Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 333: The Self-Interested Case for Examining Your Biases | John Biewen
Episode Date: March 24, 2021Too often, the process of looking at your biases can be presented like eating your vegetables. But one of the most fascinating and rewarding things I have attempted to do in recent years is t...o take a good, hard look at my own prejudices and conditioning, especially as a white man. I still screw up all the time. However, one thing that I think is often underplayed is that doing this work can be deeply enjoyable–and can also pay profound dividends. One of my most important role models here has been John Biewen, host of a podcast called Scene on Radio. The show has had four seasons, but the seasons that have most impacted me are Seasons 2 and 3. Season 2 is called “Seeing White,” in which he explores white people and whiteness. Season 3 is called “Men,” in which he looks at sexism. I was not surprised to learn that John is a meditator, a practice which, he explains, has helped him as he’s done his work. Also: We're offering 40% off the price of an annual subscription to our companion meditation app–also called Ten Percent Happier–for our podcast listeners. We don’t do discounts of this size all the time, and of course nothing is permanent—so get this deal before it ends on April 1st by going to https://www.tenpercent.com/march. And here’s a link to this weekend's Love & Resilience Summit, where I'll be presenting: https://promo.lionsroar.com/contemplative-care-summit-register/ Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/john-biewen-333 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
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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.
Too often, I fear the process of looking at your biases can be presented as if it's
like eating your vegetables.
In fact, in my experience, one of the most fascinating
and rewarding things I've ever attempted to do
is to take a good hard look at my own prejudices
and conditioning, especially as a white man.
I don't want to pretend this kind of exploration is easy
or that I'm especially evolved,
I still screw up all the time.
However, as I said, one thing that I think is often
really underplayed is that doing this
work can be deeply enjoyable and interesting and also can pay off in some profound ways.
One of my most important role models here has been a guy named John Beewen, who is the
host of a podcast called Scene on Radio.
If you check it out, the show has had four seasons, but the seasons that have had the most impact on me
are seasons two and three.
Season two was called Seeing White,
in which John explores white people and whiteness.
Season three is called Men, in which he looks at sexism.
Big hat tip here to my friend, Seven A. Solace,
the meditation teacher and frequent guest on the show,
who turned me on to John B. Wins work. As I said, it's had a big impact on me. I was not surprised to learn that
John is a meditator himself and that this practice has helped him as he's done this often humbling
work. One quick audio note before we dive in, you may hear a little bit of background noise on his
end occasionally. It's just some yard work shouldn't be too distracting.
And I do want to do one little item of business before we get into it with John B. When you can join me this weekend at Love and Resilience, the Contemplative Care Summit.
It's a free five day event from March 25th to 29th. It's being co-presented by
Lions Roar magazine and the New York Zen Center for Contemplative Care. The latter,
the Zen Center is run by a pair of really good friends of mine, Cotian Paley Ellison and Robert
Chodokamble. There are Zen monks who taught my wife and I to be hospice volunteers and then we
became really good friends with there. So go check it out. In fact, the little segment I do for
the summit features both me and Bianca talking about relationship stuff.
So go check it out.
It's free.
And you can sign up by visiting lionsrower.com slash care.
OK, here we go now with John Beewyn.
John Beewyn, thanks for coming on the show.
Appreciate it.
Good to be with you, Dan.
Thanks for having me.
So I've listened to two of the big series you've done, seeing White and also men.
They were hugely influential for me,
and I think incredibly well done.
So I really, it's a pleasure to talk to you.
Thank you.
That means a lot to hear that from you.
So let's start with Seeing White.
It seems like to me that the,
I really related to the conceit as you were setting it up,
that you know, both of us are journalists,
and you were describing your time as a journalist covering
the issue of race.
You always considered it to be turning the lens on
or handing the mic to people of color,
never thinking that, well, you two have a race.
And so the whole idea, if I understand it correctly,
and hopefully you will correct me here,
was to take a look at white people
Do I have that right? Yeah, as I say in the first episode of that series as journalists
I think we think white journalists and that's okay. That's most journalists, right?
As white people we think that we're covering race when we're reporting on folks of color
And that's kind of the conceit usually is that reporting about race is pointing your microphone
in your camera and your gaze at communities of color.
When in fact, race and racism were invented by people who look like you and me.
And so why are we not pointing our cameras and our microphones and our gaze at white people when we're reporting on racism?
And let's be clear, we're not just, you know, excuse the word racism and white supremacy, which is what we're talking about.
So yeah, that is the kind of the
fundamental move that I tried to make in framing that whole series. Let's just say we're going to look at race through the frame of this idea, even the idea,
where did the idea come from, that there are some people that we're going to define
as being white.
And of course, that goes hand in hand with the idea that there are black people.
And then the other kinds of racial groups kind of got filled in later by some odd notions of racial science.
But we're getting ahead of ourselves, perhaps.
Not in a bad way.
Yeah.
Yeah, just to say, I really love that idea, the foundational idea of the series.
And so it leaves me right to what you ended with there. It seems like a foundational thing to know when talking about race that it is not biologically
true.
It's something that was constructed by people who we would now call white.
That's right.
So can you tell us what you learned on that front?
Yes.
