Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 238: You Don't Have to be Alone to be Lonely | Former Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy
Episode Date: April 13, 2020Our guest this week gives a bracingly candid account of loneliness - one made all the more remarkable by the fact that he is a former surgeon general. Even before the current coronavirus pand...emic, we were in the midst of another, quieter pandemic: loneliness. The term sounds somewhat unpleasant, but make no mistake: loneliness is, in fact, a deeply pernicious and insidious state, both psychologically and physiologically. And now, with all the social distancing we're doing, the loneliness problem is on steroids. This problem touches those not only people who live alone, but also those of us who may be surrounded by family. Loneliness doesn't require you to be alone. As you will hear, it's more about the quality of your relationships. Our guest, Dr. Vivek Murthy is, as mentioned, the former surgeon general. He has just published a book about loneliness, called "Together." We're doing this episode in a bit of a different way. We actually interviewed Vivek twice. The first time I spoke to him was right before the pandemic truly took off in the U.S.. He gave an incredible interview that we were excited to post. But then things really went haywire with the virus, so we wanted to have him on to talk about that. So we'll do this episode in two parts. First, you'll hear the newer interview - which is more topical. Then you'll hear the earlier interview, where he goes into greater depth. Where to find Dr. Vivek Murthy online: Website: https://www.vivekmurthy.com/ Book: https://www.vivekmurthy.com/together-book Social Media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/vivek_murthy Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrVivekMurthy/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drvivekmurthy Other Resources Mentioned: RULER at YALE http://ei.yale.edu/ruler/ruler-overview/ Additional Resources: Ten Percent Happier Live: https://tenpercent.com/live Coronavirus Sanity Guide: https://www.tenpercent.com/coronavirussanityguide Free App access for Health Care Workers: https://tenpercent.com/care Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/vivek-murthy-238 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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Before we jump into today's show, many of us want to live healthier lives, but keep
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Hi, buddy. Hi, I am just recording a podcast. You want to stay in here? Can you crawl into the chair so that I so we can close the door? I'll close fuck down. Okay, George. Last time I didn't.
Yeah, it's all bad.
Yeah, it's all bad.
Okay, can you be quiet for like 30 seconds?
Okay, thanks.
From ABC, this is the 10% happier podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Okay, quick item of business.
If you want it, my first book called 10% Happier
is available at a discount for a limited time
through Monday, April 20th.
10% Happier is on sale for 199 as an ebook
and 699 as an audio book.
The idea was to put this on sale at a time when people may
need some information about meditation.
So the ebook is available through Applebooks, Barnes & Noble, Google Play, and the audio
book is available at Amazon, Applebooks, Barnes & Noble, and Google.
I think it's a terrible book.
I don't recommend you read it, but if you do it, maybe it'll help you fall asleep. Okay, the episode this week are guest today, as you will hear, gives a bracingly candid
account of loneliness.
One made all the more remarkable by the fact that he's a former surgeon general of the
United States.
Even before the current coronavirus pandemic, we were in the midst of another quieter pandemic, loneliness.
The term sounds only somewhat unpleasant,
but magno mistake, loneliness is in fact a deeply
pernicious and insidious state,
both psychologically and physiologically.
And now with all the social distancing,
we have to do, the loneliness problem is on steroids.
This problem touches not only people who live
alone, but also those of us who may be surrounded by family. As you can hear, I'm surrounded
by my son. Loneliness does not require you to be alone as you will hear. It's more about
the quality of your relationships. Our guest is Dr. Vivek Murti. He is, as mentioned, the
former surgeon general. He's just published a book about loneliness, incredibly timely, called Together.
We're actually doing this episode in a bit of a different way.
This is interesting.
We interviewed him twice.
The first time I spoke to him was right before the pandemic truly took off in the US.
And he gave an incredible interview that we were really excited to post.
But then things really went haywire with the virus.
So we wanted to have him back on to talk about that.
As a consequence, we're doing this episode in two parts.
First, you'll hear the newer interview, which is more topical.
We talk about coronavirus and all the societal implications there.
And then you're going to hear selected bits of that earlier interview where he goes into
greater depth about his own story and about loneliness
in general.
So here we go, Dr. Vivek Morthy.
Thank you, Vivek, for doing this really appreciate it.
No, of course.
It's good to talk to you again, Dan.
Yeah.
So I've been thinking about this situation we're in right now as, and I'd love to see
if you could fact check me on this, but this strikes me as perhaps the largest mental health
challenge we've faced as a culture in memory,
the combination of a pandemic and an economic,
I don't know if you want to call it a crash
or a steep decline.
Do you think I'm in the right ballpark there?
Well, Dan, I think it's right up there.
You know, I think about the big crises we faced over the last century.
And 9-11 was a very difficult one and really impacted people's sense of safety and well-being.
There were a few others like that, but I would put this right up there with an experience
it has really rocked people's sense of normalcy, has turned their lives upside down, and has
injected an extraordinary amount of uncertainty in their lives about how long this will last.
All the while, they're struggling economically, they're struggling to figure out how to
make things work with their kids and their family.
This is an extraordinary stressful time.
It really is. Just as with the virus, nobody's immune.
So I'd be curious to hear about how you're doing
in the midst of all of this.
Well, thanks for asking Dan.
You know, like everyone else,
I'm trying to figure out how to make this all work.
You know, normally in my life, I live in Washington, D.C.
with my wife and two small kids,
and I have a flexible schedule that I can design, you know, around key projects and work with
organizations and, you know, things are busy, but they're controllable in some way. Now, everything
is upside down. You know, we're in Miami right now, I'm with my wife and my kids, but also with
my parents, my grandmother and my sister and brother-in-law.
We are trying to figure out how to take care of them and all of our work has been turned upside down.
And we're just trying to figure out how to take care of our kids most of all because we don't have the usual supports,
day care, and other types of help that we have in Washington, DC.
So I think it's been more stressful than I
had thought. It would be or that I had realized it was. And I think there's sometimes a lag
at least in my own body I realize between how much stress I think I'm under and what I'm actually
experiencing. And every now and then my body will sort of perk up and tell me, hey, you know,
you're, this is not good. You need to do something differently in terms of how you're handling stress.
And so it's been a tough period.
I think especially not knowing how long it will last.
Uh, that I think has been, that's been difficult because obviously hard to plan.
And you know, they're one of the hardest things that Dan has been seeing, uh,
and hearing from friends, uh, who are fellow doctors and who are also in the healthcare,
setting his nurses and respiratory therapists who are right out there on the front lines and who don't have the protection they need. And to be honest with you, I feel
some guilt not being at my old hospital up in Boston, which I worked at for many years, and
feels some guilt not being on the front lines with them. So yeah, you know, it's been a tough
adjustment, but I want to do what I can to be useful during this time.
And that's, I think, from both my wife, Alice and I, that's, I think, one of the questions
that's on our mind the most is, what can we do to help during a time like this?
I really appreciate your candor about the guilt.
And it lands for me because I live with a woman who is double board certified in pulmonary
and critical care. But she hasn't been working for the
last few years and is now trying to figure out, does she go back to work in what capacity,
how much risk is she willing to take?
She's survived breast cancer.
Is it the right thing for her to do to go back onto these COVID wards?
And yeah, it's excruciating.
It's excruciating.
So I really, yeah, I appreciate you being candid about that.
And I also resonate a lot with just the feeling of, you know, I don't have my parents in
the house with me as you do, but you, I'm surrounded by my family all the time.
And it is stressful as much as I love my family.
It's stressful to try to do my work and to be a good husband
and dad.
And the final thing you said that really landed with me because I've just, I've seen this
in my own experience, is your body sometimes knows before your conscious mind does.
So maybe I'm just feeling utterly exhausted and depleted.
I don't, I can't figure out why.
And that can be your body's way of saying,
dude, wake up, you've got an issue here. I think that's exactly right. That hits home for me too.
I think a lot of people are going through a great deal of stress right now.
And interestingly, if you compare this to another type of stressful event,
let's say a hurricane or
tornado or another natural disaster that may sweep through and change our lives
in an instant. I think what is perhaps slightly different about this
episode compared to those experiences is with those experiences is a little
bit more predictability while there's still a lot of uncertainty you know okay
the event happened now it's over and now we can start to rebuild and recover from it. And that can be very stressful. But I think
the uncertainty of how long this will last. I think is really troubling to people. They know
once it's all over, once we're able to resume our lives, that there will be a process of recovery
that begins then, economic recovery, psychological recovery, but
I think it's almost like we're in the midst of a hurricane and we don't know when the hurricane
is going to be over.
And I think that is, that's really troubling.
I think also many people may be hard on themselves in this moment and say, okay, you know, I
should be able to figure this out.
I should be able to figure out how to tell a work and how to homeschool my kids.
I should be able to just adjust and move forward and just make the best of this new normal.
But it's not always that easy. And I think one of the things that's happening now is there's a
flatening of the hierarchy, if you will, where people who are, you know, extremely privileged and
people who are not so privileged are finding themselves in similar boats in that they are all
struggling. They may be in different economic situations.
