Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 329: How to Break Your Anxiety Habit | Judson Brewer
Episode Date: March 10, 2021To mark the first anniversary of the week in March 2020 when Covid fundamentally altered our lives, we’re launching a special two-part series. Today, we’re going to be talking about anxie...ty, which has been spiking during the pandemic. My guest is Dr. Jud Brewer, a psychiatrist and deep dharma practitioner who argues that anxiety is a habit–one that you can unwind. Then, next Monday, we’ll talk to Nicholas Christakis, who is not only a doctor but also the head of the Human Nature Lab at Yale, about when the pandemic will end, and what this ordeal has revealed about our species. But today it’s anxiety with Jud Brewer. Some of you may know Jud from the Ten Percent Happier app, where he teaches a mindful eating course. He’s also been on this show several times. He is the Director of Research and Innovation at the Mindfulness Center at Brown University. He’s got a number of apps that use mindfulness to treat addiction, including Eat Right Now, Craving to Quit, and Unwinding Anxiety. He also has a brand new book, called Unwinding Anxiety. In this interview, we talk about: how exactly mindfulness can be harnessed to deal with anxiety; what is anxiety anyway, and why does he view it as a habit? And we publicly debate something we have been privately discussing: Is there any level of stress or anxiety that is healthy? One more thing: We are looking for a podcast marketer. If you love this show, marketing, and building relationships, we would love to have you on the team to help us grow Ten Percent Happier and our future shows. Please apply at https://www.tenpercent.com/careers. Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/judson-brewer-329 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
bumping our heads up against the same obstacles over and over again.
But what if there was a different way to relate to this gap between what you want to do and
what you actually do?
What if you could find intrinsic motivation for habit change that will make you happier
instead of sending you into a shame spiral?
Learn how to form healthy habits without kicking your own ass unnecessarily by taking our healthy habits course over on the 10% happier app. It's taught by the
Stanford psychologist Kelly McGonical and the Great Meditation Teacher Alexis
Santos to access the course. Just download the 10% happier app wherever you get
your apps or by visiting 10% calm. All one word spelled out. Okay on with the
show. to baby, this is Kiki Palmer on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcast.
From ABC, this is the 10% happier podcast. I'm Dan Harris.
To mark the one year anniversary of that week, that faithful week in March of 2020, when COVID fundamentally altered our lives.
We are launching a special two-part series.
Today, we're going to be talking about anxiety,
which has been spiking for obvious reasons
during the pandemic.
My guest is Dr. Judd Brewer, a psychiatrist
and deep Dharma practitioner who argues that anxiety
is a habit, one that you can unwind.
And then coming up on Monday, we're going to talk to Nicholas
Christakis, who's not only a doctor himself, but also the head of the human nature lab at
Yale. And we're going to talk to him about when the pandemic will end. He's got a pretty
detailed vision in his mind about how things are going to play out from here. And we're
going to talk about what this ordeal has revealed about our species.
But today, as mentioned, it's anxiety, which at Brewer,
some of you may know Judd from the 10% happier app where he teaches a mindful eating course.
He's also been on this show several times.
He is the director of research and innovation at the mindfulness center at Brown University.
He's got a number of apps that use mindfulness to treat addiction,
including Eat Right Now, which is all about mindful eating, craving to quit, which aims
to help people get off of nicotine and unwinding anxiety. He also has a brand new book, which
is excellent, and I highly recommend it, called Unwinding Anxiety. In this interview, we
talk about how exactly mindfulness can be harnessed to deal with anxiety.
I ask him, what is anxiety anyway and how do we view it as a habit?
And we publicly debate something that we've been privately discussing for a while now,
the question of whether there is any level of stress or anxiety that is actually healthy.
One more thing before we get to the show, we are looking for a podcast
marketer. If you love this show, if you love marketing and building relationships, we
would love to have you on this team to help grow the 10% happier podcast and our future
shows. We hope to be launching a bunch of shows this year, as a matter of fact. So if
this sounds interesting, please apply at 10% dot com slash careers.
Okay, here we go now with Dr. Judd Brewer.
So we're coming up on a year since everybody sort of locked down. Tom Hanks got COVID, the NBA canceled their games.
I remember that night, both of those things happened and life changed.
What are you seeing as you look at your patients, as you look at the world?
What are you seeing in terms of impact on our mental health?
Well, I'm seeing an emerging epidemic, possibly pandemic of anxiety, where there's a lot of
research now showing, for example, between 2019 and 2020 that anxiety rates tripled.
So anxiety is going up, a lot of uncertainty that's continued.
It hasn't just been, oh, this thing, and then we figured it out.
It's been pretty ongoing, just constant hits of uncertainty that have just kept stoking
people's fears in their anxiety.
The other thing that we're seeing is around the compensatory mechanisms that people are
employing that aren't actually healthy. So drinking has gone up a whole lot.
The quarantine, 15, all of these things where people are on social media a lot more and
getting addicted even more to social media because they're going to social media for the
news as compared to looking at news sources.
And then they're catching all the social contagion around outrage and fear and uncertainty and
all of that. So that's what I've seen, unfortunately, is a large increase and a solidification of
anxiety through these unhelpful habits because they just drive anxiety more.
They don't actually uproot the root cause.
There's so much pain out there.
Before we go much further here, I think it might make sense to ask a foundational question. This might be a little obvious, but I think it's worth asking nonetheless. How do you
define anxiety? You know, this dictionary definition of feeling of nervousness or worry or unease,
you know, about something in the future or something, you know, with an uncertain outcome is what
the dictionary puts together.
And I think that works generally well.
But I think it also kind of ties two pieces together that are worth teasing apart, which
is this feeling, the physical feeling that we have, but also the worry itself.
So worry can actually be a noun and a verb.
And I think those two importantly are separable, and we can dive into the details of why that's important
at some point.
It has to do with how habit lives even get set up
around anxiety and worry.
But I think it's important to differentiate
that worry can be both a feeling,
but it can also be a mental behavior.
So there's my thinking process,
oh man, I don't know if I'm going to be able to pay rent
next month or I'm behind on my work. And then there's the physical manifestations of those thoughts.
Absolutely. And the disambiguation is important. Why?
Well, the feelings of anxiety are just feelings, right? So they're physical sensations they're often associated with thoughts.
But the worry itself is something
that can actually drive more worry.
So just to give a little background
on how I came to understand this,
when I was struggling with helping
my clinic patients with anxiety.
So for example, medications,
the gold standard medications for anxiety treatment,
there's this term called
number needed to treat, meaning how many people you have to treat before one person shows
a significant benefit or a significant reduction in symptoms.
For medications, that number is 5.15, meaning you have to treat five people before one person
shows significant reduction in symptoms.
So imagine me as a psychiatrist playing the lottery, you know, 20% of my patients
showing significant improvement. So the medication paradigm has been around for a long time,
and that's how I learned psychiatry is, you know, treat them with a medication.
And I was really struggling with helping my patients with anxiety, because if you look at the best
cognitive therapies like CBT, the hit rate there is about 50%. And that's just in who will respond to treatment.
So I started approaching this through different lens
where, you know, San Francisco,
at the moment, somebody asked somebody
that we're using our eat right now app,
this eating mindfulness program was saying,
hey, you know, I'm noticing that anxiety is triggering
eating for me.
Can you make an anxiety app?
And said, well, I'm a psychiatrist,
but I, you know, I mostly just use well, I'm a psychiatrist, but I mostly just
use medications, but as a researcher, I started looking back at the literature. And it turns out
back in the 1980s, when folks were heralding the pro-Zach miracle or whatever, you know, in the SSR
arts were developed, this guy, Thomas Borkevich, was studying anxiety, and in particular, he zoomed in on worry.
