and I have a mechanism
and a way of giving that value to people.
So then of course I'm not
gonna fucking have 20 points.
Sabotage that. Sabotage that.
No, you will sabotage it in some ways,
because self-sabotage--
We are human beings after all.
We are human beings.
And also in terms of like
the ceilings that you push,
you know, your ceiling is always here.
I mean, you've built a lovely ceiling,
and you go, this is my ceiling.
This is where I go.
That's a form of
self-sabotage in many ways, you know,
because you don't allow
yourself to think bigger,
to think broader, to think
of more impact as you do.
And that's also the Irishman.
You know the story, I love this story,
where I explain Irish people.
Someone says, what are Irish people like?
You know how a great
crack, da, da, da, da.
And I said, I'll tell you a story.
An American looks at a man on a hill
with a beautiful wife
and a beautiful car,
and he says, I wanna be that man.
An Irishman looks at the
same man on the same hill
with a beautiful wife
and a beautiful car,
and he says, I wanna get that man.
And that's changing.
But that explains for me, a lot of our
childhood in school.
Who do you think, Car?
Michael Jackson.
Yeah, I get that.
You know, that stuff is still there,
but that's shifting as well.
And watching men, men
being open and vulnerable
and saying, well done and meaning it.
That we're not on
competition with each other at the bar.
Yeah, having men
supporting men as well, it's crazy.
Cause you remember
all the stuff in school,
I remember, you were up
in school in the North,
cause you know, different accent.
I was telling you, oh yeah.
Oh yeah, different accent,
but still people saying you're faggot.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You think you're great, don't you?
Of course.
We all wear blue jeans and our blue cream
and our blue shirts, whatever, I'm sure.
The blue cream back in your day as well.
Yeah, I work, I work, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Trying to fit in, man.
Trying to fit in.
Yeah, yeah.
Fuck, man, we could go
down a rabbit hole there.
Yeah.
We all, we all just sitting
here looking into the past,
thinking about it, just came up on the,
in the training where the
girl, they were talking about,
there's a thing I say in a lot of trains,
it's like, in order to change a man,
you need to change the
audience he sees himself playing to.
And understanding that
composite of who those people are,
who you live in your life for, you know?
And we're all living it
for our parents to a degree,
by default, our family and our cultures.
And a half, a lot of
us are living it still
for those school kids
who are bullying us,
are bullying everybody,
not holding each other
and check on you as
plastic and a baguette.
You're like, all right,
just where my blue cream?
You know, I remember I was dating a girl,
I was dating a girl
when I was 17, you know?
Maybe 18, I was first of all my friends,
probably to get laid, I'm not sure.
I'm pretty sure I was
either first or second.
And my name's gone out to meet this girl.
The boys would make me feel like I was,
oh, you're going off, going
off to get a ride, are you?
(laughs) And you're like, I'm a loser.
(laughs) You got me.
It's just indicative of that.
Whether you're at home wanking it,
or the tissues, yeah.
Yeah, but you weren't
enjoying whatever you were getting
either, you were a prat as well.
But that's there.
And then so when you're helping,
and I have many stories about that,
when you do this kind
of introspective work
and you realize who your audience is
and how it's your
parents and how it's not,
how it's cool to put
together as you think,
but helping people first recognize
who that audience is,
you're basically playing
to the 13 year old boys
in the playground.
Now--
Still trying to prove something to them.
Prove something to them.
And those people are, those boys are now,
and whatever they are,
whereas who do you want to be playing to?
First of all, you
have to play to yourself
to a certain degree,
or to people who you admire,
or your peer group,
and to create a new
peer group whose opinion
you actually admire too, and hold them.
So I often think of a
friend called Kieran,
and I used to just literally think,
"Oh, what can Kieran do right now?"
(all laughing) One of those guys.
One of those guys, what
would he do right now?
What would he think if
he saw me doing this?
Ah, yeah.
Anyone like that?
Interesting.
But I respect him, you know?
Yeah, yeah.
At least give me a cause, a pause.
And so what your work I feel,
you're doing, you're creating these,
take these men away on this weekend,
and you give them a new standard
to see themselves from.
