Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 152: Scott Rogers, Embracing Your Adversary
Episode Date: September 12, 2018While working on a difficult case with some particularly difficult opposing council, Scott Rogers said he had a moment during a mindfulness sitting when he realized the way he was dealing wit...h the matter of litigation wasn't reducing that quality of dissatisfaction with that experience, it was contributing to it. Rogers, who has written several books, now serves as the director of the Mindfulness in Law program at the University of Miami School of Law, working with law students and faculty to embrace mindfulness as a way to be less stressed, but still competitive in the field. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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It kind of blows my mind to consider the fact that we're up to nearly 600 episodes of
this podcast, the 10% happier podcast.
That's a lot of conversations.
I like to think of it as a great compendium of, and I know this is a bit of a grandiose
term, but wisdom.
The only downside of having this vast library of audio is that it can be hard to know where
to start. So we're launching a new feature here, playlists,
just like you put together a playlist of your favorite songs.
Back in the day, we used to call those mix tapes.
Just like you do that with music, you can do it with podcasts.
So if you're looking for episodes about anxiety,
we've got a playlist of all of our anxiety episodes.
Or if you're looking for how to sleep better, we've got a playlist of all of our anxiety episodes, or if you're looking for how to sleep better,
we've got a playlist for that. We've even put together a playlist of some of my personal favorite episodes.
That was a hard list to make. Check out our playlists at 10%.com slash playlist. That's 10% all
one word spelled out..com slash playlist singular.
Let us know what you think.
We're always open to tweaking how we do things
and maybe there's a playlist we haven't thought of.
Hit me up on Twitter or submit a comment through the website.
Hey y'all, it's your girl, Kiki Palmer.
I'm an actress, singer, and entrepreneur.
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I'm asking friends, family, and experts,
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Listen to Baby, this is Kiki Palmer
on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcast. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ I'm Dan Harris. Generally speaking, lawyers in the public imagination do not generate a surplus of sympathy,
but I'm not sure that's fair.
And even if you think it's fair, bear with me because our guest this week who has been
teaching mindfulness to aspiring lawyers at the University of Miami Law School is really
interesting both in terms of his personal story and also in in terms of his approach to
meditation, so Scott Rogers is coming up first. Let's do your calls. Here's number one. My name is John. I'm calling from
Abu Dhabi in the UAE
First I want to say thank you for the podcast and the and the work that you're doing
It's proven to be very helpful and enlightening Thank you for the podcast and the work that you're doing.
It's proven to be very helpful and enlightening.
So my question is this, I've been meditating
in an established practice for the past seven years
and I went home for the holidays
and started teaching some family and some friends
and realized that I have kind of a pension for this and maybe
even an ability. So in a roundabout way, my question would be, what advice would you give
to current practitioners that are possibly prospective teachers and want to move it into
destruction and teach this stuff. Thank you.
First of all, that's awesome.
I think it's great.
And one of my biggest fears about the state
of the meditation industrial complex right now
is that there are not enough highly trained teachers.
And I've said this before in the podcast,
I am of the view, it's just my opinion,
that the great teachers have a lot of experience on retreat.
And really, you know, it takes, you're going to get under the hood of somebody's mind,
you need to have a lot of time on the cushion yourself, it's a position of extraordinary responsibility and power.
And we don't have enough of them in my opinion.
And so I'm psyched that you're into it.
So I would recommend, in bear in mind,
I come out of a specific, I've practiced
in a specific tradition.
So I'm biased in that direction.
I just want to be open about my biases.
So there are two places I would recommend you go.
The Insight Meditation Society,
which is in Barry, Massachusetts, B-A-R-R-E, they have
a teacher training program.
And I believe, and I don't know too much about this, it may be affiliated with or separate
from Spirit Rock, which is on the West Coast in Marin County.
I believe it's Marin County, North of San Francisco, which is a related meditation center.
And they either both have teacher training programs
or have a joint one, but in any event,
I would recommend talking to them
because they produce an extraordinary number
of amazing teachers, many of whom I know quite well
because they teach on the 10% happier app.
So I think it's awesome what you're up to,
and that's where I would recommend you go to check it out and anybody else is listening who wants to get into this.
Alright, let's do call number two.
Hey, Dan Kimberly calling.
I have found meditation to have an incredible impact on my life and I want desperately to pass this practice to my children and I would love to have your best tips on how to do this without freaking out my children that has been raised in more
of a faith-based lifestyle that I am actually starting to question and make a turn about.
I've already tried to approach it with the one child I have that I think could use it the most,
and I have gotten a typical mean girl. What is this all-mandy, pamby, peace, love, not more kind of response?
And she thinks I've lost my mind.
And she also genuinely believes that she's the one living in reality and I'm not.
But that's a whole other conversation.
Have a great day and thank you, Hudson Hugs to all, you, Bianca, and your little boy.
Have a great day.
Thank you, that's very sweet.
I appreciate it.
And I've had a minute of thinking, oh no, is this the same question?
I get all the time. I want to teach meditation to my kids. How do I do it?
But actually, yours is a really interesting twist.
Because it sounds like your kids are in a faith tradition.
And therefore, there's some sort of baked in hostility to meditation.
So you're really just trying to figure out how to position it
so that given their conditioning,
they might be open to it.
And so I would say, and this is just my opinion,
I would say that you should really depict it in secular terms
that this is not about attacking their belief system.
But this is not about attacking their belief system. It's about a secular training of the brain and the mind to be maximally effective.
So we all want to have productivity and focus that's operating on the highest possible
level so that we can get as much done.
I would assume that would be attractive to your children.
We all know that we suffer from strong emotions at times and sometimes as a consequence,
do things we regret, shaving that down, shaving down our emotional reactivity.
That's attractive, I think, to a lot of people.
And I think pointing out that a lot of people in our society who we admire, the US military corporate executives, entertainers, elite athletes are doing this,
not because they're in the market for abandoning their core religious beliefs, but because it makes them better at what they do.