And what he found was that worry could be negatively
reinforced, meaning that worry could actually
drive anxiety habit loops.
And I'd never thought about that before
to look at anxiety and worry in particular,
those two together as a habit, as compared to just a feeling that I
need to give people medications for. And just to articulate that a little bit, and we've talked
about habit loops before on your show, so I'll just do this really quickly. Habits are formed with
just three elements, a trigger, behavior, and a result. It's this evolutionary process that helps
us remember where food is and avoid danger. So if you think of anxiety or some other negative emotion
as being a trigger,
worry can be that mental behavior that results in two things.
So Borkyvek and others have talked about
how worry either distracts us
from the more unpleasant feeling of fear or anxiety
or, and it could be both,
that it gives us a feeling of control.
Because even if worrying doesn't fix something, at least we feel like we're doing something
by worrying.
I'm sure you have no idea what I'm talking about.
This is so interesting because you're describing everybody else on the planet, but me.
So let me just see if I can play this out and how this would work.
It's just in my own mind, I'm about to move.
And the thought of moving strikes fear
and you know, I can get a tightness in my chest.
That can be the trigger.
The behavior is I start, you know,
sort of obsessive mentation around all the logistics
of the move, everything that can go wrong, etc.,
etc. And the reward is, I feel like, all right, this is horrifying, but at least I'm on
top of it because my worrying will make sure that nothing goes wrong.
Yes, absolutely.
So you're the one that have thought about the possibility that your moving company
could suddenly go bankrupt the day before your move. But are you telling me that my worrying is useless?
Well, let me phrase it this way. I haven't found any evidence to suggest that worrying is actually
helpful. So, for example, worry can actually drive more anxiety because we know we think about
all these things that we hadn't thought about. Like no, what if my movie in Comedy Coast Bank Raptor?
What if there's a blizzard on the day of my move or whatever?
So that can actually just perpetuate anxiety.
And what that can also do is it kind of makes the thinking part of our brains go offline.
So this is probably helpful for anybody listening here.
So this old part of our brain, the fear-based learning,
right? Negative reinforcement is actually that survival mechanism. You know, we see the saber
to tiger, we run away, we survive, right? That's helpful. So it's not that fear isn't helpful.
But then on top of that got layered this prefrontal cortex, this new or part of the brain,
and that's involved in thinking and planning. So of course thinking and planning is helpful for your move, right? You got to think plan ahead.
Yet what that needs is it needs precedent and it needs accurate information.
So you can say, well, what happened the last time I moved?
What can I learn from that or when other people move? Can I extrapolate from that?
And what accurate information do I have? Like with the weather?
Is it going to be a blizzard on that day, or all that. When there's a lot of uncertainty,
fear plus uncertainty leads to anxiety.
And that anxiety makes the thinking and planning
part of the brain go offline.
So we can't actually utilize the thinking and planning.
So I would postulate that worrying not only is not helpful,
but it actually makes things worse,
because we can't think in plan.
We think that we're doing the right thing
because we're gaming everything out,
but in fact, we're driving ourselves into a hole
where actually the quality of our thinking is going down
because we're activating the reptilian folds of the brain,
the migdala, the stress and fear center of the brain,
and that actually just shuts down the more advanced parts of the brain, the migdala, the stress and fear center of the brain. And that actually just shuts down
the more advanced parts of the brain,
the prefrontal cortex.
Yes, basically.
So if fear is not useless,
in other words, fear can have its uses,
it's when we get into the obsessive thinking
that's triggered by the fear
that that's where we need to watch out.
Absolutely. And that's why I was saying it's helpful to differentiate those physical feelings
from the thinking piece because the physical sensations they tend to be just there.
You know, a lot of my patients, they wake up in the morning and they, first thing they do is they check
in with themselves and they're like, yep, I'm anxious.
You know, whereas that anxiety can then lead them to start worrying about why they're like, yep, I'm anxious. You know, where is that anxiety can then lead
them to start worrying about why they're anxious, which then perpetuates them being anxious
and worried all day? Okay, so that's interesting. Let me just take, I'm hesitating a little
bit just because I don't want to be too selfish about this, but here we go. I am writing a book
unlike you. I cannot sneeze out a book very quickly.
You have this incredible ability to write very fast
and very well at the same time.
It takes me five years to write anything that's like decent.
And I shouldn't say just decent, I should say,
having a shot at being decent.
And that period for me is quite difficult.
And I do find that I actually kind of walk around
with a tightness in my chest,
quite frequently, even right now, as I'm talking to you, but there's nothing I'm anxious about,
you know, I'm enjoying talking to you, there's nothing I'm acutely concerned about. So,
I should just be mindful of the feeling and try not to let it throw me into a whole set of
useless rumination around why am I the anxious guy, et cetera, et cetera.
Well, I think there are two pieces there.
So the short answer is yes.
And the try not to can be a challenge.
So here, approaching it from just kind of being able to see these things clearly, being
able to see these habit loops, to see where there is, if there is a habitual component there,
right? Is there worrying there that's even running in the background? You know, sometimes that can
be so pervasive that it's like constantly in our working memory because it's just what we do.
You know, I worry, I worry, I worry, I worry. And that can then just be constantly feeding that feeling
of tightness in your chest that you're talking about. So I think being able to see that clearly
is very helpful.
Maybe I can give a concrete example.
One of my patients and I actually wrote about him
in my book because it was a pretty interesting case
where this gentleman was referred to me for anxiety.
And he walks in my door and Jackie looks anxious.
So I didn't just throw some meds at him
and send him out the door.
I asked him to describe what his anxiety was like,
but it was very much a black box for him.
So I said, well, and he also had panic symptoms.
So I said, describe the panic.
And he said, when I'm driving on the highway,
I feel like I'm in a speeding bullet.
It was so bad that I started avoiding driving on the highway.
And then that would help alleviate those thoughts
because he wasn't driving on the highway anymore. Yet he was so anxious that even driving on the highway, and then that would help alleviate those thoughts, because he didn't, he wasn't
driving on the highway anymore.
Yet he was so anxious that even driving on the local road to get to my office made him
pretty anxious.
So what we did in probably in the first five minutes of his visit, I just pulled out a
piece of paper and a pen, and I just wrote down trigger behavior result.
And I said, okay, let me see if I've got this straight.
Your triggers, these thoughts, your behavior is to avoid driving,
and then the result is that you can avoid those anxious thoughts.
And here, this is a hall look in his eye
as if he had never understood this before.
It's kind of like, if we don't understand
how our minds work, how can we possibly work with them?
So that example, going back to your point, I would say the first step is to really,
you know, before jumping in and saying, I'm going to do something about this, which can often come
in the form of, I'm going to fix this, you know, even consciously or subconsciously. I'm not saying
that's the case for you, but for a lot of my patients, it's like, oh, here's the anxiety, I need
to do something to fix it. And so it's, you know so the first step is really just being able to map these pieces out to see where there's
a component that can be fed by worrying, and then to be able to move into aspects of experience
where we can start to bring in basically awareness to see and feel, see our thoughts, feel
our emotions on our body sensations, and then that can help pull that fuel from the fire so that we're not constantly
stoking the fire of anxiety. Does that make sense?
It does, but I want to get way more granular on it.
So let's just take your patients who say they wake up in the morning
and because they're a patient of yours, they have learned to sort of check in with themselves.
And they notice, oh yeah, I've got feelings of anxiety in with themselves. And they notice, oh, yeah,
I've got feelings of anxiety in my body. This is not an uncommon feeling for me. So what's the
move then? So the first move for them is to check in to see if those feelings of anxiety are
driving them into worry. So for example, people at Generalist's anxiety disorder, in this gentleman
that I just mentioned, he met all the criteria for both panic disorder and generalize anxiety disorder. Okay, so he's poster child for anxiety.