It's like, "Play the disc out of boys."
Or, you know, they're strong,
and they're moving towards something.
Maybe they're not that strong yet.
Maybe their integrity
isn't quite there yet,
but they're on the path.
So at least you
should be playing to people
who are on a path, and
moving towards something.
Wherever they are on that path,
doesn't matter as long as
they're giving it a go, you know?
And the power of that community too,
is that not everyone
is on the same level.
So you will become inspired by someone
who's maybe a little bit further ahead
than you on your journey,
or perhaps career or
money or family or whatever.
But then you'll also
become an inspiration
for someone else who's a
little bit further behind.
And then you'll also
connect with somebody
who's perhaps on a similar level as you.
So there's like,
there's power in that too.
That because a big
part of those weekends,
as much as for your weekends,
is that there's a lot
of sharing that happens
in terms of their
struggles, their history,
the problems, the
pains they've gone through,
what's presenting in
their life today as an issue.
And someone else is
listening to this going,
oh fuck, like that shit that he's going,
that he went through five years ago,
that's where I'm at today.
And fuck, look at him today.
He's so strong and so
confident and whatever else,
you know, they're making up certain
assumptions or opinions.
And then they start to talk
and then they start
to exchange notes or...
So there's something interesting
that happens at the weekends as well,
where I'm not the only person leading.
There's other leaders as
well that start to show up.
And it was quite
interesting on the last weekend.
He may be listening to
this, but we went to the sea.
One of the first things
we do the weekend is we go,
we jump into the cold water in the sea.
And like, there's six of us
and five of us down the steps,
do, do, do, do, do, into the sea,
jumping, boom, cold, do, do, whatever.
Next thing I look up and one of the guys
just fucking jumps off
the pier into the water.
They did see this, by the way.
And I look up and I go, all right,
this is the kind of
weekend it's gonna be.
We're going all in.
And what was quite interesting was
after he jumped off the pier,
everyone else decided
to jump off the pier.
And I was actually the one at the top
who was hesitant to jump in,
because I got a fear of heights.
(laughs)
And I was the one then who
was being led by the others.
Because I was, just as they
were coming to the weekend
to face their fears or
overcome their challenges,
here I was standing at
the top of this pier,
looking into the water going, oh fuck.
It took me about five
minutes to finally make the jump.
And of course, going
through all my strategies,
a bit of breath work and leaning into it.
And ultimately me saying to myself,
look, if I fucking walk away
from this, if I don't do it,
what sort of example am
I setting for these men?
If I walk away from
something I'm afraid of,
they're not gonna trust me to
take them through their fears
and their difficulties this weekend.
So that no matter what happens,
and it wouldn't matter in a way,
like I'm that kind of guy
who just would not walk away
from something like this.
I've done it many times before.
I said, no matter what
happens, I'm fucking jumping in.
I don't care if it takes
me fucking under 20 minutes
or I'm going in before I leave.
And of course they're all
encouraging me to jump in.
And I finally jumped in.
And great sense of release and
achievement in doing that.
But what I highlighted was there's a guy
that's been working me
for six months or more.
And he was the first guy
that jumped off the pier.
And I said, you know what?
You stepped up as the
fucking leader on that day
when you arrived at the
pier, you jumped into the sea.
If you didn't jump into the sea,
nobody else would have jumped in.
Nobody else would have,
there's another guy as
well who was quite fearful.
Nobody else would have
would have done that.
Nobody else would have embraced it.
Nobody else would have
gone all in the way you did.
So you set a standard for the weekend.
So it's what I mean.
Like, so it gives
other people an opportunity
the weekend to also step up
and realize that there's a
leadership quality within them
or there's gifts or
talents that they have.
As I said before,
they've gone through pain.
They've gathered lessons.
And now they're giving back to others
who are perhaps a
little bit further behind
or you become an inspiration
for somebody else vice versa.
So this is the power of it.
I say it's a great
example of the heights.
And so a couple of things you learned.
One, that you can overcome your fears.
Two, never do the cold water exposure
anywhere with your peers.
One thing they try a
lot with, for example,
the online courses is
an A-week course, right?