And I think that probably for a lot of people that just sounds odd to hear
you say that what do you mean? It's not biological. What do you mean? I mean, I'm not imagining that
there are people with lighter skin and people with darker skin or people who are descended from
African and European. That's what we mean by white and black right? What are you trying to tell me? That's not a real thing. So the point is though, that first of all, through most of human history,
those classifications didn't exist. Yes, there were people, people divided themselves in all kinds
of ways much more prominently for a long time by religion or by what we might now think of as a kind of a
nationality or an ethnicity or language groups and all kinds of ways that people divided themselves.
But this idea that there were three or four or five or six, you know, there's never been any
agreement actually on how many races there are. What I learned in high school in my
social studies textbook was three races of humanity, Mongoloid, Caucasoid and Negroid.
And so there have been these classifications that there are these large groups that coincide loosely
with the continental regions of the world and that there's some meaning to these particular distinctions
of three or four or five races. That is a recent invention five or so hundred years ago,
four or five, six hundred years, depending on where you want to kind of mark the beginning
of it, but it was really an idea that was developed over several hundred years, really
up until the early 20th century that some of these ideas were still evolving
and being formed and being created.
And so we actually trace that history, really tell that story over several episodes of
the Seeing White series.
So that's a really important thing to know, as I said before, sort of a foundational fact
as you venture into this. Talk about some of the other big learnings
for you as you went on this quest. Yeah, I mean, really another huge point that we make is that
that move, that invention, to say, first of all, that we're going to classify and really the first
seemingly and this is according to the historian Ibra Macks-Kendi who many people I think
will have heard of. He's been really prominent in the last few years and he's all over news media
and so on. Really the first move was that Europeans invented the idea of black people.
move was that Europeans invented the idea of black people. When and why? Well, 1400s, 1500s, and it was the time that the Atlantic slave trade was really being pioneered. And basically,
an economic decision had been made that we are going to go to Sub-Saharan Africa, to kidnap people and bring them into slavery to raise our sugar cane
and our tobacco and so on.
And that was, it was at that time that it suddenly became advantageous in order to justify
that trade to say, well, all of the people of Africa, we're going to sort of lump them together,
and we're going to call them a distinct group that is inferior.
They're kind of beastly, was a word that was used.
They are less than us, and that justifies, first of all, a particularly brutal kind of
chattel slavery that was not common.
You know, there were people often say that there was
almost all cultures in ancient history enslaved people,
but it wasn't until, really, until the West got into this stuff
that it was this business of generation after generation
you would be born into slavery, you would die in slavery,
your children would be born into slavery, you would die in slavery. Your children would be born in slavery and really treating people as property in a
very fundamental way. That was actually not. There wasn't that much slavery that was like
that, but it was at the same time that they were inventing that. And I don't think it's
coincidental that some folks decided, okay, we're going to classify humanity into these
large groups. And we're going to do that on the basis of a hierarchy.
And say that white people are at the top of that hierarchy. Black people are at the bottom.
And then over time, it was not long after that that you were also having the scientific revolution.
And you started having people classifying, you know, Linnaeus and people like that who were classifying the natural world, that then you started getting
this idea which was invented by slave traders, getting it codified into notions of science
that there are three or four or five races of humanity.
And white people are the superior one.
Black people are the most inferior and so on.
So this point that it was not just a kind of
innocent observation that led to the invention of race,
it was, you know, as I say, you need to follow the money
to understand why the invention was made
in the first place, was created, was invented.
And that's, to me, those two facts to understand
that race is a human invention, number one, and number two, it was a human invention motivated
by the wish to justify the brutal economic exploitation of another group of human beings.
I believe for me, it's altered my understanding of the way that race works today and ever
since.
Yeah, if I understood the points that you and the experts on the show were making correctly,
you can think of racism on at least two different levels.
There's the level, I think, that most of us think about racism on, which is whatever attitudes,
biases, eye may harbor,
sort of an interpersonal racism maybe. And then there's the races of us baked into the structures of
our society. If I hear you correctly, you seem to be coming down on the structure part
as the more important thing to look at. Absolutely. And that's a theme that we touch on throughout the series.
I'm going to mention the name of my collaborator on that series,
Chandra I Kumanyika, who's a media studies professor at Rutgers and a podcaster and an artist
and somebody who is steeped in understanding race, but also other forms of oppression and
injustice and so on.
But that's a theme that we hit on in particular that he emphasizes again and again. We tend to think, as you say, we tend to think of racism as being an issue of individual attitudes,
bigotry, prejudice, however, whatever word you want to use.
But this is another point that Ibra Maks-Kendi, the historian, makes, we get the cause and effect
backwards. I think what I grew up learning and I think what most of us assume and what we think
is the case is to the extent that you have tangible effects of racism, discrimination, housing
segregation, employment discrimination, different quality of schools that children
go to based on their race to a large extent, that those things are the result of individual
prejudice.
And what Dr. Kendi would argue is actually the reverse is true.
We started with policies and practices that advantaged white people and disadvantaged black people, and then by extension some other
people of color, and racist attitudes actually grew out of that.