So the first step there is to just see are these feelings driving to thoughts that are then driving back and feeding the feelings.
Can I map this out? And then for them to check throughout the day to map it out to see what else it is driving.
So for example, with this gentleman, I sent him home, I gave him our unwinding his ID
app and said, just go map out your habit loops. And I failed to mention that this gentleman was
180 pounds overweight. So he had hypertension, he had a fatty liver, he had obstructive sleep apnea,
his body was not doing well. He came back two weeks later,
and the first thing he said to me was,
he actually looked better already,
but the first thing he said to me was,
oh, doc, I lost 14 pounds.
And I looked at him kind of quizzically
because we hadn't even talked about weight loss at that point.
He said, you know,
it's mapping out my anxiety habit loops,
and I realized that anxiety was driving me to eat.
And I thought that that was helpful,
but it didn't actually help me at all.
So I stopped doing that.
And he went on to lose over 100 pounds.
He's described it as effortlessly
because he just became less excited to do that.
The reason I mentioned that is that anxiety
can drive a whole lot of other things
that then feed back because he was worried about his health,
and he could actually start to get a handle on his health, which then decreased his health
anxiety, which then decreased his general anxiety.
So, is the end state here for people who live with anxiety to, it's not that you're never
going to feel the throbbing in your chest or whatever physical
manifestations there are of fear, it's that you're going to learn not to let it drive you into
unconstructive behaviors. Yes, absolutely. And I think there's a way that we can actually tap
into our brains to do that. And that's what I wrote a lot of the book about. But that's the end game is to, I think of it as it's not about not having thoughts or emotions or sensations. It's about
changing our relationship to them. And often in the process, if we change our relationship to our
motions, we can see where we're feeding them, we can stop feeding them. And at the same time,
when they do show up, we don't resist them because that resistance
is part of the feeding, you know, what we resist persists.
And that's absolutely true.
So those are two elements that work complementary.
So I can sit here having this conversation with you and I may notice, yes, there's residual
tightness in my chest because the last thing I did before I came into this interview was
spend a bunch of time working on my book.
Or I may even just notice the tightness in my chest
while I'm working on my book,
but I can be cool with that, aware of it,
not making a big deal out of it,
and checking whether it's driving me
into sort of obsessive thought,
but that doesn't mean I have to let it push me
into thinking about why am I so anxious?
I'm never gonna get better, et cetera, et cetera.
Absolutely.
And just to give you an in the moment example of that,
that last sentence that I just said
those two can work complimentary.
My brain started saying, well, that's not grammatically correct,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So in this moment, I could be here sitting,
thinking, oh man, I'm totally bombing it on this great podcast,
or I could be like, oh yeah, that was not grammatically correct.
Boop, let it go.
And then we move on with a more interesting conversation.
So absolutely.
I didn't notice it just for the record.
You mentioned that in the book, you talk a lot about tapping into the brains
natural resources in order to help us with this.
And I want to get to that.
But just let me ask another sort of 30,000 feet question.
How do we know whether we qualify as having
some sort of clinical level of anxiety
or whether we have garden variety anxiety?
How do you tranche these things you as a professional?
There's one of the tools that's used most commonly
clinically.
And we use this in our research studies
as well,
is called the GAD7, generalized anxiety disorder 7, which is surprise, 7 questions.
And it can give a marker of severity, but it can also help diagnose. It's not perfect for
diagnosis, but we can use it to clinically track people's level of anxiety. And there's below 5 is
minimal anxiety, 5 to 10 is mild, 10 to 15 is moderate,
and above 15 is boy, you're really anxious.
I think officially it's severe.
So we can use questionnaires,
and that tends to be gold standard right now
in psychiatry and psychological research around anxiety
because we don't have physical markers of anxiety.
Certainly there can be surrogates, but they're not specific enough for anyone individual.
I hope everybody here listening if they feel like they need one, they should get a therapist,
a psychiatrist, a psychologist, a social worker, whatever you think is right for you.
But if I'm listening to this and I'm not working with a mental health professional, how
do I gauge whether my anxiety's just a natural response
to the fact that we're living in a pandemic
and any of the other sort of disturbing current events
or whether I actually, it's disrupting my ability
to function fully.
Yeah, so here it's pretty subjective
and a lot of the psychiatric, the DSM for the psychiatrist's
Bible, there's often this caveat at the end of,
you go through these checklists of symptoms,
and then it says, and must be causing
some disturbance in life, basically.
We can have a bunch of these symptoms,
and it might not be causing us any problem at all.
And so I think that's a critical aspect
is to ask ourselves, oh, I met this checklist, blah, blah, blah.
But how am I actually dealing with this?
Is this causing a disturbance?
And I think this really highlights the importance
of looking at the relationship with our thoughts
and emotions rather than just looking at them objectively
and saying, oh, yeah, that's a problem.
So for example, I know you've played a lot with like
not eating sugar, this or that.
It's not that sugar is a problem,
but it's how we relate to sugar.
And that's very individual, right?
So it's like, well, sugar is a basic building block.
It gives good calories.
And in certain ways, when it's delivered through non-processed foods, can be very nutritive
in that sense.
So it's really looking at these things and how we relate to them.
I think that's really looking at these things and how we relate to them. I think that's really critical.
I would love to get you to say more about the methods you lay out in your new book on
winding anxiety for how we can work with our fear, no matter where we are on the spectrum
from my term, not yours, Garden Variety to all the way up to the spectrum of generalized
anxiety disorder.
So the first step we've talked touched on a little bit, which is just mapping out these
habit loops.
Like I talked, you use the example of my patients.
And anybody can do this.
They can pull out a piece of paper.
They can write down trigger behavior results, or they can even bring a piece of paper with
them or take it on their phone or whatever.
And just map out any anxiety or worry related habit loops.
That's the first step, okay?
Pretty straightforward, something that anybody can learn
in five minutes or 30 seconds even,
as I did with my patients.
That's actually the first part of the book
is helping people not only see how anxiety and worry
can be, you know, mental behaviors
and how to map out those habit lips,
but also how they can apply those to other habits as well,
because why not?
And there are a lot of other habits related to anxiety.
It's like the quarantine 15.
It's the drinking that's gone up tremendously
in the last year.
It's that Netflix has gone off the charts
because everybody's distracting themselves with Netflix.
So we can map out all these other related habits as well.
The second step is really my favorite part,
but it's favorite from a research perspective
because this is so cool how the brain works.
So of course, as I mentioned, I've been approaching anxiety from a lens of habits.
How can it be driven habitually through worries and mental behavior?
This goes back to some of the research that my lab has done around reward value with other
behaviors. So for example, there's this formula from the 1970s called the Rescola Wagner model, where
we tend to hold a certain reward value of a certain behavior in mind, okay, and it gets
stored in our brain so that we don't have to relearn that behavior every day.
So for example, you know, the taste of chocolate, for example, versus broccoli,
or cake versus broccoli. Let's use cake as an example. So if we have this value stored in our
brain, we don't have to relearn it every time we're like, what's broccoli taste like? What's cake
taste like? What we've done is we've laid down this composite reward value every time, you know,
starting as a kid, we go to birthday parties, All the times we've gone to celebrations where we've eaten cake.
All the times we've eaten cake to cheer ourselves up.
This gets laid down as a composite reward value.
There's this hierarchy in our brain of reward values.
Broccoli tends to be generally lower than cake for most people.
We can tell ourselves stop eating cake, but if it worked, I would happily find another
job and I wouldn't need to help my patients with obesity because our thinking brain doesn't
hold a candle to our feeling body.
Our body looks at the cake and says, well, that's pretty rewarding.
Eat it.
What are you doing?
Just staring at it.
You know, eat the cake.