They may have different levels of family support, but everyone is enduring a lot of change
right now.
I think it's important that we be gentle and compassionate with ourselves, recognizing
that this is not something that we're trained for.
This is not something that we have experienced before.
Our country hasn't been through a pandemic like COVID-19
in over 100 years.
And so I think this is a moment for ourselves.
So just pause and be gentle both with ourselves
and each other, just recognizing the extraordinary stress
that we're enduring.
I agree.
Just to pick up on the boat metaphor,
we're all in boats in a raging sea right now,
but some of us have bigger boats and you reference that.
And my wife and I were looking just this morning at the infection rate per thousand in different neighborhoods in New York
City and how our neighborhood is less than 50% of the infection rate of the less affluent neighborhoods
and the outer burrows in New York City. And really notice just taking in the two of us that these
are folks who often don't have the choice to work from home. They're living with many more people, the population density is
higher and public health messages may not have penetrated as deeply. And so in many ways this
crisis is also exposing the profound inequalities in our society. I think that's right. And unfortunately, we find that whenever a stressor
that's applied to society, that it pushes us in
profound ways and pulls the curtain back on things
that were broken, that we're not working
and particularly on the inequities in society.
And I think what we're finding right now
is that it is the most vulnerable
who are once again the most affected by this economically as well
as in terms of their health.
And so I think once this is all over, there's a much deeper reckoning that we'll have to
come to terms with as a society and some questions, important questions we'll have to ask ourselves
about what does it truly mean to be all in together?
What does it mean to have a true social safety net? And are there
holes in our net? And I think the answer is yes, there are. And there's going to be a deeper
question of, are we committed to fixing that? Recognizing that in moments like this, all
of us can be vulnerable. Although there are some who are chronically more vulnerable than
others. And when we look at the lack of, for example, paidly, when we look at the difficulties with access to healthcare, when we look at the dramatic variation in quality of healthcare across
our country, we start to realize that these are real liabilities.
Because in a moment like this, you might think, okay, well, I've got resources, I live
in a great neighborhood, and I have access to really good healthcare, so I'm okay.
But it turns out that if somebody else does not have access to good healthcare, if they are more exposed, and the disease spreads in their community, they
can quickly spread to yours as well.
So this is a moment where our interdependence is heightened, and the idea that the well-being
of one of us depends on the well-being of all of us is, I think, really emphasized in
a moment like this.
Indeed.
Let's get to the issue of loneliness because that's the subject of your new book.
That's the theme of both of the interviews we're posting on the podcast today with you.
I just, I wonder how universal a problem is loneliness because you and I began this discussion
talking about the fact that we're surrounded by people and really cannot escape.
And I've been making this joke.
It reminds me of the title of one of my favorite Indie Rock records from the 1980s or 90s
by the band Dinosaur Jr. and the title of the record was, You're Living All Over Me.
And so I feel at times I'm experiencing the opposite of loneliness.
Oh, no.
Well, I'm glad for you that you're not experiencing loneliness per se. But you know what's
really interesting about loneliness, Dan, is that it's not always connected to the number
of people around you. And what it is more directly connected to is how many relationships
or do you just period have relationships where you feel you can be fully yourself and where
you feel like you can bring the entirety of who you are
to the table.
And the truth is that there are many people who have quote unquote friendships, you know,
online and in other contexts, but they don't necessarily feel like they can be themselves
in those relationships.
And that really matters.
So when it comes to loneliness, loneliness is a subjective feeling.
It's not an objective description of how many people you have around you.
And because it's subjective, it's really dependent on how you feel both about your relationships with other people and the quality of those relationships, but also about how you feel about your connection to self.
And I want to say word about what that actually means. When you're deeply connected to yourself,
you understand that you have value,
you have a strong sense of self-worth.
When you're disconnected from yourself, in that sense,
it's actually harder to focus on your relationships
with other people.
You may find yourself approaching them
from a place of insecurity and fear and anxiety.
And one of the concerns I have, particularly when I look at
younger people, folks who would consider themselves to be in Gen Z or even millennials,
is that much of the culture that surrounds all of us, but that particularly bombards them
on social media, is a culture that tells them constantly that they're not enough,
tells them that they're not thin enough, not good looking enough, not popular enough,
not rich enough, not famous enough.
And the truth is, if you go through your life,
constantly confronted with messages
that tell you you're not enough,
then you begin to doubt yourself worth.
You find yourself chasing sources of self-worth
and meaning which are attached in our society,
most often to wealth, to reputation, and to
power. Whereas in reality, it is our relationships with each other that are one of our greatest
sources of strength, and power, and meaning, and healing. Yet, I worry that because of the
sort of cultural forces that are pulling us in a different direction and telling us
that we're not worthy, that we end up feeling seated disconnected from ourself, and that makes it harder
for us to focus on and bring ourselves fully to our relationships with other people.
So let me just see if I can unpack up that a little bit.
We can be surrounded by people, but if we are not truly comfortable with those people, we may be susceptible to loneliness.
And given the current environment in which we exist, where we're bombarded by messages
about our innate insufficiency, which is essentially untrue, but we can start to believe by comparing
ourselves to others on social media that we are somehow insufficient.
Even if the people around us are loving and supporting, we may not be comfortable enough with ourselves to show up in those
relationships in ways that would stave off loneliness.
That's right, Dan.
Yeah, that's right.
Because the thing is, if you think about it, if you are feeling again, that you are not
enough all the time, if you're feeling that somehow you're inadequate. You bring that insecurity to your interactions
with other people.
It may lead you to focus excessively on yourself
to put a lot of pressure on the interaction.
It may lead you to try to be somebody that you're not.
And the thing is that people may not necessarily
be able to put their finger on it,
but we can often sniff out authenticity.
And people really respond positively to authenticity
conversely when they sense that we're not being who we are. It affects the quality of our connection
with them. And what all of this, to me, really emphasizes and reminds me of is that, you know,
all of us have some core human needs, regardless of what station of life we occupy or where we came
from. We all want to be seen for who we are.
We all want to know that we matter and we all want to be loved. Those three things are essential
to every human being. And if we're not living in a place where we have those basic needs met,
then we don't feel good, we don't feel safe, we don't feel fulfilled, and it affects the quality of our connections with ourselves and others.
So this loneliness is like the other pandemic.
Yeah, you know, it is quite widespread.
It's a lot more widespread than I had appreciated then.
You know, I thought early on when I was experiencing loneliness, my self-dirt childhood and during
my adulthood, when I was seeing loneliness on the frontlines in hospitals, when I was experiencing loneliness myself, during childhood and during my adulthood, when I was seeing loneliness on the front lines
in hospitals, when I was caring for patients
and realizing just how many people were coming in
during critical moments of illness
and had nobody to support them.
I thought in all of these instances
that perhaps what I was seeing was unique
to my own experience,
but it was only when I was surgeon general
and began traveling around the country
and talking to people in different
corners of life that I began to realize that loneliness was far, far more common than I
thought. And part of the reason it was hard for me to see, I think, originally is that loneliness
looks like different things. It doesn't always look like a person sitting in the corner
of the room, not talking to anyone. But loneliness can look like depression. Loneliness can manifest as addiction. Loneliness can also manifest
as irritability and anger and a temperamental mood. It has different ways that it shows up
in our life. And that's not to say that every time you're angry, you're lonely, or that everyone
who struggles with addiction is primarily lonely.
It's not to say that,
but loneliness I found is an important root contributor
to many of these states.
And so, you know, it's more common than we think
and also more consequential than I had appreciated before.
And so, what is happening right now
as we are dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic
and as we're being asked to physically distance ourselves from other people,
and to, in some cases, the sever are traditional social ties.
It's pulling back the curtain on a deeper well of loneliness that existed long before COVID-19 came.
And I think many people who are experiencing loneliness are finding a deepening of that,
and those who perhaps had not,
are getting a taste of what it might be like
to be more lonely than you're comfortable with.
And the real question now in front of us is,
how do we deal with this?
And can we turn it around from a weakness
and something that may worsen our loneliness
to a moment where we can more deeply appreciate
and even strengthen our relationships.
So how do we do that? Well then I think the first step is for us to recognize that we are all
hurting right now and that one of the reasons we're hurting is because we don't have the same
social connections that we used to have. There's a lot of focus right now on the direct health
impact of COVID-19 and on the economic impact that it's already having on millions of people.
That's appropriate.
These are two incredibly important sources of pain that we have to deal with.
There's a third source of pain, which is the social pain that's resulting from ties
being cut and organically weakened because of lack of physical contact and proximity.
That I worry could potentially spark a social recession, where people become a more
deeply lonely because of prolonged periods without contact.
So the first thing to recognize is that one, this is happening to us, and it's happening
this social pain because our relationships really matter.