So I would really position this as something that's secular, and that, you know, if these are people
who really care about their prayer life, for example, being able to curb to a certain
extent the craziness of their own minds, the monkey mind, will I would imagine improve their
prayer life. So they're less distracted and more focused on what it is they want to
focus. So that's my advice for what it's worth.
Best of luck to you.
Let's get to our guest this week because this is a really smart person who I think has
a lot to say that's going to be interesting to you guys.
Scott Rogers is the director of the mindfulness and law program at the University of Miami
Law School.
He works with both students and faculty and helps them embrace mindfulness
as a way to be less stressed in an extremely stressful
environment and in what is an extremely stressful field
of endeavor professionally.
This was actually recorded in January,
so if there's an outdated reference in here,
please forgive us.
The reason why we're posting it now is because the law is on the minds of many Americans
as Brett Kavanaugh is in the midst of his confirmation proceedings on Capitol Hill.
In fact, I'm looking at a TV monitor right now and he's on there.
So here we go.
Here's Scott Rogers.
So let me ask you, how did you start meditating?
Well, Pam about 28 years ago when we were in the law school environment. Oh, she was in law school with you? Pam and I met in law school. In fact, just months before
it was all going to turn into the next aspect of life in the law that is graduating,
law that is graduating said we have a meeting with Marty Peters. Marty Peters is this extraordinarily wonderful woman who was the school psychologist, University
of Florida, a school psychologist at the law school, which was a sign of its being on top
of things.
And she would always offer students and others tips on reducing stress or focusing, concentrating, and
those nice things that I always found helpful and interesting.
She also was trained by the Maharishi in Transcendental Meditation.
One day out of the blue, Pam said, we're going to see Marty, I've signed a step to learn
TM.
That's how the form will practice, sort of got set in motion.
What were you like at that time?
Was it were you super stress versus a reason Pam dragged you in to do TM and what kind of
effect did it have on you?
Pam might have an different entry to the question.
I loved law school.
I thrived in law school.
I found it to be very rich and not stuff I did not know.
I love the learning process.
I love my classmate.
I love faculty.
So I think that I was not stressed in law school.
Our relationship was somewhat new.
And Pam, the relationship continues to this day.
You've met Pam.
And I don't know what Pam would say.
I'm sure I've changed
in many ways. But I don't think I'll have to ask her. That's a great question, Dan. Why
did she? I never thought about why. It just seemed interesting.
What did you notice in effect internally when you started to do it? I was drawn to it, this idea of turning my attention inward.
And in this case, you're probably familiar with TM, there's a concentrating on word,
right?
A mantra.
A mantra to continue to come back to that word when the mind wanders or however that may
be.
And really in some ways, TM offers, you know, the promise, perhaps, of the experience really enriching and deepening
and some, you know, I don't know if I wrote the word Woody Allen used in Annie Hoppe, some
transplanted sort of way or something, right?
There's something that I think captures people with the prospect of really an enriched
experience.
I didn't necessarily have that so much as the motivating force, but this real
interest in noticing and perhaps narrowing the field of focus around an object. I find
that to be quite interesting. And I had, yeah, I find that to be quite interesting.
Well, I mean, a lot of lawyers have a good attention span. You're going to sit and read
through it. This is the reason why I'm not a lawyer. I thought about it. It just seems horrible, certain offense. Actually offense. It seemed horrible. But so I can imagine why
a mind that would be good at law school would enjoy locking in on a mantra and seeing
how well you could focus on it. That's interesting. You know, I think a lot of people, certainly
a lot of law students and a lot of attorneys will talk about how, just how busy their mind is, how restless the mind is, how antsy.
And a lot of people, you know, this idea of people saying, I may D.D. or I may D.H.D., I hear
that all the time in and outside of.
So that just may be an aspect of the ethos of the moment and just the way things are moving.
What you're saying is very interesting. I do think that there is something
about a certain aspect of the lawyer mind locking
in on something.
I think there's something to that.
I don't think that that canvases the law, though, broadly.
Some, yes, not all.
For me, maybe, maybe.
I think I've always had a fairly good ability
to sort of stay on top of things, but, but
restless as well. Did you find that doing this practice was useful for you in
your life and your relationships? Did it make any difference whatsoever? You know,
I didn't stay with it long enough as the practice. I think what happened was we
learned it. I really enjoyed it. We practiced it. Pam and I practiced it together a little bit.
We went to Marty and her husband Don's house where we would sit and practice and maybe with a small group. Marty, by the way,
does a lot of interesting stuff with I think TM in its larger aspect today.
And
but there wasn't a lot to read about it. I was hungry, I think, for learning more about this introspective,
attentional orientation.
And I began to read what I could find,
which back in 1990, 1991 wasn't tons,
at least I couldn't find tons.
And that led me to a couple of books on Zen,
led me to Alan Watts, led me to some interesting,
even when it was religious, it was a Catholic priest who had become a Zen practitioner and wrote a
book on it. I found that to be helpful for instruction, like learning about more of a less mantra
oriented practice. And then in short order, led to mindfulness which became the one the practice
that really took hold. So when you say mindfulness in this context or you're referring to secular
mindfulness or did you learn mindfulness within a Buddhist context? At first the books that I found
on mindfulness were books written by Ticknot Han. He had... He's a mysterious...
A wonderful voice for mindfulness, a wonderful way of, I think, speaking to it,
simply and beautifully.
And there were just some books, if I went looking in the bookstores, he had books.
I think Parallel Express had published a bunch, and they just kept coming out.
Faster than I could read them.
Another one was coming out, and he tended to, at least in my experience, restate basic fundamental insights. And so you would read
another book and really reread something, but it would resonate and reinforce. So he
is, as you said, Vietnamese and from the Buddhist tradition. And so I would say that my early
readings, and then as the journey progressed a sort of engagement was with the Buddhist psychology and teachings.
