Understanding great literature is better than trying to read and understand (yet) another business book, Leadership Lessons From The Great Books leverages insights from the GREAT BOOKS of the Western canon to explain, dissect, and analyze leadership best practices for the post-modern leader.
Hello, my name is Jesan Sorrells, and
this is the Leadership Lessons from the Great Books podcast,
episode number 186.
Opening up from our book today,
we're going to pick up in part one,
chapter one, and it's going to be part two
of. Of chapter one. And we're going to take
in the setting for today.
And I quote, and that was the long Salinas
Valley. Its history was like that of the rest of the state.
First there were Indians, an inferior breed, without energy,
inventiveness or culture. A people that lived on grubs and
grasshoppers and shellfish. Too lazy to hunt or fish, they ate
what they could pick and planted nothing. They pounded bitter acorns for flour.
Even their warfare was weary pantomime.
Then the hard, dry Spaniards came exploring through greedy and
realistic, and their greed was for gold or for
God. They collected souls as they collected jewels. They gathered
mountains and valleys, rivers and whole horizons the way a man might now gain title
to build lots. These tough, dried up men moved
restlessly up the coast and down. Some of them stayed on grants as large
as principalities given to them by the Spanish kings who had not the
faintest idea of the gift. These first owners
lived in poor feudal settlements and their cattle ranged freely and multiplied.
Periodically, the owners killed the cattle for their hides and tallow and left the meat
to the vultures and coyotes. When the Spaniards
came, they had to give everything they saw. Name this is the first duty of
any explorer, a duty and a privilege. You must name a thing
before you can note it on your hand drawn map. Of course
they were religious people, and the men who could read and write, who kept
the records and drew out the maps, were the tough, untiring priests who traveled with
the soldiers. Thus, the first names of places were
saints names or religious holidays celebrating
at stopping places. There are many saints, but
they are not inexhaustible. So that we find repetitions
in the first namings. We have San Miguel, St. Michael, San Ardo,
San Bernardo, San Benito, San Lorenz, San Carlos, San Francisco,
Ito. And then the holidays. Natividad, the Nativity,
Nacimiento, the Birth, Soledad, the Solitude.
But the places were also named from the way the expedition felt at the time.
A Buena Esperanza, Good Hope, Buena Vista because the view was
beautiful, and Chihuahuara because it was pretty. The
descriptive names followed Paso de los Robles because of the oak
trees. Los Laureles for the laurelsitos
because of the reeds in the swamp, and Salinas for the
alkali, which was as white as salt
Then the places were named for animals and birds seen. Gabalains of
the hawks which flew in the mountains. Topo for the mole, los gatos for the
wild cats. The suggestions came from the nature of the place itself.
Tasara, a cup and a saucer. Laguna Seca, a dry
lake, Corral de Tierra for offensive earth,
Parisio, because it was like heaven.
Then the Americans came, more greedy because there were more of
them. They took the lands, remade the laws to make their own titles
good and farmholts spread over the land, first in the valleys and then up the
foothill slopes. Small wooden houses roofed with redwood shakes,
corals of split poles. Wherever a trickle of
water came out of the ground, a house sprang up and a family began to
grow and multiply. Climbing cuttings of red geraniums and rose bushes were planted in the
doorways. Wheel tracks of buckboards replaced the trails, and fields of
corn and barley and wheat squared out the yellow mustard. Every
10 miles along the travel routes, a general store and blacksmith shop
happened, and these became the nuclei of little towns. Radley, King
City, Greenfield. The
Americans had a greater tendency to name places for people than had the Spanish.
After the valleys were settled, the names of places refer more to the things which
happened there. And these to me are the most fascinating of all
names, because each name suggests a story that has been forgotten.
I think of Bolsa Nueva, A New Purse, Morocco
Ho and Lay Moore. Who was he and how did he get there? Wild
Horse Canyon and Mustang Grade and Shirttail Canyon. The
names of the places carry a charge of the people who named them,
reverent or irreverent, descriptive, either poetic or
disparaging. You can name anything San Lorenzo, but
Shorttail Canyon or the Lane War is something quite different.
The wind whistled over the settlements in the afternoon
and the farmers began to set out mile long windbreaks of eucalyptus to keep
the plowed topsoil from blowing away. And this
is about the way the Salinas Valley was when my grandfather
brought his wife and settled in the foothills to the
east of King City.
So Cain went out from the Lord's presence and lived in the land of
Nod, east of Eden.
With this from Genesis 4:16, our author
today opens up a truly expansive novel
written in the 1940s, but of course based on a life of
experiences in the Salinas Valley and first published in
1952. The novel describes on an epic scale what it
really means to fall out of the utopian paradise created by a transcendent
God into the blood, sweat and tears
of the fallen. World we all now tragically
inhabit. This book has
never not been a bestseller since its first publication, and
this is because it touches on deeply human themes of loss,
regret, trauma, sexual immorality,
manipulation, greed, sociopathy, and
even the honest differences people can experience who grow up in the same family
raised by two people doing the best that they can.
For leaders, this novel is a very easy read, but it is unsettling
in its implications and truly groundbreaking in its assumptions about
human n. But not because human
beings have changed between the date of its original publication in
1952 and now in the year of our Lord
2026, but because in
2026 we seem to have lost the plot or at the
very minimum, the language to address the,
well, the perplexing and sinful behavior we see in
the humans around us. For
all of our technological sophistication, this book proves a
point we need hammered home to us in a society like
the one in which we live now. Many of us have
iPhones, the Internet, and social media, and
many of us do a lot of things with those things, but we still
aren't really sure what any of that actually
means. Today on
the show, we are revisiting the
Salinas Valley of California at the beginning of
the last century. You know, the one with
dates that began with 19. And we're going to try to
extract lessons for leaders that they can apply in this
century from John Steinbeck's
magnum opus, the second one in his long literary
life, east of Eden
Leaders. We've said this on the show multiple times
with my guests today, and we'll probably say it again
in this recording today, but the more things change,
the more they regrettably stay the same.
And today, of course, I am joined by my fellow traveler
whose computer has decided that it is going
to behave as if it's not
living its utopian best life, joined
by my co host and fellow traveler,
Tom Libby. By the way, if he cuts out, I'm just going to
keep doing this episode without him. We're, we're on a,
we got to be on a roll here. So how you doing today, Tom?
Well, I, I think as you've just said, I'm, you know,
the, my, Listen, I, I, I owe the computer nothing,
okay? It's, it's, it, it's,
it's, it's. Well, I think I bought it years before co even
happened. So that tells you about how old the computer is. It
owes me nothing. But I'm getting to the point where now I got to, I
got to figure out, you Know, do I try to, do I try to
continue the repairs and kick it down the sidewalk a little bit? Or do I
just bite the bullet and get a new computer? They seem to be commodity at
this point, so buying a new computer shouldn't be all that difficult, you know, etc,
etc. But I remember to get into the episode
today, just talk a little bit about your intro and get away from
my technology troubles.
I remember the first conversation, I remember the first conversation you and I had about
this opening. And I remember specifically saying to you
I was having a good day until I heard that. And like, like in a
fictional book, my people are still being like dumped
on because if you look at the natives eating grubs and we're too lazy. Whatever.
Like, come on, enough already. Can we figure out, can we just find a
book that says we're awesome? I. Just one, just one book that says that native
people are awesome. I'll be happy with that. But again, I understand this is a
classic book. And I, and, and you and I talked about this when we spoke
before too. I, and I actually love. Steinbeck is one of my favorite authors.
So it's, I, I'll, I'll give him a pass, I guess.
It's, it's, it's. The term I believe that he used
was weary pantomime. I, I, I believe
that was the, that was the descriptor that, that he used. Yeah,
he. Okay, so
just full disclosure to the folks listening today.
This is our second time around with this book and with this episode.
So we originally, this is a little bit of inside baseball. We, we
record, we tend to record on a Monday for a Wednesday release.
Normally we don't record on a Wednesday for a Wednesday release,
but because of, due to, due to operator error
this week, my operator error, we,
we had a two, we had almost two hour long conversation about Easter E did
on Monday and we recorded none
of it. So we're back
to bite the bullet again. And that's what Tom is referring to. So this is,
there's going to be a lot of references to a conversation that you never heard
but that we recorded. Actually wrote a blog post about this where
we behaved as if it were being recorded, which is actually the more
interesting thing to me, just at a sort of psychological level because I was thinking
about it afterward after I got past the initial sort of frustration and
anger at myself of my own operator error and again,
having no one to blame this week but myself.
And by the way, this has been one more thing in a series of things
that just have created a series of Mondays for me this week in my life.
It's just been Monday all week. It's always been the first day of the week.
It's gonna call you Lemony Snicket over here.
Oh, my gosh. I will be glad to get out of this week. Like, Friday
cannot come soon enough. But, but,
but this was one of those things where, like, the
fascinating thing to me is again, we, we acted as if we were being
recorded. We behaved as if, and we kind of had a little bit of a
disagreement about some of the aspects of the book. And that's all right. We're going
to explore some of that today. But we were, we were on our
behavior as if we were being recorded. And so, you know, it's
one of those chicken and the egg things, like, which came first? You know, the
good behavior and the respectful dealing with another person or the technology,
like, which one of those came first? So anyway, I wrote a whole blog post
about that. If you're following me on social media on LinkedIn, you should go connect
with me. I repost my blog posts on, on
LinkedIn. Lately, I've been kind of doing that. I'll be doing that for the whole.
All the next quarter. And it's called hitting the record button, so you should
go check that out. So anyway,
Just one of those things. I don't know. I don't know why I felt the
need to bring that up. Probably because, you know what? I want everybody to know
just how hard it is to put together the show. That's really, that's really what.
Ms. That's what everybody to, like, know that Tom is not the only
one having a crap week at this point. Plus,
today in America is for all those who are international listeners and
other places, today is tax day in America. This
is the day when you either pay the government money
and then there's no. Or after that. I mean, you might get a refund, but,
like, those are less and less as time has gone on. So
I have. I have not received a refund from the tax man in
15 years. Normally I'm paying in. So
it's been a good long time. I don't even remember what it feels like to
get a refund.
Anyway, enough said about that. Back to the book. So John
Steinbeck, right? I'm gonna let you. I'm gonna let you kind of go off like
you did last time. So talk to me a little bit about John Steinbeck. Talk
to me about what you think of him as an author. I know you said
that he was one of your favorite authors. Why is that?
I know why. He's interesting to me. He's sort of the anti Hemingway
and he sort of sits in that
pantheon of social realist writers. Right.
But he was unlike an Upton Sinclair or William
Faulkner who could probably be accurately compared with
his style was more about
seeing, at least in my opinion, seeing the
nature of who human beings are and just sort of letting them.
Letting them be who they were right on the page.
But. But what did you think of Steinbeck? What did you. What do you think
of? I know it's been 30 some odd years since you read east of Eden,
but what did you think of the book?
