No Stupid Questions - 162. How Can You Be Kinder to Yourself?
Episode Date: September 10, 2023How do you practice self-care if you don’t have time for a break? Is it weird to talk to yourself? And does Mike need a bag of Doritos — or just a hug? ...
Transcript
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That looks like someone who needs a hug.
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Mike Mahon.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, how do you practice self-compassion?
I tend to feel alone in my failure.
I tend to obsess and fixate on everything that's wrong. Angela, it is always a delight to talk to you. Hello, Mike Mon. Today, we have a
question from Andrew Davis. Andrew and his partner just had their third child under five.
They said they have virtually no time to sit back and take a break. So his question, he said,
I was talking to a family member and he suggested practicing self-compassion, which suggests things
like talking to yourself and saying things like, I know this is hard right now and it's only natural
you're feeling so stressed. I'm here for you.
Andrew continued, this struck me as a ridiculous thing to do, to tell yourself that you're there for yourself.
So he asked, do you think this is a worthy practice?
And more generally, how do you feel that self-compassion can help while in a hard situation?
Oh my gosh, I love this question in a million ways.
Andrew, I think maybe is reacting to this idea of talking to ourselves like,
hello, self, how are you today? Which sounds a little bit ridiculous.
When you talk to yourself, people are like, hey, maybe Mike's losing it. You know,
maybe it's over for him. All right, well, let me begin by asking you this question.
Have you ever talked to yourself?
Like, have you ever had a kind of covert dialogue just with your alter ego?
You know, it's a kind of foundational question for the self-compassion question.
Like, is it preposterous to talk to ourselves in that way?
And I'm going to answer that question myself, which is to say, I do.
I do have not only an inner monologue, but an inner dialogue, you know, like the Angela
who doesn't really want to do this and the Angela who does.
What about you?
Okay, so first of all, I never thought I would tell this story out loud, so I can't believe
I'm about to tell it.
Oh my gosh, I can't wait to hear.
But yes, I don't think I make a practice of this at all.
But the other day, I actually did this.
So I'm sure you're familiar with Maya Angelou.
She was an amazing poet, author.
She wrote, I Know Where the Caged Bird Sings,
and is just one of my major heroes in life.
Samesies.
Anyway, so she has this conversation years ago
with Bill Moyers.
And what I think is so fascinating, she said, you're only free when you realize you belong no
place. You belong every place, no place at all. The price is high. The reward is great.
More and more, I belong to myself. I'm very proud of that. I'm very concerned about how I look at
Maya. I like Maya very much. And so I've
thought about this quote that I belong to myself. And I recently moved into this new neighborhood,
don't know a ton of people. The neighborhood is very inclusive and loves to create opportunities
for people to get together. And so on Sunday afternoons, they do these walk and talks,
they call it. And I don't want to go because I feel
dumb and don't know anyone. It's so awkward to walk in by, you know. So I literally thought
about Maya Angelou and I said out loud to myself, I feel so dumb admitting this. I said out loud to
myself, I belong. And then I walked in and met all these people. But it was this moment of like centering myself
to just say, okay, I belong, I can do this.
And you were talking to yourself.
You're like, I belong, I belong, I belong.
Okay, I'm gonna do this, right?
Okay, to be clear though, I only said it once.
The way you said it makes me sound so desperate.
See, you're so squeamish.
As a psychologist, I'm like, go you, well done.
This is where Andrew's question legitimately, he said it sounded ridiculous.
And I agree with him.
And I think even in my telling this story, while it worked, it sounds ridiculous.
Okay, I am here, Mike, to reform you and Andrew both.
I'm really hoping in this conversation to make you think that talking to yourself is a good thing and not a bad thing. And also, I want to give you some tips on how to
do it in a way that is optimally self-compassionate.
Before we get into it, I do think we should acknowledge that maybe when you talk to yourself,
don't do it in public all the time, right?
I haven't even made my case and you're like, all right, but one thing is clear. It's not good to talk to yourself in public places. You are so uncomfortable with
talking to yourself. I'm deeply uncomfortable talking to myself in public and I feel dumb
having told that story. I just want to tell you one of my favorite memes is a photo of something
you would buy at like TJ Maxx or whatever that
just says, I am enough, but it says it like 10 times. And then the meme says, for only 1099,
you can let every visitor in your house know that you are struggling.
I'm going to tell my mother-in-law that because TJ Maxx is her favorite retail establishment,
and she has probably seen that plaque, but maybe not seen the meme.