So the only way to actually update that reward value is to bring in something that you
might have heard of before.
It's called awareness.
Okay.
And what we're scrolling, when I'm going to talk about, was what's called a positive
and a negative prediction error.
So if I'm looking at a piece of cake, and I, you know, it looks really good, and I take
a bite of that cake, and it is absolutely delicious.
It's better than any chocolate cake that I've had before.
That's something that happens
to call it positive prediction error.
It's more rewarding than I expected.
Or if I bite into that cake
and the chef accidentally used a bunch of salt instead of sugar
and I spit it out and disguised,
I get this negative prediction error.
And what that does is it trains my brain to say,
hey, you better look out for that bakery, whoever baked that cake might not be doing a good job.
So the cake in that specific setting decreases
in its reward value.
So it's easier for me to go past that storm,
be like, eh, tasted like salt last time, I'm not interested.
Okay.
Now, we've done research with this,
where we can actually embed mindfulness tools
into our apps, where we can actually measure mindfulness tools into our apps where we can actually
measure reward value on a moment-to-moment basis.
And we can have people go through a mindfulness exercise and really pay attention so they
can update that reward value.
So if it's overeating, we have people who say, go ahead and overeat.
And we have them do that and then ask themselves, how content do you feel right now?
And check in with themselves.
Within 10 to 15 times of people doing this exercise,
we can map out that reward value change.
That behavior drops below the value of not doing it.
And we've seen this both with eating food,
and we've also seen this with cigarette smoking.
Sigarettes are pretty straightforward
because they don't taste very good.
You know, okay, it can be a little more subtle.
So we can take that principle and see that mindfulness is a key ingredient, really awareness,
is that key ingredient, but that attitude of curiosity like, hmm, what did I really
get from this as compared to saying, oh, I shouldn't eat cake.
Those are very different things.
When we really see that reward value clearly, that updates in our brain.
And this goes all the way back to the ancient Buddhist psychology around becoming disenchanted with these old behaviors.
Right? So here's disenchantment in a modern-day formula through math for those folks that like math.
That's awesome. I'm not great at math, but I like that there is a mathematical formula
that my postdocs can go and measure and calculate and write papers about. But we can actually apply this to worry as well.
And so that's the next step is to really, you know, map out these habit loops,
anxiety and worry, right? And then when we're worrying, we can ask ourselves,
one, what am I getting from this right now, right? Feel into our body. Oh, it's actually making more
me more anxious, for example. And two, we can ask, is this actually solving the problem
that I'm hoping that it will solve?
So for example, common one is parents,
when they have teenagers and their kids go out
partying with their friends, they're going to worry
until they hear that door unlock in the kid's home safely.
My guess is that the worry isn't actually making the kid safe,
just a guess, okay.
So they can ask themselves,
well, what's worrying getting me right now?
Well, they're getting an ulcer,
they're getting high blood pressure
or trying to control their kids' lives.
None of those are helpful.
So that's one aspect that folks can pay attention to.
The other is, goes back to this resistance.
So if there's just anxiety
and somebody's not worrying particularly,
they can see, am I trying to fix the anxiety, am I
trying to find the problem? Why is this anxiety happening? And what am I getting from the resistance,
or that trying to figure it out and solve it, or trying to avoid it, whatever the behavior is that's
not helping them just simply be with and accept their anxiety, those feelings, and see if they can
just welcome the in, which
is not easy to do when somebody is first starting, but over time, when they realize that these
feelings are simply body sensations, emotions, they can start to experience being with them.
Or, all these practices that you know from your own experience can help us at least start
to get our foot in the door of not just constantly and
quickly trying to get rid of anxiety as quickly as possible. So that's step two. I have
a million questions about step two, but I want to let you finish the steps. So I'll keep them in my head.
So we'll go quickly into step three and then we can go back to step two because step three is relatively simple.
I think of it as you know, if your brain has found
that something is unrewarding, it's gonna say,
okay, give me something better.
So I think of it as the BB out, the bigger better offer.
And ideally, we would find something
that is intrinsically rewarding, not something external.
So you could say, well, if you're anxious,
just go look at Q pictures of puppies on Instagram
or whatever, or binge on Netflix.
But our brains become habituated to those things.
There is such a thing as too much of a good thing.
And I've heard Joseph Goldstein talking about,
yeah, try just having sex for a long, long, long, long, long, long time.
It just doesn't work out that well.
You got to stop at some point.
So there is too much of a good thing,
and our brains become habituated.
That's how our brains learn.
It's like, well, I get the cute pictures of puppies now,
give me something cuter.
So we need to look internally if possible.
This idea of having superpowers for our brain,
I think you first introduced that to me.
And I don't know,
do you talk about mindfulness as a superpower?
What specifically? I think I said that. Sounds like something I would say.
Yeah, no definitely. So I think it was mindfulness where you're like, mindfulness is like a super
power. I think of the attitude and equality of mindfulness. So you think of mindfulness being
awareness and an attitude, non-judgment is what a lot of people say. I think of it as curiosity.
You can positively frame it that way. I think of curiosity as a superpower.
And my lab's actually done research on this,
but basically anybody listening can ask themselves
what feels better being anxious or being curious
about that anxiety in this moment, right?
Curiosity feels better.
We've done studies with hundreds of people
looking at the reward value of a bunch of different mental
states across the board.
People rank curiosity, kindness, connection,
much higher than anxiety and fear and worry,
and things like that.
So it's about finding that bigger, better offer,
and the nice thing about mindfulness and awareness
is that awareness is intrinsic,
and curiosity is intrinsic.
It's just about awakening it,
so we don't become habituated to it.
And if we think, oh, I'm bored of being curious,
we can go, hmm, what's it feel like
to be bored of being curious?
And then we're curious again.
So that's the third step.
You think of it as any, I think of it as
any mindfulness practice that can help us
step out of the old habit loop.
The way this would work in practice is, again,
just because I haven't yet broken the habit
of self.
Let me just stick with myself for a second as an easy example.
I'm sitting here, still have the throbbing in the chest.
The BBO would be, hey, can I just be curious about it?
Not curious like, why am I such an anxious person, but curious about what are the physical
sensations right now and what kind of starbursts of thought might the sensations be triggering that I could drop
out of and see as they happen?
Absolutely.
And I think you're touching on an important point that I didn't actually know until two
years ago, which is there are two different flavors of curiosity.
And you just named both of them.
So one is called deprivation curiosity,
which is as it sounds, not having information, right?
Which drives our brain to go get information
because information is food for our brain
and food helps us survive.
Not knowing the answer to something
or not knowing why I'm anxious, for example, is a rabbit hole.
What does it feel like?
Let me ask you, what does it feel like
when you're like, oh, why am I anxious?
Does it feel more closed down or does it feel more opened up?
Definitely closed down. Yeah. So the other is called interest curiosity, where
I think of deprivation curiosity is the destination. Once you get the answer, you've arrived
at the end of your journey. Interest curiosity is about just exploring the journey,
the joy of discovery. So in the moment, if you just focused on the interest
curiosity, does that feel closed down
or does that feel opened up?
In the moment, now we're example with the whatever
tightness I'm feeling in my chest.
If I just can be gently curious about what
does this feel like without trying to dive into story?
Yeah, it feels much better than trying
to do amateur psychotherapy on myself.
Yes.
That's actually what my lab has found.
So when we mapped out these 14 mental states
and looked at the reward value,
we also asked people,
does one feel more open or more closed?
And uniformly, people reported that the ones
that fell open, including curiosity, were more rewarding.
So there may even be this intrinsic continuum
between contracted and closed down versus opened up
that is already
different or a differential in the reward spectrum. One feels better than another, which is goodness for the human race because
anger and frustration and divisiveness
feel much worse and more closed down than connection and kindness.