Well, well, to. To answer your question, first about
my thoughts on Steinbecker. And again as. As I have mentioned, see
I was just going to continue to say, as I've mentioned in the past, I
wasn't even going to point out that we had this faux power on Monday. That
was your fault. I wasn't even going to go there. But anyway,
that's fine. As I mentioned in a previous conversation,
I think one of the things about Steinbeck that stood out to me as you
know, and again this is. This was high school reading for me. So as you
mentioned, it was quite a. Quite a long time ago. But when I think about
the quote unquote required reading that we had
back then, the Harbor Lee's of the World author Millers
that like. I thought Steinbeck was more of
a. I thought he was more.
You even used the word realistic. So I think his characters are relatable.
I think that you can see either yourself or your fam. You're a family
member in that character. I think it was very. He's very. He's
very down to earth, salt of the earth kind of writing where in
way that he describes things is very
non whimsical I guess is the word I would. The thing. The way I would
describe it. Like when he describes the. The valley, like you can
picture that in your head. You're not picturing some Lord of the Rings thing
where it's like, you know, you know, created in
his brain. Like you can tell that it's something real to him. Like I
think that's. I think that's my favorite part. And his characters are
such. Right. Like whether you talk about east of Eden or the Grapes of Wrath
or Mice of Men. Mice of Men stands out to me even
more in that sense too because he didn't, he
didn't dance around the issue that George
was not Intelligent. Like, he didn't dance around the
issue that he was a special needs. Kind of like what we would consider special
needs person today or mentally challenged, however you want to word it. But
I think that he did that better than most of the people that I
enjoyed reading or I, that I read. And, and I, I do
think that, like, again, the, the two other authors that I just mentioned,
Harper Lee and, and, and Arthur Miller, I think they did a pretty good job
of it too, which is probably why I like them as well. But I thought
Steinbeck was just a cut above. I really do think that he,
you, you can truly get
a mind's eye because
you can relate to what he's writing, to something that you
yourself have either seen or experienced. Like, again, when he's writing
the, the characteristics of a character or the behavioral patterns of a character,
you're like, oh, that reminds me of my uncle, so and so. Or when he's
describing the, the city surroundings or the country surroundings, like, oh, I
remember visiting a place like that. Like, you know, he's very, like, it's very
relatable to, to, to people. And it's, it's very easy to,
to see yourself in the settings that he's describing in, in the environments.
And again, when I say in the settings of environments, I'm not talking specifically or
solely about physical environments like the Valley. I'm talking about being in the
social environments, being in the work. Like, you can see yourself
in those environments that he describes. And by the way, even reading through some
of the stuff now, like looking back
at some of the Cliff Notes, so to speak, or Spark Notes, I guess today
is the, the term. But like, even. Even though
it was written almost 75 years ago, it still
applies. Like, I'm fascinated by the fact that it still
applies. So that I think, I think for me,
I just think Steinbeck was a. I, I just think he would be. He's a
regular guy. Like, he just. I think he's a regular person that got out, that
had a way with taking what's in his mind and putting it on paper.
But if you read it, it's almost like you're looking directly into his experience
and his thought process is directly into his experience. So it's.
Again, and I don't. To me, it doesn't matter whether you're talking about E or
Grips of Wrath or Of Mice and Men or any of the other. What, 50?
I don't remember the number, but he wrote dozens and dozens
of things. So it was something like 50 or 60. Or I
remember the number being very large of his writing. So I just
think that most of them were part of his. And you notice,
too, and you mentioned Hemingway. We were talking about this, and I don't know if
you want to talk about this now or if. If that came later, later in
the show. But, but like Hemingway,
Faulkner, these guys, like, kind of traveled the world, right? So a lot of their
writings are about their experiences around the world. His
writings were all about here. Like, it never. He never wrote anything
that I remember seeing anyway. It was explicitly about Europe or
Asia or any of these other places where some of these guys have written about.
So again, if you're an American citizen
and you're. You're here, it's very relatable. Like, it's relatable because it's your. Like everything
he wrote about was your country. It was things that were happening in the moment
for, for him and, and what was going around the country. And I think some
of the. And we'll talk about this a little bit later because you're going to.
I know you're going to ask me, but some of the lessons are still relatable.
Like some of the things that they talk about under the way that you interact
with people, the way that you experience. The way that you experience human interaction
has not changed from the time that he wrote this. Now that's the part. That's
another part that I found fascinating. But. But it's like, timeless. His
writing seems to be. Seems to be timeless. Well, and this is something
that we're going to get into. This ties into something else that we're going to
get into. Because you talk about experience, right? So
Steinbeck's experience was very much a
rural experience, right? So, you
know, we kind of covered this in. In the shorts episode that precedes this
episode. We're at shorts number. I think it's number 219.
We talk about the myth of the city, and we're gonna get into a little
bit of this today as well, talking about Taylor Sheridan and Yellowstone and
cultural myths and things like this. Um, but Steinbeck, I
believe, fundamentally is the last or was
the. Not last, but he was the. The pinnacle of a breed of
writers that had no other choice
but to write about what they knew. And if what they knew was
the land or if what they knew was the rural area they had
been surrounded by, they were going to. They were going to
ruthlessly mine that.
They were going to ruthlessly mine that vein of experience, right? And
so, you know, he lived in.
He lived in the, you know, in the small rural valley of the Salinas Valley.
When he was a kid, he spent his summers working on ranches. He
labored with migrant workers on sugar beet farms. He
graduated from Salinas high school in 1919, literally at the
end of World War I, like, literally the year after World War I was over.
By the way, Hemingway had been in World War I,
right? And so, so Steinbeck
missed, you know, the big war, such as it were, of his
lifetime. But obviously around
for World War II, he reported on his. His son's,
I don't want to say adventures, but his son's experience in Vietnam
and reported on it not from the sense of, hey, I'm going to go to
Vietnam and visit him, but I'm going to write about this in a way that
sort of relates or is relatable to people who are
still, even in the 1960s, sending their kids
to. 1950s and 60s, sending their kids to this place
where they come from, you know, this, this. This rural area.
He studied English literature at Stanford University and left without a degree. In
1925, he traveled to New York City to try to write. Did
not make it in New York City, unlike Joan
Didion, who I think is his. His generational successor,
who did go from California to New York. And we'll talk about sort of the
geography of that in a minute. But then he
returned to work in California in 1928, and he began to
work as a tour guide and as a caretaker. And he spent a
lot of his time doing, quite frankly, what we would call these days
menial labor, menial manual labor.
His family supported him through the Great Depression so that he didn't
have to do that labor because the Great Depression happened every. All those jobs dried
up. He, you know, he lived in a cottage
and wrote ruthlessly, but he wrote about the things he saw.
And so you can see this in books from Cannery Row to.
Or from Tortilla Flat, actually through Cannery Row all
the way through much later on. His depiction of
the Okies coming from the Dust bowl to California and being
discriminated against in the Grapes of Wrath, you know, that was the book that made
him. And then, of course, the book that we are. We're talking about today, east
of Eden. He defined how rural America in the
early to middle 20th century thought about itself and
specifically how they thought about themselves. And I'm going to say this
directly and up front, thought about themselves in opposition to the city,
not as part of the city, but as a place that
was separate from an urban environment that was distinctly
separate from an urban environment. And Hemingway, not Hemingway,
sorry, Steinbeck leaned into that. Whereas guys like Hemingway, to your point,
Hemingway, Faulkner, John Dos Passos
even, who is probably the most Americanized out of all those guys?
Or not Americanized, but American centric, I should probably say that.
But those folks were, they, they did, they traveled
to Europe after they got out of World War I, you know, they, they were
like, how can I go back, how can I go back to Kansas
after I seen gay Paris? Right. And so I'm going to stay in Europe
and I'm going to sort of become part of that, that lost
generation. Steinbeck
was, was part, was the oldest member of the generation that
came after the lost generation. Right. And so he didn't have a
connection to any of that World War I experience other than
reading about it in his local newspaper. And for him, in the
Salinas Valley, the killing fields of, of,
of the killing fields and the trench warfare of Europe would have seemed like
10,000 miles away. I can absolutely see that as like a 15 year old, 16
year old reading about it in the newspaper, maybe hearing about it on the radio.
Sometimes, like we just, we underestimate
the distances that people had because everything now, you know, in our time
is so immediate, the impact of everything is so immediate.
And we see the impact of everything on our phones, whether it's happening
in Paris or Vietnam or Russia or,
you know, downtown in the city that's
the major metropolis in our state. Like, we can see all of it because of
the phones now. And so the divide between the rural and the urban has
shrunk quite a bit. But Steinbeck was probably,
like I said, the highest pinnacle of that writer who understood how to
write about rural environments and how to give those people pride,
while also, of course showing them being
exactly what they, what they are, which is just,
you know, human beings in another, another environment that's not an urban environment.
As he got older and his society continued to change well into the
post, post east of Eden as he went into the 50s and 60s,
society continued to change. The rural environment continued
to decline. And as that happened,
Steinbeck became infinitely grumpier.
And even though he won the, the Nobel Prize for literature in 1952
and later on found out that he was
sort of a best of the bad lot pick in the 19 in
1962 for that Nobel Prize for Literature and was kind of
resentful about that. And I can understand why
he, he wrote his travel book Travels with Charlie,
which I do believe we've covered on this show. And if we haven't, we will
because it is one of, one of his better books where he's just riding around
in this like RV with a dog looking at
the 60s getting ready to happen.
He, he, after he got that Nobel
Prize in, in, in 62,
he, he basically quit writing. He
basically put down his pen and he didn't write anything for the last remaining six
years of his life. He was, he is sort of one of those things where
like I think of the, I think of the Daniel Day Lewis character at the
end of There Will Be Blood, based on the book Oil, which we've
already covered. You should go back and listen to that episode where he sort of
where he, he kills the, the preacher kid,
Paul Dano in the, in the
bowling alley that he has built into his house. And then
he says, you know, come get me, I'm done. And that was basically John
Steinbeck to reality. Come get me, I'm done. I'm, I'm finished.
And it's sort of a, I think biographically sort of a
tragic end for to your point, a
man who was a towering talent.
Yeah. So I don't know. I don't know. That's
all the background on him. That's some of my thoughts on
Steinbeck. East of
Eden itself as a book though is.
Well, it's almost a thousand pages. It is
multi generational. It covers the two families
that have settled in this. That settled in the Salinas Valley, the Hamiltons or the
Trasks, and goes through three generations of their lives
and their interactions with each other,
their bear interactions with each other, but mostly their interactions with other
people, with the families and of course with the land.
Why don't we talk a little bit about California before I jump back into the
book? So California is a character
in this, in this book. What do you think of
California, Tom?
I've been there. It's a nice place to visit, but I wouldn't want to live
there,
I think, you know, not for any reason other than I,
I don't know. Again, it. There, there are some very, very
beautiful areas in California. I mean there's no doubt that it's got, that it has
its, it has its attractions.