Well, first of all, as I said, these stories, these fictions were promulgated actually to justify
these policies and practices. But then also, you're in slaving a group of people
and not allowing them to learn to read, for example, and keeping them in a state of, as a
18th century white guy put it, a guy named John Womah, you know, and keeping them in this kind of
undignified state as enslaved people, it's easier to tell yourself the story that they're
inferior because they're not exactly being given the opportunity to fully develop as human
beings, right, or to thrive, but that the systemic structures, and this is why, you know, just
in the last couple of years, I think a lot more of us in this country keep hearing this
idea about systemic racism, systemic racism, and I think there's a lot of us in this country, keep hearing this idea about systemic racism, systemic racism. And I think
a lot of us still need to kind of get our minds around what that means.
But I think when you retrace the history and you look at things like, well, in 1790
after the US Constitution was signed and the first Congress went to work. The first two laws they
passed were one that said the Census Act under Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, which
said we're going to count white people and other free people and slaves. Those are the
categories of people we're going to count. The second law they passed was the Naturalization Act, which said you can come and become a naturalized
citizen of the United States of America if you are a white person, a free white person.
So that's not just attitudes at work.
Those are laws, and there were all kinds of laws that in colonial America and in the United
States that created, for example, this idea about the one drop rule. And these were laws that were
grounded in economics. It was designed to keep more people sort of on the side of the line that
would be considered black so that they could be exploited and treated as less than so that people on the white side of the line, especially those in the ownership class who own those folks,
could make more money, really. So that there are just all these ways we just keep returning to
this point that laws, science, systems, economic, political, and social systems that actually treat people differently in
very tangible ways. That's what we mean by systemic racism. And the attitudes and prejudices
are really secondary to that. They matter and they're real. And they help to justify
and reinforce those systems and allow us to think that those systems are okay, but they're not the fundamental
cause of all of it.
After doing all this work, what impact did it have on you?
Did you notice your attitudes changing and can attitudes change?
I think attitudes can change.
Yes, I mean, I guess, you know, one of the things it's hard to describe or
to quantify, I suppose, one of the things that I noticed was that for most of my life,
and you know, I'm in my late 50s, I had thought of myself as I was raised by parents who
were kind of progressive racism is bad. I always thought I was not a racist and was raised
to not be a racist.
I was a journalist for many years like you
and was interested in race and racism and injustice
and thought that I was one of the good guys,
one of the good white people who kind of understood
racism, that it was a real thing and that it was a problem.
And I was one of the innocent ones, you could say.
I was not part of the problem.
And for a long time, I thought that was enough,
that there's a subset, and this actually kind of, I think,
dovetails with the perception that racism is about prejudices
and attitudes, and that the racists, the one who are causing
the problem of racism in the country, they're the people with prejudice and bigotry, and they're a kind of subset,
right? And we can sort of identify them. They may be wear hoods and bring
swastikas to the protest, and, right, and they discriminate against people of color. But we're not them. So we can kind
of go about our lives. And we're not contributing to the problem. So we, and we're actually rooting
for people of color to win their struggle to stop racism that's being done by those people
over there, right? Now I see that that's not an adequate. That's
very problematic because it actually makes us complicit. If because if you understand
that we're dealing with systems that all of us are part of, and that I'm benefiting as
a white person from the schools I got to go to from the way that I'm looked at by an employer,
etc, etc, etc. By cops, certainly, right? By the way, I'm looked at by an employer, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, by cops, certainly,
right?
By the way, I'm seen by a police officer when I'm pulled over.
If I am not actually helping to put my shoulder to the wheel to dismantle those systems and
change them, then I'm complicit.
And that's what somebody like Ibrahim Kendi means when he says you're either anti-racist or you're
effectively racist.
Because if you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem is people used
to say, you know, decades ago.
So it sounds like there's two levels of work that you're proposing here.
And I'd be interested in hearing about both of them.
One is the work of examining your own attitudes
and seeing if you can work with them.
The other is, as you said, putting your shoulders
to the wheel in the effort to dismantling
systematic structural racism.
Can you talk about each of these levels
and how you think about doing the work?
When we saw this in 2020 after George Floyd's death and the murders of Amad Arbery and Breonna
Taylor that there was another kind of surge of interest and a whole bunch of white people
who really hadn't thought too much maybe about the depths of racism in the country, kind of
having this awakening, right? And all of the books on the New
York Times bestseller list for a while were books about racism and white supremacy. And I think that's
absolutely a good thing for people to do when you have that moment of feeling like, okay, I need to learn more.
That's a good thing. And you should go do that, right?
Listen to our podcast, go read those books, right?
The ones that were on the bestseller list.
And so there's a little bit of a paradox in a way
because there's a tendency based on what I said a few minutes ago
about the primary importance of systemic racism.
You'd say, well, the solution then is not individual attitudes.
The solution is to change systems.
But at the same time, I think we need a critical mass of people who are able to see that,
the change that needs to be made.
And particularly, there are people with the certain kinds of power and influence that
then we can change those systems, right?
So that it is also true that we need more people learning.
We need more people reading the books
and watching the right documentary films
and listening to the right podcast
so that they can have these aha moments of,
oh, actually I'm understanding better how this all works
and that helps me to understand how I might be able
to get involved and what it would mean for us to change these institutions
and systems so that we have a more just society.
And by getting involved,
do you talking about voting a certain way
or you're talking about hitting the streets?
What does it look like in your mind?
Yeah, I think it looks different for different people.
It certainly means I would argue voting in a certain way.
So for example, and we talk about this
in the last episode of seeing white,
we talk about reparations.