And people don't realize how fucking,
especially when like I'm
the breathwork guru, right?
So they always kind of,
what do you think, James?
What do you think?
I was like, okay, I don't
know all the fucking answers.
You're not happy with therapists.
Happy, like you're fucking very
well-developed humans
with a way more experience
in certain areas than me.
And what I think is the most out,
there's a moment on
the week seven, you know?
And it was where I
always opened it up, go on.
So it says, "Guys, what do you think?
What do you think?"
And they just started offering,
like, "Well, Fergus and Paula."
And Paula was like,
"I'm going to have my
first transformation
of breath organization.
I don't know what to do
with, where do I touch him?"
And then Fergus went, "Oh, I look, men,
they store a lot of interview that's
found as well, right?
They store so much in
their chest, you know?
And you should go like that.
And you should put whereabouts."
And he was kind of shown or online,
you know, we go around like that.
And I was like, "Oh."
Because that's very satisfying.
I guess the exact
opposite of what people think,
I think sometimes I want,
or you might want as a facilitator.
You know, like your ego will go so far.
Yeah, of course.
And you go, "Come on guys, come on."
And then at that moment happened,
for me, I was like, "You know what?"
Yeah, yeah.
You co-teach each other,
you share, you do all that.
That's what you want,
like one form of leadership or another,
where like, because
I'm not there any at all,
you know, I know some
techniques and I give a platform,
but now we're all here doing our best.
And so it is really sad.
It's really like those moments, like
that'll stick with me.
Yeah, just the dissolving a
sense of competition again,
and even instilling that sense of
connection all the more.
And also that they had come to,
not even I had brought them,
but they come to that level of confidence
in their breathwork
facilitation to openly,
in front of other,
give some advice in a casual way and say,
"I do this, can I find this works?"
Now, what do you think James?
Like, that's what I think, can you?
Because that's what it is.
I mean, it's confidence.
You want to know the things
and you want to know the science
and know the methods and the
language and all those things,
but it's presence and
confidence in yourself, you know?
That's so much is just presence.
You'll find that yourself,
just like being with someone,
being actually being
there with the breathwork.
The great thing is you
have to be there almost.
It's impossible not to be there
when people are going through that.
You know, like checking your phone,
someone's like, "Mmhmm."
(both laughing) And so, yeah.
Yeah, it's amazing watching that fold.
Yeah.
Was there a moment there in the past
where you had this
realization of the power of the breath
because you talk about the yoga,
you talk about doing
some breathing practices,
and of course the breath
work that you had to practice
whenever you had this surgery.
Was there a moment there and
you thought, "Fuckin' hell."
Like, this is actually,
because you do with us
in terms of the processing
of emotions, like when
this happened for you?
Or was that the breakthrough moment?
Or was there something else
that sort of made you realize
the power of being in your body
instead of being in your head?
For me, it was a series
of collections of moments
that I came more and more into my body.
My biggest moments, rather than,
and breath has always
been like this fast access.
But my kind of, I would say
that kind of a pivotal moment
actually ties in with a lot of things
we're talking about.
So I was in Taiwan, I'm
23, and I've done the yoga,
and I've done all these things.
And I go to the Passion
of Meditation retreat.
Have you ever been to one of those?
10 hours a day meditating for 10 days.
Like strict Buddhist style.
So I go in.
No speaking for 10 days?
No speaking, no looking
at people, no nothing.
You're just literally
meditating for 10 hours a day.
Simple food twice a day.
So I go in.
It's tough, but it's okay.
Third day, I started to
think about this flight
that I had booked.
I had meant to be flying to China.
And I started to think about it.
Couldn't get it out of my mind.
Therefore, okay, you can
go talk to the head monk
two minutes a day and I go,
"Can I go check the internet?"
It was an internet cafe at the time.
He's like, "No."
(both laughing)
Right, day five, day
six, it's torture now.
10 hours a day and I'm
just got this in my mind.
They fucked that flight up.
I need to check the flight.
I need to check the flight.
And he goes to me and
I said, "I gotta go."
And he's like, "Look, I'm pretty sure
your flights are fine.