Right. And we, we kind of talked about this in one of our previous
conversations about how
like. But the, it's, it's not so much about the actual
physical land of California than it is about the, the
mentality and the, and the,
the personality of the land which leans itself, lend. Lends
itself to a much more relaxed Environment, a much
more
accepting environment. There, there's lots of, there's lots of
adjectives here that you can describe it. And
we had spoken too about, like, you know,
I remember I, I was, I'm trying, I was trying to remember the analogy here
that we were talking about the other day, but when we were talking about how,
like, we're all Americans here, right. So I live here in the
Northeast. Californians live in California. Somebody from California that
goes to New York doesn't really do all that well, but somebody from Boston that
goes to New York does just fine. Right. Like, it's. And it's not.
And by the way, California has plenty of cities. LA is one of the
biggest cities in the country. But people who live in LA
don't necessarily like being in Boston and New York. It's
just the, the, the, the personality of the
cities are different. Right. Like, so it's so. And, and we talked about this.
Like, even though we're in the same country, it's like people from the Northeast
are like, it's like France and Germany. Like, if you think about the
closeness of France and Germany, but yet somebody from France just
doesn't understand somebody from Germany. They don't get it. Like, there's, there's lots of
cultural things, language things,
behavioral things that are all different because Germany is Germany and France is
France. Well, within our own country, we have the same
dynamics. Like, think about the people poke fun at
the Boston accent all the time. And I try really hard
not to have one. And hopefully, you know, it's not
blatantly obvious when I speak that I'm from the Boston area.
But that, but that's on purpose on my part
because I want to be able to interact with people around the country and then
have them not know where I'm from just because my mouth opens. Like.
Right. But, but California. So that's this, like, that's the idea.
Right? Like, so somebody that was born and raised here in the Northeast, again, whether
you're Boston, New York, and by the way, I kind of wrapped Philadelphia into that
environment as well. When I think of the Northeast, I basically think of like Pennsylvania
up. And then, you know, so we got these sections of the country
that all have these different dynamics. So I get my point to this, I guess.
And the rambling nature of this is, I
think having the landscape as a
character in the books makes sense to me because it would be different if you
lived in different places in, Even in our own country. Yeah, like
you, you, you would have to have.
You would. Because Somebody who lives in the United
States would want to know that, like, what area of the country
is this based on? Like, how do I know that it's like that it's
realistic? If you're taking the same characters from California and they act
the exact same way, and you tell the reader that they're in New York, it's
unbelievable from our perspective. I mean, you're selling it worldwide, like, to other
countries. Sure. They don't know any different, so it's fine. But if you're selling it
within the borders of our country, you need to have. You need to have that.
That landscape as a character kind of situation for people, for the reader,
to make it believable. Well, and I also think that
from Steinbeck's perspective as a writer and as a
creator, the land itself as a
character has its own personality and it has its own
stuff going on. And we're going to talk about this when we get to. When
we talk about Kathy Ames later. Later on, we'll sort of revisit this.
But. But I think. I think a couple of things.
One, I think it's really interesting
how, because California is at the end of the continent,
that it is perceived as. Even in his description there that we opened up
with, it is perceived as this paradise by
people from back east, right? A place where,
you know, the water is, you know, always
blue. It's not dirty like the Atlantic. It's always blue.
The sun is always shining. Even when I've been to California. Like, I was in
California last year for. For a training that I had to do with a
client. And I got off the plane and
I. I looked around and even. And my wife says, I always say this
about places, but it's true. I said, the light even looks different here. The
sunlight looks different here. And of course, the first question that.
The first question that comes out of my mouth was. The same question that comes
out of my mouth when I go to Florida, by the way, is how do
people actually do work here? Like, if I lived here, I would never work.
I wouldn't. I wouldn't hustle at all. Like, there'd be no. What is the
reason? But that's the perspective. That's an east coast perspective
on. On a West coast sort of posture. And I know
they're hustling out there. I know all my California listeners, I know y' all are
hustling the heck off out of it. You hustle. You just hustled Eric
Sowell, you know, out of the Congress. So I know you're getting after it, like.
And I saw that just happened at the governor's race in California.
But so I know you could all can get after it, but
the getting after it is at a different speed at a different template.
Because. And I think Steinbeck was. Was be the
beginning of sort of setting the template for this. California is sort of the
last frontier. It's the last place in America where
you can go. Now, of course, people will say,
well, you can go to Hawaii. Not in 1952.
Now. Yeah, in 1952. That was not. For a lot of Americans, that was
not an option. And for Americans of
Steinbeck, Alaska wasn't a state until 1959. So.
Right. And for. And for. For. For Americans
of Steinbeck's generation. I mean, the continent ended at the
coast of California. Like that's where it ended. Like that was it.
And so it was one of those. It's one of those places where.
Well, I had a person from California sort of describe it to me recently when
a conversation we were having, he said, you know, Californians both love our state
and we hate our state at the same time. And I never heard
them sort of frame it that way. Somebody like that frame it that way.
He's like, we're in love with the natural beauty and the surfing and
the skiing and all of this and this and that, but we also, like,
hate it. And I said, well, how does, how is that possible?
Because I live in Texas now. And I will
tell you right now, people from Texas don't hate their state.
I can tell you that right now. And by the way, everybody else in America
knows we don't. The American, the Texans don't hate their state. Texans will
tell everybody who will listen that they don't hate their state. Everybody
knows. Nobody's surprised by this, but
to hear that from a Californian. And I've been. I've lived other places. I mean,
when I lived in. As an example, when I lived in Minnesota,
almost everybody that I ever met in Minnesota had this fantasy
dream of moving to like, Denver, Colorado. They're like, Colorado
is the place to be. They all wanted to move to Denver. Right. Or
when I used to go visit people in Colorado, they had this fantasy of living
in like, Idaho or Wyoming. There's always a place that's
better. But in Kepler, for Californians, there is no place that's better
because this is the butt end of. This is the butt end of the continent.
There is no place that's better. There's nowhere else to go, unless you're going to
go in the ocean. And so you sort of have to make it here,
right? But you also have to make it here in what is
perceived by others who are not from here as paradise.
And the way that Steinbeck describes the Salinas Valley with its
alkali sands, and he describes the wind,
and he describes, like, the. The harshness of the environment
when you're trying to farm and trying to pull something from it. It's not
paradise. It's. It's just as vicious as any other place where
you could go and try to try to make an agricultural living. And
yet in east of Eden, he describes it with a
certain. I'm going to use the term
here. A certain love, a certain affection for all of the
harshness, a certain affection for all of the
toughness that is required to be there. And it is
a rural toughness. As he presents
California as a character,
I also think that there's a
dichotomy going on here between the rural area and the
city's area. And we kind of see it in some of the families that. That
he describes at east of Eden, which. Back to the book,
back to east of Eden, we're going to read, like, different
pieces of this. We're not going to obviously read the whole book. It's a thousand
pages. Can't do that. Plus it's copywritten. So we have to be careful
how many pieces we actually read from it. But suffice it
to say, you want to go pick up this book, it's. It's worth
your time and you'll breeze through the almost thousand pages fairly
quickly. So we're going to pick up here
chapter. Let's see, part
one, Chapter five, Part one.
Describing one of the families, the Hamiltons, right on
the ranch, the little Hamiltons began to grow up. And every year there was a
new one. George was tall. Was a tall, handsome boy,
gentle and sweet, who had from the first a kind of courtliness.
Even as a little boy, he was polite and what they used to call, quote,
unquote, no trouble from his father. He inherited the neatness of
clothing and body and hair. And he never seemed ill dressed, even when he
was. George was a sinless boy and grew to be a
sinless man. No crime of commission was ever
attributed to him. And his crimes of omission were only misdemeanors,
by the way. Pause. I love that turn of phrase.
His crimes of omission were only misdemeanors.
Back to the book. In his middle life, at about the time such things were
known about, it was discovered that he had pernicious anemia.
It is possible that his virtue lived on a lack of energy.
I love that term phrase too. Behind George Will
grew along, dumpy and stolen. Will had little imagination, but he had great
energy from childhood on. He was a hard worker, if and if anyone
would tell him what to work at. And once told, he was indefatigable.
He was a conservative, not only in politics, but in everything. Ideas
he found revolutionary and he avoided them with suspicion and
distaste. Will liked to live so that no one could
find fault with him. And to do that he had to live as nearly like
other people as possible. Maybe his father had
something to do with. With Will's distaste for either change or variation, which.
Will was a growing boy. His father had not been long enough in the Salinas
Valley to be thought of as a quote unquote old timer, by the way. Pause.
So the Hamiltons were immigrants to. To California. They
were immigrants to this part of the Salinas Valley as.
As Steinbeck describes them. And they were.
Tom, you'll appreciate this, being from the Boston area, they were Irish
immigrants
which. Which back in the day meant they were already stamped
with. With the dirty end of the stick.
Back to the book. He was in fact a foreigner and an Irishman
at that time. The Irish were much disliked in America. They were looked upon with
contempt, particularly on the east coast. But a little of it must have seeped out
to the west. And Samuel not only had variability, but was a man of
ideas and innovations in small cut off communities. Such
a man is always regarded with suspicion until he has proved he is no danger
to the others. A shining man like Samuel could and can cause a lot
of trouble. He might, for example, prove too attractive to the wives of men who
knew they were dull. Then there were his education and
his reading, the books he bought and borrowed, his knowledge of things that could not
be eaten or worn or cohabited with his interest in poetry and
his respect for good writing. If Samuel had been a rich
man like the Thorns or the Del Mars with their big houses and wide flat
lands, and he would have had a great library.
The Del Mars had a library, nothing but books in it and paneled in oak.
Samuel, by borrowing had read many more of the Del Mars books than the Del
Mars had themselves. In that day, an educated rich man was acceptable.
He might send his sons to college without comment, might wear a vest and a
white shirt and tie in the daytime of a weekend of the weekday, might wear
gloves and keep his nails clean. And since the Lives and practices of Richmond
were mysterious. Who knows what they could use or not use?
But a poor man, what need had he for poetry or for painting or
for music not fit for singing or dancing? Such things
do not help him bring in a crop or keep a scrap of cloth on
his children's back. And if, in spite of this, he
persisted, maybe he had reasons which. Which would not
stand to the light of scrutiny. By the way,
I love that. I love that sort of
characterization and the sort of
juxtaposition that Steinbeck does. Again, understanding and
knowing who real people are
and how real people have to engage in the world.
Back to the book, just this last piece here. The first
few years after Samuel came to Salinas Valley, there was a vague distrust of him
and perhaps Will as a little boy. Her talk in the San Lucas store.
Little boys don't want their fathers to be different from other men. Will
might have picked up his conservativism right then. Later, as the other children
came along and grew. Samuel belonged to the valley and it was proud of him
in a way. A man who owns a peacock is proud.
They weren't afraid of him anymore for he did not seduce their wives or lure
them out of sweet mediocrity. The
Salinas Valley grew fond of Samuel, but by that time,
Will was formed. Now
there's other children in. In this family. It's not just George
and Will. So we.