But you know what I'm saying?
Right.
That's why I feel a little dumb telling you this story, because it's like the meme is right.
Okay, well, look, I love when Maya Angelou says, I like Maya.
I like Maya very much.
I mean, it's just so interesting because she is stating something about herself as if she were another person. I want to say that we have this inner dialogue in part because when we talk about having two minds about something, should I go to the walk and talk or should I not go?
I don't know.
I don't know what to do.
It's almost like underneath one skin there are two mics, if not three, if not five.
And it's not just psychologists who have observed this about people.
It's also like every philosophy and every religious tradition. And when I start to describe this, to be able to
actually talking to my husband, Jason, about it, he was like, oh, like multiple personality disorder.
And I was like, okay, when people have a clinical disorder, which is actually now called dissociative
identity disorder, they actually legit have total alter egos. Right, right, right. That are completely separate. And
one alter ego doesn't even know about the others. That is not what I'm talking about. When I say
that you have multiple selves, Mike, and that I do and that Jason does and that Andrew does and
his partner does and all three of their children are going to grow up to have multiple egos. What I mean is that we have different identities. And, you know, the father
of cognitive therapy, which you could argue is basically modern psychotherapy, Tim Beck,
he called them personality modes. We have angry Angela mode. We have Angela, the patient professor
mode. We have Angela who's extroverted and confident. And we have Angela who's deeply insecure. And the reason why Tim thought we needed to have these different personality modes is because when we move through our day and our week from one situation into another, it's adaptive and appropriate for different aspects of ourself to rise to the
occasion. You know, it's not really helpful to come home and be Professor Angela with my kids.
Like, they don't need Professor Angela, who's authoritative and answering questions. They need
Mommy Angela. So I want to say as a foundation for Andrew's question, that not only do I think it's
healthy to talk to yourself, one of the reasons why we do have these inner dialogues is because
we have multiple selves. So I love the idea that maybe the idea of self-compassion is also
recognizing that you have multiple selves and you can be compassionate with the fact that you're,
you know, impatient with the idiocy of youth, because let's all be clear,
kids are amazing and can be idiots. You're talking about Andrew's three children under five?
I'm not speaking of Andrew's children. They are, I'm sure, angelic.
They are angels. Always. And sleep all through the night,
so it's weird that he's having a hard time right now. I'm just kidding. But I like the idea of
part of self-compassion is understanding that we have different elements to our lives and
different elements to who we are. I wanted to tell you a story and get your take on it. So I,
as you know, trained for Mount Kilimanjaro last year. I know because I was supposed to come that
I didn't. I know. Okay, keep going. But here's a story that I thought of after I read Andrew's question.
So I hire this nutritionist because I need to get ready.
Her name's Megan Lyons.
She's very good at what she does.
Ultimately, she helps me lose 30 pounds.
You know, I'm doing this during a super stressful time.
I guess I would say all of life is a super stressful time.
It is what it is.
And I'm reporting back to her about different moments
when maybe I didn't follow
through on the plan in terms of what I would eat and exercise, whatever. And if you've been in a
tech company, you know that most of them have kitchens everywhere. There's free food everywhere
in abundance. It's like an unlimited buffet. Which is part of the problem. Anyway, so I tell her I
am having this bad day and this super stressful situation.
And I walked downstairs and got a big fountain drink of Diet Coke and a bag of Doritos. And I
sat in a corner in someone else's chair and just drank the Diet Coke and ate Doritos.
And Megan says to me, she said, Mike, what do you see when you see someone in that situation and i was like well i see
someone who made a short-term decision that was a bad choice and there were a lot of other ways i
could have handled this than using food to cope with the stress and she says to me no mike what i
actually see is someone who probably just needs a hug.
And I had this moment where I was like, oh, because again, she is really good at helping me think through every situation about what are other ways to get dopamine. If you're trying to
get a dopamine hit, it doesn't have to be Doritos. Listen to a great song, go outside,
send a gratitude text. There are other ways to cope. But in that moment...
In that moment, she wasn't thinking,
you could have gone for a walk.
You could have breathed deeply for 10 seconds.
She just thought,
that looks like someone who needs a hug.
And I thought it was such a compassionate way
for her to respond,
but also introduced the idea
that maybe if I exercise more self-compassion,
I would also exercise better responses to stress or negative incidents because it allows you to step back and say, hey, this is really hard.
