Must-Knows Before You Die
Welcome to "Must Knows Before You Die," the podcast where existential dread meets practical wisdom. Here, we embrace the absurdity of life and unravel its mysteries, one season at a time. We'll tackle the essentials, like what you need to know to get through your 20s successfully. Can relationships truly reveal who we are? How do we navigate a career when the universe itself seems to be freelancing?
But we don’t stop there. We’ll dive deeper, exploring how to live ethically, build authentic relationships through inner work, heal our inner children, and more.
Press play if you dare, and join Niya as she contemplates the greatest must-knows of life.
Must-Knows Before You Die
How to Look in a Mirror
We've all at one point or another had to introduce ourselves. We usually say our names, origins, Jobs. But who are we really more than the labels we are given from the external world? What does it really mean to know yourself?
Levels Of Understanding Yourself
About a week ago, I was visiting family and on my way back, I realised I had forgotten my favorite earphones at home. This was about to be a long flight most-likely with long waiting times too because I was way too early in the airport and I realised that this was the first time in a long time where I didn’t have some entertainment whenever I’m alone. And as hours went by I noticed how restless I was becoming. Just waiting there for boarding, not doing anything, tick tock, tick tock. This reaction surprised me because I’ve always taken pride in being able to spend so much time alone. I always thought I was the kind of person who can always be entertained by their own thoughts.
Which in a way, I found it quite enjoyable and maybe even needed to get some time in my days without any other humans but the truth is I’m never really alone with my thoughts. I’m always consuming something. Be it music, a book, podcast, series, youtube video, scrolling on my phone. This error in my self-knowledge surprised me quite a bit. It got me thinking, How much do I really know about myself? How much do we really know about ourselves?
As children most of us have been asked what we want to be when we grow up. Whatever we answered then, we think hard and long about it as we near college and choose a skill to master. We’re told this is the key to having a successful and just an easy peasy life.
But is this really true? I mean, I’ve met many people who’ve completed many degrees, achieved the highest honors and even if they can tell you all about world history or explain the most complicated scientific theories are still at loss of explaining what emotions they are feeling, or what makes them happy, what they’re looking for in a relationship or life.
And there are people, maybe in small little towns, often older people who understand human nature. They’ve grasped and always pursued their true interests even if it was the opposite of what society expected. They have empathy for other people and could imagine emotions could originate from many sources and are not to be taken personally. You can see they are living in flow.
Which isn’t a surprise if you really think about it. Most people spend years studying a subject but most of us are terrified of spending time alone. But How else can we know ourselves then? I mean, we wouldn’t claim we know someone without spending anytime with them. And if we don’t even understand ourselves how can we understand and form deeper connections with others? And what does it even mean to understand yourself?
There are of course many stages to understanding yourself
- We all know ourselves to a basic degree. Like your name, where you’re from, your parents, where you work or go to school. But so do babies. Babies understand that they belong to their parents for example. And as soon as they speak, they’ll know their name, and can say what they did on the weekend or what they’ll do when they get home. This kind of external self knowledge is still how we try to get to know others. When we meet a new person we ask, what do you do for work? Or what’s your name?
- The second level of understanding yourself is understanding your values, your needs & wants, what things are important to you in life. What do you desire at the moment? What are your motivations for doing what you do? This helps us make plans, and do things that bring us fulfilment. Even if this is a deeper understanding of yourself, it’s very easy to confuse what we want with what society wants, or to build our self image based on what we’ve been told. In fact most people’s self-opinion is based on the feedback they get from their environment. If you’ve been told you’re pretty enough times, you’ll believe you’re good looking. If you’ve been told you’re smart or dumb or lazy or a good dancer, you’ll believe that about yourself..
What is the issue with this you ask? The thing is if we build our entire self-identity based on the external world, we’ll have no option but to live a life inauthentic to ourselves. Depression, they say, is when your body is saying what you’re doing, how you’re living is not in alignment with your authentic self.