We also have the third son, Tom, who's most
like his father. He was born in fury and he lived in lightning. I love
that. I love that phrase. Tom came headlong into life. He was a
giant in joy and enthusiasms. He didn't discover the world and its people,
he created them. When he read his father's books, he was the first.
He lived in a world shining and fresh and as uninspected as
Eden on the sixth day. There's the biblical illusion there again,
right? And then
there were, of course, the little sister, Molly.
And of course, Samuel
had another. Had another child named Joe.
Joe was physically lazy and probably mentally lazy too. He
daydreamed out his life and his mother loved him more than the others because she
thought he was helpless. Actually, he was the
least helpless because he got exactly what he wanted with a
minimum of effort.
I love that from Steinbeck, by the way.
He understood the dynamics of human nature, right? Like, that's the. That's. I guess
I. I guess I'm. I kind of was. That's kind of what I was leading
toward earlier, right. When I was talking about, like, he Just. He just
got it. Like, he just got. He understood that. And by the way, this
is a really, really good example, but
something else that, like, I talk to my daughter about a lot. So my daughter,
for those of you who don't know, she's a psychology major, right. So she has.
She. Her and I talk a lot about behavioral. Behavioral patterning,
changing those behaviors and the difficulties behind changing behaviors that have been
around, whatever. Right? But think about this. She's just gone to school
for a good amount of time, spent a tremendous amount of money at a very
good university to get this insight into human nature.
Steinbeck seemed to have had it naturally that he just
understood people and the dynamics and their
behavioral patterns and what that meant as that behavioral
pattern interacted with society. If you think just the two excerpts that
you read right there, the difference between the two brothers,
Right. He understood that. That dynamic without having a
psychology degree. That's impressive. I'm sorry, that's just
impressive. Not only not having a psychology degree,
but going around, I
presume, in his town and in his environment.
And it's not just one example. He would have seen. Right? He would have seen
a pastiche of examples, and then he was able
to pull together. And this is an issue.
This is one of the reasons why I don't think AI will ever be the
thing that we think it's going to be. I think we've overblown it massively.
He took the pastiche of patterns, which AI can do, and he
can predict behavior, which AI can also do. But what
AI can't do is take the pastiche of patterns,
put them together, and then go, this is. What is. This is the
example of a whole human being and then make that whole human being relatable to
other human beings even better. And I don't remember which. I don't
remember which character it was, but there was. I remember seeing an article or an
interview written, an interview of
Steinbeck, and he was being interviewed. Sorry, I'm
sorry. An article about an interview of him. That's
okay. So the article written about an interview of him, and he was talking about
one of his characters, and I don't remember which book it was, but they asked
him where he got the idea for the character, and he's like, oh. And he
started explaining, like, these three different people that he grew up
seeing, that he said in his mind, if he could make them one person, they
would be dynamic. Was the. The phrase that he. Right. So to your point about
AI, AI is not doing that either. AI is not Taking three
different people, their, their behavioral patterns, their characteristics,
their actions, their thought processes, and then
blending that into one human being and then writing about them
as if they were that a new person. Like that's right. So
again, you know it. I, I don't know
if that's the only thing that AI is going to struggle with. I'm sure there
are other things. I, trust me, I believe that. To your point, I think
we've overblown what AI is going to create.
I literally had a guy tell me that, you know, between five and ten
years from now, not, not the next century, but
between five and ten years from now, no human being is going to work anymore
and we're going to have an AI avatar that works for us and they're. The
AI avatar is going to earn our money and we're just going to be dependent
on how good we can create our AI avatar. Guitar that is one of the
most absurd things I've ever heard in my life. That, that we're going to see
that in the next five years anyway, anyway, but to, to. Back
to Steinbeck, where I think you're right, but I think, I
think it goes a layer beyond that where like he said about
this one particular character, I wish I could remember which character, what book it was,
but he was like, yeah, I remember this guy in my,
my childhood. And then I met this guy over here and this guy. And he
goes. And I remember thinking to myself, if these three guys could be one person.
And by the way, people, I'm paraphrasing, this is not a quote from the article.
I read this article a long time ago, but, but I
remember if I could ever find it, I would send it to you. I think
you find it fascinating, but just the
way his brain worked, I feel like it was beyond his, his
time. I think, I think he was, if he were alive today, I think he
would still be read, I guess is my point. I think
if he was a brand new writer today, I think people would still read him.
Yes, I actually, I'll go a step further with you than that. This is actually
one of the conclusions that I sort of
came to not only reading east of Eden and us having a
conversation about it, but then also sort of looking at Steinbeck. And I've
read other things from him, obviously. And we'll bring Grapes of
Wrath. We're going to talk about that book on this show. I also want to
talk about Cannery Row. It is a fascinating little book. It's very,
very small, very, very compact,
but it is about. It's about, you know, these people who live
near and around a canning factory, you know, on the
shore. Well, on the shore on the. Right up. Right up
next to the beach of the water, where they can, like, go get fish. They
bring fish in and other, you know, seafood, and
they're packing it and canning it and sending it out. And
there's so much life embedded
in his descriptions of those people. I read that book
when I was probably
the age my youngest son is now, so probably nine years old.
I have not revisited that book since I was nine years old. And that's
damn near 40 years ago now. And I still
remember it in vivid detail. You know, there's the.
You know, the fishmonger wife, and then there's like, the guy who's. Who's
quite frankly lazy, but then there's the other guy who's really industrious. And then
we got. We got all this cast of characters.
And to your point about being able to combine things together,
you're right. That was his creative genius. I think that
creative genius still exists. The problem,
I think, in our time and the reason why so many
modern books, particularly postmodern
books, are
currently struggling against AI I think
the reason for that is the kind of
creative dynamism that is required to
pull a relatable care, a psychologically
and culturally relatable character together. That sort of
dynamism requires, number one, a lack of distraction, which means you got to put
down your phone, you got to get off the Internet, you got to stop the
dopamine stuff. Number two, I think it
requires time to write and to think and to engage
in critical thinking, which when you're distracted, you don't have that time because
you always feel crowded. And then there are the practical distractions of life as
well. But then the third thing, and I think this is huge,
we've made writing as a culture, and this is a cultural
thing, not an individual writer thing. We've made writing an act of
status. Look at the MFA programs and look at the writers workshops. We've
made it an act of status to be a writer, particularly a literary writer, like
what Steinbeck would be considered to be in our time. We've made that an act
of status rather than an act of, quite
frankly, the way Steinbeck was an act of grind and
hardscrabble struggle. Yeah. You know,
and I don't think we value that hardscrabble struggle as much as we. We
say we do, you know, and this gets back to.
To dynamics again, between the city and the country and a lot of other things
that tied together that, that Steinbeck was, was sort of sitting at the, at the
pinnacle of one other thing. I think that's interesting.
And we haven't really gone into this, but maybe this is the place to go
to if you read this book as a leader. There are biblical
illusions shot through this book.
And we talked a little bit about this in our conversation on Monday. Like to
re, Bring, bring this back up the Bible, right?
We did like maybe a five minute jog on the Bible, right. I was, I
was wondering, I was wondering if we're gonna, if we were gonna inject this because
on Monday it seemed to be a very lengthy conversation about it and we didn't
seem to get there today. But, but anyway, go ahead, Go ahead. No, we're there
now. No, we're there now. We're there now. So,
you know, the title of this book is, you know, it comes from the
idea in Genesis 4 that after Cain,
you know, kills Abel and, you know, the blood of Abel
cries out to, from the ground to God, or transcendence, however you want
to think of this. You know, Cain is of course
cursed and, and he. By the
way, there's a great line from Cain, number of great lines from Cain, but
one of the ones that I'm going to focus on this piece anyway,
he says to God, my punishment is too great for
me. If you cast me out into the world,
basically I'll be hunted and killed. And transcendence
agrees with him and puts a mark on him and basically says, if
anyone touches Cain, I'm going to do to you what Cain
just did to Abel, which is a weird sort of
armor and protection, at least weird
from our perspective.
And then he is cast out into the land of Nod.
Now when we think about the land of Nod, we tend to think of sleeping.
But the original translation of the word Nod, if I remember
correctly, I read this somewhere is wandering. It's a land of
wandering east of Eden. Well,
if Eden in Steinbeck's mind,
in a Californian's mind, if Eden is the east coast, you
know, what's east of Eden? Or if Eden is the west coast, what's east
of Eden, right? This. He would have juxtaposed this with geography,
even the way in which Steinbeck put together this book. So
the, the book ends with the last line from,
from Adam Trask, right? Who,
who, who, who dies? And
at the end of it to his, to his, his
Chinese American servant, right,
Named Lee. Lee, right. He says the
last word, his last Word. The last word of the book is Timshaw
T I M S H E L Now
if you go and you Google this word, you're going to see a whole bunch
of stuff about Tim Schultz. This has been pulled apart by a whole bunch of
different. You'll see a couple of different spellings of it as well. There's a couple
of different spellings of it that you know. Etc. But go ahead. Yeah,
exactly. And Tim Shell comes from the idea that
exists in. Also in the. In.
In Genesis 4. Let me go ahead and pull this up directly because I don't
want to, I don't want to miss this. But it
says. Or not. But it says, let me see.
So Genesis 4.
Here we go. Genesis 4, chapter 6.
So the Lord said to Cain, why are you angry? And why has your face
fallen? Verse verse 7. If you do
well, will you not be accepted? Then verse.
And this is. Continue on at verse seven. And if you do not do well,
sin is crouching at the door. Its desire is for
you. And you must rule over it. That line right there at
the end, you must rule over it. That's the trans. The American.
Well, not the American. That's the ESV translation of this
word. Tim Shaw but if you go and look at some of the research
around it, the Hebrew, the definition
that's closer to the Hebrew is more of a thou
mayest rule over it, which indicates
a certain degree of.
And this is really interesting, a certain degree of autonomy in
creation and free will. It's not that
sin is going to have its way with you, although with that term, when he,
when he, when it's framed in that way, it is almost a.
And, and I'm not the first person to come across this term or not to
come across which is state this, this interpretation
of sin will have its way with you. You can find this a lot of
different places. But the way that is interpreted in the original
Hebrew is that sin will basically have sexual relations with you. It will
possess you right in that sort of meaningful way that we get
from. That we get when we think of sexual relations between two people. Okay?
But then it switches and it says you'll have.
Or transcendence says to Cain, if you
resist, you'll have the ability to have free will over that. You'll have
the ability to control yourself and have a certain amount of autonomy in
sp and a certain amount of choice right there.
And so it's interesting that that is the word Timshel. That is the word
that east of Eden ends on. And Steinbeck was
obsessed with this idea. He was so obsessed with it
that he carved a wooden box to
send to his publisher that had the manuscript, the original manuscript for east
of Eden inside the wooden box. And on the outside of the box, he carved
the Hebrew. The Hebrew sign for Tim Shull and
sent it to his. Sent it to his publisher. So I'm saying all of that
to say that when you read this book, there are biblical illusions
shot through it. There
are some subtle differences, though, too, right? Like. Yeah, you know, in the.
