Ep. 156 – Turney Duff: Sex, Stocks and Wall Street: Why One Man Left Millions Behind to (finally) Choose Himself

I’d rather be an alien.

I’d rather be myself. Than be liked.

It makes sense… why you’d want to be liked.

Think about it. From an evolutionary standpoint, when you’re liked, you’re safe.

You’re in the tribe. People protect you.

But now, I’d rather be an alien. I don’t want stress. I don’t want to worry. And think “Do I fit in?”

Being liked has consequences.

You start compromising.

You stop taking risks. You follow the herd.

You get stuck in a crappy job at a fluorescently-lit cubicle. Where they can watch you.

You stop taking risks. You wonder, “Is this ok?”

“Ok” to who? Not you. Not the only person who matters.

I’d rather be an alien.

If I’m an alien, I can act like I just landed here. And I’m not supposed to know if I fit in.

I’m myself. No trying. I can surrender.

My guest today, used to be in a tribe.

I won’t say it’s the worst one. But it’s bad.

Turney Duff is the New York Times bestselling author of, The Buy Side: A Wall Street Trader’s Tale of Spectacular Excess, where he tells the truth. He bleeds.

“Look, chances are people aren’t going to like me after I tell the story, so at no point am I ever, ever, ever going to try to get the reader to like me,” Turney says.

But that wasn’t easy. Because he spent his whole life trying to be liked.

“I’ve always had this ‘Nobody loves me’ syndrome. I had this fear of ordinary, fear of being normal.”

I’m going to tell you three steps you need to know to finally choose yourself. But first I’ll tell you how Turney did it.

On Wall Street, Turney was a trader.

But he wasn’t just trading stocks. He traded sleep, health, relationships, money. All of it for drugs.

He was afraid.

He’d go to hotel rooms and snort cocaine by himself.

But nothing was enough.

He made $2 million dollars a year. He thought, “If I could just make three million dollars a year, all of my problems would be solved.”

But before that he said, “If I could just make fifty thousand dollars a year, all of my problems would be solved. All of them.”

He wanted to be a journalist. But he traded.

A lot of people trade. Maybe you traded.

But it’s not too late. You can choose yourself.

There are three things you need to know to choose yourself.

And I got these from my interview with Turney. He’ll show you. He’ll prove to you it’s not too late.

I believe in you.

Three steps to (finally) choose yourself:

1) Don’t try to be liked.

When Turney wrote this book, he knew people would stop liking him. Or hate him.

He told it anyway. And it saved his life.

That’s what saved my life too. Bleeding on the pages. Telling my truth.

Listen at [2:35] to learn how to cure something in yourself too.

2) Want less.

Wanting more hurts. Because you trick your brain into believing you don’t have enough. And start feeling sorry for yourself. Instead of grateful for what you do have.

So I want less.

Listen at [6:28]. Turney explains why wanting more destroys you.

3) Build up your gut.

We have instincts. And our bodies speak to us. But we’re good at ignoring it. The pain.

We think stomach aches are just stomach aches. But it’s an accumulation abuse. Stress. Worry. Fear.

You have to listen to your body. Notice the pain.

Turney says, “I became successful on the trading desk because I had great instincts, and I used my gut. Along the way I lost that.”

Listen at [51:50] to hear how he got his gut back.

After everything, I ask him, “Has it worked out?”

“I’ll tell you this…”

Listen here for my interview with Turney.

You’ll learn how to choose yourself.

And you’ll hear how Turney did it himself. How he turned his back on his tribe, his drugs, his money.

It took him most of his life.

But he did it. You can too. 

Resources and Links:

  • Exceptionally thoughtful podcast!! Congrats to Turney Duff for telling it like it is and having the courage to be real. The more stories we hear like this the more we have the courage to tell our own stories, say “no” to our material culture that is all about acquiring stuff, keeping us in a state of psychic ill-health, and not about connection, contribution and love. Thank you.

  • Tullus

    Well all so easy to say … as long as you live alone. These as many other storries from AT do not work for families, where the man is the traditional provider.

  • Kevin Goetz

    I want to be a selfish, greedy, drug addicted prick for a while, then get clean so I can be a hero,too

  • Kevin Goetz

    first world agony..LOL..poor widdle me, i made too much money & it ruined me..much better to starve in the slums of New Delhi, then id be lucky

  • Kevin Goetz

    this courageous beautiful man is my hero!!.forget those stupid losers who do not get drug addicted, and who maybe join the fire department, police force, armed forces etc..THIS man is the true selfless hero to be worshiped and admired..forget New York`s bravest, stupid losers who ran into the WTC building on 9-11, the true ones to be admired and emulated are Wall Street drug and money- addicted traders

  • Kevin Goetz

    it’s so giggle-icious..joking about cocaine, creating the demand that kept FARC IN DEMAND & power, MURDERING THOUSANDS OF KIDS in Colombia & other places

    hilarious, funny stuff !:)