That's so funny what you said about Tignot Han restating the basic
propositions of mindfulness. It just really hammers home the point that we can hear it,
read it, practice it a thousand times, but we still need to hear it
10,000 more times because it's something that runs so counter to the way we operate,
in other words mindlessly, that this message of waking up, breaking out of autopilot,
we just have, in all of its aspects, that's what I actually view as one of the functions of this podcast is to just have a weekly waking up party,
a reminder session.
It's not dissimilar to in some ways
why you go to church on Sunday.
Yeah, it's really interesting.
I remember years ago, another person very early on
that really influenced me and to this day,
I cherish his voice is Ram Das.
And I remember one of Ram Das.
He just, he's a former Harvard professor, got fired for giving acid to the students and
like that. And then went off, India studied with a Hindu master, changed his name to Ram Das,
and that lives in Hawaii and still teaches. And I think he got fired for being both researcher,
because it was, it was LSD and related research that was
that was okay back then and maybe sort of having a resurgence in some ways but wanted to be
both researcher and subject. That's right that that that that's right. He's an extraordinary.
If you can listen and you probably have if you listen to Ram Das talk and articulate things
at least I was just drawn in.
And also he, I think early on, was very interested in getting out of his head,
right? The voice in the head that you speak of that so beautifully.
And then in time, I think emerged with the realization also it was deep
ining his connection of the heart.
And I think that's where he, his own, at least my tracking of him and perhaps
myself as it connects to that sort of move into that sphere of really a hard opening embrace
maybe being the key in many ways to unlocking so much and so I find him to be really wonderful to learn from and in one of the things
He said he began by saying something like there's nothing I'm going to share with you all that you don't already know
It's that we tend to forget.
So let's hear we are.
We've come together to remember.
And I think when Ticknot Han, when you read it over and over and over and when you share
it, when you interview people and hear the same and very similar pieces of wisdom, yeah,
it's like, it is a run so contrary to something that is this important wake up.
And then we fall asleep again. Let me hone in on a phrase you just used.
This is one of those phrases that's a bit of a red flag for me, but I think I know where
you're going with it and I just would like to hear you unpack it.
Heart opening and brace.
You for me as a dedicated anti-sentimentalist phrase is like that.
I'm always sort of policing my interlocutors about, you know,
what does that mean? So you used it. So what do you mean by it?
Well, you know, it's interesting. And the law, for example, which is a very adversarial system by its very nature, like life is adversarial, right?
In many ways. And the law is by design an adversarial process that perhaps tamps down on what it might otherwise be
if we didn't have the law.
And so this idea that the other is the enemy,
the other is a threat, the other is a problem.
And the other, of course, if we're really,
if the voice in our head is really calling the shots
and we're not catching that voice,
then everything is the other.
And that's not necessarily correct.
At least it's not correct, even at the simplest, most superficial level,
that the threat that we presume that this person represents is, in fact,
the threat that they actually represent.
The stories we tell ourselves, and we hear ourselves, really can make it so much more of a distance
than it actually is. So I think for me that heart opening embrace on the one hand is an opportunity
to realize that we're much more connected. We've got we're in this together, even if it's a case
in your on opposite side, we're still seeking justice and we're still going to go
home to our friends and our family and just we were doing the best we can and it's challenging and
there's a lot of confusion. So on the one hand at the most superficial level Dan, I'd say it's
realizing that we've got more going on together than we think and we're not quite the threats
that we take each other to be and we don't have to be as guarded and as stressed as that
leads to. Going a little deeper, I think it speaks to, I think it speaks to this recognition
that if we can really tame that voice in our head, not forget it, but really size it up
and befriend it. Maybe that's another word you're going to want to unpack.
Really, but friend it.
No, I'm cool with that.
Okay, good.
Then there's this letting go of something
that was never real in the first place
and the feeling of connection,
which is not touchy-feely, but is actually inherent
in the system in which we find ourselves,
we realize, and it's a game changer.
But how did this play out? At this point, you're a young lawyer, you just graduated, you're reading
all these books by Tick.Hon, which is probably not super common in your profession, especially
at that time. But you're actually practicing the law. I don't know what you'll tell us,
what context you were in. How did that play? Did
you find yourself, you know, giving big hugs to people in a different side of a case?
Or like, how did this heart opening embrace play out in your legal practice?
Well, yeah. Well, I practiced commercial litigation. So there's an intent to that tough stuff
with a wonderful firm, with wonderful people,
who by the way were very interested in talking about mindfulness, because that was when I
was firmly in this mindfulness sort of approach to contemplative practice.
Love talking about the mind moving into the past and regretting doubt.
Love talking about very interested and insightful about the mind moving into the future and anxiety, et cetera.
And then when it came to practice, that didn't teach to your point.
Even you said, I love what you said, your book.
The first book, 10% happier.
There's extraordinary brilliant book.
If you needed justification and a basis to sort of explore mindfulness, there you have
it.
You have it.
I use that book in class.
I think I've shared with you. Students love it.
We read it.
I have them put together a little chapter of their own story, not the way you, because it's
so interesting and helpful.
But this practice is elusive, which is why your next book, the current book, I think,
is really important as well.
So this journey, I mean, for me, that was, say, the early 90s when I began to practice and
become interested. And for me, it was a great deal the early 90s when it, when I began to practice and become
interested.
And for me, it was a great deal of reading.
It was reading.
It was reading.
I didn't have a teacher.
I was in South Florida.
I wasn't, I was married or just gotten married and I practiced and I did something called
Judicial Clurchship with Judges, which then led to the law firm and commercial litigation.
And it was just busy.
And I found a lot of my spare time,
I was reading books on mindfulness.
And the game changer for me was when I was in a sangha,
this is a Tick-Not-Hon sort of suggestion
that people start these groups, these mindfulness groups.