This is an emotional storm.
This comes from a deep-rooted problem
or issue that you have.
And if you sit with it,
you're gonna learn a lot
about yourself and a lot
about what's really going on."
Day eight and now day nine,
one day before he finishes,
he's like, "Fuck this shit.
I'm going, I'm not
meditating here anyway.
What's the point?
I've been torturing myself for six days."
And I wandered off.
I left and I said,
"All right, guys, tell."
Didn't say it because you
couldn't talk to anyone.
(both laughing)
Just gonna walk out.
Just wave goodbye.
No one looking.
You're not looking at people.
Oh, it's like, I walked out
and checked the internet cafe
and yeah, of course the flights are fine.
And I had to sit with
that then for a long time.
It was like, "What's going on here?"
And this is where
this idea of the audience
that you see yourself playing for,
because what does it
really matter, this flight?
Do you know what it's a flight?
And I realized it
came from this fear I had
that my parents think I'm stupid
and that they were gonna find
out that James had fucked up
again, because I had the
reputation of the message
after seven years of
drinking, who wouldn't?
The first 14 years of
being the kind of like head up
in the clouds, distracted
by books, smart as fuck,
but not exactly pressing people,
impressing people with
my being in the moment.
After that, seven years of drinking
and almost dying multiple times.
So it was all, so I'm sure
this came from before that
as well, but anyways,
geez, I have been pretending
that I don't give a
fuck what anybody thinks.
And I've been pretending to myself,
I'm Mr. Hippy Dippy free from it all,
but here I am when it comes down to it,
when I just sit in my
body for long enough,
the reality of my emotional world
eventually comes home to roost.
Now it comes to roost in different ways
and in different guises.
And this one was just a manifestation
of that deep rooted pain that I have.
That I still, it's not like
heal these things completely.
You know, I noticed,
oh, there it is again.
But that was it.
It was the power of being in your body
and not distracting yourself.
And just being there,
because you can't fucking watch it
and you can't talk to nothing there.
And it just comes right up.
And the only way it'll go out,
that's kind of what the breath work is.
When they did breath work session,
said that years later, I
started doing the breath work
sessions, I was like,
this is like a fast version of that.
That's what that is.
This is like that on speed.
Yes, okay.
And that was when I realized, okay, so,
and I'm not gonna host 10 hour,
it's not for everybody,
but you can give this stuff.
And then I was running those
and I was doing breath work
and I was combining
with NLP and hypnosis.
And then when I was living
in Barcelona, I met this guy,
Mario, Mario, you motherfucker.
Mario, Cosmic Mario used to work as,
there we go, we're
going way over PG right now.
Mario used to work as literally,
he would give cosmic orgasms, right?
He does his whole job.
I think he says he's
fingered 10,000 women, right?
And at a certain point,
he was surfing in Hawaii
and he broke his back
and he was paralyzed.
And then he went
through this whole therapy.
People are still hanging on the finger
and 10,000 women, by the way.
They still, Mario can't--
They're still at that,
on that word, on that sentence.
So, just give a moment to
just let that land and process.
And then you can move on.
What the fuck?
What the fuck did he do?
Cosmic Mario.
Does women now check on Instagram?
Oh, they find him as well.
He's hell of a, he's a phenomenon.
And then he--
This is a form of therapy.
For who? For him? For me?
For who?
Look, this is like, that's his story.
When you go into his
workshop, he tells you that story.
And then he broke his
back, was paralyzed,
and went through a form of therapy
involving like physical manipulation.
And then he learned those
skills and he runs this.
Oh, this is before he
started the fingering?
No, this was after.
The fingering ended
when he broke his back.
He rebuilt himself and found purpose,
but still had all the skills and the
physical touch, right?
And so he learned the massage techniques
that had rebuilt him.
And now he travels the
world, given these workshops,
training people how to release emotions
using physical touch.
Wow.
You should check him out.
It's really insane.
And so Mario, I had
this space in Barcelona,
and we were thinking about
running some workshops together.
And then I went to his train.
He says, "I'm the first person
that ever came to his train for free."