If we could just get everybody to wake up to that.
Yes, and that's about the waking up part.
It's about being aware of the results of being mean versus the results of being kind to each other.
Sticking with the habit loop around anxiety.
The BBO, again, just to put a fine, fine point on this. Step three, in terms of unwinding
this anxiety, is getting to the bigger, better offer. So you're sitting there, feeling your
anxiety wherever you feel it in your body, and you notice that you might be headed toward
the back of Doritos. But then you remember, actually, no, I've been aware through the Dorito binge several times
and seeing that it just makes me feel terrible about myself and terrible physically.
So I'm just going to drop back into checking out what does it feel like to be with these
feelings right now.
And that in and of itself is the reward.
That's the BBO.
Yes, absolutely, especially when you compare the two. You can feel back into what is like to dive into the bag of Doritos, and then you can compare
that to what it's like right now just exploring those sensations.
The results, what do I get from just exploring versus if I were to dive into the bag.
I'll give you a clinical example of a patient that I just saw maybe a week or two ago.
She just hit her one year of sobriety and she's in her 50s. She's been drinking
a long time, let's say. So we used a lot of mindfulness practices with her and she actually
had a lot of anxieties. So she was using our unwitting anxiety as well. What she does every
morning is she wakes up and she asks herself, what would I get if I drank? When phrase for this
is playing the tape forward. So we can think we have to draw on old memory to project into the future.
So what that does is it draws back on what she did in the past that led to her drinking
and what the results were versus what it's like right now to be sober.
And for her, being sober feels great, compared to drinking or being drunk.
Do you ever have people say, I mean, doc,
you're telling me that the reward is mindfulness?
I mean, come on, how can that compare
to binging on whatever it is I want to binge on?
They shut down these feelings.
I'll be a temporarily of fear, anxiety, et cetera, et cetera.
Well, I think the difference here
is that overindulging on anything
is not physiologically
adaptive.
And so our brains know this, and they're going to say, hey, you better cool it on whatever
that is.
And actually, what feels good is kind of this udymonic state of being where there's just
this ease, there's balance, there's, we're not driven.
And when we're overindulging, not only do we get the consequences of overindulging where
we have to deal with the headache or the hangover or the full stomach or the guilt
or whatever, but at the same time, all those pieces are driving us to crave that thing
more.
And that craving is very unsettling.
It's just do something, do something, do something.
So especially when you bring all those pieces together, it feels much worse than simply
noticing, oh, there's some chocolate.
Am I hungry?
Or do I just want a little piece for a little bit of sweetness?
And can I stop there?
You know, there's always a pleasure plateau that we're going to hit.
But if we don't pay attention after the awareness comes in, we're just going to keep doing those
things habitually, driving us to really
a bunch of different negative outcomes. So, yeah, I'm saying awareness helps us see how unrewarding
these other things are. Yet, the awareness itself helps us go through life, not constantly pulling
at this and pushing at that and pulling at this and pushing at that. So, you're not using meditation
or mindfulness or awareness as a, each of your vegetables,
good for you type thing.
You're using it as a way to orient the brain toward what actually feels good right now,
always.
Yes, and I would argue that eating your vegetables actually feels pretty good.
I guess it does.
You know, feeling healthy, feeling energetic, not having a sugar rush and crashing,
not being constipated. You know, all these things that come from eating our vegetables, eating whole foods. For me, it's a no-brainer. I mean, it is so much better.
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You talk about curiosity being the superpower.
Could you substitute or add in a word, this is a big word, not in length, but
in its cultural heft? Could you add in something along the lines of love?
Absolutely. Yes. And I would say, well, my lab's research types of love, and I think you know about this, but if we look
at the commonality between, say, curiosity and love, they share a quality of experience,
which is this opening up, is this expansion, right?
So when I'm feeling love from somebody, or when somebody's kindness to me, you know,
the kindness,
it just feels good. I feel more connected. I feel more open. And when I'm curious about something, I feel more open. I feel more connected with the world. So I think that you have slightly
different flavors, you know, like it's slightly different phenotypes, let's say, but at their core,
like it's slightly different phenotypes, let's say. But at their core, that opening is the same.
And I think I remember Deepa Ma,
who is this famous meditation teacher,
somebody asked her,
what's the difference between loving kindness
and awareness or something like that.
And she said, there's no difference.
I hope I'm not misquoting her on that.
But the idea there is, at the core, it's the same.
And at the core of these practices,
whether it's kindness same. And at the core of these practices, whether
it's kindness practices or love, truly selfless love, not a love you, if you love me back,
type of thing, which is more transactional. That core of opening, I would suggest, is
really a key aspect of mindfulness itself, is helping us see basically how unrewarding
it is to be contracted and whatever leads to that. So divisiveness leads to
contraction. And how great it feels to be open and connected, which both love and curiosity do. So
I don't know if that gets it your question or just provokes more questions, but that's how I see
it right now. Both. I've always been confused when you hear meditation teachers say things like love is attention or attention is love.
But I think now I'm starting to understand it that just this open, interested,
this is also a loaded word, but caring, but not caring necessarily in the sense that you're like Florence Nightingale, but just like you, I like the expression just north of neutral,
you know, you do give a crap on some very basic level. Then and to me, it feels like those two can be, if not interchangeable, at least
closely, closely related. Absolutely. And I would suggest that they can foster each other.
They can support each other because anything that helps move us in the direction of opening
helps us see how rewarding it is and helps us look for other things that will do the same thing.
Yeah, I mean hence for me why a
fully balanced meditation diet includes both and I discover this very late in my meditation career both
Straight up mindfulness, you know watching the feeling to breath and then when you get distracted start again and loving kindness
the feeling to breath and then when you get distracted to start again, and loving kindness, where you're actively boosting your capacity to care. Part of, for me, where I got confused on
this is that love is such a frayed word in our culture and we start hearing string music and
seeing white lights, blah, blah, blah. But actually, if you define it down, it's quite useful to
think about it as just our wired, our innate capacity, hardwired capacity to care.
Absolutely.
And you can direct that towards yourself
in moments of anxiety.
And for me, can even have a cognitive aspect to it of,
okay, I'm noticing that I'm feeling fear,
but you know, this is the organism trying to protect itself.
Can't I just, I think I'm stealing that line
from Jack Cornfield, so I love. And then I can be like, Can't I just, I think I'm stealing that line from Jack Cornfield to I love?
And then I can be like, all right, yeah, I get it.
This is, I don't have to fight against this.
I can relax a little bit and feel it.
Does that make any sense?
It makes a lot of sense.
And actually, I'm thinking of one of my patients
who said when we were training her
and kind of seeing this for herself,
she would use the little mantra when she would get anxious. She would just say,
oh, that's how my brain works. To remind herself exactly what you're talking about, which is,
my brain is trying to protect me. It's this old thing. In a modern day, everything is not a
survival threat, yet my brain proceeds it that way. And so let me give my brain a break. And in the process, it's like putting ourselves
in our brain shoes, so to speak.
We can then have compassion for our brain
because we understand how it works.
And it's like, oh, it's okay, brain.
And that also helps it get out of its little rut, too.
In terms of understanding, though,
and this gets back to the issue of curiosity,
does it not make some sense? Because I think this happens a lot in therapy, at least in
my experience, to try to get a sense of what's happened in your personal history and maybe
even back in your family history, because we know that intergenerational traumas, kind
of an interesting thing, is there no value to that kind of excavation done well?
So certainly done well, it probably doesn't hurt anything.
Yet I love this, there's this quote,
forgiveness is giving up hope of a better past.
Have you heard that before?
No, I like that.
So the idea is if you look at it from a habit perspective, habits are perpeted, so let's
say it's self-judgment for our past or whatever.