And we had one in South Florida that I on the beach,
Miami Beach that I was a wonderful friend now, Jill Siler, who just opened her
home to people to come in once a week for an hour and a half to read about
mindfulness and sit and practice mindfulness and then talk about the experience.
So for many years, it was this student reading and learning.
And I wouldn't I would say that there was no heart opening early on.
and learning, and I wouldn't, I would say that there was no heart opening early on. There definitely was in ways that by the way weren't always so, seemed, didn't go swimmingly
as I'd hope, you know, the ability to be with my wife and have her say something that was
probably quite right and all that, but I was resisting it, and rather than react and
have it turn into a fight, I was quiet and listened,
and then she said to me, why are you so quiet?
Right, so I was like, but I am quiet.
This is a good thing.
This is a step in a direction.
Was she, by the way, keeping up with her meditation practice?
No, Pam is brilliant at pointing me in the direction,
probably to what you intimated earlier,
because it'll be helpful to me and helpful to her,
and then going off and doing something entirely different.
So I'd say there was this journey of really slowly
and maybe but surely stepping more and more
in the direction of being a little bit less reactive,
a little bit more aware, and then of course,
having all that fall away and becoming reactive
and not aware, and then having that be the very
Stuff that helped me become a little bit more aware and a little bit less reactive for years And I would say it was probably helpful to the relationship
It was helpful to me. You know life does it stuff with you know wonderful children and then the then parenting and
parents getting older and
Friends passing away and things like that and I think that the practice has been helpful at creating a more alive and connected and aware me.
And then in time, I think there probably was
a bit of time into this when that heart opening embrace,
something began to shift.
And it just happened.
So when you say you began to hug people,
or that is something that I think is nice to do,
but I can't do it on purpose.
But it wasn't like,
you were still, I don't know if you were still doing
commercial embrace, a commercial litigation
when the embrace happened.
But how did that change your relationship
either in your own mind or in real life
to the people who were, but for all
intents and purposes, your adversaries.
Right.
Okay.
You made me think of something.
So again, I think that the hard opening embrace took, I'm going to say, 10 years or
longer to even begin to kick it in a way that I felt towards quote adversaries. I remember when I was, we were at a very difficult case
with a posing council who was extremely just, just unbelievable, it was unbelievably difficult case,
unbelievably difficult opposing council and his client. And it was one of these cases where you're so sure you're right and you're so sure they're
misrepresenting.
And I think that was correct.
And we all have our takes on things.
I remember having a conversation after some hearing or something.
And the opposing, I was so like my, even as I'm saying, at my heart, I feel my heart
racing. It was just so unbelievably frustrating to want to be feeling like you're being treated
unfairly and things are being misrepresented and you're having a difficult time setting
the record straight. And I sat and I practiced. So I, that was a time to practice. So I remember
sitting and I did up a mindfulness practice. Somewhere in the middle of the practice. I had this realization this insight
That I was contributing to this offering
That even though
I may very well have been right
Nonetheless the way I was responding in the conversation the way I was
I was responding in the conversation, the way I was dealing with the matter of litigation that I was, there was resistance and there was that I wasn't helping making it.
I wasn't reducing that quality of dissatisfaction with the experience.
I was contributing to it.
And that to me was a realization that we're all in this together and me too.
So what could you, I'm just curious about this because I think a lot of people, I'm honing
in on this because I think a lot of people, well we're going to talk about this with you,
teaching mindfulness and a law school context, but a lot of people worry about meditation.
And I still on some levels have my moments of worrying about it too, that what does it mean if you're in a competitive context, which the law certainly is in many of its
aspects, if not most of its aspects? What is it? How do you take this stuff into your professional
life when there's a certain amount of vanquishing that often needs to be your endeavoring to do.
Yeah.
Well, you know, I don't think that being present,
being aware, being alert, hearing what's actually being said,
letting the person who's talking no matter what your relationship
to them, and no matter how hostile your relationship may be
in terms of a legal matter, letting them finish what they're saying,
having them feel that you've heard them, that would be not, not checking it up to another level
of hostility, actually hearing them a little bit more than you might otherwise, having people in
your midst to your collaborating with, be able to more meaningfully say, well wait a minute here,
let's talk about what's really maybe going on here. You know, Sharon Salzburg has that nice phrase that mindfulness is being able to tell
the difference between what's happening and the story you're telling yourself about what's
happening.
So everybody's got a story about what's happening and if one person can sort of offer
a little nugget of what's actually taking place, that can be really helpful.
So that doesn't mean that you don't forcefully pursue and at times emotionally and energetically
engage because that's responsive to the call of the moment and do what needs to be done.
But it does mean you're doing what's actually called for to be responsive.
You're not overdoing it and you're not underdoing it. Both of those would be
sort of equidistant from that responsive point, something that doesn't serve the situation as well.
Well said. And it reminds me of something else that Sharon Salzburg has said, Sharon,
for the uninitiated is a eminent meditation teacher who's been on this podcast many times
She says you can compete without being cruel and I said essentially what in some ways what you're describing
That's right. That's right. I once there was a
Poet or somebody said treat a person as you will just hold them in your heart
So to get to your heart opening embrace treat a person as you will like as you must
But don't lose that sense of
connectedness to them as a human being who just like you has a life that began
is going through the challenges and the struggles and the sadness and the
celebrations and will end. And don't forget that. And that's that's something you
feel, not something you know just in your head. Again, well said. So you then went on to join the faculty, University of Miami, law school,
where you are still and you teach mindfulness to law students. So when you first proposed this idea,
what kind of looks did you get?
Fortunate thing was I've tried not to propose things.
I don't know if I try not to propose things
because then I get attached to wanting it to happen
or I've just been very fortunate.
So I was at a Florida bar convention.
I had my little table out,
sort of mindfulness balance and the lawyer's brain
was this workshop I was doing.
I was, people were walking by and giving me the glances.