I think that I should administer to you right now the short form of the self-compassion skill.
Do you want to take it?
Well, do I want to or am I willing?
I'm willing.
I'm absolutely willing.
You're willing. You're scared. I mean, look, I've already admitted so far that I said to myself, I belong. You've been so vulnerable. We'll go through these items and hopefully Andrew's
listening and he might also ask himself these questions. So I'm not going to read you all 12.
It's the short self-compassion scale. There's an even longer one. And I want to point out that one of the co-authors of the scale is really the founder of the research
on self-compassion, and her name is Kristen Neff. Anyway, Kristen and colleagues wrote these items,
including, when I fail at something important to me, I become consumed by feelings of inadequacy.
I try to be understanding and patient towards those aspects of my personality I don't like. When something painful happens, I try to take a balanced view of the situation. When I'm feeling down, I tend to feel like most other people are probably happier than I am.
than I am. And finally, not finally for the scale, but finally for what I'm going to read to you,
I'm disapproving and judgmental about my own flaws and inadequacies. Okay, so Mike, I have sampled from the short self-compassion scale. Where do you think you fall on the continuum from
like, oh, I'm super self-compassionate to I'm lacking in self-compassion entirely?
It's fascinating hearing you go through the questions because my biggest takeaway
was not even to judge myself or evaluate myself where I am today, but to think through
over maybe the last decade. And if there's one thing I can say, it's that I have,
I think, shifted substantially on the self-compassion scale where I used to catastrophize a lot more.
I would think that, oh, I'm way worse.
I'm da-da-da.
And while I fail all the time, I care a lot less than I used to, meaning in terms of both judging others' intent and judging myself in a way that I didn't have the maturity early on.
So you used a word, judgment, that's super important to this whole research tradition on self-compassion, because in a way, what self-compassion is, is the opposite of self-judgment.
And the origin story of Kristen Neff's research is actually her own personal crisis. So she was going through a divorce, and this is back in the 90s.
She says, it was very messy, and I felt a lot of shame about some bad decisions I had made.
And then she goes on to say that she went to a local Buddhist center and signed up for meditation classes.
Buddhist center and signed up for meditation classes. And what she took away from this mindfulness practice was not just that like, oh, I can do deep breathing and it provides relief
from this pain that I'm feeling. She took actually a sense of self-compassion, this perspective that
maybe before we say, I'm a bad person, I made bad choices, like what kind of pathetic idiot crawls into the corner of an office with Doritos and a Diet Coke?
Okay, okay, okay.
Just to make it real.
Not pathetic, just having a hard day.
Well, I'm modeling self-judgment, Mike.
We're going to turn from self-judgment to self-compassion.
But she basically had this epiphany that you don't have to judge epiphany that like, you don't have to judge
yourself all the time and you don't have to be in denial either. I mean, that's the wonderful thing.
Like the opposite of self-judgment isn't denial. The opposite of self-judgment is self-compassion.
And she just said like, wow, this idea that you don't have to judge yourself, that you can be kind
to yourself after observing that you make a poor choice. She says like, quote, it just made an
immediate difference.
I immediately resonate with that because like I was saying before, when Megan said to me,
that looks like someone who needs a hug, my thought process was, wow, that's a compassion
level I didn't have for myself. You knew that was a better response, right?
I immediately knew it was a better response. And I knew that what Megan was channeling was that I was actually going to make better decisions if I had positive self-talk and more compassionate self-talk than if I had said, you're an idiot.
Here are the three things you should have done instead.
Yeah, because then you just go get more Doritos.
Or Cheetos at that point.
Maybe some Twix bars.
I mean, that is actually, I think, some of the most exciting research there is in
social science when you're like, what? There is a way that you can both feel good about yourself
and do stuff that is productive. It's not like either you feel self-compassion or you get to
your goals. You can have both. So let me just summarize some of the major findings. First of all, that, you know, as we've defined it, what self-compassion is, it's a posture towards a self that is in a way the opposite of self-judgment. So the kind of compassion we would have for another person, if we can understand that, now we just apply it to ourself. And now we know we have multiple selves. So one of ourselves can feel compassionate toward another of ourselves, right? That's another way of thinking about it. The research shows that you can measure self-compassion through
questionnaires like we just practiced with. And then the outcomes of self-compassion are many,
and they are wonderful. Self-compassion has been associated with happiness and well-being.