Giving up hope of a better past means it's not about why this is happening right now,
it's about what is happening right now, because what drove it to happen right now
is less relevant than that it is happening right now.
And having people devote their energy to the what
as compared to the why, is really helpful
in helping them step out of these things.
Now, I could certainly see those patterns,
where if somebody's in an abusive relationship, for example,
and that it was a result of generational trauma, where their parents were in abusive relationships,
where it is just comfortable, and that's what they know.
Being able to see that pattern is obviously very helpful because it might actually help
them step out of it a little more easily.
And also seeing how that can actually be perpetuated just because it's comfortable, maybe just as
helpful as knowing, okay, well, so I've seen that pattern over and over and over, I get
why it's happening.
We can also get why it's happening from a brain perspective.
And you can think of this as back to our K% ancestors.
The K was our comfort zone, right?
We're in safety.
We don't have to have our alert systems on.
When we go out into the Savannah foraging, we have to go on high alert because we don't know if
there's danger out there, okay? When we go out into some new territory, this could be, let's say,
an abusive relationship. Somebody moves out outside of an abusive relationship. It feels very
uncomfortable because they had the safety of the relationship, even though it was an abusive one. Right? So we can move out into this discomfort and we can freak out and go into a panic
zone where we're like, oh, running back into the safety or finding somebody else as quickly
as possible that might repeat the pattern. Or we can then bring curiosity in and say,
oh, this is my brain. This is how my brain works, I'm moving out of my comfort zone into the growth zone.
This is new and different.
What if I dated different people, for example,
or hung out in different environments
and know that that uncertainty is part
of our brain survival mechanism,
but it doesn't mean we need to run quickly back into the cave
because that could actually be detrimental for us.
So, they are certainly understanding the past can be helpful, but also just understanding
some basic biology of how our brains work, some basic psychology, I would suggest can help us
identify those patterns in the moment that they're happening, and that's what helps change habits.
I don't have hard and fast views on this, but I think, gun to my head, I would have to say,
I'm kind of both and on this.
So let me kind of gently challenge you,
but again, just a personal example,
I was talking to my psychiatrist recently
about the aforementioned move that has provoked
some anxiety, some financial concerns, as a matter of fact.
And I was kind of laying it out to him
and he was challenging me on it.
And you pretty quickly arrived at the fact
that there wasn't much evidence
to support the financial concerns.
We've made responsible decisions financially.
Then he pivoted to, what was the attitude around the house
when you were a kid around money?
And I started remembering, oh yeah, my parents didn't want to run the heat too much.
So we wore parkas in the winter.
And yeah, like my parents drove like really crappy cars, even though they both were very successful
physicians, et cetera, et cetera.
It said they're quite flinty new Englanders.
And he was like, well, he's in a possible that, you know, some of the anxiety you're feeling
right now is this sense of maybe you're breaking your parents' rules
about how to comport yourself as a grown-up
and it's kind of like a little bit, he didn't use this word,
but maybe a little bit infantile or childish.
And it was helpful for me to see my anxiety
in that historical perspective.
So, it felt helpful, so what am I missing if anything?
So, that certainly can be helpful.
And I would say the key is,
when you feel anxiety in those moments,
how do you work with it, right?
So, is it, you know, our thinking brain,
I mentioned this a little bit earlier,
our thinking brain doesn't hold a candle to our feeling body.
And so, if we get really, start to get really worked up,
trying to think ourselves out, you're like,
well, my parents were like this when I was a kid.
You know, that may not actually snuff out the flame of anxiety
in that moment.
But what is probably more guaranteed
is if you bring in your mindfulness practices
in those moments to work with the anxiety.
So I think it's a both-and. Certainly seeing it and seeing, oh, that's how it got set up.
But how it got set up is in the past.
What's happening right now is that it's showing up.
And the best way not to feed anxiety is to make sure you're not fueling it.
Right.
The psychologist, I believe, is a psychologist, Jonathan Height from NYU.
Jonathan, if you're listening to your invited on the show, I was, is a psychologist, Jonathan Height from NYU. Jonathan, if you're listening, you're invited on the show.
I was reading a book he wrote recently called The Righteous Mine, where he describes the way
the mind works as like an elephant with a rider.
Human rider, the elephant is our subconscious, our feelings.
The rider is our thinking capacity, and often the rider is just a PR agent for the elephant,
or a lawyer for the elephant.
We think we're really running the show, but it's this unseen giant animal and that kind
of jibes with what you're talking about here.
Yes, it might be helpful to give the writers some historical perspective on the roots of
his or her or their anxiety, but learning to work with the elephant through seeing it,
through awareness is going to be more powerful over time.
Yeah, absolutely. So you can think of it as that seeing the historical origins would be like,
oh, this is an elephant as compared to a kitty cat or a puppy, you know, oh, and then learning how to
ride it. Yeah. Okay, one technical question and then I want to get to a long running debate we've been having over email.
The technical question is in order to do the Dr. Judson Brewer on winding anxiety steps,
you've talked about mindfulness and awareness, do you think that meditation, formal meditation
practice is required here?
How are you defining formal meditation practice?
Sitting, eyes closed or open,
and following some set of instructions about how to work with the mind for a few minutes at a time.
Okay. Here I'll give historical precedent and research evidence where I would suggest that no, it's not required.
Historically, if you look at Tibetan Buddhist schools,
they talk about actually these short moments many times,
where a lot of the teachers will talk about actually these short moments many times
where a lot of the teachers will talk about a moment of mindfulness will help and a moment of mindfulness. If you think about habits, if you want to set the habit of awareness,
if you do it throughout the day, short moments many times, then that's going to help set that habit
throughout life as well as in context. My research, you know, I love when I set up
hypothesis, and I'm totally wrong, I learned more from that than when the hypothesis is confirmed.
When we did our first studies, this was with our smoking studies long time ago, where we found
five times the quid race at Goldstein or treatment. When we looked at the data to see what was
driving that, it was the informal mindfulness practices as compared to the formal ones.
My hypothesis, because I had trained in formal meditation practice, was that it would be
the formal ones.
It wasn't that they weren't helping.
There was certainly a correlation between formal practice and outcomes, but it wasn't nearly
as strong as the informal.
What I would suggest is, especially for somebody just just starting trying this out short moments,
you know, many times throughout the day, and having that being supported by even shorter,
like I think you do a great job of advocating like just a few minutes.
The formal practices can really help deepen things, but if we just jump right in and we're like,
oh, it's all about levitating off my cushion,
we're going to be frustrated right from the get go. And we might be more likely to give up. So
I've actually taken the approach following those data that we start with the informal stuff.
And actually starting by helping people understand why the heck they're meditating in the first
place, mapping out these mental loops, looking at the push and pull, seeing that in their everyday
context so that when they then go to sit on a cushion or sit on a chair, do walking meditations or whatever formally, they can be aware of those
patterns much more easily. They can be on the lookout for them. And in that respect, it might
augment the utility of doing the formal practices. So obviously, I like both, but I've actually started
with, you know, little informal pieces helping people understand the mind first.
And then adding in the formal practices after that.
You may have said this and if I missed it, I apologize, but what do you mean by the little
informal practices of short moments many times?
So going back to the research examples that I said earlier about where we were
building mindfulness practices into these apps where we have people pay attention as they eat food, right? We have people pay attention as they
smoke a cigarette. So imagine if somebody is smoking a pack a day, they have 20 times a
day where they can practice being really mindful with a specific activity. So those are the
short moments or anytime somebody is walking down the hall and they're feeling anxiety,
they can take a moment to simply note what that anxiety feels like in their body.
Or they can take a moment to take a mindful breath.
Those are the short moments.
It's not like, oh, I'm driving down the highway, I'm feeling anxious.