I think we should be having that conversation.
I think we should really be looking at a profound moral debt
and actually a profound economic debt
that is owed to the descendants of enslaved black people. So I personally would
argue for voting for people who want to have that conversation and want to move ahead with
something like that. But that can take other forms too, right? That recognition of how we got to
the wealth gap that we have, right? A lot of your listeners will know what I mean by that,
but the fact that the average white household in America has roughly 10 times the assets
of the average black household. And that is explained by this 400 years of history, right?
Reparations is one way to address that, but there are other ways. You know, should we consider things like a federal job guarantee?
Could that inform the way we look at something like whether to cancel
a whole bunch of student debt? It actually is relevant to that conversation, I think.
So there are those kinds of policy things, yes, that could affect the way that we might vote.
But it's everything from that to, are
there people in my community working on changing the institutions in my community to make
that whether it's the schools or a criminal justice system or any number of other things
to make them less systemically racist in their, their some way I can contribute to that work, right? It's also things like at my workplace.
Am I an accomplice to my colleagues of color who are talking about discomfort and maybe the outright
racism that exists in my workplace or am I the white person who kind of sits at the back of the
room during the diversity and equity meeting and resents being there.
These are all, you know, and we could go on, I suppose, but those are some, there isn't
one or two things that I say to white people, go do this.
I think we each have to kind of find our place and what we feel like we can do, but I also
do recommend you should feel okay about taking some time to learn as opposed to just saying,
oh today I understand that racism is a problem and I'm going to run out and barrel out and
join the Black Lives Matter movement and or do the first thing that I can think to do because
you may actually do some harm if you don't do a little education first.
I know you're you're into meditation.
To what extent was and is your meditation practice helpful in working on your own attitudes?
It's hard to say because I started daily or almost daily meditation practice about 11 or 12 years ago.
It's hard to say for sure that I wouldn't have been
able to do the kind of journalism that I'm doing if I hadn't done that, but I will say
that it seems like there's a certain kind of parallel between meditation practice and
this kind of journalism or documentary work in the sense that Buddhist teachers will
talk about, there's a lot of talk about letting go, there's a lot of talk about willing to
sit with discomfort, with hearing something, we're also with kind of being able to sit
and examine our narratives about ourselves and our aspects of our identity that we may
be really tied closely to, that we haven't really examined, right?
So there's all of that feels very parallel to me with the idea, for example, of being willing to say,
all right, what does being white mean to me?
What piece of my identity and what are the ways I react in a kind of reflexive and negative
way if somebody says whiteness is a problem in the world, right?
Tendurai, my collaborator on the Seeing White series.
We open one episode actually with him saying, you know, why is it when I even just refer
to a person being white like the white person ate his cereal,
just, you know, in a completely banal way that some people just seem to kind of flinch
some white people.
And I think it's that we're not used to having even the fact that we belong to a racial
group having that alluded to.
And we get to, we get to go through life for the most part, seeing ourselves and being seen, but at least by other white people as individuals.
And being part of a racial group that may carry stereotypes with it, and that sort of thing, that's something that people, non-white people, have to live with, but we don't.
And so that when there was a story, actually Stephen Colbert talked about this at one point, where I think
it was a country singer, I forget who it was, but he was in a fast food place. And the young
black worker who was just giving him his food when it came out said, oh, this, the white guy there,
this, that's his. And this country singer got very upset and made accusations of racism. How dare you allude to the fact that I'm white.
So what's that, that reflexive response?
That's an example, right, of the kind of thing.
What's at work there, and rather than lashing out and say, how dare you call me white to just
say, oh, for some call me white, I guess, you know, I would certainly tell that this food
is for
that black guy there, right?
If there are multiple people.
And to just learn to sit with it and not react and to be vulnerable, be willing to hear
things that are uncomfortable, etc., etc.
You've now taken a deep dive into at least two of the most sensitive aspects of modern
life.
And I'm just curious, have there been moments for you
where you've been really uncomfortable,
maybe even defensive or angry?
And in those moments, did you find that having a practice
of looking at your own mind systematically
and being able to watch thoughts come and go?
And do you find that that practice was useful
when the rubber hit the road?
Yes and yes.
So I am too much on Twitter and that's a place where, for example, and I follow a whole bunch of black people and other people of color and I follow a whole bunch
of feminist women and that's an area where you will see, for example, people will make these kind of provocative or sweeping statements about why people are blah, blah, blah, or man-ars, you know, or
even like, why are men?
That's an actual tweet that you'll see.
Why are men question mark?
Right?
Where they're just...
The question is, it's a kind of like, man-ar- a mess and why do we have to deal with them?
So I can certainly in those moments, in fact, that's its own hashtag to not all men,
which is the kind of standard response to that, which is what I am certainly capable of
feeling. Like, don't lump me in with all those bad guys or the case of racist white people.
like it's don't lump me in with all those, you know, those bad guys or the case of racist white people.
And I have learned, first of all,
what you learn in black Twitter, for example,
is or in feminist Twitter, don't respond that way.
Or as people say, it's not about you, personally,
that tweet.
If you feel like it's not about you,
then it's not about you, take a breath and move on, right?
So that yes, absolutely, There's a conversation in seeing white
where Chandra Aykumanyika asks me,
he says, how important it is to you to be white?