And people who are more self-compassion actually are in better
health physically, not only mentally.
Wait, really?
Really, because there is a kind of mind-body connection that we as human beings continue to
find surprising. But, you know, one of the mechanisms connecting self-compassion to physical
outcomes is not just that you take care of yourself more, but also there could be
like a more direct path where you are experiencing less of the stress response because you are not
shaming yourself. You're not yelling at yourself. And the stress response has lots of inflammatory
and other negative effects in the body. So this self-compassion posture that we can learn,
and that's one of Kristin Neff's major contributions is to suggest that there are
ways that we can practice self-compassion, just like she went to that meditation center
in the 90s. We can learn to be more self-compassionate. You have learned, you said,
to be more self-compassionate. We can get these benefits, even if we're not
especially self-compassionate right now. Absolutely. And what I'd love to hear from
our listeners is how do you show your self-compassion in times of intense stress or
chaos? And how do you calm down? How do you center yourself? So record a voice memo in a quiet place,
put your mouth close to the phone, and email it to us at nsq at
Freakonomics.com, and maybe we'll play your voice on a future episode of the show.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions, Angela and Mike discuss the relationship between
self-compassion and self-care.
You're okay.
You're always going to be okay.
There's nothing you can do that will make you not okay.
Now, back to Mike and Angela's conversation about self-compassion.
So Mike, since you were so vulnerable and sharing,
let me do the same.
This year, even though I have read many of Kristen Neff's scholarly articles and was pretty well versed in the science of self-compassion, I didn't do such a great job of it because, as you know, I've been working on a book, and I really struggled because I think during different points in this year, we saw each other in person, and I was effectively crying, right?
Like on your shoulder.
It's like a little bit falling apart.
You will always have a shoulder to cry on here.
I wish I had as much compassion for myself as you had for me, Mike, in these conversations where I would relay to you like the latest installment of this terrible sabbatical year I've been having. And I have to tell you that
when I look at my journal entries at different points this year, honestly, I was so self-judgmental
and so unable to find self-compassion. When I look at these items that Kristen Neff uses to
measure self-compassion, Like when I fail at something
important, I become consumed by feelings of inadequacy. I'm like, yeah, check. When I fail
at something that's important to me, I tend to feel alone in my failure. I tend to obsess and
fixate on everything that's wrong. I'm disapproving and judgmental. Check, check, check, check, check.
So I think to me, what this conversation is reminding me of
is that even when we kind of know in this cold intellectual way
that we have multiple selves and that we can talk to ourselves
and sometimes we forget that we are showing up in a situation where we need a hug,
it's a great reminder to me to like, I don't know, even write it down somewhere.
Like maybe I need to go to TJ Maxx.
I am enough.
I am enough.
I'm going to put that up on my wall in an unironic way.
Is that possible?
I say that compassionately, but I don't know.
Okay, let me ask you this question
because I think it's interesting.
There is this gentleman, Charlie Gilkey.
He's an executive coach and business growth consultant.
He wrote an article called The Foundation of True Self-Care is Self-Compassion.
And he says that self-compassion is regarding yourself compassionately.
Self-care is treating yourself compassionately.
So one is like an attitude and the other is like a behavior.
Right. And one thing that I have admired for a long time, so I've
worked with Ryan Smith for over a decade, co-founder of Qualtrics, owner of the Utah Jazz and a lot of
other sports and entertainment properties. He's grown this little tech business that he started
in his dad's basement into a $12 billion company and done all these other things. Most founders
can't scale with their
businesses long-term, meaning that you grow it to $100 million in revenue, but you can't take it to
$500, or you're not the person to take it to a billion in revenue. Ryan's been able to scale
with his business the entire time. And one of the things that I've observed about him is that he's
very good at self-care, meaning that he doesn't burn out.
What does he do? I want to know what he does.
When he knows he needs a break, he'll take a break. Now, I know some people listening to
that are like, okay, cool. If you're the boss... What does that mean? Does he like take a nap?
No. So for example, one time we flew into San Francisco, we are running from meeting to meeting
and they're all important. And he just says, look, I'm going to go take 30 minutes and go for a run. Or when we just hosted the NBA All-Star Game in Utah recently, we all
worked an insane amount of hours in the weeks and months leading up to it. And after that, it was
like, okay, we all need to take a few days to reset and reprogram ourselves. But he's always
mindful of if I'm not at my peak productivity
here, I need to take a break to do something different. I think that's a little bit harder
if you're Andrew and you've got three kids under five. That's where I was looking at all that,
what do people do for self-care? And all these people are like, I go to a retreat. I do a spa. And it's like, okay, awesome if you have that opportunity.