I think the second thing then to focus on is to ask the question, what can we do to strengthen
our relationships in a time like this? And this is where I think
we're very fortunate that this is happening in age when we have technology. When the
Spanish flu pandemic took place in 1918, we didn't have ways to video conference with each
other to see each other's face, hear each other's voice despite the fact that we might be quarantined
or understated home measures. But now we do.
And I think that there are a few steps that we can take in this moment, as hard as it
is, to make sure we're staying connected with people.
We can, for example, use the time that we had, even if it's five to ten minutes a day,
to reach out to someone we love each day, to ideally video conference with them, so we
can see their
face and hear their voice or just to call them on the phone or even it was just to write
them and tell them, hey, I'm thinking about you. I want to check on you and see how you
are. The other thing we can do is we can make that time count. We can improve the quality
of the time that we have with each other. And the way we do this is by reducing distraction.
In our day to day lives, we've all become accustomed to multitasking.
And there's a great myth around multitasking that we tell ourselves, which is that we can pay
attention to two things at the same time. And for that reason, many people, myself included,
and I'm not proud to say this, I've had the experience where they're catching up with a friend
on the phone, but also refreshing their social media feed and looking at their inbox and googling
a question that I'd put us pop that into their head.
And we're doing all these things at once and convincing ourselves we can still pay attention.
Science very clearly tells us that we cannot, that we don't simultaneously pay attention
to two things, but we switch between tasks very rapidly.
This is a moment, I think, when we can re-examine the quality of those interactions, because
just five minutes of high quality conversation
with somebody can be much more impactful both for you and the other person than 30 minutes
of distracted conversation.
And so I think this is a chance for us to be disciplined about spending that time with
other people to focus on making that time really count.
And finally, Dan, there's a piece around service here that is really important, which is that one of the things
that I came to learn in the writing of this book,
when looking at the research and hearing stories from people
all over the country and the world,
was that service that turns out is a very powerful
backdoor out of loneliness.
When we serve other people, two very important things happen.
One is that we build an immediate
connection with somebody through a very positive experience.
We're providing something of value to them.
The second thing that happens is that we remind ourselves that we have value to bring to
the world, and that itself is really powerful because when you get lonely and when you
stay lonely for a long period of time, you can start to convince yourself
that you're lonely because you deserve it, because you're not likable, because you're
not lovable, because something is wrong with you.
And acts of service, just reaffirmed to us what is right about us, and they give us that
feeling in the form of a very tangible connection to somebody else.
So these are ways right now that we can start to refocus and strengthen
our relationships. And the service piece is so important because a lot of people are
hurting right now. It may not look like that on the outside. If you look at the pictures
they may be posting on social media or if you haven't heard from them, you just assume
they're fine, they're always bounced back, they're probably doing great. I wouldn't
make that assumption in a moment like this because the truth is if you called up a friend
and said, Hey, I know this time is hard for everyone.
It's been hard for me.
How are you doing?
I want to check on you.
My guess is that you'll hear that they have been struggling too.
So this is a moment where we can step up, help each other, serve each other, service is
more than volunteering at a soup kitchen.
It's reaching out to a neighbor or a friend who may be struggling and is dropping food
off to a colleague from work who might be struggling to telework and raise their kids and school them at the same time.
Acts of service can be simple yet incredibly powerful and strengthening our human connection.
I love that. Let me go back to distraction for a second because I will admit
I am really bad at this. My day now consists of often back to back to back to back Zoom calls.
I think it's great to have that face to face interaction, but if I'm being honest, it's
not uncommon that I try to get slick and check my email while I'm on these calls, especially
if there are several people on the call.
What are your thoughts on how to improve the quality of these interactions,
given the siren call of Twitter, Slack, and email
while you're on these calls?
Appreciate you being so honest about that, Dan.
And I'll be honest, I struggle with this too.
I find that even though I know it's really important
to focus on people when I'm talking to them,
I'll just find almost unconsciously
I'm reaching for my phone.
There's almost this twitch to try to refresh my inbox and I have to really fight that.
One of the ways I've found it to help push back against that tendency is to be really
explicit with people on the phone and say, hey, while we're all talking, can we make
a pact that we're just going to focus on each other for the 10 or 15 minutes that we have,
that we're not going to check email, we're not going to do anything else.
And let's keep each other for the 10 or 15 minutes that we have, then we're not going to check email, we're not going to do anything else. And let's keep each other to that.
And just making it explicit, I think gives everybody not only permission, but also I think
added motivation to be focused not just for yourself, but really for each other.
So the truth is that everybody is struggling with this.
I don't think we're bad people because we find ourselves reaching for that phone or trying
to, you know, check the text messages just came through.
It's partly these devices are very compelling and they're designed to be that way.
It's partly because this is how we've just been the last few years.
We're in this period now where we have an opportunity to re-examine the nature of our
social interactions and to bring an intentionality to it.
And I think a focus to it that we perhaps may not have otherwise done if we were just
continuing with our routine life. and I think a focus to it that we perhaps may not have otherwise done if we were just continuing
with our routine life. So that I think is the great opportunity. The opportunity I hope we
can take advantage of so that we can ultimately come out of this great struggle and this
difficult period with COVID-19 more connected than we were before it all began.
I love that. If there's going to be a positive impact here, hopefully there are many positive
impacts from this nightmare, but one of them could be if we start thinking more about the
value of social interaction and the quality of those interactions. Let me just go back
to, you know, the point you make quite eloquently was that this rolling dumpster fire that
we're in right now is shining a light on and exacerbating an underlying loneliness
problem in our culture. And I wonder, you know, in thinking about that, whether this loneliness problem
is actually going to make the pandemic worse in some ways, there are two ways that come to mind.
One is, is it possible that given what loneliness does to our nervous systems and our physiology
that people are going to be more vulnerable to the virus and are going to fare worse once
they get sick?
And then the other question is, will loneliness spur people to disregard the public health
recommendations around social distancing?
Will they get desperate and go out and do things
that are irresponsible?
Well, that's a good question, Dan.
What we do know is that any form of chronic stress can have a negative impact on our immune
system and make us more susceptible to infection.
I do worry about the overall stress load that people are experiencing right now, including
the stress they may be feeling from being disconnected for now in extended period of time. I think also
that when it comes to seeking out social connection and perhaps breaking the rules, if you will,
around physical distancing, I think that's important to consider because our desire to connect
with other people is deeply ingrained. It's part of who we are. We can't just turn it off with a switch. And so we know that
we crave connection. And so the question that we have to ask ourselves is how can we
fill that need in a safe way at this moment? And I found that people are approaching this in different ways.
Some are really leaning into the use of technology to make sure that they are seeing
and hearing from people on a regular basis, who is before in their life.
They may have just called when they had time.
They're really being disciplined about that and saying, you know what, in the same way,
that I need to keep some structured time where I make sure I can get my work done, where
I'm brushing my teeth, where I'm eating my meals, when I'm making sure my kids are learning.
I've got to make sure that I have some structured time in my day, even if it's just for five or
10 minutes, where I'm connecting deeply with someone else, where I'm just talking to my best friend,
or talking to my spouse just for five or 10 minutes, the two of us just uninterrupted.
And so I think that that is incredibly important right now. I think the other thing that we have
to keep in mind is that
in this moment where we're asked to physically distance ourselves from each other and be alone,
this is a strange and unusual moment of solidarity as well because we're all doing this together.
And I think there's some comfort that people can take in knowing that it is not just you
who's experiencing this, but this is happening to everyone. One of the challenges with loneliness, Dan, is that you often feel like you're experiencing
it just by yourself.
Because of the stigma around loneliness, people don't talk about it.
You look around at the world, especially through the filter of social media, and you see
people just having a wonderful time and going to parties and celebrating birthdays and having
incredible weddings.
And you just feel like, gosh, am I the only one who's struggling here?
But this is a moment where it has become more clear than ever
that we're all struggling with figuring out how to rebuild connections in our life.
And so, I think when we recognize this as a moment of solidarity and shared experience,
when we lean into connecting with people through technology and with regularity and consistency,
I think we'll find that even though it's not the same as being able to reach over and hug a friend
or to sit down with a group of your best friends for brunch, it does help fill some of the need for
human connection that we all have. So in other words, if you're feeling lonely and that's you think pushing you in the direction of being tempted to do something you probably shouldn't do, maybe, maybe
think hard about it and look at the alternatives, which aren't quite as good, but can be very
powerful. We are going to go much deeper into all the aspects of loneliness in the interview
that you and I recorded.
And we're gonna talk a lot about your personal history
with loneliness in the interview that we recorded right
at the beginning, right before the crisis started
to get really severe.
But before we take a break and dive into that other interview,
are there other aspects of loneliness as it pertains
to the current crisis that I should have asked you about
but failed to do.