You might imagine,
or coming over and saying,
oh, this looks really interesting.
And Janet Sterns, the dean of students at the law school, who had recently joined his
dean of students, said, this is interesting.
Wellness is a big part of what really matters in the law school environment.
Do you think you could come and do this mindfulness balance on the lawyer's brain for law students?
So I said sure.
And it really was a life changer for me because I was not anticipating
going into law schools and went and taught this class, this voluntary class, I think 15 students
signed up, eight students finished, called Mindful and Spalanced and the Law Students Brain,
and those that finished liked it. And fortunately also ended up doing well so that it's also
spoke well, although I think they were
just extraordinary students who would have pre-selected in a nice way that would have done well no matter what.
But that led to then me going and talking at orientation to all of the students.
And when I did that, a hundred and I think twenty signed up.
So we had three classes the next semester, or the next year or rather,
and it just sort of went from there.
And then two years later, the dean,
a new dean came, Trish White,
and she said, this is really important.
Let's make this a part of, let's grow this.
And then eventually in 2010,
said, let's make this a program.
So it really just was very
The the faculty and administration supported it. That's huge. The students were responsive
That's that's everything and it just sort of has grown on its own and I've just been lucky to sort of be there for the
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So at this point is it an integral part of the curriculum or like is it a requirement?
It is an integral part of the curriculum in the sense that there are now classes like mindful ethics,
mindfulness and law,
mindfulness and motivating business compliance with the law,
a new class, I teach mindful ethics
with a wonderful dear friend and collaborator, Jan Jacopo-Witz,
I teach mindfulness and motivating business compliance
with law with a wonderful colleague Rob Rosen. I teach mindful leadership with a wonderful colleague, Raquel Matis. These are
wonderful collaborations to sort of enlarge and are collective understanding of mindfulness and the
ways that we can share it. And mindful ethics is a part of the PR curriculum. And so students have
to take a PR professional responsibility class as you can imagine. Ethics is pretty important for lawyers to walk out
and have an understanding of.
And it's required, but there's a handful
of wonderful offerings in the PR arena,
and mindful ethics is one of them.
I see, I see.
So I think I know the answer.
You may have just answered my next question
in your last answer.
Lawyers are not super popular in our culture.
So why should anybody care whether they're happy?
Well, that's interesting.
Why should anybody care why they're happy?
Why should people be pleased to hear
that lawyers are learning mindfulness?
Well, first of all, I think it's unfortunate
that lawyers have the reputation they have. I think it's unfortunate that lawyers have the reputation they have.
I think it's oftentimes deserved, but you know, it's a curious thing.
You know, if you go way back in time when there was a state of nature, right, before laws,
it was like, you know, life was nasty, breweders, and short.
Yes.
Yes.
I'm seeing.
Yes, exactly.
And then something happened and we got this rule of law and something really extraordinary
emerged, which was stability out of the chaos, some clarity, a reliable way to interact
with each other and move things forward.
And I'll suggest that that was a mindfulness expression unfolding, wisdom and compassion
coming out of the state of nature. And lawyers are the stewards
among others and judges of that. And now we have it where anxiety and depression and suicide
thoughts and suicides which run high across our society runs especially high, they say among lawyers.
And so I find it very poignant that those who are probably the stewards
of holding steady in the midst of enormous conflict and anger and resentment and frustration and unfairness
are the ones who are suffering in many ways. So I think that if you, so I think there's something
about caring about our society and those who play the roles
that they play and it's not easy for lawyers.
It's not easy.
And the profession is suffering and probably that it's been going on for a long time,
which is why this noble profession, because when we look back about the great lawyers and
judges, it's a very noble profession even to this day.
And those who have relationships with their lawyers that have been so
helpful to them. And there's so many that are just doing, I mean, the clinics that we have in
the law school and just to be helpful to people in need, it's really extraordinary and yet
challenging. So why would people care? I think that you may have just answered. Okay, but go ahead.
I don't want to drive to be. Well, you. Well, because it helps, it helps,
because we should care about each other.
And lawyers and members of legal profession help,
help if they're not doing well, we all suffer.
Yeah, there are any real part of the system
that we require in order to have the society
we want.
Yes.
What is going on in the law that suicides and depression and anxiety appear to be elevated
in the profession?
You know, I've heard, I have colleagues who share, who talk, who teach my, I have colleagues
who teach mindfulness to lawyers.
I have a wonderful friend, Judy Cohen, in the Bay Area.
And she, I've heard her say that the lawyers,
we are problem solvers, and we're really good
at problem solving.
We are competitive, and we like to stay on top of our game,
and we are perfectionist, tech.
We like to get it right.
And these three things serve our clients well, serve us well when we're doing our job.
But if we can't modulate, if we can't turn down the dial on problem solving, then we're
constantly looking for the next thing that's wrong, whether we're at home, whether our
family, whether our children out just relaxing.
If we can't tone down that competitiveness, then there's threats everywhere, whether and overstating those threats. And if we just sort of have to keep going
through that document again, because goodness if somebody finds a misplaced comma and
we're shamed by that or whatever that may be, we just keep going. And I think that the
thing that serves lawyers so well can become the thing that just
answers the question you asked about why.
And in South Florida, we've had just recently a bunch of extraordinarily wonderful and kind
and brilliant attorneys in their lives, die by suicide, and it's just been a very painful,
painful thing.
And this is happening, again, throughout all of society to be sure, but with students and
lawyers and when it happens, it's a wake up called a lot of people because a lot of times
people will say, I had no idea or I really thought that they were managing it.
So what are the biggest, the most interesting issues that you encounter teaching mindfulness in this context, which one would imagine would be a reasonably hostile environment.
I think the, what's fascinating is that people are very interested. I think now it's even easier because of wonderful books like yours and what's going on in terms of just talking about mindfulness. It's easier.
It's easier.
There's a greater I think need to keep clear
on what it is and what it's not
because it's become more and more popular.
