Why Humans Need Death To Wake Up | Simon Sinek

人类为何需要死亡以唤醒 | 西蒙·西克

The Daily Motivation

2026-03-13

10 分钟
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Leave an Amazon Rating or Review for my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy! Check out the full episode: https://greatness.lnk.to/1898DM Simon Sinek cuts through the noise about why we struggle with change. We're dopamine-driven animals built for short-term survival, not imagining futures decades away. That retirement account? Your brain would rather have the instant gratification now. But crisis flips the script. When threats become tangible, when you can name them and see them, abstraction turns into urgency. Simon watched the Twin Towers burn from his office window exactly one mile away. He walked through the exodus with his sister. Four strangers stopped to help a man covered in ash desperately trying to call someone. No words needed. Just: "Give us the number." The call got through. "I'm okay. I'm okay." The man handed back the phone and walked away. Everyone was crying. Simon explains why old people give the best advice. They've accepted their own mortality. They don't care what you think anymore. That freedom unlocks truth a 20-year-old still worried about impressions can't access. The goal of storytelling? Give people the transformation of near-death experiences without requiring the trauma. Sign up for the Greatness newsletter: http://www.greatness.com/newsletter Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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  • Hi, my name is Lewis Howes and welcome to the Daily Motivation Show.

  • Why does it sound

  • like it takes war or conflict or something extremely scary out there for us to come together and start to transform as well as people?

  • You know, we're a myopic bunch.

  • You know, human beings are very dopamine driven.

  • you know, find the food, look for shelter, you know, then do it again.

  • And long-term planning is not really our strength as a species

  • because long-term planning exists in our imaginations.

  • I better save money for the day that I retire 60 years from now.

  • You know, it's just like, well, or I could just buy now because it feels better.

  • Right?

  • We're bad at it.

  • We're bad as governments at it.

  • We're bad as individuals at it.

  • We're just bad at it.

  • We're not engineered for it.

  • And so I think that's a part of it.

  • And what near-death experiences do, or competitive threats do,

  • is they're tangible reminders of what could be.

  • Because again, we're tangibly driven animals, right?