But then I found on just healthline.com
a list of different things that one can do for self-care.
If you have one minute, it says light a candle,
practice box breathing, laugh, hug somebody,
drink a glass of water.
And then it's like if you have five minutes,
text a loved one, amp up your shower routine,
listen to your favorite song, sit in the sun.
If you have 10 minutes, go get your heart rate going,
play a game, meditate, walk barefoot.
If you have 30 minutes, make yourself a meal,
declutter a room, read a book for fun.
If you have an hour, listen to this inspiring podcast.
Do an online yoga class,
pamper yourself, spend time with a friend. There are kind of these micro things you can do if you
just have one minute. My sister, when she was raising her four kids, they were all young and
at home. She talked about how sometimes, you know, you can't go to the bathroom. You can't
take a shower without the kids like crawling everywhere. Totally frazzled.
She hid chocolate in her closet and would just shut the door to her closet and eat a piece of chocolate and take a minute, recenter herself and then say, okay, now I can go handle this again.
And she knew she needed it.
And by the way, because she was self-compassionate, she didn't need to eat a bag of Hershey Kisses.
No. It was like, I need a moment.
I'm going to shut the door. I'm going to have a piece of chocolate. I'm not going to feel bad about myself and therefore spiral into more chocolate and self-blame. Right. I think because
she was self-compassionate, she didn't spiral like I did with just a bunch of Doritos. She was like,
I'm giving myself a moment and chocolate is a thing that I love.
But no, the unhealthy mechanism is what Megan was identifying in me, which is, okay, you're
spiraling probably because you're not treating yourself with compassion.
Right.
And thus you're choosing unhealthy mechanisms to deal with your stress.
I think with self-compassion, a little bit goes a long way.
I think with self-compassion, a little bit goes a long way. And, you know, I speak to many audiences, as you will not be surprised, about the topic of grit. And one of the most common misconceptions about grit is that people like Ryan Smith, whom I have studied as a paragon of grit, when people think of those people and they don't know them very well, they make the mistake of thinking, oh, they're always tough on themselves. And that's only half
right because they are their own toughest critic often, but they're doing something that's more
like tough love. So I think there's a kind of like, can I do it faster? Can I do this smarter?
Like, how else can I do this better than I did before? But they're doing
it in a loving, compassionate way. So here's my prescriptive advice and what I think I've learned
from thinking about things through a grit lens. When you look at parenting or leadership and you
ask this question, like, which is better to be supportive or demanding? Like, where on the continuum should I be? What the research suggests is that there is a way in which you can be both
supportive and demanding. The old both and, huh? You know me. I'm so predictable. But the research,
especially in parenting, I think is really solid. And there's also analogous research and leadership
that the best bosses and the best teachers and the best coaches and honestly the best parents are actually very demanding. I mean, that's actually what I
have benefited the most from of having mentors like Marty Seligman. Like, it's just never good
enough, right? But there is this other axis. Let's call it the vertical axis if we were just on the
horizontal one. Okay, that is the continuum from not at all supportive to totally 100% supportive. So the quadrant that you want to be in
as a mentor, as a parent, as a coach, and even when you're compassionately coaching yourself,
is to be in the top right quadrant, which is to say, I am in the role of someone who's saying it's not good enough, and I 100%
support you, I care about you, and you're okay. And I know it sounds like I'm contradicting myself,
because in one sense, it's saying you're not okay. And in another sense, it's saying you're
100% okay. But I think the nuance is that when you are a supportive and demanding mentor,
what you're demanding is a behavior.
What you're demanding is an action. And you can say that the action that you just took was not
good enough. But the supportive part is what I think of you as a whole, as a person.
And one might paraphrase that no one cares how much you demand until they know how much you care.
And then you can demand other things.
You say with Marty Seligman, nothing's ever good enough.
But you know it's because he cares about you and has compassion for you at times when maybe you're struggling or going through a rut that you take that as motivation rather than as this soul-crushing moment.
A hundred percent.