One thing I think that's particularly important right now during COVID-19 is to recognize the
importance of solitude in moments like this, because when everything is turned upside down in our
life, the noise level is just incredibly high right now. We're stressed internally. We have voices
inside telling us we have to figure out x, y XYZ. You've got information coming from the news 24 or 7 telling us all
the things that we have to be worried about. We have people who are worried around us in chat rooms
and emails on social media who are just showering us with the information about what we should be
concerned about worried about, etc. There's a lot of noise around us right now. And what we need in these moments is to make sure that we have at least a few moments of solitude,
where we can let that noise quieten, where we can focus on ourselves, and where we can just be.
And I think the reason this is so important is not only to help manage our overall stress level,
but if we want to deeply connect with other
people, the more centered we are, the more grounded we are, the easier we're able to do that.
And you can center yourself in some fairly simple ways. You know, Dan, you've been a great
teacher and facilitator of meditation for so many people. And I think this is a moment
where meditation is more important than ever before. But there are other ways also that people may choose to find that
centeredness. You know, you can simply sit outside for five minutes and just feel the wind against
your face and just let yourself breathe. You can take five minutes to remember three things that
you're grateful for in your life. They could be people, they could be opportunities or experiences, or you could take this time to meditate for
five minutes or to pray.
That solitude is the calm that we need in the middle of this great storm.
It's what allows us to both check in with ourselves and be honest with ourselves about
what we're going through, But it also allows us to
put both feet on the ground and to plant ourselves firmly. And when we reach out to other people from
that place of groundedness, we'll often find that we can be more present with them, that we can
listen more deeply, and that the quality of the interaction when we're grounded is higher as well.
of the interaction when we're grounded is higher as well. So, you know, if you look overall at the COVID-19 pandemic,
despite all the extraordinary disruption that it is causing
and will continue to cause in our life,
think it's also giving us this opportunity
to re-examine how we live,
to re-examine how we've ordered our priorities,
and to consider that there may be a way that we can derive
even more fulfillment and enrichment out of life if we're able to double down in focusing
on the quality of our relationships and making that the center around which we build the
rest of our lives.
Yeah, and that includes our relationship with ourselves.
And I hope you're right. More 10% happier after this.
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Okay, so that was our recent conversation,
our most recent conversation with Vivek,
specifically focused on loneliness in the midst of the pandemic.
Now we're gonna transition to the conversation
we had with him in late February. The insights in this interview on
the topic of loneliness were really profound. We did not want this stuff to get
lost. So that's why we're combining the two interviews here. One thing to
note is that his suggestions, some of them, which you'll hear were offered
before we entered the world of social distancing. So here we go with part two
with Dr. Vivek
Morthy. I guess I'm just really curious why you got interested in loneliness, not as a
medical professional, but as a human being. What is it about your life that made this issue so
salient for you? Well, I had experienced loneliness from an early age and still have actually during my
adult life.
And that I think is what made me sensitive to the issue when I began hearing it so often
in the stories of people I met around the country when I was a surgeon general.
But when I was young, I remember often getting dropped off at school and feeling this sinking
pit in my stomach.
That was not me being scared
about teachers or exams. It was this fear that I was going to be alone, you know, the playground,
and the cafeteria. And it wasn't that I didn't want to hang out with people. I actually really enjoyed
hanging out with others and playing team sports. But I was really shy and I was worried also that I didn't quite fit in.
And so that stuck with me for a long time.
It's funny how these experiences from when we're young can have such a lasting imprint
on our lives.
Years later, I ended up being able to find great friends in high school and I cherish those
friendships.
Now all this isn't to say that I was lonely at home, and this is what's so interesting
about loneliness
is I think it can be compartmentalized
to different parts of one's life.
At home, I didn't feel lonely at all.
I had loving parents, my sister, who's a year older to me,
was like a second mom.
And we all loved each other,
took care of each other,
spent lots of time with each other.
And I felt quite content at home.
Outside of home though, it was a different issue.
Did you experience it with me around in your life as well?
Loneliness?
I did. There were certainly a transition times in my life,
many bouts of loneliness.
When I started college, again, being shy,
it took me a while to make friends.
But those were lonely times, especially that first year,
when I was there.
There were also other times later in life
when I didn't know what I wanted to do professionally
after residency training in medicine was one of those times.
And I found those to be quite isolating experiences because it felt like everybody around me knew
what they wanted to do.
And I felt like something was wrong with me because I just hadn't figured it out.
I hadn't gotten my act together.
And so I found myself partly out of a sense of shame, isolating more and more and becoming more
and more lonely.
And that's one of the dangers and great costs of shame.
Is shame, whether it's founded or not, and it's usually not well-founded, pushes us to
distance ourselves from other people, often precisely at the time where we need the company
and compassion and perspective of others.
So that has certainly happened to me at multiple times during my adult life. we need the company and compassion and perspective of others.
That has certainly happened to me
at multiple times during my adult life.
And interestingly, it happened to me
when I was Surgeon General as well,
which is ironic because I was surrounded by so many people
when I was Surgeon General.
There was literally hardly a moment I could get
where I wasn't with people,
whether it was members of the public or members
of my team or other folks in the administration.
But what's interesting is that loneliness isn't about how many people you're around.
It's about the quality of your connections with them, which in part has to do with you
and where you are emotionally at that time.
And one of the things that had happened to me when I became Surgeon General is I had
convinced myself that this was such an important opportunity that I had to make the most of it and do as much as I
could to be of greater service during the time that I had.
And I didn't know how long that was going to be.
I knew I had about 2.5, 2 years in change left in the administration and I didn't know
what would happen after that.
And so, you know, I sidelined a lot of things in my life to just focus on work.
And those included my relationships with close friends
and even to some extent with family.
And I realized now in retrospect that that was a mistake
because we can always find a reason to prioritize work.
Even with the best of intentions,
with the desire to be of service, you know, to others.
But when we do so at the cost of our relationships,
we end up eroding the foundation on which we're built. And we end
up not being able, I believe, to perform as well, to show up as well in the workplace.
And that was part of what happened to me, too.
Why do you think we're afraid to talk about it? What is it with the stigma around this word?
And the misunderstanding, too. Well, the stigma comes from feeling that if you're lonely, that must mean that you're
not likeable. And that's how I felt when I was a kid. I even to this day never told my parents
that I was struggling with loneliness as a child at the time I didn't because I was ashamed. I
didn't want them to somehow think that I wasn't likeable enough or I wasn't capable of making friends.
No, I need to day like me, but it would be different. I didn't want to feel like I was somehow
socially deficient. And that is that way, I think how people feel when they say that they're
lonely. I think that's what they worry about in terms of how they might be judged as somebody
who is in an outcast or a misfit, somebody who is broken in some way. But the reality is when you look at the science and the evolutionary history behind our species,
you come to understand that there's nothing broken about people who are lonely.
In fact, loneliness is a natural signal, like hunger or thirst, that we have evolved to
experience, a signal that's something that we need for survival, in this case social
connection, is missing.
I think often that we don't feel embarrassed to say
that I'm thirsty, I need some water,
we don't feel embarrassed to say I'm hungry,
I need to break for lunch.
But we do feel embarrassed to say I'm lonely,
even though it stems from a similar evolutionary need
on that our systems have.
So I'm just thinking about my own situation,
which is not dissimilar to yours.
The situation you describe when you're surge in general, not that I've achieved such lofty
heights, but like you, I'm married, you've a couple young kids, although they may have
come kind of late in your tenure at a certain general or after one during my time and one
right after. And you're surrounded by people all the time. So you can have all of this going on and yet be lacking social connection.
Yes.
Because if you think about it, what really matters is the quality of those connections.
And the connections that are often the most fulfilling to us are the ones where we can truly
be ourselves, which means where we can be open and vulnerable.
Many people at work don't feel like they can be open and vulnerable with those around
them. They feel like if they do, then somebody might use something against them later or perceive
them as weak in some way. And unfortunately, what that leads to is many people, even though
they may have pleasant interactions at work, they don't necessarily have friendships, deep
friendships at work, or at least the have friendships, deep friendships at work,
or at least the kind of friendships
where they can be truly open in themselves.
This actually comes at a pretty significant cost
in the workplace because we now know
from now multiple studies,
including some work from Sigal Barseid,
who's a professor at Wharton at the University of Pennsylvania
that when people struggle with loneliness at work,
it impacts their engagement in the workplace, it impacts their productivity, it even impacts retention
in the workplace. And so if you are a manager or if you own a company and you want your workplace to
be a place where people want to stay, where they do good work, where they have good relationships
with other people, then you should care about
whether your employees feel lonely in the workplace or not.
But this is a key piece of it, and it comes down to a word that we haven't mentioned,
but I think it's worthsing explicitly, which is a word vulnerable.
Well, when we feel like we can't be vulnerable with people, that puts limits on our connection
with them.
And I think as human beings, we all have some common needs.
I think we all want to be understood for who we are.
We all want to know that we matter,
and we want to know that we are loved.
And if you don't feel that you have that
in the social relationships in your life,
then you're likely to feel lonely.
Interesting what you were saying about work.