In the. In the Bible, Cain and Abel Kane kills Abel. In the book, you
have the two brothers Adam, and it's
Adam and I'll pull it up. Go ahead. It starts
with a. Starts with S. Yes. It was Adam and Charles.
Charles, Yep. Adam and Charles. Yep. Charles and. And Adam
dies, but Charles isn't the one that kills him. He dies in the war. Right.
And then. But. But the sin part, this is the part that I find interesting
about the book. I think the. The. The
metaphoric sin part was Charles going and
trying to kind of cozy up to Adam's wife.
Yes, right. Like, so, like, to your point, there's all. There's a lot,
but you need to interpret it like, there's some things in there that you like.
If I'm a. If I am a. A
true reader of the Bible, like, and I. And I know the Bible like the
back of my hand, I'm going to read this book and go, what are you
talking about? It's not the same. Right. But people like you and I
who read the Bible because we believe in a higher power, but we.
We don't necessarily.
I got to be very careful how I word this, because I'm. I want to
make sure that I'm respectful, because now anybody who has heard me
on this show knows that I'm not Catholic or Christian. I'm native, but I have
a lot of respect for other religions. So I try to choose my words
carefully when I'm gonna. When I say things, but, like, but to me,
this. The Bible is a collection of stories that
are both mythical and truthful in nature, and
human beings have kind of filled in the gaps where the. Where
the gaps needed to be filled. Right? So it's. It's not
verbatim, in my opinion. It's not verbatim the. The
literal words of God, but it. The purpose behind it is
the purpose of God. So again, I'm trying to be respectful here. I'm not saying
the Bible's a bunch of garbage. That's not my. I I would never in a
million years say that. But I want to be clear because when I read the
Bible, I was reading it like a story. Like, I read it as
if it was any other kind of literary story. And I found it fascinating
to read. And so, like, between Genesis, I always
tell people my Genesis and Revelations are my two favorite books.
Books in the Bible, right? Like, it's the beginning and the end, all the stuff
that happens in the middle. It's not, it's not important.
It's very important to Christians and Catholics. I believe that, but I. Believe me, I
believe that it's important, but to me, yes, I'm good with the
bookends. Like, I, like, I, like I, I found, I found
those two books in the Bible the most fascinating, I guess. Not
that they were the best to learn morals, not that they were the best for
the, you know, know, the, the moral compass perspective. Trust me,
there's plenty of Luke and John, like, there's plenty of
moral compass stuff that goes in the, the body of the Bible.
But when you look. But if you're all this to say if you are
real, if you love the Bible, you're going to think this book is, you could
put, you could potentially think of this book as blasphemy, right? Like,
because it basically, it turns, it turns, it turns biblical things
into like this, this thing that is not
directed to be a moral compass and not directed to teach you the right,
the difference between right and wrong and not to teach you what sin is. It's
just for fun. Like, you basically turn the Bible, you turn the
Genesis into a book about. I'm just gonna write this for fun
now. If you don't look at it that way and you look at it as
an interpretation, I think it's very, very well done. Right. Like, like
it's. But again, you have to be okay with it being an interpretation.
Yeah, I would agree with that. I mean, as a person who does
believe the Bible is true. And we can
discuss. This is not a topic for today, nor is a topic for
Tom and I. And folks can, can come at me about this if they, if
they've, if they've made it this far into the show now, we're into some other
things because this is deep in the show now. But,
but I mean, like, I, we can have a conversation about what true
means because. Correct. That there's a whole bunch
of different things involved in true and true, in
my opinion, and I'm just one person with an opinion,
I want to be very clear on that. True, in my opinion, cannot be,
cannot be purely and ultimately
measured in a reductionist, Darwinist sort of
way. You just. You can't get there from here.
It minimizes reality too much and it
distills out to the point of
myopia, in many cases, important
truths and the important truth
that overwhelms and girds and
undercuts and covers our entire reality.
With that being said, I read east of Eden as the person
who's coming from that perspective. I read east of either. Not looking for
parallel allusions to Genesis 4 and everything else that happens after
Genesis, I read it for. Because
it comes from a time where
the audience that Steinbeck would have been writing to would have
caught on to the illusions and the parallels immediately because they were
much more biblically literate in the 1920s,
1930s, 1940s, 1950s than
folks are right now. Matter of fact, I'll go a step further and I
will say the rural people he was describing
were hyper biblically literate. And that's, by the way, been a trend in the United
States for, please, centuries. Since day one.
Yeah, since day one. And I think that's
a fundamental difference between folks who.
And I've lived in the city. But when you live in the city,
you get drawn into different distractions. Like I was just saying about writers.
Writers and creatives. You get drawn into different distractions and you get drawn
away in different directions. And you are drawn away from
the type of engagement with transcendence that a
biblical worldview provides you if you
are not drawn away from those things in a rural environment. Case in point,
there is a whole section in the book of
Genesis. It's Genesis 13, if I remember correctly, where
Abram, before he's Abraham, Abram and Lot are journeying
right in the. In the plane. And.
And they had just come out of Egypt, right? And Sodom and
Gomorrah hadn't yet been destroyed. And Lot and
Abram are having a. They're having a disagreement, right?
They're having a fight, and their herdsmen and the farmers
are having a fight. And finally Abram gets with Lot, who's his nephew,
who he took out of the land. Of the land that he came out of.
And when he was called by. Called by God takes
him out of the land with him and goes journeying off, you know, to. To
go on the adventure of his life at the age, by the way, of 75.
I always have to bring that up because. Proves that, you know,
the door ain't closed until the door is closed. You can Always go on the
journey of your life. It's just, you
know, your hips might be a little stiffer than they were when you were 20.
That's all. When I'm
75, I'm not walking across the desert. I'm just letting you know that. Right. Well,
well, well, well. If transcendence calls you, Tom, you might want to answer
the call. That's true. That is true. That is true.
The Creator gives me direction. I'm going to take it. But I'm. I just can't
see him asking me to walk across the desert.
He knows me better than that. Hasan. I'm just saying.
Well, he may ask. He may ask you to go on a different kind of
adventure. Maybe not walk across the desert. Right, exactly.
But. But when. When Abram gets this call, he
takes his nephew because he wanted friends and his wife and his stuff, and he
goes, right, okay, so they wandered. They've done the thing. They're getting ready to settle
down. And there's this massive plain, right? It's
described in the biblical account as the Plain of Jordan.
Right? And in the biblical account, it says it was
well watered everywhere. And by the way, the biblical account makes a
point of this. Before the Lord destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah,
even as the garden of the Lord, like the land of Egypt, as thou comest
up to Zoar, then Lot chose him. This is. This is the
thing. All the plane of Jordan. So Abram got one
spot, and Lot looked at all the plane of Jordan and was like, I'm going
to take all of this now. Lot was. This is
an interesting point. This is the interesting point I'm going to
about cities. And Lot journeyed east, and
they separated themselves one from another. Abram dwelled in the land
of Canaan, and. And Lot dwelled not in the land of
Canaan, in the cities of the plain, and pitched his
tent towards Sodom. But the men of Sodom were wicked
and sinners before the Lord exceedingly.
That's also something that I think Steinbeck is trying to get to
in here. Not necessarily that living in
LA is wicked or living in San Francisco or whatever. No,
there's righteous people there. This is the whole point of Abraham, you
know, bargaining with God about the destruction of Sodom and
Gomorrah. Of course, there's 50 righteous people. And
if there aren't lots. Or Abraham's great question
to. To God, if there's not, shall not the judge of all the
earth do right? Shall we not have a. Shall we not have
a negotiation? Shall we not have an agreement to save the righteous? Shall the righteous
be destroyed along with the wicked? Right. Okay.
I don't think Steinbeck was saying that living in a city is a place of
wickedness, but I think he was addressing in east
of Eden the tension. And he was making a choice, by the way, the
tension between the rural and the urban. He was addressing
that tension because in 1952, post World War II America,
he could see that coming with the building of the suburbs,
people pushing out from the cities, but not quite going back to the country,
cities expanding. And by the way, there's something to this. So if you look up
the statistics going into 2050,
about, you know, 25 years from now, when,
when, when, when I will be still around, hopefully, good Lord
willing, and the creek don't rise by 2050,
89% of the US population and
68% of the world population is projected to live in
urban areas in 25 years.
That's a lot of people crammed into cities.
Yeah, and there's something that you lose
there. I'm not saying you become Sodom, but I'm saying there's something that you
lose. And Steinbeck understood that tension. And he was writing to an audience that
understood that tension and was on the other side of that tension
culturally and also psychologically.
And he was trying to appeal to them with, you know, appeal to them
in biblical terms. And so they would have gotten in terms they would
understand. He was giving them an opportunity to. Again, like I
said a second ago, he was giving them opportunity to interpret this in
their brain in a way that would, that made sense to them.
Right. And, and part of the reason why this book has never not been a
bestseller is because if you go past the rural urban divide,
part art, and you go up a scale level,
it's, it's, it's for everyone, regardless of where
you live, you're going to find something in this book that you're going to relate
to. Speaking of never been not a bestseller, did
you end up looking up any of that information about.
I saw somewhere, at least I, I'm pretty sure I read somewhere that
literally Every single year, 50,000 copies of this book
are sold worldwide. Like, did you actually look that up? Is that
accurate? Yes, that's accurate. Somewhere around, Somewhere around that number.
That's. That, to me, that, that is, that is just simply incredible that,
like, to have that kind of staying power is insane to
me. Well, and it was also resurrected. Gosh,
what is it, like, 15 years ago now? Might have been
15 years ago. Now, remember when Oprah was doing her book club? She
had a book club? Yeah, yeah. I was hesitant to mention this, but
she, she glommed onto Easter beat. Right.
And, you know, there were a lot of people at the time who.
Jonathan Franzen was one of them, who, you know, didn't want,
you know, Oprah to even touch his book, which I'm sure
he's kicking himself now about that, but in some room
somewhere where no one's reading his books, but
poor bastard anyway. And actually, Jonathan Franz is a
good writer. Like I like. I like his books. I think that he's a good
magnum opus writer. But I also think that
you have to kind of understand the time in which you're in and sort of
really make some, Some cognizant decisions as a. As a writer and a
creator, sort of on. Not sort of, but on purpose and intentionally.
And I think he was a little too casual with the, with the anti Oprah
thing. I don't. I don't think he sort of understood sort of where the, where
that was going to go. But anyway, one of the points that folks like him
made was that if Steinbeck had been alive and
Oprah's book club had been stamped on the COVID of east of Eden, he
would have objected to that as well.
And I don't think they're correct on that. I. I
don't think that's true. I think Steinbeck would have said,
this black lady could. Has gotten enough cachet
to be able to bring my book forward. Okay,
that's fine. What's the problem? No, I agree with
that. I don't think he would have cared. I don't. Not that he would not
have cared. I. Quite the opposite. I think he might have even leaned into it,
to be honest, again, as we talked, as we talked before, about how
he saw the value in people for what their value, what they brought
to the table, not what he wanted them to bring to the table, not to
what he hoped they brought to the table. He saw value in people
for what they actually brought to the table. So I think if that. If
that is true in that entire conversation that
we had about that the other day is true, then you're right.