Wonderful things that aren't mindfulness
but wonderful things can be confused with mindfulness.
Like taking a bubble bath.
Like taking a bubble bath.
No one can take a bubble bath mindfully.
Yes.
But.
Might not be as much fun as you thought it would be. Right. It mindfully, but it does.
It does, right.
The fun that life really offers us might not be the heightened level.
Or could be better.
I mean, it really just don't know.
But as soon as you are open to seeing what's happening in your mind and body, you might be
in for some surprises.
Yeah.
We are continuallyisting surprises. Yeah, right. We are continually infresurpizes.
It'll be, it's nice when we get to that stage where we're not surprised because we get
that it's always changing and the direction it's heading and and and all that stuff that
life is deeply about.
I think that how can I take this thing that I'm drawn to, which is wanting to be happier
and more balanced and have a less stressed time of it all and still stay competitive to
your earlier comment?
That's the thing you hear the most.
That's the thing I hear the most.
And then people are relieved when they get that the two are not antithetical, but they actually support each
other.
But it does take a little bit of seeing the larger picture and understanding more deeply
what mindfulness is to get there.
It's both of those things.
It's, I think, probably first understanding what meditation is and isn't.
So, it's not, at least in mindfulness meditation, isn't sitting on a mountain top
in a low end cloth and listening to a lot of Anya. It is. But it's also seeing the bigger picture,
which is that, as you said before, you can see the humanity and your competitors while still competing.
Yes, that's right. And not lose touch of the humanity within yourself.
Right. Because the two probably run in tandem
together. As you lose sight of it and the other, you're losing touch of it within yourself. And as
you can't maintain that awareness in the other, you cultivate it more fully in yourself.
So you've written a bunch of books, but you have a new one. What's the new one called and what's it about? The new book is the Elements of Mindfulness, and it is drawing upon the elements of nature
in particular the tree, the wind, clouds, the sun as four primary elements and then two
other elements that are very special to both learn what mindfulness is for those for whom it's new,
and then to be able to use our connection to nature
and our continual immersion in it
as an opportunity to wake up,
to have it reinforce the cultivation of mindful awareness,
and the book is very much in the service of ways
of doing that.
So say more about how this would actually work.
I mean, South Florida, well, you do have beaches, which are, of course, natural.
A lot of people spend their times in their cars and in their offices.
Maybe in their backyard a little bit.
But so how do you get people to get in touch with nature without it sounding like sort
of an empty bromide?
Well, what's interesting is that what you say getting in touch with nature.
So for example, they're for each of the elements.
And the elements that were chosen are we're chosen because no matter where you are in the world,
even if you're nowhere near a beach, for example, and I feel very fortunate to live on the beach,
you nonetheless have these elements at the ready.
You look outside the window, whether you're driving in the car or you're have these elements at the ready. You look outside the window,
whether you're driving in the car or you're sitting in your office, and you will see a tree,
and you will have the opportunity to one way or the other be reminded of something important
because the element is right there if you are primed to notice it, if you're primed
to notice it. So for example, for each of the
elements, there's two ways that one approaches the elements as one develops their relationship
to mindfulness, the doing and then the being. So for example, when one sees a tree and
they can be in a book, because it could be a book that allows one to practice just by
looking at imagery, when one sees a tree, they adjust their posture. When one feels the breeze or
hears the breeze, they take, say, three breaths, slower, deeper breaths. These are your instructions.
These are the instructions. And if you think about most meditation practices, to be sure,
and really a growing body of mindfulness practices, it will often begin with something like,
bring yourself into a comfortable
seated posture, upright and stable. Well, there's the tree. Take three slow, deep breaths. There's
the wind. And then move to the cloud. And this is something that's sort of a bit of a little bit of
an innovation in the book with the doing practices to think to yourself, this is a thought, to actually
generate a thought in your mind so that you can begin to, right, you get it.
You can begin to realize that just because it's arising in your mind doesn't mean it's true.
Exactly.
In fact, in the original version of the book, I had it where when you saw a cloud, you
would think to yourself, this is not a thought.
The idea being that what could be clearer that a thought is not true, then if you're thinking this is not a thought,
but a lot of people who read it were like, I don't understand that. So I figured we'll save that. I didn't understand it.
Yeah, it's good though. So you think this is a thought. So you hear that. So it primes that awareness of the content of the mind.
And then you also smile and you think again, but there's a feeling
that accompanies it, this is a feeling. And you sort of see if you can't tap into that, that slight
uplift of a smile. And then you frown and you think this is a feeling, because again it's just a
feeling. And you see if you can't connect with maybe a little bit of a drop in mood.
So you supposed to do this every time you see a cloud?
Well, for the do know, the doing practice.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because that seems slightly impractical.
It's a lot of clouds.
Correct.
But to begin a practice, so when we get to the so-be mindful sunrise, if we get to that,
it would be that would be a specific practice.
The way you start is there's the tree you adjust your posture.
There's the wind, so you take three slow deep breaths.
This is just the beginning, so you think the thought, smile, feel the feeling, frown, feel
the feeling, and that all takes seconds.
And now you are, you're not going to come back to that in the practice, but you've generated
it to start the practice.
And then you move to the sun. The sun is awareness, but as a doing practice, the Sun is warmth, spreading warmth.
So then you would in the spirit of Sharon Salisberg, you would bring someone to
mind and wish for them, well, may you be happy, you spread warmth, and then you
would bring it to yourself. So a very small loving kindness practice. May I be
happy? So that would be the doing practice working through the four
elements, the four primary elements, and that might take 30 seconds, 45 seconds. You could
take five breaths, you could take fewer breaths, you could do the whole loving kindness routine
of not just may be happy, but the others as well. It depends on the person in their own interest
in relationship.
And then now that the sun is out and the sun is awareness,
you now come back to the tree.
And now it's aware of the body.