You know, I can't remember that's not the exact phrasing,
but something like that.
And actually, we then, we took another whole episode
to kind of address that question.
And to, but yes, I certainly have experienced took another whole episode to kind of address that question.
And to, but yes, I certainly have experienced discomfort.
And it's absolutely been helpful to me again and again and again.
In fact, every day, many, many times, it's helpful to me to be
both in this work and just in, in life, to be able to just say,
oh, that didn't hit me right,
or I'm reacting to that thing.
Let's just take a moment.
I see myself reacting to it,
but I don't need to do anything about it.
I can just take a breath and let that go.
Absolutely all the time.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, it's absolutely priceless that capacity and it's certainly not the case that I
that it does it for me all the time or that I'm successful. Quote unquote at that all the time,
but it's absolutely helpful. Much more of my conversation with John Beewen right after this.
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You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app. One of the things that I like the least about myself is how defensive I can get.
And I've been meditating for a while as long as you have written books about it and still
get caught up, just wrapped around the axle on this stuff when it comes up.
Just some deep desire I have to be as you use this phrase, be one of the good guys.
And I'm desperately trying to tell myself a story that I am. And then when it shows up that I'm not,
it's like I can't handle it. One of the things that really helps kind of deflate my defensiveness
is to see that my thoughts are just part of nature that we
evolved for bias.
We evolved to quickly categorize things and people.
And that can be helpful as cognitive shortcuts to navigate the worlds, or not having to figure
everything out afresh all the time.
But it can also be deeply damaging to yourself and to others, and
dehumanizing if you're just telling yourself a really quick and inaccurate story about
people and then treating them a certain way as a consequence of that.
Just to see that we don't have to take our thoughts so personally.
We can view them as, I didn't order up these racist thoughts.
I not only don't need to act on them,
but I also don't need to tell myself a whole story
about how irretrievably rotten.
So does any of that make sense to you?
Totally. And in fact,
to use the exact phrase that I like to use in this context,
which is don't take it so personally.
I think that's so often what people are reacting to is that if I say, for example, whiteness
has been a force of injustice in the world and really nothing else.
Oftentimes what people hear when you say that is, you're saying that I'm bad because I'm
quote unquote white because I'm quote unquote white
because I'm a European American.
And actually that's not what I'm saying.
That's not what I'm saying.
It's not about you actually.
I'm saying that whiteness as a concept,
really as we've said before,
was invented for the purpose of creating hierarchy
among human beings.
I didn't do that.
I do benefit from it, but I didn't do it. So there's
no reason for me to feel bad, personally guilty for having been born into that system, but
it also doesn't hurt me to acknowledge the truth of that statement. It's not about me.
And so I think that is, yes, exactly what you said.
So it's not only where we wired to make sorts of those shorthand distinctions.
Okay, these are the people in my group, those are the people in the other group, but then
the way that that wiring got applied to these ideas about people in these quote-unquote
races, we didn't create that either, but that, you know, we grew
up swimming in that water, right? So that, yeah, I think we should be willing to go easy on ourselves
personally when we notice ourselves with these, you know, thinking in these kinds of patterns.
But at the same time, I'm doing all we can to learn to see ourselves
doing it so that we can let it go and not act on it.
One of the things I really like about the Buddha's approach is that he very much aims his
message at the pleasure centers of the brain.
It's, yes, meditation is hard, but it will make your life better because you're suffering,
whether you're aware of it or not. So what's the self-interest in doing this work looking at your
biases, but whether it be your race-based biases or, as again, we'll discuss in a minute,
your biases when it comes to sex and gender. Why do it given how hard it is?
Yeah. Well, for me, I guess the motivations have to do with wanting to be a better person in the
world. And in fact, I interviewed a white woman who's a philosopher at the University of
North Carolina, Charlotte, and she's written a couple books on whiteness.
And I can't remember how in our conversation we came around to this kind of question, and she said something
like, you know what, I'm raising children, and I don't want them to be monsters.
That actually chokes me up now to remember, you know, and I just had such an impact on me, right?
Because that's, I don't want to be a monster.
And I don't want my children to be monsters.
And when you recognize the depth of the injustice
in our society that flows out of white supremacy,
you know, I don't want to be part of that.
It's kind of like saying, you know, I'd rather not be a Nazi
if I'm living in Nazi Germany. So, yeah, and people may react like, whoa, you're calling me, you know,
no, I mean, it's an analogy, right? And another thing that's related is just that to me, I just feel
And another thing that's related is just that to me, I just feel more content when I feel like I am living with the truth.
When I'm telling the truth, when I'm hearing the truth, and there is so much lying and
gaslighting and misinformation and disinformation in our historical moment now, but actually throughout human
history and throughout the history of our country, we don't tell the truth all that often about who
we are, who we were, who we are, what's really at work, what our society is really like.
And there's a comfort of a certain sort for me when somebody says something that feels true or when I say
something, when I say something that feels true. So the other thing I would say is that just another
layer to it is that I actually really do think that we all have something to gain if we could build
a society that's more fair and just yes white people and I've said this over and over again that white people benefit and gain advantage
from white supremacist systems
And so there is a sense in which we have to give up we have to give up power we have to maybe give up some advantages
But I think at the same time most of us
would gain benefits if we lived in a society that treated people better and that didn't have all this injustice and pain and suffering
that comes from those hierarchies and those systems.