He would have saw Oprah and the value that she brought and just ran
with it. I don't think he would have questioned it. I don't think he would
have bucked it. I don't think. I think he would have just been perfectly
okay with it. And, And I think he would have. Again, he was such a
Good observer of people. I think he would have predicted that.
I think he would have started coming, so to speak. Yeah, before. Yeah, I, I,
my gut tells me that Steinbeck would have seen Oprah become Oprah before she even
knew what was, what she was doing. Like that she was Oprah, perhaps.
I think he would have seen it and I think he would have been okay
with it. I think it would have been more than okay with it. I think
he would have leaned into it. Well, and he, you know, he died before civil
rights really became, you know, sort of a thing. And,
and we didn't sort of mention this previously, but I'll mention it now.
He was fundamentally, at the end of the day, not just a person from
California, but he was a man of the west,
capital W, Regional west, like American West.
And in race relations in this country, we
never talk about regionality unless it's the south versus
everybody else. Right. But let me tell you something. I've lived in the west
and currently in Texas. I live in the western part of Texas, not the
southern part of Texas. That's east Texas. That's over there with those
people, and that's fine.
West Texas and the west in general. I mean,
first 12 years of my life, I spent in New Mexico,
the West. In the west, race relations are fundamentally different.
The battles are different than they are other
places because of the nature of,
as we opened up with, with east of Eden, the nature of who
settled that place and what their, what their, what their
posture was towards all of those kinds of issues.
You know, so he was a man of that, of
that time. And so I don't think he would have been to your point. I
think that's another reason why he would not have been opposed to
Oprah basically putting the, putting a stamp on his,
on his book. Okay,
let's talk about meaning. Let's talk about, we talked a lot
about this book. We've read some pieces from it. Talked about the influences.
We talked about Steinbeck coming all the way as part of that sort of mid
20th century pinnacle of
human nate, of understanding human nature. Being able to sort of bring everybody, to bring
dynamic personalities together and really make them creatively
interesting. Talked about the biblical illusions in this book and of course,
you know, the nature of the Trasks and the Hamiltons and the, the people that
are winding together through this multi generational narrative.
What can leaders take from all of this? If
I'm a leader and I'm listening to this podcast, what do I get from
east of Eden? What do I take why is it worth my while to read
this thousand page book? Well, I think,
honestly, I think I just, I just, I think I just said it. I'm
just like. Because I think from a leadership
perspective, I think that we as leaders have
got to stop trying to fit square pegs into round
holes and start leveraging the talents
and the, and the people that we, that we
have. Right? Meaning like, like I just said a second ago,
Steinbeck found value in people at
its face. He wasn't looking to change somebody into
something they weren't or move somebody from point A to point B because that's where
he thought they should be. He just didn't do that. He was able
to take people and
understand their value and then turn that value intrinsically
into active activity, into the, in the book. Right?
Like a character in the book or whatever. So if we're looking at, from a
leadership perspective and we're reading this book and we're truly understanding that
dynamic that he's talking about, then we can look at our teams, whether you have
one team or 10 teams, and start really identifying the
people in those teams and whether or not they bring value
to that team, team based on just who they are and not
trying to change them into something that we want. By the way, guys, that doesn't
mean that you have to keep everybody on your team. If they don't fit, fire
them and find, find somebody else. I'm not suggesting that you have to work with
what you got and you can never change it. But I'm saying that that
learning from Steinbeck's ability to, to
find value in every single person that he was able to encounter and
then turn that value into, to something amazing like that book.
We have that ability, we have that ability to look at the people that work
for us, the people that work with us and the people that we work for
understand who they are as people, their values, their morals, their.
Go back to the biblical sense. Whether you are Catholic or Christian or not.
That does not mean that you don't value a moral compass. Like,
I mean, you, whether I don't care what religion or what faith you, you, you
support. Support. I would imagine having a moral compass is going to be
important to you. Do people understand the difference between right and wrong? Are you going
to have that like, and making sure that those, the right people
fit the right circumstances for us? I, I just think
all of that is in there, right? Like that's,
I think all of it is in there and you can learn from it. If
you're looking to Learn from it. I think that's, you know, that's the,
the, that's the thing that, that I think people, I think people sometimes forget that
like if you, and again, you're probably one of the few people
that, and I know I, I try
to do this. I don't know if I do it really well, but you're one
of the few people that I know that will read a book and
not just read it simply for pleasure. You're
always looking at it from an angle perspective. Or maybe you have certain books you
do this with or certain books you don't. But I, from the, from what I've
learned from you, it's, there's always underlying tones
and underlying lessons to be, to be learned from these books and these authors that
you're reading. So to just simply read something because you just want to
have a mind numbing experience, to me, doesn't exist.
So. Yeah, yeah, I think, I think if you're, if you're taking
your time to read something, you should have some sort of
benefit from it, whether it's personal, professional,
whatever that is. And I think in east of Eden especially, and
Steinbeck in general, and I know we talked about this on Monday because quite
honestly, I don't care whether you're reading east of Eden or Mice of Men
or Grapes of Wrath or the Cannery, I don't care what any of those
Steinbeck books are going to tell you. That he
values people for what they are and who they are and what
they bring to the table. Naturally. And I think that if we can
learn from that, then we, we will become better leaders.
He even values people who we don't understand because you
can learn something from everything and something from
everyone. Let me pick this up here. This is a good segue into this.
East of Eden, Part two,
Chapter eight, Part one. He opens up with this line. I love this
line. I believe there are monsters born in the world to human
parents. Some you can see misshapen and horrible, with huge
heads or tiny bodies. Some are born with no arms, no legs, some with three
arms, some with tails or mouths. In odd places they are accidents and no
one's fault, as used to be thought. Once they were
considered the visible punishments for concealed sins.
There's that biblical illusion again, folks. And just as there are
physical monsters, can there not be mental or psychic monsters born?
The face and body may be perfect, but if a twisted gene or a malformed
egg can produce physical monsters, may not the same process produce a
malformed soul? By the way? Pause. Clearly
Steinbeck was asking the question about do we have souls
or not? Which, by the way, is a worthwhile question for our
time right now. And we better get
real quick. We better get real clear on this one
real quick, because otherwise we're going to outsource
the best stuff from our souls to mechanical men.
We're already starting to see that happening. Back to
the book. Monsters are variations from the accepted normal to a greater or
lesser degree. As a child may be born without an arm, so one
may be born without kindness or the potential of conscience.
A man who loses his arms in an accident has a great struggle to adjust
himself to the lack. But one born without arms suffers only from the people who
find him strange. Having never had arms, he cannot miss them.
Sometimes when we are little, we imagine how it would be to have wings. But
there is no reason to suppose is the same feeling birds have. No,
to a monster, the norm must seem
monstrous since everyone is normal to himself.
That is a huge insight, by the way. Everyone is normal to himself.
To the inner monster, it must be even more obscure since he has no visible
thing to compare with others. To a man born without conscience, a soul
stricken man must seem ridiculous. To a criminal, honesty is
foolish. You must not forget that a monster is only a
variation and that to a monster, the norm
is monstrous. And this
is his introduction.
And I wrote at the beginning of this chapter because I make notes in all
my books that I read for this podcast and books that I read just for
my own to Tom's void pleasure.
The note that I made was the making of a sociopath.
This is what he is describing here,
which I think is also fascinating. You think about like
Freud. Freud, the, the father of modern psychology, died in
1939. 38, 39, 40. Somewhere around there. Yeah.
So like, so Steinbeck's writing, when all this stuff is coming out
new, like, this is all new to them about like the. What, what a sociopath
is like psychology. And like, I think
this is his inner turmoil about like science. And I think
this is where he starts going down the, the, the other side of the slope.
Because you talk about how, you know, when he was growing up, he was, he
was Christian growing up and he became agnostic later in life.
I think this is part of it because seeing what Freud
was doing and then being able to word what you just read,
that's his, that's his brain saying like,
like, do we. Should we be leaning more toward biblical or should we lean more
towards science? Right, right. How do we. Like, how do we. How do we square
this circle? Yeah. Yeah. How do we square this circle? How do
we. How do we make, as the kids say these days, make
it make sense. Right? Exactly. Exactly. Yeah.
Back to the book for just a moment. He says, it is my belief that
Kathy Ames was born with the tendencies, or lack of them, which drove and
forced her all of her life. Some balance
wheel was misweighted, some gear out of ratio. She was not like other people, never
was from birth. And just as a cripple may learn to utilize his
lack so that he becomes more effective in a limited field than the uncrippled,
so did Kathy, using her difference, make a painful and
bewildering stir in her world. There was a
time when a girl like Kathy would have been called possessed by the devil. She
would have been exercised to cast out the evil spirit. And if after many trials
that did not work to Tom's point, she
would have been burned as a witch for the good of the community.
I'm going to go back to that in a second. Just keep going with the
book. The one thing that may not be forgiven a witch is her ability
to distress people, to make them restless and uneasy
and even envious. Then it goes
into a description of her and her. Her. Her body and her
hands. And it's. It's. It's a very graphic description, folks.
Just going to keep that in mind. And then.
And then we go to this.
Kathy was a liar, but did not lie the way most children do.
Hers was no daydream lying. When the thing imagined is told and to
make it seem more real, told as real, that's just an ordinary
deviation from external reality. I think the difference between a lie
and a story is that a story utilizes the trappings and appearance of
truth for the interest of the listener as well as of the teller.
That is a great description, by the way, of what an author actually does.
A story. Back to the book. A story has in it neither gain
nor loss, but a lie is a device for profit or
escape. I suppose if that definition is strictly held to,
then a writer of stories is a liar if he is financially
fortunate. Kathy's lies were never
innocent. Their purpose was to escape punishment or work or responsibility, and they
were used for profit. Most liars are tripped up either because they forget what they
have told or because a lie is suddenly faced with an incontrovertible truth. But
Kathy did not forget her lies, and she developed the most effective method of
lying. She stayed close enough to the truth so that no one. So that
one could never be sure. She knew two other methods also.
Either to interland her lies with truth or to tell the truth as though
it were a lie. If one is accused of a lie and it turns out
to be the truth, there is a backlog that will last a long time
and protect a number of other
untruths. Talk about
the psychology of a sociopath,
the making of a monster. And then the very
next chapter is the making of a. Not a sociopath, but a psychopath,
because she eventually runs into a psychopath and which of
course answers the question what happens with a psychopath and a sociopath meet. It's
not good. Let's just frame it that way. Somebody has to lose. It's like, like
George. Like Henry Kissinger's quip
during the. The Iran Iraq War.
He said infamously back in the 1980s. Infamously.
It's a pity that both sides couldn't lose,
which has always sort of amused me in a geopolitical level.
And Kissinger, I have my own concerns about his mental health,
but anyway. Or had about his
mental health. But anyway,
the, the thing about Kathy, and this is why I
wanted to bring it up even close to the close here of our show today.
