Skip to content
Home » TRANSCRIPT: Simon Sinek & Trevor Noah on Friendship, Loneliness, Vulnerability, and More

TRANSCRIPT: Simon Sinek & Trevor Noah on Friendship, Loneliness, Vulnerability, and More

Read the full transcript of a conversation between Simon Sinek and Trevor Noah on Friendship, Loneliness, Vulnerability, and More… at Brilliant Minds, June 2024, in conversation with ‪@trevornoah‬.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

TREVOR NOAH: Good afternoon, everybody. How are you doing? As you can see, there’s nothing up here because there was nothing here. I’ll tell you how this came to be.

So, first of all, thank you, and I hate you, Anastasia. But we were having a conversation in the little courtyard yesterday, and I bumped into Simon. I’ve seen him around a bunch. I love him. I always tell you I have, like, the biggest brain crush on you. But we were having the discussion, and then Sarah came up from the team and was like, “Are you guys speaking?” “No, we’re not.” Blah, blah, blah. “Would you like to?” I said, “I’ll speak if he does something. I just want to listen to him.” And then Anastasia was like, “I heard you,” and now here we are.

So, I’m not going to waste anybody’s time, because I’m sure many of you will agree with me, but if you don’t know, this man right here is honestly one of the greatest thinkers of our generation. I love how his mind works. I love how he challenges us, how he thinks about thinking, and really, all I wanted to know, and the genesis was yesterday, is what are you fascinated by right now? Because I know you’re always working on something, or you’re always drilling into something.

Simon’s Current Fascination

SIMON SINEK: Well, it’s interesting, because the common theme that we’ve been hearing from all the talks today, which is the passion isn’t some manufactured thing, where you sort of find the passion and do what you’re passionate about. Passion is an output, not an input. And what we hear is somebody finds an obsession for something, and that then becomes their passion.

And the same is definitely true, I’m sure, for you, and definitely true for me. So, the thing that I’m sort of obsessing about right now is friendship. There is an entire industry to help us be better leaders. There’s an entire industry to help us be better parents. There’s an entire industry to help us eat better, exercise better, sleep better. And yet, there’s barely anything on how to be a friend. And if you think about all the mental health challenges that so many of us are facing today, whether it’s coping with stress, depression, anxiety, addiction, even obsession with longevity, friendship is the ultimate biohack that literally fixes all those things.

TREVOR NOAH: It’s interesting that you said this. So, I’ve always felt like, you know, I’m not a very superstitious person, grew up very religious, but I do believe in some sort of magic in the universe. And every time I bump into you, I feel like we’re thinking about the same thing, but on a slightly different path. And usually, other people are forced to listen to us, just talk about that slightly different path. I apologize.

Friendship and Sacrifice

But the reason this is fascinating is because I’ve been thinking a lot about friendship and what it means. A friend of mine actually said to me on a trip recently, she said, “In successful spaces, oftentimes people will use the word sacrifice.” You know, we heard many people. We had Martin. We had so many people up on the stage saying, “Sacrifice, sacrifice, sacrifice, sacrifice.” And she said one of the most powerful things ever to me.

She said, “When we say we’ve sacrificed something for our career, we shouldn’t be afraid to put a name to who that sacrifice was because oftentimes it was the people in our lives that we call friends.” And I wanted to know, have you been thinking about that? What is the balance? What is the confluence? How do you think of friendship and then the sacrifice that brings you here to sit with people where you may make new friends or not?

SIMON SINEK: Well, I think definitely for me, and I can’t speak for anybody else, but definitely for me, I think the sacrifice was lopsided. And I think especially for high performers who I think later on in life, you start to realize that that network of friends sometimes isn’t there because you’ve sacrificed. You know, the number of us who have canceled on friends because a meeting comes up, because they’ll understand, right? And yet the reverse is very rarely true, that we’ll say to somebody for a meeting, “Can we meet on Friday instead of Thursday? Because in my calendar, we wouldn’t say it, but in my calendar is a friend.”

And definitely for me, the times where I have tripped, slipped, fell, hit rock bottom, felt alone, any of those spaces, my work wasn’t going to rescue me. And it was by the grace of some higher power that there was always a friend who saw it and recognized it in me, who picked me up. And so I realized that we talk about investing. We talk about, you know, this is a different kind of investment.

You and I were talking about it the other day, you know, which is people are moving to, in the United States, you know, people are moving from California and New York to Texas and Florida to avoid paying taxes because they want to save time. And yet, where else? I want it to be the reverse. Like, I want to, like, I’m not worried about, like, saving the money, you know, to be in a place I don’t want to live. I want to live with the people I love and if it costs more. And by the way, by cost, I mean that maybe I won’t achieve that thing or maybe I’ll miss that deadline or maybe I’ll miss that quarter, you know. It’s a different kind of sacrifice. We think of sacrifice as always against people, but I can make a sacrifice for my career, for my friends, and it’s about striking that right balance because your friends will be there for you, your work won’t.

The Truffle Pig of Ideas

TREVOR NOAH: Yeah, you see, I love that line.