As demanding as he ever was, I always knew with this kind of like
rock solid certainty that he had my back and that he had this, the psychological term is
unconditional positive regard. That's like a dream that you want to have from anyone who loves you
in your life. Unconditional positive regard. That's a great phrase. If you could get three
words tattooed, like, I don't know, those are pretty good. Like unconditional positive regard. That's a great phrase. If you could get three words tattooed, like,
I don't know, those are pretty good, like unconditional positive regard. You know,
there were these humanist psychologists, they were all therapists. And this goes way back,
this is before Kristen Neff started studying self-compassion. But I really like this aspect
of what the humanist psychologists said, which is that they thought that what all
people really need, right, not just people who walk into a therapist's office, is to feel this
unconditional positive regard. It's also part of a lot of religious traditions. For example,
in Christianity, the idea of grace, that there could be this kind of unconditional positive
regard from God. But more generally and secularly, I think they're exactly right that we
have a need to feel like we're okay. And when our boss or our other self says, you know what,
you need a hug. I love you. You're okay. You're always going to be okay. There's nothing you can
do that will make you not okay. After you thoroughly receive that message, you're ready for,
so let's talk about what we're going to have for a snack the next time we're stressed.
Like, you're open to that. Right. And it's not the old, I'll edit here, the crap sandwich. Like,
you're great. Fix this. We love you, right? It's not that, which doesn't work anyway.
It's the idea of if I feel in general
this sense of love, care, compassion, then we can have these conversations versus the crap sandwich
type of feedback, which is crap. You know, when people talk about the crap sandwich feedback,
I know there is a deeply critical view of that. Like, you don't seem to be a big fan of it. I know our friend Adam Grant,
who's also a professor at Wharton, has written about how he hates the idea.
Our dear friend Kim Scott, who wrote Radical Candor, also hates the idea.
But let me just stand up for the crap sandwich, which is to say that I agree,
a kind of formulaic, predictable, like, I'm going to like sugarcoat the bitter pill of my negative
feedback for you in this way that is totally insincere, like that's not good. But I don't
think there's anything wrong with making sure that somebody is in the right ego state to receive
what is always stinging criticism. I mean, you could tell me anything I did wrong,
the smallest thing, and I would be defensive and feel wounded. And so I think putting people in a
space where I affirm how much I appreciate about them and then say some things that I know are
going to be hard and then make sure that I end by reminding them that I still think they're great people. Like, that is my
Pollyanna version of the crap sandwich. And I do try to do that, you know, and I don't think it's
always as bad as it sounds. I think that's fair. So, Angela, I want to end by telling you
an example of a time I tried self-care and it went totally awry.
Okay, I'm listening on bated breath.
One thing that I've tried to do over the years for self-care is also establish certain rituals
where it's like, okay, we're going to get away with a group of people.
And our ritual is that in the midst of our busy lives, we're going to carve out
X weekend every year to go on this trip or something to connect with each other and with
ourselves. And so for years, I've been going on this horseback riding camping trip with these
three brothers, Adam, Wes, and Will Marriott. We call it our brother's camping trip, though
obviously I am not. Wait, they're all brothers with each other? They're all brothers and I am
not. They are not your brothers? Correct. But we call it our brother's camping trip. Okay. And they have other brothers who don't come. It's just the four of us. Wow, that's so many brothers.
Yeah. Well, they have 11 children in the family. Oh. Anyway, so we've been going on this horseback
riding camping trip. We ride deep into the mountains, camp by a lake, enjoy time together.
There's no cell service whatsoever. It turns out that after years of this tradition,
whatsoever. It turns out that after years of this tradition, somewhere along the road, I developed a deathly allergy to horses, which we didn't know. And so we go out horseback riding.
We're deep into the mountains. I mean, we rode for probably four hours.
Right. You rode away from medical care.
And I don't realize how allergic I am yet still. And we hobble the horses and we get everything ready for the night.
It starts raining.
We jump in the tent, kind of in our horse hair covered clothes.
And all of a sudden, my throat begins to completely seize up.
You had anaphylactic shock.
My eyes are the deepest red I've ever seen.
And I can't breathe.
I am barely wheezing with all of my energy to just get air in and out. And I can't get enough air. I legitimately think I'm
going to die. Why are you talking to me? How are you not dead? We literally were pulling out a knife
to try to, you can't Google how to do an emergency tracheotomy. Tracheotomy with a pen. I think I'm
going to die. And I keep reciting to myself that poem,
I will not go gentle into this good night.
And my point is, I made a really dumb mistake.
So to get over that terrible, horrific event three years ago,
I text the Marriott brothers again and say,
hey guys, let's do this again.