Yeah, to me, there's layers of reasons that feel like self-interest to me.
Yes, to all of that.
And I think I would add on top of it, like, I don't know if I'm going to be able to articulate
this well.
Here I'm talking about bias, not only is it relates to race, but also all bias.
You know, can be sexism, it can be ages, and it can be the way bodies look.
For me, I can one of the more humiliating things
I've learned about myself is I can kind of place
much more importance on people who are in power
as opposed to people who are junior.
So lots of kinds of sorting mechanisms
that the mind does that are hard to look at.
But I think worth looking at one,
because there is a kind of pleasure,
although maybe at times perverse pleasure
and like seeing what your mind is actually doing,
because then when you see it,
you're not held hostage by it.
So I think that actually in my experience is pleasurable.
And then I guess the other thing I'd add is that
when you are not so yanked around by your biases, and by the way, I would add in tribal
biases to, you know, I know there's a pain associated with dogmatism.
And when you're not walking around, just trying to defend every random thought that's come
up into your head, like you get along better with people, and when you get along better
with people, and when you get along better with people,
you're happier, and then you're in an upward spiral
of you're happier, and then you get along
even better with people, and then you're even happier,
et cetera, et cetera.
I'll stop again, because I just wanna check this
with you to see if it lands.
Absolutely.
And yes, I think you're a happier person.
I think most of us are happier
if we aren't just gripping
our beliefs about what's true or our, as you say, our tribal identity or I belong to this
political party or this political ideology. And I'm going to feel terrible if there's a fact
that I hear that suggests that the other side may be right
in this case.
And I think you live a happier life if you're just willing to kind of have that kind of softness
around those things and say, well, maybe this time, maybe the other side's right about
this thing.
You know, yeah, yeah, absolutely that rigidity those kinds of there's a lot of pain in that.
And it's a lot of source of I think a lot of our divisions is that people are holding
really tight to what they think is true and what they want to be true so that they can
be right and the other guys are wrong all the time.
Well, I want to ask just about that actually, and I want to apologize in advance because this
is a long question, but go for it.
So I've spent the last couple of years really trying to systematically examine my own biases,
which is in part why your podcast has been so meaningful to me because you've done way
more work than I've
done.
So I just get, you know, kind of steal from you.
One of the areas of my own bias that I've really tried to take a hard look at is the aforementioned
tribal bias.
I'm a journalist just like you, and I've spent my whole career really working on the
capacity to be fair.
You know, I've interviewed murderers and cult leaders and terrorists,
and I certainly don't agree with them,
but I believe that I have the capacity to be fair,
or at least I believed that.
But I'm also a human being who was raised by parents
who had views, and in my case, they were sort of arch liberals.
And I can't not bring...
There is no such thing as perfect objectivity.
That's a fiction perpetuated by some in our profession.
And I've really tried to do the work
of the last couple of years of listening to podcasts
and reading and following on Twitter,
people from all different parts
of the ideological spectrum,
you know, the far, far left, which I can sometimes have a little trouble relating to,
not so much the far right, but center right folks, thoughtful center right folks.
And I found that it makes more complicated my efforts to look at stuff around racism and sexism
because there's some heterodox views that you run across,
some not very politically correct views,
some aggressively politically incorrect views
because these folks are pushing back against what they view
as a sort of a cancel culture
or a religion or dogmatism of the left.
And it comes from interesting people,
I've been following this cadre of black intellectuals, Glenn Lowry, Thomas Chetterton, Williams, John McWorter. And you know,
they really kind of take issue with a lot of the stuff that you've been talking about
here, you know, the notions of white supremacy and that somehow the whole country is even
post the Civil Rights Act totally, you know, incurably racist, et cetera,
et cetera. And so I wonder, what kind of criticisms do you hear of your work and, you know,
which of them do you take seriously?
Well, you know, as you know, podcasts are almost purely have self-selecting audiences. So I think that I
probably get less critique and pushback than I would get even if you know I
worked in public radio for a long time and I think there was probably a
broader audience for my work in say NPR, the public radio system, then there is now, there are people who choose to listen to this.
So I don't get a lot of pushback, but to the extent that I do, more often it has been actually from white people,
for example, the reaction to the Seeing White series on Seen On Radio.
It's tended to be people who came across it, even just say from a Facebook
ad that we did about the series, or actually I did a TED talk, and that's just like an
18-minute taste, so that people just listen to that, maybe you're listening to some of
it, and they just write in the comments, oh, this is another one of those woke white people
who's anti-white. I haven't received very much criticism that's very
substantive, to be honest. I do think, yes, that there are certainly black people and other
people of color who reject the kind of story that I've been telling or the... and take
what I consider to be a more kind of establishment or conservative view of the history of racism and particularly of the
more recent history of racism, I happen to think that their analysis is wrong.
But yeah, I guess I don't know really what else to say about it unless you wanted to like
get into the some of the substance of that.
But I've had debates and I had an actually
a pretty strenuous debate with an old dear friend
of mine, a guy I went to college with.
It started over lunch one day and carried on for a year
to through long emails.
And I think some of those analyses don't do justice
to really how pervasive the systemic injustice
and the systemic hierarchies and so on are at work.