I think about the cliche that we deploy internally
at the Temperson Happier Company, which is, we want you to feel comfortable bringing. I think about the cliche that we deploy internally at the Temperson happier company
Which is you know, we want you to feel comfortable bringing your whole self to the office
Yeah, and I was unaware that there's actual data to show that if people feel that they need to put up a front all the time
Then they're not gonna function as well
Yes, and it's interesting because it not only affects them
But it affects the people around them
So when you look at people who struggle with loneliness in the workplace,
it's not just that it reduces their engagement, but it changes how people feel about them
and makes it others less likely to engage with those individuals,
which then creates a worsening spiral of loneliness.
I have to imagine this is worse for women because the modern work was created by men.
And so many women, at least from what I've read and being married to one, feel that in certain
circumstances, they need to act in stereotypically masculine ways, which may not be true to how
they are, you know, genuinely organically, authentically.
So I would imagine that this death spiral you're describing is one that might resonate
with some of, resonate with some,
particularly with some of our female listeners.
You know, I think that you're right that we have constructed workplaces that tend to be
historically at least quite masculine in nature, and we take women and we effectively tell them
that they need to be like men to succeed in the workplace, whatever that means.
But what's interesting for men too is I think many men, perhaps an equal number of men,
struggle with loneliness in the workplace, but I actually think that they are less aware
of it than women are.
Now, traditionally, and I'm stereotyping here and generalizing, and obviously we know
these stone holes true for everyone, but women generally tend to be better at maintaining
relationships in their life.
They also, in my own experience, tend to be more aware of their emotional state.
Whereas for some of us guys, it takes us a bit longer to catch up and to fully see what we're experiencing and to admit it to ourselves.
Especially if it's a challenge in our emotional state, which we may in traditional social terms perceive
as weakness in some way.
And so even though we have built workplaces
that are historically speaking, not focused on friendships
and not focused on vulnerability,
men haven't need for that just as much as women do.
And when they don't have workplaces that support them
in being open and developing
friendships and in bringing, as you put it, their whole selves to work, then I think they
suffer. They may suffer in silence, they may suffer in ways that they don't even fully
realize or relate it to loneliness. And what's interesting in men is that, you know, in our
current culture, men are raised to believe that emotions are largely off limits
in terms of what you display.
With one exception, the emotion of anger.
So if you are a man in your feeling lonely or you're feeling frustrated, it is seen as
socially acceptable for that to come out as anger, even though that has massive negative
consequences for you and the people around you, but you're not seen as less masculine, if you're displaying anger,
versus if you are tearful or if you are sad, then somehow in traditional
masculine culture that's not seen is favorable. It's seen as a threat or challenge
your masculinity. So I think what's interesting is if you look at the data around loneliness,
who's you know, and if you're asking the question, who struggles more as a men or women,
the data shows that the numbers are roughly equal in fact in terms of proportions of men and women.
But I actually think that I wouldn't be surprised if we searched to see more data showing that in fact
men have more issues with loneliness than women because I, I think there's an awareness issue
and an inside issue that more affects men than women when it comes to even recognizing that this is an issue for them.
Yeah, all that really lands for me. So, okay, we've covered a bunch of things, not in any particular
order. So let me just reset for a second. We talked a lot about your personal road to writing this
book about loneliness and then we branched off into a few other topics. Let me just reset and
get you to talk about why not just from a personal standpoint,
but from a professional standpoint as somebody who's deeply concerned about public health,
why loneliness hits your radar in such a prominent fashion.
Well, you know, it started to hit my radar when I finished my college experience and
began medical training.
And there, for the first time, I began to see
that loneliness was an issue for the patients
I was caring for.
Now, this is not something that I learned
about in medical school.
It wasn't part of the curriculum.
It was not something that I even appreciated
when I was growing up and watching my father,
who's a medical doctor and my mother
who managed his office care for patients.
I came to appreciate the power of community and connection, but I hadn't recognized at that
time how many people are struggling with loneliness.
But I went into an internal medicine training program, and I assumed that the majority people
I'd be caring for would have diabetes and heart disease and cancer and infections, and
that's what I would spend my time thinking about.
But I started to quickly see that many people would come into the hospital for disease, and cancer, and infections, and that's what I would spend my time thinking about. But I started to quickly see that many people would come
into the hospital for care and have to make some pretty
tough decisions about whether to take certain treatments
or go down certain investigation pathways,
and they were making these decisions alone.
And so I would often ask them, is there somebody
who would like me to call or should I ask your family to come in so we can all discuss this together?
And quite often people would say, no, there's no one to call. It was just them.
It was also the case so many times that at the end of life, when people ultimately passed away,
that I found that the only ones who were with them were me and my colleagues, the nurses and doctors who worked at the hospital. We were the only ones there to witness so many
people's last moments. And in those moments I kept wondering myself, where are their friends,
where are their families? And I started to realize very quickly that there is this larger
undercurrent of loneliness that my patients were struggling with that I had not learned about and felt utterly unequipped to address as a doctor.
And I'll tell you one of the worst feelings as a doctor is to see a problem that your
patients have and to feel utterly unequipped to address it.
Most of us went into the profession wanting to relieve suffering and help people. And we trained
in as many skills as we could to be able to do that. But I realized that there was a huge gap
in my medical training. Now, before I became Surgeon General, I was unsure of my experience,
was just peculiar to the patients I was seeing, or if it was more broadly representative,
but what was happening around the country and around the world.
But when I was searching generally,
even then, even though that was in the back of my head,
I didn't list it as a high priority issue,
like when I began my time in office,
and when I went through the Senate confirmation process
and had to testify before the Senate
about, among other things, my priorities,
this was not one of the issues I listed,
because I didn't think it was gonna be a high priority issue.
But I began my time in office with the listening tour just going to communities all across the country asking people how we could help.
And I tried to just sit back and listen to those stories. And that's where I started seeing the behind so many of the stories of
addiction and violence and depression and anxiety and chronic illness that people were struggling with.
and violence and depression and anxiety and chronic illness that people were struggling with,
were actually threads of loneliness. And no one ever came in and said, hi, my name's Dan, I'm struggling with loneliness. But undeniably those threads were there.
So I started to surface them more explicitly, and I would go to town halls and small group meetings
as I were to ask people. People think that loneliness is a problem. Is it something that's affecting
their lives or their loved ones?
And I'll tell you, Dan, what was so interesting is I could see these almost immediate flickers
of recognition in people's eyes.
It was this visceral response that people had that was quite different from almost any other
issue that I talked about or dealt with.
And so that was another signal to me that there's something much deeper and much more
pervasive
happening here than I had really come to appreciate.
And then after that, as I started to delve into the science around loneliness and came to
understand not only is this far more common than I thought, but it's also consequential.
It has a profound impact on our health.
All of those together led me to realize that this is an issue that I want to do something
about because it's something that we're not doing enough to address, but that we have All of those together led me to realize that this is an issue that I want to do something about,
because it's something that we're not doing enough to address, but that we have the power
to address through the power of human connection, and also addressing the Linus is not something that
that you have to be a doctor to solve. You just need to be a human being with the heartful
of compassion and the willingness to reach out to others who may be struggling.
So I want to talk about how to address it in a second, you know,
full some manner, but first let's talk about the consequences that you referenced.
What happens to the human psyche and physiology under loneliness?
So loneliness puts our body in a state of stress. And to understand why, you just need to think about how we lived several thousand years ago
when we were hunter-gatherers, in those circumstances when we were under threat from
not just predators, but also a lack of a consistent food supply.
One of the things that helped us survive was having trusted relationships with other people.
When you were connected with other people that you trusted,
you could take turns watching at night
to make sure the group was safe.
You could pool your food so that everyone had some food
on every given day and you wouldn't have periods of starvation.
You could also do things like share in child rearing
and in spreading the workload of the family
responsibilities so that people could go out and hunt and gather.
So there was tremendous value, survival value, to being connected to other people.
Now over thousands of years, I became baked into our nervous system.
And what would happen is that if you were separated from the group in those times,
you knew that your chances of survival would drop.
And so that immediately puts you into a threat state.
Now what happens in a threat state?
When a threat state, you take something that may only have a 1% chance of being bad or
being a threat, and you want to treat it like it's a potential threat because if you're
wrong and it actually is a problem and you think it's benign, then I could cost you
your life
So you'd much rather air on the side of assuming it's a threat than saying it's benign
Now here's a problem is if you if you recognize that that's how our nervous systems evolved
We are effectively that same creature, you know in modern day, you know our genes are very similar our nervous system is very similar. So even though we're no longer hunter-gatherers, if I'm separated from the group in modern day world, which the
equivalent would be saying, I feel lonely, then I automatically go into a stress state, where two
important things change. One is my threat perception, shifts, such that I perceive many things as a
threat that may not be. And the second thing that happens is my focus shifts from being on other people to being
predominantly on me.
And you can understand this because again, if you're lost in the tundra, you know,
way from your group, you want to be paying attention primarily to yourself.
You want to know, like, am I, did I get injured?