Thanks, Mario.
And then he said to me,
"James, this breath work stuff's mad."
And I said, "NLP, I'm really interested.
Why don't you come with me to India?"
This was last year in January.
We went a year and a half ago.
I was doing breath work.
I had studied massage in Thailand.
I studied a lot of it,
but never reworked the
massage bed into the breath work.
And we started running these
workshops, and it was crazy.
Like you never saw it.
He said, "Man, I've never felt bodies
that are so receptive to touch."
And this is like a master,
as when they're in that
receptive state, you know?
And so we spent two months
running workshops together.
I'm not gonna say he
showed me everything he knows,
but he showed me a lot.
And he learned a lot about holding space
and facilitating and being okay.
And he would tell me,
"Look here, watch this."
And he'd just go there, and you'd see.
He'd hit someone.
He would chase the
snake up the body, you know?
The energy.
They're the things that I showed you,
the working up the body,
but he would be like next level.
He'd be like, "See this girl?"
And he'd go, "Boom."
And he'd hit it here.
And then the energy, she'd go like that.
And it would move up to
here, and then he'd go,
"Oh, she goes boom."
And she'd go like
that, and he'd go, "Bam."
And he'd go, "Pah."
Fuck.
And I was like, "What?
Why, what that?
I won't do that."
"Gosh, you do."
I wanna finger tell this woman.
And so that, those, like, that stuff,
like that was when, that
was when really the Phoenix
breathwork and all the stuff that I do.
Cause all the language stuff I knew.
Cause it's just very important.
Oh, it's huge.
Huge.
And it's amazing.
And that is the collective release
of everyone working together.
We pair each other up, and
you were working a tripty,
and you know, there's the
boundaries that are resolved there.
And you normalize that space.
They say, "Oh, everyone grab each other,
and everyone does it."
I can't, I still can't believe it.
Everyone just, "All
right, now you grab them here."
Remember, I think it was a
train that you were actually,
when the lad said,
"James, I haven't touched
another woman in 25 years."
And there he was at one point.
We had her suspended in
the air the two of us,
shaking her like that.
So, and the touch is huge.
And you can talk things out,
and you can do it all, but like,
that's a big part of humanity.
And I think that's a
big part of being human,
and it's such a necessary part.
And in Ireland, we
really fucked that shit up.
Yeah, for sure.
We fucked that shit up.
But people know it, and
they're willing for it,
and they're thirsty for more contact,
and for more opening, so.
We're unfucking it.
We're unfucking it, yeah.
So I'm optimistic.
Brilliant, man.
James, thank you so much.
Fucking love this conversation.
Love hanging out with you.
So this was a pleasure, as always.
And for anyone who
wants to work with James
or reach out to you,
where's the best place to get yet?
Oh, look, my t-shirt.
Doesn't even have any sleeves on them.
PlayfulGroat.com, or
Instagram James PlayfulGroat.
I'm gonna have to rename it my own name.
PlayfulGroat.
PlayfulGroat, but we have, I have to say,
we got Breathe Ireland, which is,
I don't know if it is or
not, but I just said it.
It's Ireland's biggest
ever immersive headset.
Event happening on Thursday, sold out.
120 people would head to
town screaming their heads off.
And there's training in London.
There's online programs,
all bunch of stuff going on.
But that's a great crack.
Thank you very much.
I love what you're doing.
I really do love what you're doing.
You know what?
I watched the,
and I saw that one about
the jumping off the pier,
you know, and I see a picture of you
with your hand on a man's chest.
And you're fucking brilliant.
So keep going.
Well, thank you,
because I received those lessons
and those skills from you.
So thank you.
That's better, love.
I would definitely
recommend that any of you listening,
go and check out James' Workshop,
even if you never want to use it.
Oh yeah.
Coaching capacity,
you gain so much from it
in your own personal experience.
That's why I find the,
it's just, it's what I now realize
is what therapy should be.
Communal, real, emotional, raw, sharing,
non-hierarchical, just experience
and feeling letting
it go, yeah, for sure.
Let it go, baby.
Let it go.
Nice one, James.
Until next time.
Thank you very much.