I need to pull over and pull up the cushion out of my trunk and meditate on the side of
the highway.
It's about in that moment, when they're driving down the highway and they're feeling anxious
and they notice this worry thought come up to note that
Oh, there's this worry thought so that they can be less
Identified with those thoughts in those moments. That's what I'm talking about each of those moments is a moment of mindfulness that will help support the next one
You talk about the perverse thrill of being wrong. I love the perverse thrill of having something completely obvious
I love the perverse thrill of having something completely obvious reassert its prominence in my mind as something that's worthwhile.
So like I do find that taking deep breaths, which of course like every parent tells their
kid to do this mid-temper tantrum, is phenomenally helpful when I'm feeling worried and I know
there's a lot of science there.
Okay, so let's get to the battle royale here.
I've been inquiring with you for quite a while.
And this goes back to the episode we did a year ago on this podcast when the pandemic was really
just first kicking in and we wanted to talk about how people can work with anxiety. And we talked
on that episode about something called the Yerks Dodson Law. And you raised some questions about
the legality of that law. and also this was privately with me.
And then you also, and then I kept pushing back on whether is the, basically the Yerks Duds and,
you know what, I'm gonna shut up. You described this alleged law and why what your problems with it are.
And this goes back, you know, I, when I'm working with, you know, whether teaching a seminar or
giving a talk or whatever,
people invariably come up to me afterwards and say,
but isn't a little bit of anxiety good for my performance?
And I'm thinking for me, it's not,
where are you getting this?
And then they, you know, somebody actually wrote me
a very, very long email after a weekend seminar,
you know, explaining all the ways that it was helpful.
And I think, I don't know if it was that person
or somewhere reference this New York's thoughts in law. And so I went and looked it know if it was that person or somewhere reference this Yerks thought in law.
And so I went and looked it up.
And it turns out, and there's this great review article
on this that I cite in my book.
Back in 1908, there were these two researchers,
aptly named Yerks and Dodson.
And they were studying Japanese dancing mice, okay?
I don't know what prompted them to do this study,
but they started shocking these
mice, you know, mild moderate and severe shock.
And they were testing to see how much each of these shocks would affect their ability to
navigate a maze or something, you know, whatever they were doing to test the cognitive
performance of these Japanese dancing mice.
And they found that the ma, you know, it's like Goldilocks, you know, the moderate
shock was enough to get them off their butts and run down the maze, but the too little, they're like,
and too much was like, this is my personification of a Japanese dancing mouse getting shocked.
So that paper wins largely ignored for half a century. So it was only cited, I think, four or
five times in 50 years. So in the 1950s,
there was a guy, Hanselje, a relatively well-known psychologist who postulated without evidence
that maybe this Japanese dancing mouse thing, performance thing, could be applied to anxiety as well.
And one of his former graduate students ran with it. So he did a study with rats, held their heads underwater,
and found that if he held the rats head underwater,
just the right amount of time they did better,
but if he held them underwater too long,
they decreased their performance.
And he interchangeably used the words anxiety
and arousal and all this stuff.
So it makes complete sense that we need to be awake
and somewhat have some level
of arousal to do things, right? If we're a comatose, we can't check over to do list. But what
these guys were suggesting was that there's this sweet spot in terms of where a little bit
of anxiety gets us off our butt to do things, but too much freaks us out and we're paralyzed.
So these folks started talking about the Yorks Dod Dodson experiment as the Yerks Dodson law.
Because it was, you know, that's a psychological law. It must be true.
If you look at this in this review paper that I found only 4% of studies
supported the evidence for this inverted u-shaped curve.
Everybody loves the symmetry of an inverted u-shaped curve, right?
A little bit, not so much, you know, just the right amount,
gold elocks, everybody wins,
and too much the beds too hard,
or the poor just too cold, or too hot.
So 4% of studies supported this,
46% or 10 times that many
supported it complete inverse relationship.
The more anxiety there is,
the worse people do in performance.
And if you look at the York Stoughts and Law,
it went from being cited fewer than 10 times by 1990 to 100 times in like the year 2000 to over a thousand times in the
year 2010. So there's this exponential rise in people looking at this heuristic probably
with the help of the internet saying, oh yeah, that makes sense. I'm going to cite this
thing and not actually look at the raw data. So, goes from Japanese dancing mice to drowning rats
to humans improving their performance because they're anxious. And what my PhD mentor, Lumuglia,
he's great, he would say, is it true, true and unrelated? Could you be anxious and could you perform
well? But it doesn't mean that there's a causal connection, that anxiety is causing better performance.
And when I look at performance, when I'm anxious, I perform worse.
That's an end of one.
All these studies are backing that up.
That there really isn't any evidence
for there being that sweet spot of anxiety
that improves performance.
So that's the Yerks Dodson, I would say more myth than law.
I think that the statutes need to be updated
or how the legal speak is for that.
So let me just keep pushing on this because the way I heard this described and the way I talk about it to folks is, and I'm very open to revising this. So that's the spirit in which I'm going to
say what I'm about to say. The way it was presented to me and the way I presented to others is
we're in the middle of a pandemic. Nothing is wrong with you if that's scary.
So yes, a certain amount of like, oh yeah, this is a big scary pandemic.
I need to make sure I have enough masks.
I need to make sure that I'm getting tested on the regular.
I don't want to go see my elderly parents if I haven't taken precautions, et cetera, et
cetera.
A certain amount of that makes sense.
It's when you're paralyzed that you're on the wrong side of the inverted U-shape.
So maybe what I'm describing is like a definition of anxiety or stress, but help me understand where the confusion here is.
Yes. So what I would, what the data are suggesting is that no amount of anxiety is actually helpful, right?
So this goes back to the thinking and planning part of our brain.
To think and plan our prefrontal cortex needs to be working optimally,
and there's no evidence to suggest that anxiety actually helps our prefrontal cortex perform.
So let's use the opposite example when we perform our best.
So I think the example that I can think of the best personifies this or
exemplifies this is flow. I've looked into flow a little bit and wrote about it in my last
book. But the idea behind flow is when somebody is at peak levels of performance. This is often
described in music performance or sports where somebody is doing such an amazing job that not only are they just crushing it,
but they're actually sucking the crowd in with them
because everybody is feeling that energy.
So I'm gonna use that as an example of optimal performance.
And when you look at flow,
I check some high coin this term,
the psychologist wrote a book flow in the 1970s,
he talked about it being effortless,
selfless, you know, there's nothing in there about anxiety. There's nothing in there about
any of that. It's about actually being completely free of all of these worries
so that we are just merging action and outcome.
Right, and I don't dispute any of that, except I think for many of us, it's a bit utopian.
So I think there are times, yes, why I play the drums, and there are times when I'm playing
the drums and I enter into flow, or there are times in meditation when I enter into flow,
or there are times even when writing.
But it's not just like perennially available to me.
And so therefore, a certain amount of like deadlines for writing. Deadlines
are stressful to me, but they actually can focus the mind and get me a little bit up on the
useful part of the Yerksdads and Law, which is not obviously a law.
So there, I would say, do the parallel experiment. And I would say that I agree with you. It's,
you know, if we think of flow as binary, I'm either not in flow or I'm in flow,
then that's going to be a problem.
But if we think of it as a continuum,
and I think of that contracted quality,
or the closed down quality of experience
that we talked about before, if that's anti-flow,
that's moving in the opposite direction,
but anything that helps us open up and open up and open up
helps us move along the flow continuum.
Okay, so here, it's not that we have to try to get into flow up and open up and open up helps us move along the flow continuum. Okay.
So here, it's not that we have to try to get into flow because trying is going to get in
the way.
This is the Yoda quote to Luke, you know, Luke says I'm trying and Yoda says, do or do
not.