Kathy is on the one hand, yes, she's
clearly, I'm going to use the term here, demonically evil.
She is seeking to manipulate and gain power. She commits murder.
She is out for money and for greed. And she ruins a whole bunch of
people, including her own kids. She train wrecks a whole bunch of people.
And by the way, Steinbeck, basing this on people he saw,
right, and behaviors he actually saw, was trying to make
sense of this. But Kathy is also
just like all of the other characters in the book,
from the Hamiltons to the Trasks and their entire family and all the dynamics
that happen in there, including like deaths that just come out of nowhere,
failures of the land, failures of farming, failures of animals.
She's a tragic figure. And this is the part that I
think we've. In our current era, we have
a lot of movies that try to make the villain relatable
or even try to weirdly enough turn the villain into a hero. And I, I
have a problem with that as a storytelling trope because sometimes people are just evil
and you don't need to know that. Daddy didn't hug them. Like, it doesn't matter.
People are just evil. And that's okay to say. It's
fine. Now the reason we don't say that is because we want to have it
both ways. Because if there's Gray area then kind of
the things that I do well that I can't be judged. And it goes to
this whole like, you know, or, or, or we want the, we want the Deadpools
of the world. Right? Do bad things for the right reason or whatever. Right. Is
that really that much better? Is that better? I don't think so.
I don't think so. Yeah. No. We need
to get back to yes, you can know evil. Yes, there is
objective evil, just like there's objective good. And there's no
confusion about this. We actually know. And we, by the way,
you know how we know in our lives when objective evil is done
to us, we cry out for justice. That's how we know there's
objective evil. That's how we know anyway
and that's how we know we can identify it. But the
other, but the piece of it that we're missing, the part that we confuse with
the gray area in our time is the tragedy of evil,
the tragic nature of it. And not just the outcomes
of evil, but also the environment that
produces that evil. Because Kathy is not described as,
as learning how to be evil. She's described as being evil from
birth. That's why he opens up with the whole like comparison
to a malformed body. Right. Can you have a
malformed soul? Soul.
And that is a, I think
a extremely challenging question
specifically for our time because we don't even believe in the soul, much less
that it could be malfunction formed. Or we struggle with that belief and
then when evil happens to us or when there are genuinely evil people in
the world, we have no answer for them. We have no answer for their behavior
other than, and this is the failure of
Nuremberg, other than to appeal to some sort of morality
that comes from nowhere. And basically just to like, just
to like say, well, this morality that comes from nowhere, we're going to put upon
you and we're going to lock you up in jail. And of course the evil
person looks at that decision not
as justice but as the,
the, the, the leveraging
of power over them and thus learns nothing and changes
nothing. You have to have a moral element. You have to admit,
you have to admit that there's objective truth. You have to admit that there's objective
evil. You have to admit that there's objective good. And you have to say,
as Steinbeck struggled with, and it's okay to struggle with this question, but
you have to at least admit that this is the question by whose authority
are we determining these objectives? And we have to name that authority.
And in A book that has biblical illusions. Steinbeck was, was
clearly saying that that authority is a transcendent God. And
we can still wrestle with that. That's okay. And we
should. For leaders.
Thoughts on. Huh? What do you do,
what do you do if you have a narcissist? Because that's a term that's
thrown around quite a bit. Everybody's a narcissist these days. You know, if you
have a narcissist in your, in your organization, or maybe even you have
a sociopath or a psychopathic behaving person
without a clinic. And these are not clinical definitions, by the way. I want to
be very clear. These are not clinical definitions. We want to get a clinical definition
of one of my guests. I could bring on and give a clinical definition of
all this, but this is not what we're talking about Last, last time I checked.
Hey, son and I are not psychologists, psychiatrist or any of the like.
So. Right. Like, I have no degrees, no certifications.
Yeah. This is pure conjecture. Right. But if you're, but if
you're a leader and you're seeing behavior that's objectively
bad, objectively not good, how
do you deal with that on your team? How do you deal with that in
a world where, well, you know, Johnny just didn't get hugged.
Let me add, let me add to your question and see what you, how you
answer to this one as well. Because not only like, okay, so observationally,
watching somebody do things that are not bad. What? Fine. Okay, I get that. That's
bad inherently evil. We don't want people doing that. But what happens if you trust,
try to redirect them, you try to give
them corrective actions, you try to give them
opportunity to do the right thing and they choose not to.
Like how? Like, I mean, I, I, I, I know what I would do. I
think for me, the answer is very simple. That person's not on my team anymore.
I'm. See you later. You're no, you're no longer my problem. You're
somebody else's problem at this point. At that point. But should
I, am I wrong in doing that? Like, should I be thinking about ways to
be more lenient, to be more
inclusive, be more willing, be more
willing to be patient with those corrections? I, I, I don't know. But
I will tell you, I only have a certain tolerance level for that stuff. So
it's it, you know, and if I point it out to you and you have
no interest in correcting your behavior, then I have no interest in having
you on my team. Team. So
for me, because you're asking me this question, for me, if I'm
leading a team of folks and someone is doing something that's objectively bad,
right? For the team, I'm going to ask. There's
a series of cascading sort of questions I'm going to ask,
but I am going to see that as objectively bad and I'm going to confront
that person. That's one of the first things that I'm going to do because I've
learned that if you confront a person who is
a. Let's just start with the lying part, okay? If you confront a
person who's a liar with objective truth,
and by the way, a liar relies on everybody
going along with the lie, that's where they get the power because
everybody just goes along with the lie.
Well, the most dangerous person on any team and it doesn't
have to be the leader, the, the designated leader or the positional leader,
it can be anybody on the team. The most dangerous person on
that team is going to be the person who doesn't go along with the objective
lie. It doesn't go along with the, with the lack of
objective truth, that's going to be the most dangerous person. This is why
we have protections for whistleblowers and things like that. Because that person
not only is dangerous, but is in danger,
but is also in danger. Okay? So for me, what I'm
going to do is I'm going to confront that person first. Then the second
thing I'm going to do is I'm going to
not try to save that person, but I'm going to sort of take the
attitude of,
well, you know my favorite superhero, Batman. I don't have to save
you, okay? I'm not obliged
to rescue you and I'm not going to get out of the way of your
consequence. So as long as consequences are clear,
all I am is the deliverer of consequences. That's all. At the end
of the day, I'm not the boss, I'm not the leader. I am
the deliverer of consequences. That's the other
thing that people sometimes get caught up on.
They get caught up on do I have the power to deliver the consequence or
do I have the power to accept accountability if the consequence doesn't work and
it becomes a very power oriented mini
Nuremberg trial sort of weird,
sort of we're going to have the morality without the appeal to the objective sort
of kind of moment. And people don't use those terms, but that's basically what they're
doing. Right. At a psychological level, that's what they're doing. And
I think you have to. Think you have to let go of all of that.
I think you have to say no. You know what? It's tragic. This
is the tragic part. Part. It's tragic that you lied. It's
tragic that these are the consequences.
Have a good day. Goodbye. And by the way,
when your. Your future employer calls me
and asks me questions, and the final question, of course, will be, would
you rehire this person? I'm going to be honest, because
I'm not going to lie and I'm going to say, no, I'm not going to
rehire that person. And when they ask me why, because of course, none of
those. None of those interview questions. I've been through a few of those interviews for
former employees, and none of my former employees let me go on record. None of
my former employees have I ever had to have this sort of. Sort of
hypothetical conversation about. I never had any of these kinds of
problems. Right. I ran into people in other venues that have lied to me, but
not. Not who I was leading or teams that I was on.
But. But if, if I had, you know, those series
of questions they don't typically ask, did this person lie about XYZ
or abc? That's not typically something HR is looking for, but it's in that
rehire question. Would you rehire this person? And the answer, of course, is no.
No, I wouldn't hire. Rehire a liar. Well, why wouldn't you rehire this person?
Well, let me tell you a story, man. Not what I thought about
it, not what I felt about it, but here's what practically happened.
Here's a fun fact, though. In the state of Massachusetts, you're not allowed to answer
that question. Really? You
can answer, wow, would you rehire this person? And they can
say, no, I would not rehire this person. And you're. You. If they say
why and you answer it, you can get sued
very, very deeply in the state of Massachusetts, because that really,
that could be. It could be considered defamation. That could be considered, like, all
kinds of stuff, because if. If the
words that come out of your mouth next are closer
to opinion than fact, then
it opens up that company to a lot of liability.
Interesting. In the state of Massachusetts, they will tell you you are
allowed to answer three questions on a referral or on a
reference. Yeah. Did they work for you, yes or no. What was the
time frame that they worked for you? Can you vet and can you
verify their position? Like, what was their role and
would you rehire them? That's it. That's
it. That's. That is a reference in the state of Massachusetts.
Well, I guess in the state of Massachusetts even liars got to eat.
And I guess the state of Massachusetts is going to, is going to protect the,
is going to protect the liars because God forbid the liars don't
eat. But maybe if,
maybe my, my pushback on that and this is my only pushback thought
and the state of Massachusetts is going to do whatever the state of Massachusetts does
is well and I can tell you the theory behind it is. The theory behind
it is just simply if you and I are working together, you're my boss and
we just don't get along. You could and like I didn't
technically do anything wrong, but you, you replaced me because
we just weren't a good personality fit. Then you could go and then
vilify that person on, on the reference. Right. And the kinds of things
we're talking about, the Kathy Ames of the world are edge cases.
Right. I, I, I genuinely think there are exact. Yeah. At least in,
in the state of Massachusetts. In, and I'm not trying to defend them here, but
in, in their defense, they're thinking that those are outliers, that those
are statistical anomalies, that generally people will leave a job because
they weren't a good fit and you don't want to then penalize them and not
be to your point. They have to, they still have to feed their families. So.
Right. And if they're really not that good of a person, you're going to see
it on their resume anyway because they've had eight jobs in the last five years.
Right. Like you, you don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out that
there's a problem there. But, but from a
But they, they just don't want to add fuel. They don't want to allow people
to add fuel to the fire, I guess is the, is the point to your
point A few minutes ago it's like, it's like working through Dragnet.
State the fact. Just the facts, ma'. Am. Just, just give me the facts. I
do not want to hear your opinion as to why that person doesn't work there
anymore. Right. I want to hear facts. Fact. Did they
work there? Yes. Fact is this how much money they made. Fact is this
the dates and times they work there. And would you rehire them? Should tell
you everything you need to know. If they say no,
I would not rehire them. Why it doesn't. What is the Reasoning does not,
does not matter. Who the hell cares? That is a red
flag to me that I'm not overcoming with a simple, well, but
why was it your fault or theirs? Like, who the hell cares? I don't care
if. Right. If they say no. If they say no, I move
on to the next candidate. Well, and I'm sure there's also some sort
of Title seven, Title nine.
Yeah. Some sort of Civil Rights act sort of
interpretation underneath,
underneath this as well, which, which I'm
sure is again, again, appealing to
what, like what are we appealing to here? And again, this is my, this is
my philosophical sort of perspective on this At a
practical level, again, I am
practically, I have not experienced an edge case like that.