And it can continue there with just a traditional
awareness of the body practice,
or you can then move to the wind and now it's an awareness of the breath practice and or you can then move to the wind
and now it's an awareness of the breath practice
and it stays right there.
So for people who've been practicing for a very long time,
they're there and now the practice continues.
There's no special, you know,
kutraments or accessories or anything complicated about it.
Or it could then move to clouds
and now you're aware of thoughts and feelings
that fundamental practice, or
then it could move to itself, when the sun, where it's aware of, bear attention,
choiceless awareness, it's just this open field of awareness.
So that's using the elements, really as a for a beginner, or for somebody who's doing
a long time, it can be refreshing to sort of really reconnect.
And then when you're outside and you're walking
and all of a sudden you see a tree, you might stop.
Like the students in the class this week,
their instruction is when you see a tree outside,
just once a day, at most, you don't have to do this too much,
just stop and be aware of the body.
I got you.
So that's where I was getting confused.
So this is a mixture of sort of in vivo
during your life practices. So when
you see a tree, maybe once a day, you give, you know, you straighten your posture and notice
your posture, same thing with clouds, sun, wind. But it's also a sort of formal practice that
you can do that's organized around these concepts. That's right. That's right. Well, at the same
time, not trying to add anything to the rich body of contemplative practice
is particularly in the mindfulness tradition that are already there.
Well, given that there is, there are all these sort of how to meditate books.
Why this, why now?
Well, one of the things that I think it offers is, and this was born out of my own early
experience, that just happened for two days when I saw a tree one day and
while I was driving and I just really saw that tree like something very nothing to
S.O.T.R.C. but just something it was a meaningful experience.
And I realized that that tree that I just happened to chance upon was the cue that woke me up.
So I share it as what are called punctuated practices, that you can just be out there
during the day and if you spend a little time reinforcing these images as really just a doing
or being practiced that are fundamental to contemplative traditions already, then when you're outside,
you won't just pass every tree with your mind lost and thought periodically,
or you will have the breeze blow by you and we lost and thought, it might actually create
the opportunity to wake up.
And in that waking up, and this is in the spirit of Ticknot Han, for whom I shared with you,
I was deeply moved and touched and learned a great deal, this interbeing, right?
This idea that the trees are all around us
and we have this body, this idea that the wind is all around us
and we have this breath, this idea that, you know,
things come and go and we have this mind.
The idea that the sun is there
and we have this quality of warmth and compassion
and also this capacity to really be aware.
I don't think it's,
I don't think it's a surprise that there is this connectedness between this impermanent thing that you and I wonderfully are here embodying and this world around us.
I think that all sounds actually quite useful. Before I'm sensitive to the fact that we're almost out of time, but before we, and I know
you've also written a book about parenting.
So I have a three year old, your kids are older.
What kind of wisdom can you drop on me in terms of dealing with a three year old?
For example, yesterday, he was, I'll tell you what I did and you tell me if this is
the right thing.
He's very testless mother as well, he should be.
She's great and daddy's, I'm around, but not,
I travel a lot, I work a lot, so I'm less around than she is.
For sure.
She, he took a nap yesterday, she snuck out to,
I don't know, do something and I,
she said he's gonna freak out when he wakes up,
but she actually wanted me to wake him up,
she didn't want him to sleep too long,
and she said it's probably gonna be unpleasant,
which I would have known.
But so I woke him up, so he didn't like that,
A, and then B, his mother wasn't around,
so he was keening and wailing for a good long while.
And my approach was to be like,
are you, so how are you feeling? What can you tell me how you're feeling? He's like, I'm sad. I said, okay, so was to be like are you so how are you feeling what can you
tell me how you're feeling he's like I'm sad I said okay it's okay to be
sad you know tell me more about that and sorry I sort of just drew him out on it
and we hugged it out and but then we cry again and we talk again and so that
was my move not knowing much about actually I haven't read much about I haven't
read that book that you wrote nor have I read the book that John Cabin's in wrote about it. They very kindly sent me. I have
not done a good job of reading books about mindfulness and parenting. So I just kind of did that.
Does that sound right to you? What did I miss? I think it's beautiful, Dan. I think that, you know,
your signless tendency is speaking something that's really important, which is that we can read forever.
you know, your simultaneously speaking something that's really important,
which is that we can read forever.
And we can continue to learn and reinforce
and remind ourselves of the things that we already know
or you've certainly been practicing for a good while
and very seriously and with a lot of heart
and a lot of intellect.
When those moments arise, we can rise with them.
When those moments arise, we can rise with them. And I think that what you just shared, especially with that idea of being there and resonating
with his emotional state, so that he was not alone in it, and you weren't invalidating
or saying, no, let's be different than you are, but you sort of put a big hug around him
inside I'm here with you.
And I think that that's, he's a very lucky little boy.
It's funny because I was thinking about
all these lofty thoughts of creating a safe container
for your child's emotions.
And I was recalling, all this was happening
as we're calling moments where I had strong emotions as a child
and my parents graded the aforementioned container.
But none of that is what actually got him to calm down is when I heated up some quinoa
and fetishum and 98 and he was totally fine.
Well, do things about that.
First of all, good quinoa, good job with that.
But also, the book mindful parenting
was not about what to do in situations with your child.
It was how you as a parent could,
in the words of Ram Das,
create a spacious, resonant environment
so that when your child wants to come out and play,
to be themselves, there's nothing inside of you
that's gonna keep them stuck.
Right? And so, uh, yeah, so it's about us showing up and what we can do to be more
mindfully present.
Well, say more about that. So what would it be that would be inside of me that would,
that would squelch something that my child is hoping to express?
Ah, that's a, that's a really important question.
I'll offer something.
Just I don't deal well with, and I don't say this is,
one of the many flaws that I'm aware of
that I am just trying to be work with more skillfully.
Some reason I have a bit of a negative reaction
to operatic shows of emotion, displays of emotion.