There is no try, right?
This is about just doing, getting out of our own way and just doing these things.
So anything that can help us see where we're getting in our own way and anything that can
help us kind of open up a bit helps us move in the direction, whereas you can think of flow as the
extreme end of that spectrum. So here with a deadline, if we can clone Dan Harris and do the parallel
experiment and say, okay, at the beginning of the week, anxious Dan is going to compete with
and say, okay, at the beginning of the week, anxious Dan is gonna compete with calm Dan.
Dan who is just a little more open,
let's just do a little nudge toward open versus closed, right?
Is the open Dan gonna still meet that deadline?
Is he gonna meet that in a way that doesn't feel like,
oh, it's another deadline, but like, oh, here's a deadline,
right?
So it could be the, oh, versus, oh, if
we meet that with curiosity, does the curiosity help us motivate to meet that deadline in a way
that even helps us perform better than if it's the, oh, you know, so though, oh, versus
oh, I sometimes worry that if I write in a, and we haven't invoked this term thus far, but
I'll put it into the conversation, if I write and what might be described as a sort of
self-compassionate way where I'm listening to my body, not pushing myself too hard, I'm
very interested in that, and I do find that I do better when I do that.
Part of my brain is telling me, yeah, actually you do need like hair on fire deadlines to actually get your stuff done.
But that's just a habit.
Yeah, it could just be habit, right?
Where it's, that's what you've done in the past. That's what helped you associated with getting it done.
Yet you can now do the parallel experiment and just feel into what it feels like to really be,
you know, riding, feel into what it feels like to really be, you know, riding, feel into
what it feels like to be thinking about these things, feel into all the rewarding aspects
of your experience versus the very, the kind of the stick, you know, it's the carrot versus
the stick mentality.
So, but let's just get back to the pandemic for a second.
And I want to make sure I'm not confusing fear, which you've said has some redeeming
qualities and anxiety.
Some fear in the face of the headlines we're seeing on the news seems to make sense
and to be evolutionarily adaptive, but that is different from anxiety, which is uncontrolled
worry in the face of that fear.
Do I have that right?
Absolutely.
So, think of it as we have a huge amount of uncertainty right now. If you think of it
from a health perspective, unprecedented in our lifetimes. I can't think of a time globally
where the world's population has been less certain about its health, right? Especially at the
beginning, but even now, like with the new variants and the vaccines. And there are so many elements of uncertainty there.
The uncertainty is telling us, hey, pay attention.
This is important for your survival.
But what we do with that uncertainty is critical for the survival piece, where if we're worrying
about when I'm going to get a vaccine or as my vaccine going to work for this variant
or blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, we're actually given ourselves that slow burn of anxiety
of killing us chronically versus acknowledging the uncertainty,
seeing that we don't know all the answers,
maybe looking at some trusted sources for information,
and then importantly, letting go when we don't have the answer,
like being okay with being uncertain, right?
Can we be comfortable with the discomfort?
So when we're in that action mode though,
researching, thinking, planning, hopefully not infused with anxiety,
what would you call that? Would you call that a rousal?
Given that fear may be present, is it appropriate for there to be some level of stress?
I guess I don't still want us to get hung up on not having the right words.
Yes.
So if you look at, I think time scales can be helpful here.
So if you look at the time scale of fear, it tends to be pretty short.
You know, peaks and then it goes away.
We can't just be like super afraid, super afraid, super afraid, super afraid, the whole
day.
Our physiology is not set up that way. And actually, if you look at it,
we're going to have very, very fast reactions of things.
So let's say I step out into the street.
I'm looking at my phone, my weapon of mass distraction,
and I forget to look both ways before crossing the street.
So I step out into the street.
I look up, I see this bus barreling down at me.
Before I can think, before I can even be afraid,
I'm jumping back on the sidewalk. I don before I can even be afraid, I'm jumping back
on the sidewalk. I don't have time to be afraid. I need to survive. So there's that level,
which happens like a millisecond level, you know, reflexively. Then we have this fear response,
this is, wow, you should probably put your phone away when you're crossing the street. So there's
where the learning comes in, right? That can happen pretty
quickly. But what we do with that piece is where the anxiety comes in, where, you know,
it's like, oh, I can't believe that. Or do I have it? I should go see my psychiatrist,
because I might have a death wish or, you know, whatever. That piece is the chronic piece that
is completely optional, where we can be like, oh, yeah, I should put my phone away. We learn from it. We let go of that. We move on.
If you look at animals, I think it's dogs will shake when they've had something stressful to literally shake it off and then they move on.
I think zebras or wild animals like that will jump and kick after they've been chased by the lion so that they don't get chronic stress.
So I think that's the difference here. And you can tell generally in a straightforward way
based on time scale.
So I've been giving this speech for the last seven years
since I wrote 10% Happier, where I talk about how my dad told me
that the price of security is insecurity.
And that I use that as my little mantra
and my pre-mindfulness days, workaholic days,
and that it had a negative outcome, many negative outcomes, one of which was, you know, getting
depressed, self-medicating with recreational drugs and then having a panic attack.
I then come back to the price of security, is insecurity at the end of the speech and
say, you know, I still kind of believe that.
I still believe that if you're going to do anything great in your personal, professional, volunteer life, whatever,
certain amount of thinking, and plotting, and planning
does make sense.
It's just that we tend to carry it too far.
And it's useful.
Mindfulness is like a wheat thresher
that can separate wheat from chaff and help you see.
Oh yeah, when am I in useless rumination as opposed
to sort of what I jokingly call
constructive anguish.
Do I need to revise that, you think?
No, I think that fits pretty well.
I write in my book about moving out of our comfort zone into panic zone versus growth
zone.
I would say that insecurity that your dad was talking about, the price of securities insecurity,
that is moving out of our comfort zone into some new territory, into the growth zone. And it's moving from the oh no, which can be paralyzing
to the oh, this is different, which helps us. We're a new territory. That's an indicator that we
can grow. And that's where breakthroughs happen. It's not in their comfort zones. It's in the growth
zone. So it's not like doing great things is going to mean like willing yourself into a constant state
of flow. You are going to be uncomfortable. But how do you want to be with that discomfort? Do
you want to be locked down around it? An anxious, uncontrolled worrying, or do you want to be open
and curious around whatever challenges you're facing right now, and monitoring when you laps over into uncontrolled worry. Yeah, can we be comfortable with the discomfort, basically,
totally agree? Before I let you go, can you just remind us of the book, remind us of the apps that
are out there, and where we can go, is there one stop shopping if we want all things, Judbury?
So the book is called Unwinding Anxiety.
The app, so we have an Unwinding Anxiety app
that I write about a lot of the research
that we've done in the book.
And I'll just actually bookmark this with,
you know, I think I mentioned medications
that number needed to treat 5.15.
We've done several clinical studies
with this Unwinding Anxiety app now,
and the number needed to treat for that is 1.6.
The efficacy there,
you know, if I'm playing that lottery, I'd want a lower number. And then we have a eating app
called Eat Right Now, one for smoking, called Craving Equate. But folks can find all things,
Judbruer on the totally self-referential, drjud.com website, drjud.com, and then they can find the book,
you know, any where books are sold, but there's
also a link to the booksellers on my website.
Brilliant.
Excellent job, Judd and really appreciate it.
Thank you.
Oh, thank you.
Big thanks to Judd.
Always great to connect with my friend.
Thanks as well to the folks who work so hard on this show.
This show is made by Samuel Johns, DJ Cashmere, Maria Wartell, and Jen Plant
with audio engineering by Ultraviolet Audio.
As always, a hardy salute to my ABC News comrades, Ryan Kessler and Josh Cohan at ABC.
We'll see you all on Friday for a bonus.
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