You know, am I hungry?
Am I starving?
You know, are my instincts going up that somebody else,
you know, might be coming out to get me
or an animal or a predator might be coming after me?
But these two adaptive features
of, you know, shift and threat perception
and a focus on self, when loneliness is chronic,
these two features can become incredibly detrimental
because imagine that, you know, you're feeling lonely and the people are coming up to you saying,
hey, do you want to come have lunch together?
Now normally you would say we make sense to say, yes, okay, I'm feeling lonely.
Let me have lunch with somebody.
But if you're in a state of chronic loneliness, you may start to think, hey, is that person
really want to have lunch with me?
Are they just taking pity on me?
Are they going to have lunch with me and then make fun of me or ridicule me and make me feel bad? It was like, I don't need that.
Like a double bind. Did you? It's a vicious cycle.
It's a vicious cycle. And the other thing is because your focus is so much on yourself,
sometimes I can be a turn off to other people, right? When you're interacting with them.
Now, I mentioned this because understanding this has taught me that I need to be more compassionate
also when I engage with people who might seem
like they're overly focused on themselves or might seem a little awkward, who may not
be resistant initially to my outreach.
Because I realize that this is not just them being annoying or silly.
This is them actually behaving in the way that our nervous systems evolved to behave, even
though it's counterproductive in the modern world. So this is actually why, in a really interesting way, loneliness actually puts us in a stress
state.
Now, this is where the consequences come from our fur health.
When you're in a temporary stress state, that can actually be quite helpful to your performance.
So the night before a big exam or a big speech, you might feel, hey, I've got this adrenaline
flowing through my system. I feel a bit stressed, but it pushes you to perform better and get
more out of yourself. The problem is when that stress lasts for a long period of time,
then you have elevated levels of cortisol and other stress hormones that are flowing through
your body, which can increase inflammation, damage, tissues, and blood vessels, and ultimately
increase your risk of heart disease and other chronic illnesses.
And with loneliness, what's interesting is you see this.
You see that people who are lonely have a strong association with an increased risk for premature death,
for heart disease, for depression, for anxiety, for dementia.
Their sleep is more fragmented, which means the quality of their sleep is lower even if they're sleeping the same amount of time.
Their immune response seems to be blunted and their wound healing seems to be impaired.
One by one, as you go down the line, you see that the chronic stress that's caused by
loneliness has real consequences to our health.
And how consequential is it?
Well, it turns out pretty substantial.
So Julianne Holunstedt, who's a researcher at the Brigham Young University, and done a really interesting meta-analysis, pooling a number
of studies from around the world, and she helped show that the mortality impact, the amount
by which one's life is shortened, the mortality impact of loneliness is similar to the mortality
impact of smoking 15 cigarettes a day. It's greater than the mortality impact of obesity or sedentary living.
And I think about how much a surgeon general I spent talking about smoking
and about obesity and about the importance of exercise,
compared to how little I spoke about the importance
of cultivating strong healthy relationships in our lives.
And I realized there was an imbalance there based on what the data is telling us about
the health consequences of loneliness.
Are we, as a society, seeing elevated levels of loneliness and if so, why?
So it's a bit of a tricky question to answer in part because we don't have nearly as much
data on loneliness as we have in other areas like diabetes or high blood pressure.
But a couple of things we do know from the data. We do know that loneliness is really common.
So even if you take a conservative end of the spectrum and look at data from the Kaiser
Family Foundation and the Economist from their 2018 study, they peg loneliness rates in adults
in the United States around 22%. The UK and Australia, their rates are around 25%, but there are plenty of studies,
especially recent studies from SIGNA, a major health teacher here in the US, which have pegged
those rates quite higher. They're also indicating, as other studies have, that there is a spike in
loneliness that happens in adolescents and young adulthood. So millennials and Gen Z members are actually lonelyer than people who are in their 60s, 70s
and 80s.
Again, not entirely intuitive, but the data seems to pair that out.
It's intuitive, if you think about social media and people driving people toward anti-social
behavior.
If you're all you're doing is sitting in your bedroom looking at other people's lives
on Instagram, which I think is something that a lot of people do
young and old, then your happiness may well go down.
That's right, lonely just may go up.
That's right.
So what's really interesting about technology
is that, and this is the most common question
I get from people about loneliness in the community,
is they want to know, is technology to blame,
and social media in particular, the cause of this. And what I would say is that technology in the end is they want to know is technology to play, and social media in particular, the cause of this.
And what I would say is that technology in the end is a tool.
How we use it is what determines whether it's strengthens or weakens our connection.
There are ways we can use technology and social media to strengthen our connection.
So if I'm coming to New York City to do a podcast with Dan, and I post on Facebook to my
friends who are in New York City.
Hey, I'm going to be in New York.
Anybody want to meet up for dinner?
This way of using social media as a bridge to offline connection can be quite helpful.
Even on the other hand, I'm feeling lonely on a Friday night.
And I think, well, let me just go on Facebook and look at what my friends are doing and then
I feel connected to them that way.
Well, let me see what they've posted on Instagram and I'll feel like I have a bond with them
or I'll be reminded of my friendship somehow. That tends not to work. And to
happen is you actually feel worse about your own life because the experience of social
media for so many people is comparing other people's best days to your average days and
you always end up coming up short. So it can be really challenging in that way. So the
other piece of it is that what you mentioned is the cannibalization of time is when you're right now the latest stats from common sense media tell us that it's somewhere around seven to seven and a half hours a day
the young people are spending on average in front of screens outside of their educational work. So that's at a schoolwork.
If you're spending about seven and a half hours on the screen, if you're sleeping about eight hours, you're in school about six plus hours a day, that's not a whole
lot of time left for face-to-face interaction with friends and other family members. That's
undistracted. And this is a really important caveat here. Because if you ask people, do you
have FaceTime with people? They'll say, oh, yeah, I do. But then if you ask them, is it
undiluted FaceTime? Are they focused on the other person?
Then the answer shifts.
Because what the other impact of technology has been that it has diluted the quality of
our interactions with people.
So how many folks do we know?
And I've done this on plenty of occasions, which I'm embarrassed by, but it has happened.
How many people have brought their phones to the dinner table with their families and
with their friends?
And we tell ourselves, hey, if it's face down, then I won't be distracted by it.
Or if I just put it on silent, then I won't be distracted by it.
But we know, I mean, from hard data, that when we get distracted, it takes us many, many minutes
to actually re-engage and focus conversation. We also know that we have a terrible tendency to
overestimate our ability to multitask. And think things we want to distract as we can talk to our friend on the phone and catch up,
but also be checking Instagram at the same time on our phone and we'll be able to pay attention.
But the data shows that we can't.
We can only switch from one task to another.
So this, I think, has been the consequence of how we use social media predominantly now.
Is it's taken time away from face time with loved ones.
I think it substituted lower quality connections
for higher quality connections,
and it's also diluted more often than not
or in-person interactions.
So let's talk about what we can do about this.
And I'd like to start on the individual micro level
and you already sort of help fully brought us
there when you talked about our relationship with ourselves.
So would you say that's step number one for dealing with this?
I think it's right up there with one of the first things that I think we should think about
and focus on.
Because our connection to ourself is not something that many of us
are told we should pay attention to. We're often in fact told that it's self-indulgent
to think too much about ourselves and we should be thinking about other people.
Where the question that comes up in my mind when I hear connection to myself is what does
that even mean?
Yeah. So when I think about connection to self, I think about self- and self compassion as being the two critical
components of that. To be connected to oneself is to be comfortable with oneself, which
means I understand who I am, and I also understand that I have value and worth to contribute to
the world around me. Now, self knowledge is not always easy to come by, like in the current
world, because we get a lot of self-knowledge
by reflecting on our experiences.
And much of the white space in our lives has disappeared.
When we have a few minutes to spare here and there,
we pick up our devices and check our inboxes,
or we check social media, or we check the news.
So much of the, those cracks in our life have been filled.
The other thing that I found is really important is,
especially as the pace of life increases, and the inputs and the signals that we're
getting in terms of from media and advertising everything increase. We need
spaces in our life where we can let that noise soften and where we can just
allow ourselves to observe both what is around is but also how we are reacting
to the world. And that's where I think meditation can be a very powerful tool for people.
Now, I have my own experiences with meditation, which I'm happy to talk about,
but I think that there's more and more data telling us about the power of meditation,
but I think it has a particular use here when it comes to strengthening our own connection with self.
The self-compassion piece is also very important.