But let's take a lot of precautions.
We just went on this horseback riding camping trip
and I had gloves.
I didn't touch the horses.
They saddled everything, da, da, da.
And I didn't almost die this time.
Okay.
But it was horrific and so uncomfortable.
What, the second time?
Like the time with the gloves and everything?
Yes, the time I just did.
Why did I go back after that? I don't know.
Yeah, why did you go like swimming or something?
Well, we went swimming in the lake to wash off all the horse hair.
But just non-horse related swimming.
This is my point. My point for dear Andrew and for all of us is that sometimes
some examples of self-care should be retired and everyone
needs to find out what works for themselves.
And as we were riding back into civilization, Will, who's the one who owns all the horses,
looked at me and he said, I hope you enjoy your last ride because we all knew this was
the end.
And I think the point is this, self-compassion takes many different shapes and forms and at different points in your life, it means very different things. And so maybe while
you've got three kids under five, you're going off of that one minute list where all you have
an opportunity to do is say, I'm going to take a deep breath. I'm going to laugh. I'm going to
hug someone, or I'm going to drink a glass of water. And later in your life, you can do all
these other things. Whatever works for you, have compassion in those moments where you go grab a 64-ounce Diet
Coke and Doritos and realize that you're going to be okay. Mike, I think that is excellent advice.
And if there is an asterisk on this advice, be like, if you are allergic in an extreme way to any of the things on the self-compassion list, just make a line right through it and move on to the next item.
And instead, go to a tattoo parlor and tattoo unconditional positive regard on your back.
This episode was produced by me, Rebecca Lee Douglas. And now here's a fact check of today's
conversation. Angela says that individuals with dissociative identity disorder have separate alter
egos that are unaware of each other. However, contrary to Angela's statement, it is possible
for alters to recognize one another and even
communicate with each other in a state that the American Psychological Association refers to as
co-consciousness. Later, Mike shares that in an attempt to skirt death during his nightmare
horseback riding trip, he recited the poem, I Will Not Go Gentle Into This Good Night. The 1951 Villanelle
by Welsh poet Dylan Thomas is actually called Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night. Mike makes
it sound as if it's a first-person struggle with one's own demise, but the speaker in the poem
is addressing his father. That's it for the fact check.
Before we wrap today's show, let's hear some thoughts about last week's episode on ultimatums.
Hi, No Stupid Questions.
Your recent episode brought to mind a compassionate ultimatum I received from a friend that changed my life.
I had come to Zambia to do some short-term volunteer work.
I ended up working at a local commercial firm instead.
While I was there, I also started volunteering at a nearby prison on the weekends where I did recreational activities with the teens in custody there. And so I was venting to my friend about how frustrating it was that I saw these big needs that these kids had,
yet all my working hours were being spent at this law firm. So my friend said to me,
either you're going to help these kids or you aren't. I challenge you on Monday, this was a
Friday, to go hand in your resignation and start figuring out how you're going to help. If you
can't do that on Monday,
you never will. You might as well pack your bags and go. I was stunned. But after a weekend of
soul searching, I actually went that Monday and handed in my resignation. That conversation
happened eight years ago this month. And since that time, Up Zambia, my organization, has helped more than 3,000 children
with free legal help. To this day, it's still a little bit scary to talk to that friend,
because I never know what new ultimatum will come my way. But I am so, so grateful to have a friend
who challenged me like she did. That was listener Sarah Larios. Thanks to her and to everyone
who shared their experiences with us.
And remember, we'd love to hear your stories
about how you practice self-compassion.
Send a voice memo to nsq at freakonomics.com
and you might hear your voice on the show.
Coming up next week on No Stupid Questions, are you genetically
destined to be overweight? Those questions reveal to me that people don't actually understand how
genes work. That's next week on No Stupid Questions. No Stupid Questions is part of the Freakonomics
Radio Network, which also includes Freakonomics Radio Network Eleanor Osborne. We had research assistants from Daniel Moritz-Rabson. Our theme song was composed
by Luis Guerra. You can follow us on Twitter at NSQ underscore show and on Facebook at NSQ show.
If you have a question for a future episode, please email it to NSQ at Freakonomics.com.
nsq at Freakonomics.com.
To learn more or to read episode transcripts,
visit Freakonomics.com slash nsq.
Thanks for listening.
I'm not kidding, though.
I've been taking my inhaler.
It's a week later and I still can't breathe.