And they often, to my mind, kind of blame the victim by saying there are some familiar
tropes like, well, Japanese Americans, they were hated and they were discriminated.
There was prejudice against them, but they've done so much better.
Why can't black people do that?
And I just think that just doesn't do justice to the profoundly different experience and
a different history between Japanese Americans and black people who were enslaved for 240 years and then released from slavery
with nothing and sent out into a hostile world, et cetera, et cetera, with racism still
very much at play for many, many decades after that.
So yeah, those are the kinds of reactions I have.
Yeah, the model minority argument is tough.
One last question along these lines,
and then I want to dive into the men series.
You use the term white supremacy a lot.
I think it's interesting.
This is something I've talked about quite a bit
with a friend of mine who's been on the show a bunch,
Seven A. Celacic.
I'll have to check with her before I conclude this
in the podcast, because these have been offline conversations.
But I can see kind of two sides to this argument about that term. I'll have to check with her before I include this in the podcast because these have been offline conversations.
But, you know, I can see kind of two sides to this argument about that term.
I think it's technically accurate, hard to argue with the accuracy of it.
On the other hand, as a previous guest on the show, LaRetta Ross has remarked, it can
be tricky when you take terms from academia and try to inject them into the mainstream conversation,
because in mainstream conversation, white supremacy means something pretty specific,
which is the people from Charlottesville.
And so I'm just wondering, like, how useful is it to use that term given that the very
people you most want to reach are most likely to be triggered by it. It's a fair question.
And I think for somebody who listens to the 14-part series, our podcast, Seeing White,
you know, we're sort of taking folks on a journey to the point where that term, I think,
means something different.
You're right.
I noticed now, if I listen to the first episode of
seeing white, that I use white supremacy in the way that I have usually understood it for most
of my life, which is that you're talking about people in hoods and swastikas that are open, overt
racists. And that's where that term gets applied.
But I think, yeah, if you understand more of some of the kinds of things that we've been
talking about, that really it comes to mean something both more benign or more, let's
see more ordinary, but also more pervasive, which is that we have entire systems that advantage white people
and disadvantage black people and other people of color.
And that's what we mean by white supremacy.
So to me, it's, there is a process, I think, of redefining it and bringing people along
to a different understanding of what the word means.
But then it feels like the right word to use once you understand it that way.
So you're right, I'm doing that. I can't imagine that there are some people. And people do have
that reaction, I think, with some justification, which is that when they hear somebody like me
or like a black academic or activist say that the United States is a white supremacist country,
say that the United States is a white supremacist country, that you're taking this understanding, which is the clan, and you're saying that that defines this country, right, and that
people react against that, understandably.
But it's more complicated understanding of what the phrase means.
Let's talk about the series that you did after seeing White called simply men.
You went from the frying pan into the fire.
Why did you go into men after seeing White?
Well part of it was the timing.
I didn't know what I was going to do after seeing White.
And I had some, it was had a few ideas of what might happen, but it was actually, and there were a couple
of people, always women, who at the time that seeing why it came out would send me an
email or tweet at me or something and say, why don't you do something like this about
sexism, patriarchy?
And I kind of just put that thought off to one side.
I didn't feel necessarily immediately moved to do it.
But then it was the fall of 2017.
And Harvey Weinstein happened.
And me too, movement blew up.
And at that moment, I just decided, OK.
And I decided that it would be constructive and interesting
and that I would learn a lot in the process
of doing something modeled very loosely on seeing white,
but just taking this approach that says rather than,
for example, looking at a more kind of contemporary
journalistic look at how does sexist culture work in the modern workplace or something like that?
To look at how long have we had this idea of human beings always sort of had this
structure in which men are usually kind of in charge of everything?
Or when did that start? How did it start? How did that end to really tell that story in the way that we tried to do with seeing white.
And it turns out that sexism is much older than racism.
It goes back 10 or 12,000 years, apparently, but that it was at least in many ways what we think of as this kind of hierarchical idea that men are going to be in charge, sort of the dominating
gender, both sort of at home and what we think of as the public sphere, politics, and so
on, that that came about 10 or 12,000 years ago, and it coincided with people settling
down from small hunter-gatherer groups into more complex societies and doing agriculture
and specialization of a larger community and stuff like that. So we tell that story based on what
the leading scholarship says about it. So the leading scholarship, if I have this right,
says that when we were sure hunter-gatheratherer more nomadic, there was more equality because
everybody needed to pitch in and women had a, you know, there was some specialization
and men might have been doing more hunting, women might have been doing more gathering, but the
women had apparently from what we can tell a lot more input. And then when we settled down into agrarian culture, that was the moment
men seized to systematize supremacy.
Yes, that's a, that's a short version. And that's right. When you had, for most of human
history, and it's funny to say that now, because most, again, there's all these shifts that
have to take place in your mentality, because for most of us, if I use a phrase like most of human history, I'm not even going back very far.
I might be thinking about recorded human history, but if you really talk about human history,
you're talking two or three hundred thousand years is what the scientists believe now
that a homo sapiens have been around.
And for most of that, that time, people lived
in small groups of what we now call hunter-gatherers or foragers, and they were usually 20 or 25
people at the most kind of roaming around together. And most of the decisions were made on a kind
of consensus basis. There's no indication that those little groups had a male chief usually or something like that.