We can come to know ourselves, understand our tendencies better,
but if we don't have compassion for ourselves,
and we risk being in a position where we're constantly blaming ourselves,
which I think many of us are apt to do myself included,
it's something I've been trying to unlearn for years and years in my life now,
but I have found that the loving kindness, meditations,
the metameditations, the meta meditations, particularly
is taught by Jack Cornfield, have been extremely helpful to me and I know to many others,
and reminding us that it is a compassion that has to be a part of rebuilding like our
connection with self. Through self-knowledge and self-compassion, once we have a strong connection
to self, then I think we can start thinking
about how to strengthen our connection with others. It's worth also saying, though, that
building connection to self is not just something that we do in isolation. It has to do also
with the people around us. I think all of us know from our experiences that sometimes
a good friend who knows us really well can actually remind us of who we are when we forget. They can help clarify for us what is so beautiful and valuable that we have inside of ourselves
that we've always had, that we bring to the world and to our relationships.
And we all need those reminders.
I think of good friends in that sense like mirrors that show us truly who we are when
the fog of life just clouds our own glasses.
And so connection itself is, you
know, can be built through the practices that we do in meditation and gratitude through
the use of solitude, but also by ensuring that we have time with people who truly know
us. How we build connection then to others, after that I think can be facilitated through
a few things. Think one, and this is something that was more surprising
to me than I realized when I wrote this book,
was I started coming across story after story
where people's pathway out of loneliness
was actually through service.
And it turns out that service is profoundly helpful
whether you are serving your community
by volunteering at an organization
or whether you're serving people at work
or people in your school by helping those who are struggling.
And partly why it's so powerful is that, remember, we earlier we mentioned that two of the
unfortunate tendencies we have when we're chronically lonely are to focus on ourselves
and to have an elevated threat perception.
And service actually bypasses both of those.
It automatically takes our focus off ourselves and puts it on someone else,
the person that we're helping.
And it allows us to do so through a pathway
where we are reminded that we have value to give,
that we have something of meaning
to deliver to someone else.
And that can be very self-affirming
that actually allows us and encourages us
to open up and engage more.
And so service is extremely powerful.
The second thing which I've started doing in my own life
is to take 15 minutes a day
and just dedicate at least 15 minutes
to having a conversation with somebody that I love.
It could be calling my mother,
it could be making sure that I'm actually present
while I'm talking to my wife.
It could be texting a dear friend or an old mentor just to say I'm thinking about you.
But just 15 minutes.
The third thing I think it's really helpful for individuals is to think about the quality
of your time with people.
Even if you only have five minutes with someone, if you are focused when you're with them,
that can mean so much more and give you so much more gratification than half an hour of
distracted conversation.
And more often not than not, what this means is, don't multitask when you're talking to someone,
put your devices away and just focus on what they have to say.
Those things I think are extraordinarily important and these are simple tools that
can be powerful in helping us to connect with others.
But I would also, you know, I try to remind myself often that there's a fourth piece here,
which is the small things, as I think about them, the small interactions that we have with
strangers, with others in our lives, where a simple smile, a simple greeting can do an
extraordinary amount to make us feel better. Now, this might seem counterintuitive. Like, how can
a five-second interaction really have a significant impact on my life? But it's actually there's some interesting studies done on this one that was done
I believe at the University of Pennsylvania where they actually took a group of people who were walking on a busy
Busy street and they had some folks who were planted who in some cases made eye contact with folks as they walked by and in other
cases did not and
then they stopped people afterward after they passed this sort of experimental zone.
And they asked them, how do you feel?
And they found that people who had received eye contact felt significantly less lonely
in those moments and people who had not received it.
Now, we all have the power to do these things, but they had benefit not just the recipient
but the giver as well. And so I try to remind myself that every day as I walk through life, when I was
on the Amtrak train, when I'm in this studio, when I'm on the streets, you know, walking
around, that they are opportunities to interact. It doesn't mean I have to interact with every
single person I come across. They're pausing every now and then to make sure at least I'm
interacting with a few people with a simple smile or a hello can make a big difference.
Yeah, there's data that I've seen on interactions and elevators and with your barista that show
boosts in happiness for the people.
Absolutely.
You just said a ton of things that are really interesting.
I want to react to some of it.
One of the things I think about in terms of reducing my own loneliness or just boosting my own happiness level,
which is basically saying the same thing in some ways.
Over the last couple of years,
I too came to realization similar to the one
you arrived upon when you were a surgeon general,
which is that I had been devaluing my social connections,
be it family or just my larger group of friends and colleagues.
So I've really made it a priority to go to lunch with my friends regularly or accept social plans,
even if it's kind of inconvenient, or to really make sure that I make time for mentoring around
the office.
And I found that that has been incredibly rewarding.
I remember a couple of years ago
when I was first getting into this, my wife and I,
we had said no to so many social engagements
larger because I was so busy.
And some friends of ours were colleagues
of ours here at ABC News, we're leaving.
And mutual friend was throwing a Rebecca Jarvis, a well here at ABC News, we're leaving. And mutual friend was throwing
a Rebecca Jarvis, a well-known ABC News correspondent, who hosted a massively hit podcast called
The Dropout, was throwing a party on her roof deck. And we had a bunch of ABC News folks
and we brought our kid and other people brought their kids and were just sitting around talking.
And it was like a weekend, and I work early mornings and the weekend,
and so I'm often very tired.
So that's another reason why I don't
often go to these social events.
We got in the car and I was super tired,
and our kid was being whiny,
and I looked to my wife and said,
why am I in such a good mood?
And it's because it was just simple thing
of just going to this party.
Nobody was looking at their phones.
We were all just making fun of each other
and eating food.
And so I found that just that little tweak, and it's not a little tweak, at this party, nobody was looking at their phones. We were all just making fun of each other and eating food.
And so I found that just that little tweak, and it's not a little tweak, that meaningful
tweak of prioritizing human interaction has been really helpful for me.
The other thing I'll say about communication, which you talked about sort of boosting
the quality of your interactions when you're having them is that I have had some communications coaching and
It's really taught me how to be a better listener and to reflect back things that people are saying
Which forces me to listen and also makes them feel really good because they feel like they've been heard and validated and
That has really helped me you know my my phone's not on the table in front of me, at least one of my better days.
And that's just been really useful.
And then the final thing I'll say is I just noticed even last night, I was, I had printed
it out in front of me.
I have this printout of my ace producer, Samuel John's, compiles research and sends it to
me.
And usually I read it the last minute.
And last night I was multitasking.
My son had come home from his afternoon activity.
He's five years old.
It was about six in the evening.
And I was, I sort of camped out on the living room floor
while he was walking around playing with his toys.
And it was reading this content all about loneliness
and it's discontent, et cetera, et cetera.
And I realized, well, I've got this kid right here
in front of me that I'm not paying
attention to.
And I put it down.
I said, Alexander, he paused for a second.
He said, sure.
And I said, can I have a, and he came over and sort of lay on top of me for a while.
Oh my goodness.
Delicious.
And you can just see it in your mind.
It's not, it's not complicated.
You can just see how your mood elevates in moments like that.
Anyway, I've just had a lot all in defense of your thesis,
but I'll stop talking and see if you have any response.
Well, I love what you just shared about your son in particular.
And I can relate to that as a dad who far too often
has a multitasked when I'm with my kids.
And I do it almost unconsciously sometimes.
I'll just somehow, my phone slips out and I pocket it.
I'm checking my inbox when I literally have no need to, but it's just a habit. But one of the beautiful things
I've appreciated about kids is that they are on apologetic reminders of what's important.
And my son, if he sees I'm distracted, will call me out on that and say, Papa, where are you?
And you know, it's actually a really deep question. Where are you?
I'm physically present, but I'm not emotionally present.
Yes, I need to be more present.
And that's one of the extraordinary things about them,
is I think children are, they're incredibly present.
They're there.
They're looking at the dot on the wall and wondering about it.
And they're looking at the small bug
crawling outside the window with fascination.
And that appreciation and that, as I think of it,
gratitude-based approach to life is something that they remind me of so often that I
I realized that I think many of us were born
knowing so much of this, knowing so much of what we talked about, like intuitively understanding
their relationships matter, wanting no more than just to spend quality time with people.
Like my son and daughter don't care
about how fancy our house is or isn't.
They don't care about the fact that we don't have a car.
They don't care about how fancy they're closer.
They don't care about any of that.
They just care about the quality of time
that they have with the people they love.
And I think what happens over time
is that life just gets complicated
and culture sets in and tells us that a certain other set of values matter.
And then we start changing our entire life and focus and time and energy toward living according
to those values.
And to me, this is one of the fascinating things about trying to build a more connected
life and a more connected world, is that it's not trying to transform us into someone that
we're not or that we haven't evolved to be.
This is about trying to bring us back to our roots, as people who have evolved over thousands
of years to need each other, to depend on trusted connections.
And I think we know it when we feel that we have that in our lives, and when we don't,
we sense that knowing feeling, which we may or may not call loneliness, but which is often
a swaged by true authentic human connection.
Yeah.
The other thing that crossed my mind, just to build on your point, listening to you talk
about loneliness, is my concern coming into this interview was, well, is this a niche concern,
you know, loneliness?
Clearly it's not.
Some data would suggest that half of us are, as you said before, are suffering
from this, and 100% of us are vulnerable to it. And what this interview has suggested to
me is that if you can clearly identify this as a universal risk and something that should
be prioritized, it will force you to reorganize your life.