And my son is very prone to them.
Me's three, so I don't know if that's gonna be how he is
as a person, but definitely does a lot of that.
He's a toddler.
And I can feel an internal, but I try very much try
to bring my practice to bear.
I'm aware, try to be aware that that's happening and not let that
Make me do something that would be you know scarring for him
But is that what you're talking about when you're talking about something internal to the parent that could emerge that would
Squash what a child is trying to express or am I off on the wrong sort of tangent here?
No, I think that you're quite right,
and you're on the tangent,
and you sort of answered the question,
I think quite beautifully that you asked.
The, what is it inside of us that can have them stuck?
They get angry, or they get upset,
they do what a child does,
whether we are participating in their distress,
or because not doing what they'd like,
or they're just experiencing something and then we get
We become angry with them because they're doing it in public and we're at the mall or we become
Sad because our child is in distress and we're feeling that distress
or we become
in some way in a state that's resisting what they are expressing.
And that resisting, if we don't,
as you really wonderfully put it,
notice and observe and find a way of being okay
in the midst of that, which is its own large lesson
and practice, then we will not respond in a way that we know those moments
as a parent and what we do is like somehow quite right, not meaning giving them the lollipop
they want, but being there for them, even if, you know, it's not a perfect moment in the way
that we'd like everyone to be happy when it's over, or not, or not. And then we perhaps look back,
you know, Dan Harris, Dan Steekel has a nice thing about,
there's always ruptures in relationships,
but we have the opportunity to repair.
And I'm a big believer that the repair
creates the larger opportunity,
not going through and having no ruptures.
Yeah.
It was interesting that the,
I was not the person he wanted to be with, right?
And so he wanted his mom.
And obviously that
is a side of this is not great for my ego. But um, well, you chose, you chose well, the
person you chose to spend your life with is the one he wants. So right. No, no, I don't,
I don't know existential stuff about my state of my marriage or the rest of the stuff about
the quality of me, human being because you're so upset to have me be there, not her.
But even though I wasn't the one he wanted there, just allowing him to feel what he felt
and telling him, oh, it's totally fine to be sad.
It's okay to be sad.
Then he wanted to, he wanted to, when I offered him a hug, which I thought he wasn't going
to want, because he was revolved by my presence. He actually really wanted a hug. So it was
an interesting, it was interesting to watch that all play out. Okay, so I like to end on this
completely unoriginal thing that I've come up with, which is what I call the plug zone.
So I want, because I love, I want to give, yeah, because by anybody who's reached this point in
the podcast, it's going to want to know more about you.
So can you just tell us every book you've written, where we can find you on the internet,
where we can find social media that you may or may not be involved in, give it all to
us.
That's very kind.
Well, let me say this since our time together is coming to an end here.
First to plug what you're speaking to, let me say that in this moment,
Dan, I am really feeling a gratitude to you for all that you've been doing, but also in this
moment that I'm here with you and that we've had this conversation. I know that in a few minutes,
I'll be walking out the door
and you'll be getting on with your day.
And what will this time have,
will it have been fidded away?
And when I walk out the door
and I held an Uber or something,
will I just get a cell phone call?
And I'm attentive to that.
So in the waning moments of our time,
let me say thank you.
And as I'm looking at you,
let me share with you as part of an answer to your question.
If anybody's going to take anything that I certainly have contributed
in the books that I'll talk about,
it's wherever you find yourself in this moment,
if there's a person sitting across from you,
as you are me,
to really be there for
that person. If that's something that we bring into, we don't need a book for that. And yet that's
one of the most elusive things to really be there. So I wanted to share with you that I'm
as much as I can be. I'm here with you and I'm deeply grateful for that.
And to all my teachers who have, in things that I've read or people I've gotten, the
good fortune to learn from, have helped me feel that, because it's not necessarily the
way I would have been 20, some odd years ago, to your first question.
The first book was Mindful Parenting.
Another book that shortly followed was Mindfulness for Law Students.
A related book is the six-minute solution.
That's a book mindfulness for lawyers.
Those two books use language of the law.
Like justice becomes allow the moment to be as it just is.
You know, clever ways of playing with the language of the law
to remind us to wake up in the middle of our day,
and in the work that we do. Another book that I collaborated with is Mindful, Nissen Professional
Responsibility, a guidebook for teaching law professors about how to introduce mindfulness into their
curriculum, and the most recent book that you very thoughtfully allowed us to talk a little bit about because I'm grateful for that is the elements of mindfulness, which introduces that particular methodology.
And website, social media, anything else?
Website.
So, the Instagram, that now that book, the elements of mindfulness teaches a method called
the Sobe Mindful Method.
I come from South Beach, so it has a play on that, but really it means you want to be
mindful, so be mindful.
You don't make it more complicated than it needs to be, but of course it does take something.
So there's an Instagram, so be mindful, which has images of trees and clouds and sort of
serve that purpose.
A website, so be mindful.com.
I have a website, it's got Scott Rogers.com, things like that.
And then at the law school, we have a mindfulness website.
And also my wonderful dear friend and partner collaborator,
Mishijah, at the University of Miami,
we have the you mindfulness,
which you've been kind enough to come down to
and share with many your insights.
We have a mindfulness.mymv.edu.
And she has been on this podcast.
Mm, yes.
She's very special.
Thank you very much for doing this.
I really appreciate it.
I'm a great job.
OK, that does it for another edition of the 10%
Happier Podcast.
If you liked it, please take a minute to subscribe, rate us.
Also, if you want to suggest topics,
you think we should cover or guests that we should bring
in, hit me up on Twitter at Dan V Harris.
Importantly I want to thank the people who produced this podcast, Lauren Efron, Josh
Tohan, and the rest of the folks here at ABC who helped make this thing possible.
We have tons of other podcasts.
You can check them out at ABCnewspodcasts.com.
I'll talk to you next Wednesday.
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