It was a, and there are hunter-gatherer groups to this day in some parts of the world
that is, that's one of the ways that people can look at this question, is to see
that it tends to be people sitting around the fire at night and deciding, well,
where are we going to go next and who's going to do what? And as you say, there might be some division of labor along gender lines, but also a lot
of things.
People did things together.
And also, I've learned more about this more recently.
A lot of Native American tribes, for example, were, if not matriarchal, certainly the Cherokee people, for example,
they ran on a kind of, it's a very democratic kind of consensus-based
clan system. This is in their traditional form of self-governance. The typical community or
village would have seven clans, and each clan had an older woman who was the head of the clan.
And to the extent that anybody really was running the show, it was those seven women,
although actually most of the decisions were made with everybody there, including the children,
in a kind of consensus base, right? So that, yeah, it just was not the case that men ran everything until
about 10,000 years ago. And then it became quite widespread. In part, based on, you know,
colonialism and societies that were ran that way, dominating others and imposing that
structure onto other societies and that kind of spread around the world. That's what people think.
It was so much interesting history. So many twists and turns and I want to encourage people to go
listen to the series. Let me ask you something that's sort of
beyond that in a way, which is, you know, I'm curious again to hear what impact doing this work had on you as a man,
has it changed the way you view the world,
has it changed the way you navigate the world?
Yes.
And again, I'm probably gonna give a similar answer
and that I struggle with the question a little bit.
I find it hard to really describe or to quantify.
And in both of these cases too,
I was raised by parents who were very overtly,
I guess you could say anti-racist,
although that term really wasn't used back then.
And then also my mother was a feminist who,
I was one of five kids and there were three boys
and she was overtly talking to us about,
you know, don't be one of these male showmanist picks to use the language of the 1970s or so,
right?
And I probably thought of myself to some degree as a feminist since I was in college or
so.
But so that change or the lessons have felt relatively sad,
I also don't claim to be a really good feminist.
I don't claim at all to be free of gender bias
or of patterns of thinking about what men and women are like
or of a sense of entitlement as a man
or I don't claim to be free of those things
at all. But I think it is similarly to, I guess, what my experience has been like with race,
it's just a process of making a 12-part podcast series about patriarchy called men.
You know, it was another step of just getting practice in a way that's sort of learning to see,
here's how that functions.
In society in a way that I maybe hadn't thought about
before, here's maybe how I see myself participating in that
or I see it functioning in me, I see my mind going,
having that certain kind of expectation or assumption about what's going to maybe
be something that is going to happen for me because I'm male or finding myself surprised
that a woman can do this or that sexism at work in my mind.
So it's that, yeah, it feels again, it brings us back to this other parallel conversation
we've been having about a mindfulness and meditation practice and just having those moments
again and again, where you see what's going on in your mind. And you can choose, okay,
I'm going to let that go. I'm not going to act on that. I'm going to recognize that that is actually
an untrue thought. And I'm going to just let it go.
If we were to hand the mic to your wife, yeah.
No, I think it is partly with my wife in mind that I said what I said a couple of minutes
ago that I'm not there. I guess I've always tried to be the husband and the father who participates fully in all
the stuff, the house cleaning and the...
Frankly, I've always been more of a dishwasher than a cook.
I've always been a really good dishwasher, not as good of a cook. But I can also feed myself and I make some
meals. But I think that she would say that, yes, there are some ways in which I exhibit
some of those sexist patterns.
There's an academic by the name of Dolly Chug, Doali, if you're listening, respect. She has a concept that I love, which
is so useful and right on point in terms of everything you just said, I think, which
is good-ish. We really want to believe that we're good people, but if we can shift that to good ish, she says, that allows for room
to grow.
So yeah, you're being open about what sexism may still have purchased in your mind, and
you're doing work through meditation, through your journalism, through your relationships,
to be better.
And those two things can coexist quite nicely,
I think, under the framework of good-ish. I like that. Yes. And going back to the racism thing,
we have the fact that the very philosopher I was talking about before, who said that she didn't
want to raise her children to be monsters.
She wrote a book about good white people and she's actually kind of challenging the idea
that a lot of us carry around that we're good, but good ish might be trying to be good.
This kind of what in a way what it sounds like you're describing and genuinely trying to be good or to be better. I don't know what more we can do
and that
That might be a beautiful place to leave it is there something that I should have asked but failed to
I don't think so people should listen to the show, you know, I want to be careful not to spoil it
Because there's just so much in both of these series. And of course, I don't even know what the first season of the show was.
And you have a new season, the fourth season on democracy, which I also haven't listened
to.
So there's a lot to explore on the show.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Well, I'm a fan of what you do.
And it really truly means a lot to me that you've listened and that you've
found it valuable. Thank you and keep up the good work. Thank you, you as well.
Thanks again to John. One final bit of business before we go in response to the cascading crises
of the past year. We've done our best on this show from COVID to the racial justice protests, to the insurrection at the Capitol. We've done our best here to make
this a place to help you figure out how to navigate the world. And as you know,
the practice of meditation undergirds, nearly all of the practical takeaways
you'll hear us discuss here. As you may or may not know, many of our podcast
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I think, and we think it would be great if you want to consider signing up for the app,
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We don't do big discounts all the time.
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