Practically speaking, if I were, pragmatically speaking,
if I were to face an edge case like that, yeah,
I, I, I'd get rid of that person because that person has to go
now. Also, let's, let's be very clear. The
likelihood that that person is going to put me down as a reference where I'm
even going to get that call is probably going to be minimal
at best. At best. Which is so way when I
hire people, that's why I don't ask them for references. I just go straight off
their resume and just call random people on their resume. I don't even ask them.
Right. Yeah. I just want to know. And by the way, I, I don't
even care if like, so again, at our age,
can you remember the dates and times of all the places that you worked?
Probably not. I, I can give my best guess. So I don't even double check
that, to be honest with you. If somebody says they work there for two years,
I, that's usually the question I have. I don't say did they work there from
this date to this date. I would just say they worked there for about two
years. Yeah, something like that sounds about right. Okay. And then I move on. Like
I don't, I don't care what the actual dates are. But like, well, because again,
I, and it's not that I think they're lying. I just think sometimes your, your
memory fails you in, in remembering the actual
dates and time. So my only question I really want to know is
would you rehire them? If given the opportunity and the, and the
circumstances were, were right for you, would you rehire
them? And if they probably. Or
maybe that's good enough for me too. Like if I just
don't want to hear no. I just don't want to hear no. No, I absolutely
would not Hire them again. Okay. Thank you very much. I appreciate it. Have a
nice day. Right, right. You know what I mean? Like,
anyway, I know we're, we're a little off track here, but. No, no, it's okay.
It's okay because, because this gets into. So, okay, so that's the extreme edge case,
right? We're talking about the liar who's clearly lying. That, that's
Kathy Ames type. Let's go down the, the, the.
Let's go down the, the register of sociopathic. Sociopathic scale.
Sure. Let's go down the sociopathic scale to your garden variety
narcissist who takes credit for projects that aren't theirs,
talks over other people in the meeting, you
know, stays within the boundaries of whatever is approved in
HR language, of behavior, whatever,
but is always kind of riding the edge kind of slightly,
and also is loved by a certain cadre of
people. And thus. And by the way, those cadre of people are
influential. One of those cadre of people might be your boss and thus
feels as though they protected themselves from being fired. This
kind of person is rife in our organizations. Right.
And the term, of course, it's thrown around for this person is narcissist all of
the time. How does a leader do we deal with the narcissists? Because we
do see a lot of this. And I, by the way, I think we're seeing
more narcissists because of social media and because of the
impact of the Internet plus social media and the performative nature
of the way we live our lives out online that has now
spilled out into the real world. I think that's
the reason behind it. I think this is a relatively new thing.
And by new, I mean within the last 15 or 20 years of work culture.
I don't think. I think people were just as narcissistic in the 1980s, in the
1970s, 1950s, 1960s. Hell, they were just as narcissistic when they
were making straw without bricks
at the end of Genesis or at the beginning, actually, at the beginning of Exodus.
Sorry, they were just as narcissistic then. They just didn't
have as many outlets for their narcissism. We've given people
more outlets for narcissism. Thus the number of
times we see that behavior and can recognize it in real life and other
people has increased, particularly in our workplaces. What,
as leaders, do we do with the garden variety narcissist who we can't quite fire,
but we know they're going to be a problem at every meeting? I
Wonder also, like before I answer that, I wonder also if we sometimes
confuse narcissist with self
preservation. Right? Like, so you, if you, that's
good, you could come across as a narcissist if you are in
defense mode all the time or if you are in,
you know, you know, fight like that. If you're, if your
fight or flight is invoked and you decide to fight, sometimes you look like a
narcissist and you're just defending your position on something or. You know what I mean?
Like, I think sometimes we. To your point a second ago, I
don't know if we're truly seeing more narcissistic behavior or
if we're seeing more
behavior that feels like they need to be
that they're defending themselves or that they have to put themselves in a position of
detraction of attention, so to speak. Right? Like the boss is coming down on a
project. This isn't getting done. It's not my fault. I did this, this
and this. So don't look at me like it's, it's self preservation more than it
is narcissism. Now again, is that true or not? I don't know. I'm just, I,
I wonder about that though, if that, that is the case. Case. And in those
environments. I feel like that
because like again, the, the, the situation I just gave you, like if you have
a project going as a team, then you are
successful or you fail as that team. Stop singling people out.
Like, stop, stop allowing your team to say, well, I did my part, so
and so didn't do theirs. That's not relevant. If you are going to be
successful or failed and if you're going to be judged success or
failure by the team, then start allowing, start
forcing the team to view it that way. I think that's number one.
If it's not a team event and it's, if it's not a team activity
and you are simply judging people based on their own
merit, then it's not narcissism.
That like you're asking them, did you do this? Did you do it well enough
for me to recognize you? And if the answer is yes, then it's not narcissism.
It's a matter of fact, right? I think where we get, I think where we
get really caught up in the, in the jacks of narcissism is when we
look at a team and we are judging that team
as individuals and not as a team. Well then stop
calling them the team. Like, you know what I mean? Like
if it's not a team event, then stop calling it a team event. Maybe some
of that narcissism goes away. Yeah, maybe it does.
And you know what? And, and this is. We'll close out with this.
I think we have to be careful about language, right?
So words have power, people.
It may be the only. It may be only. It may only be the power
that we give it, but it's still we. We give words power. So words have
power. Words have power.
Yeah.
What can we take from east of Eden into
well into the next
25 years of growth in America? I mean, the vast majority of our
population is going to live in cities. If the, if the census
numbers are to be believed, if the trend lines, the demographic lines continue to go
in the same direction that they are predicted to go in.
We are going to have a culture, and I'm talking about a cultural level.
We're going to have a culture that is going to want to see and read
when they do read more stories
that are. That relate to the. The environments they
are in which is natural for human beings. And if you're in a city environment
or a suburban environment, you're going to want to see
stories, read stories, consume culture that reflects
that reality back to you. That way you feel like you have agency over
that reality. A
minority of people are going to live in rural areas, and
while they may be underserved in those areas,
they're of course going to have iPhones or whatever the phone is of the
day. They're going to be able to consume that content coming from,
from those city areas and those city creators.
I think of the writer Taylor Sheridan, the writer of Yellowstone, right.
Who, you know, infamously was, in his
hagiographic story of building Yellowstone, he was told that, you
know, we don't. We don't. You told by a Hollywood executive that, you know,
we don't accept stories that are set in rural areas because we can't
market them to an urban audience. And we've been doing that at least since the
1970s. So go back and try again and again how
much truth there is to that story. Who knows, right? It may just
be part of the hagiography of Taylor Sheridan, right? The
myth of Taylor Sheridan that he's building, right?
And because two things can be true at once, I do think that there
is a hunger or a thirst or a need for stories that
are set in rural areas like east of Eden that do
show nature and do show the land and
do show the struggles of the struggling against
the ruthlessness of the natural world to Remind people
who live in the cities that it's not all just smooth and
easy and all you got to deal with is these wackadoo other human beings
of which there are a lot of. There's also this other world that lives
out here that we're actually a part of.
We're just sort of cut off from it because of our technology and our
concrete and our buildings. And we need to.
As the. As the. Again, as the kids would say these days, we need to
touch grass. We need to get outside and like, get connected
back with that. So final thoughts on that. Do
we. Where. Where do we go with east of Eden? Will it still be a
bestseller in 25 years, do we think? I mean, I think it will because it
addresses human nature, but I wonder if there will be.
I wonder if the interest will wane. Maybe it won't sell 50,000
copies. Maybe it only sell 15,000. Right. Because there just
won't be a way for us to sort of relate to that anymore based on
our lived experience.
Well, I can't. I won't predict it. All I
can say is I hope that writers like
Steinbeck are still being read in 20, 20, 50,
because I think to. To what we talked about earlier, I.
I think his observation of human nature is
worth it. And I don't think I. I don't think human nature is going to
change all that dramatically in the next 25 years. I think, you
know, I think. I think so. I think it's going to be. I think it's
going to be relevant for a long time. And I think I.
Again, I'm not predicting this, but I'm fine. I'm saying this is a hopefulness.
Like I. Like I said, probably. Probably more than once already in this
episode here. I
think his magic power comes from being able to.
To find value in people
or, or. Or to find the value in people
and then lean into that value instead of trying to change people and
mood, people, motivate people. He doesn't try to do any of that. That he just
sees who they are and leans into it. And I think that.
I think that as the, the, as a society, if we can do a little
bit more of that and stop trying to mold people into who we want them
to be, we're going to be better off for it. So
hopefully, and again, I'm not saying this as a prediction, but hopefully,
writers like Steinbeck don't go away at all. And people just start, you know,
to your point about, you know, sometimes things
circle back, right. And sometimes Sometimes we, we, we
lose sight of something and somebody like Oprah comes along and says,
hey, by the way, if you've seen this classic book, you should read it. And
all of a sudden it's back in the bestseller, right? Maybe the next
Oprah does the same thing. I don't know who that's going to be, but you
never know. Maybe it's, maybe it's the, the writer or
the creative person that takes east of Eden and finally turns it into a
on screen event. Whether it's a miniseries or a movie or
whatever. I feel like we're,
I, I think Hollywood's doing us a disservice by not putting this on, on film.
And again, whether, again, maybe it's a miniseries, maybe it's not a movie in a
theater, but maybe Netflix grabbed a hold of it and turns it
into an eight episode series. Yeah, I would
watch that. Well, I would watch that more than once, I think, because
Grapes of Wrath was turned into a movie. It was fantastic. Mice of Men was
turned into a movie that was fantastic. I don't understand why this has not been
yet, but I think it should be. And I think that may be the
way that we get Steinbeck to be a little bit more sticky for the
next 25 years is to take east of Me and turn it into a film.
So if anyone's listening to this that has access to Hollywood, get this
on film.
You've got two viewers here. I'll watch it too. I will be,
I will be on that. I will be on that. And get a good writer.
Get a writer who actually like, loves,
not just California, I would say, but a writer who
loves the dichotomy, the tension
between the rural and the urban and understands that,
and understands the nature not only of the biblical illusions, but also
can fall in love with them. I'm not saying they have to believe in them,
but can fall in love with them and really do, do honor
to really do honor to Steinbeck's work and Steinbeck's efforts. All right,
that's all we got for today. I think we're good here. We've
now talked for four hours. This is the longest we've talked about one book. Four
hours total beating
Miyamoto Musashi's A Book of Five Rings where
I talked with John Hill, AKA Small Mountain. Four hours about the
book, about, about the Book of Five Rings. Most
downloaded episode the first two years of this podcast, but we've talked for
a total of four hours about east of Eden. So go out, grab east of
Eden by John Steinbeck. You will not regret it. I'd like to thank
Tom Libby for coming on our recorded podcast today.
Always my pleasure. It was so. It was so. It was so pleasurable for me.
I did it twice. There you go. And with that, I'm out.