- Which takes us to the third level of self knowledge which is to investigate where your desires and actions come from. Most of the things we do daily, we do on autopilot. We wake up, check phone, leave for work, comeback, eat, watch tv, sleep. We do all this on automatically. We have to check on our mental state as much as you check that instagram. We have to ask Why did I get triggered today when a coworker disagreed with me? Did I identify with my beliefs this much which hurt my ego or do I feel my authority threatened? Or Why do I want to study medicine? Am I really interested in the subject, or do I think it’s the way to high status and approval? Why do I want to date this person? Are they really a match to my values or I am afraid of being lonely and dying alone? Why do my relationships end? is there a pattern? Where can I take responsibility? Am I feeling hungry or do I need comfort, a hug, perhaps?
Of Course this is sometimes difficult. Most emotions are really complicated, you might really dislike or immediately love somebody for no other reason but because they embody all the characteristics you’ve suppressed in yourself for example. You might be angry at somebody and still miss them at the same time. Emotions like this take time to figure out. Some answers are also hard to hear, if we’re really honest, they make us uncomfortable and threaten your self image, so it’s also important to make sure the stories we tell ourselves are true because there is nothing easier than tricking ourselves.
This requires carefully studying our childhoods to see where our patterns came from. Specifically our childhoods because that’s the time where we were the most impressionable. The things that happened often when we were under 6 year old can be the reasons why we get that anxious feeling whenever somebody gets too close to us when we’re 60. Our childhood influences how comfortable we are asking for what we want, making mistakes, being independent, or relying on someone else, how comfortable we are with our emotions and so much more.
Once we become aware of this it becomes a lot easier to stop our self-sabotaging, to go after what we really want and to explain ourselves to the people around us and to new people we’re dating. The only caveat is to avoid judging yourself for what you’re feeling.
- Which brings us to the fourth stage of understanding yourself. You have to know that while it’s important to understand your thinking and emotional patterns you are not supposed to be perfect. You have to treat yourself with the kindness and openness you’d treat a baby. The measure of being a mature adult is not never having nonsensical emotions but understanding what’s to be taken seriously, what’s to be looked over as a pattern or nonsense. You are not your thoughts. You are the sorter and action taker of your thoughts. And thoughts create emotions. So you can control in your head which thoughts will have power to create emotions in you. Learn to be kind to yourself. This is a huge accomplishment in self-understanding if you manage to achieve this. People who understand themselves and their motives this way and not judge every thought they have can also understand others better and are less judgmental of others. This is the key to being more tolerant and having healthier relationships. Also know that there are things you miss. You have blind spots and understanding yourself is a continual process.
- The last stage of self-awareness is the understanding that we’re all one. All part of one consciousness and letting go of our ego. Which mostly only people with years of meditation experience or high dose of psychedelics achieve. Letting go of your ego means not identifying with the part of you that identifies as ME and instead identifying oneself in all living things.
In a nutshell it’s realising that the I, I’ve been talking about all this time doesn’t even exist. The me,I keep thinking about all day, is a construction of my ego that was built over centuries of evolution to protect myself. Because without an ego, you have no reason to run away from hunting lions or snakes that are trying to have their dinner. While too much ego is a sign of narcissism, without any ego, there is no sense of self-importance and therefore no motivation to rescue oneself. It means in the grand scheme of things, nothing we are or do matters. our big careers, the money we die to accumulate or the material things we dream about getting all don’t really matter.
So, what about all things I talked about so far? What does it mean to know yourself if you don’t even really exist? Because right now, to all of us, we feel real to us. And our pain and suffering is real. Our Joy, fulfilment, despair, desire, all our emotions are real. In Fact it in our makeup to suffer as long as we live. Whether it’s a breakup or a loss of a child, losing a job, just your normal morning anxiety, or a good 3 hours of existential crisis in the afternoon, it’s all real to us at this moment. Whether you’re a billionaire or a homeless person we are all made to want things, to make connections, lose them, to witness births and deaths, find meaning in this weird blurb of life.