Yes. That's absolutely right.
And I think that reorganization is good
because it's not just our individual lives
that need to be reorganized.
It's a society that really has to reflect more deeply
on how we're organized.
And we have to think, have we really organized society
to focus on what really matters in life?
When I think, Dan, about the patients I cared for who were dying, and when I think about
the conversations I was so privileged to have with them in those final days and final hours,
very few people, if any, ever talked about the positions that they had achieved or the
wealth that they had accumulated, what they talked about were the relationships in their life, the ones that had
brought them great joy, the ones that had broken their heart, the ones where they
wished they had invested more time. That's what matters to us at the moments of
greatest clarity in our life, our relationships. And the challenge that we have
today is to figure out how to not
only build our individual lives, but structure our workplaces, our schools, our government
and our public policy, as well as our public dialogue around the fact that connections
matter and that we need to build is a people-centered society.
In a massive dereliction of duty, I as somebody who hosts a podcast, that's
ostensibly about meditation. I didn't ask you at all, but your meditation practice.
But so in our remaining time here, let's let's talk about that because I know it's been
part of your life since very, very early on.
Yeah, I was blessed to have a mother and father who exposed me to spirituality and to religion from a young age. And a big part of
that was was meditation. So, both my parents meditated during my childhood and they still do today.
And probably around from the age of at least as far back as I can recall from the age of seven
onward I remember meditating regularly. Your parents were immigrants from India?
From India, yes. And they both practiced in the Hindu tradition.
And so I remember from the age of seven on,
we're meditating regularly.
When I was in middle school and early high school,
I was meditating for an hour a day.
You know, it was just a regular part of my practice.
We were very different high school students.
Well, the story changed, it didn't quite last.
But there were different types of meditation
I was brought up with.
Some were more chant-based meditations that I would do with a japa mala similar to a rosary.
Others who are more breathed meditations.
They were wonderful.
They brought me peace and they gave me a sense of centeredness.
But I ran into some trouble later in high school where suddenly, well, what felt like suddenly
to me, these practices started speaking to me less.
They became actually more frustrating as I found my mind wandering when previously it
used to be quite focused.
And despite reading all the teachings that you shouldn't judge your mind for not focusing,
it's more about awareness than about focus.
CLI found myself unable to break from that compulsion to just focus, focus, focus.
And it got to the point where I just couldn't, I was trying, you know, for hours a day to
meditate without any sort of fulfillment.
And so I remember in my freshman year of college, at the end of one of these extremely
unfulfilling meditation sessions, calling my father on a Friday night.
And he was in the middle of a dinner party where he and my mom were
entertaining people at home.
I just went out that I also in college never meditated on a Friday night
or any other night carrying on.
Well, this would be the end of that because in that conversation,
he sensed just how distressed I was.
I need just said to me, he said, just let it go.
He said, you don't need to do this right now to feel fulfilled.
You'll find your way again, but give yourself the permission to let the practice go.
Sun, stop meditating. Go to a cake party.
Something like that.
Yeah.
So that began a several years search for me for a tradition that mattered.
It was in the years that followed that I was fortunate to meet Jack Hornfield and to attend
one of his meditation classes at Spirit Rock in California.
Now he wouldn't remember that time because, and I was just one of the many, many fans at
Spirit Rock who admired his teachings, but I got so much from that in terms of an introduction
to mindfulness-based practice.
And, you know, over time, I also, you know, when I was in Surgeon General, I actually was
introduced to TM to Transcendental Meditation by a teacher.
We, in fact, had offered meditation training to everyone in our office when I was a Surgeon
General, because we knew just how important it was to when we had a group
of people who were so mission oriented who were burning the candle and both ends who were
working around the clock to make sure our campaigns were executed.
They were burning out.
We wanted to do something to help ground people and strengthen them.
So in our office, we often used to meditate together.
Many people would meditate on their own as well, but it became part of our practice.
But when I had kids, things shifted, and I'm still trying to figure out how to shift them
back to a good place, but my morning time slot for meditating evaporated, as my kids got
up with me and also would get upset if I left the bed early.
They would somehow seem to know.
And my usual evening time slot became sort of occupied with bed time.
So I'm still figuring out how to in a more consistent way build meditation, like into my
life in a regular way.
But I will say that my belief, not just looking at the science behind meditation, but from
my own lived experience and through the teachings of people like like Jack Cornfield have,
my belief is only grown
that meditation can be an extraordinarily powerful tool
for grounding us in our life.
One last thing that's worth mentioning, Dan,
is at the very end of my time in office,
I remember our office had become so engaged
and enthused about the idea of focusing
on emotional well-being.
The we organize the convening with people from around government and actually from the private
sector as well to come together to help us start thinking about how to build a larger
movement to improve emotional well-being in America.
Recognizing that meditation was an important component of that.
It was actually the first time that I got to meet a man I had deeply admired for a long time, John Kabatzen, and whose books I had read, but you know, I had never met in person.
But we also brought all kinds of other folks together, leaders in business, you know, leaders
from the Veterans Administration from hospital systems.
And what was really striking to me there was, there was such a hunger from all of these
different quarters to invest in emotional
well-being.
There was such a recognition that so much of what is sapping our health, our vitality,
our productivity, and our kids' future is our failure to invest in and really even understand
the importance of emotional well-being.
And meditation is an important tool for enhancing our emotional well-being,
although it's not the only one.
But that's one of the reasons why I wanted to focus
on an issue like loneliness,
is I think when I think about all the different ways
that we can enhance our emotional well-being,
our social connections are an incredibly important
and rich part of that.
Our connection with each other is the fuel
that allows us to be more and to do more. And as a doctor, I've written so many prescriptions for medicines, antibiotics, and other medicines.
But when I think back on it, the most powerful medicine I believe that we have
is the love and compassion that we can offer to each other and to ourselves.
And we do that in the form of genuine authentic human relationship.
That's why I believe so deeply
that we can be healers to each other.
That's why I feel optimistic about the future
because I think this is about harnessing those abilities
that we've been given that there's a part of our birthright,
the ability to heal each other.
It's about harnessing that power,
about making us aware that we have that power
and then applying it to strengthening the relationships in our lives and hopefully society more broadly.
Well said. In closing, can you just plug, I ask all of our guests to plug, can you plug your
new book unabashedly if you don't do it, I'll do it, and anything else, any other ways we can
learn more about you, any other projects you're involved in
that you want people to know about the floor as yours.
Well, that's very kind of you.
I'm terrible about plugging my own ventures,
but I am grateful to have worked on a new book
that will be coming out in April of 2020,
called Together, the Healing Power of Human Connection
and a Sometimes Lonely World.
It's a summary of this extraordinary experience
of discovery that I've had over the last few years
that brings together the science-alout human stories
to put forth a case for how we can build
a more people-centered world and why
that will make a profound impact on our health
but also on the health more broadly
of our institutions and society.
So it's been a learning experience, but I'm very excited to share it with the world.
And if people want to learn more about the book or about the work that we're doing, you
can certainly go to my website, vivacemorty.com.
And part of what we're working on now and thinking about is how to accelerate a broader
conversation in this country and around the world
on human connection, how to make it real and how to enable people to share their experiences
of strengthening connection with each other. Dr. Thank you very much for doing this.
Thank you so much Dan. It was so much fun to be with you and what a pleasure to have this conversation.
Likewise. Big thanks to Vivek, really appreciate him coming on twice to share his wisdom. His new book is called Together,
the Healing Power of Human Connections
in a sometimes lonely world.
It's available for pre-order on Amazon
and other booksellers.
Before I let you go, reminder, every weekday
at three Eastern noon Pacific,
we're doing this really awesome new kind of experimental thing.
We call it TPH Live or 10% Happier Live.
It's a live sanity break. We bring on one of the world's greatest meditation teachers. We do
five minutes of meditation. Then we take your questions. You can join us at 10%
.com slash live. I'll put a link to that in the show notes. It's a great way to
find a little calm and a little community in the middle of a pretty tough time.
Big thanks to the team who helped put this together.
That's Samuel Johns.
He's the head of this big operation.
Big thanks to Samuel Johns.
And Matt Boyden at Ultraviolet Audio
is our editor, Maria Wartelle is our production.
It means that we're gonna be 60 seconds.
Yeah, okay, but I'm well, I told you to count to 60
and you count it so fast.
So we're gonna, let's say 75,
because I'm really almost done.
That's my son Alexander again.
Maria Wertel is our production coordinator
and we derive a lot of wisdom additionally
from colleagues such as Ben Rubin, Jen Poehl
and Nate Toby at 10% happier.
Also big thanks to my guys at ABC Ryan Kessler
and Josh Cohan.
We'll see you all on Wednesday for another episode.
And Alexander, before we go, you have anything to say to the audience.
Bye.
Bye.
Can you shout that louder?
Bye.
That's my son.
Very proud.
See you soon.
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