Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 335: A Pressure Cooker for Insight | Bart van Melik
Episode Date: March 31, 2021The great meditation teacher Ram Dass once said, “If you think you’re enlightened, go spend a week with your family.” My guest today comes with tools to help you keep your cool when int...eracting with family -- or anyone else. We’re going to talk about a kind of meditation practice known as “relational dharma,” or “insight dialogue.” It’s a way of taking meditation off the cushion and into the crucible of conversation. My guest is Bart van Melik, who teaches veterans and children in juvenile detention centers. He’s co-author of a book called Still, in the City: Creating Peace of Mind in the Midst of Urban Chaos. He graduated from the Spirit Rock/IMS Teacher Training and Community Dharma Leader Program. He’s based in New York City, but he’s currently in his country of birth, The Netherlands. In this conversation, you will hear lots of tips about how to actually practice relational meditation and insight dialogue, which Bart calls a “pressure cooker for insight.” Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/bart-van-melik-335 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
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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. For maybe see, this is the 10% happier podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hey gang, the great meditation teacher, Ram Das, who sadly is no longer with us, he once
said, and this is a quote here, if you think you're enlightened, go spend a week with your family.
My guest today comes with tools to help you keep your cool when interacting with your family or anybody else.
We're going to talk about a kind of meditation practice known as relational dharma or insight dialogue.
It's a way of taking meditation off the cushion and into the crucible of conversation.
My guest is Bart Van Mellek, who teaches to veterans and also to children and juvenile detention centers.
He's co-author of a book called Still in the City.
He graduated from the Spirit Rock slash IMS teacher training and community Dharma leader program.
He's based in New York City, but as we recorded this conversation,
he was back in his home country, the Netherlands.
And in this conversation,
you're gonna hear a lot of tips about
how to actually practice relational Dharma
and insight dialogue,
which Bart calls a pressure cooker for insight.
Here we go now with Bart Van Melik.
Bart, great to see you.
Thanks for coming on the show.
Oh, thank you Dan, likewise.
I likewise.
Every time I see you, I think about the first time
I saw you, which was my first meditation retreat.
In 2010, I wrote about it.
It was like the key scene, the key chapter
from the first book I wrote,
where I go on my first meditation
retreat and I'm having all these interactions with Joseph Goldstein in the moments when
I'm allowed to talk to the teacher.
And in all of those moments, I don't think I mentioned it, but you were in the room because
you were apprenticing with him and he was giving me all this advice and you were sitting
there nodding sage Lee.
So it's always a pleasure to see you.
And you know, the pleasure is very mutual then. And funny story is, I had no idea
what you do, right, for your livelihood, because I had just come to America from the Netherlands.
So I remember, I think Joseph said something to defect, do you know this person?
Well, no, no. And then he didn't say anything else.
But later on, I found out, oh, it's, yeah, it's you.
Well, you were there for one of the most important moments
of my life that retreat really changed the trajectory
of my life.
So I will always associate you with that.
So many areas I want to touch on with you, but let's start with relational
mindfulness. Can you just give me a very basic description of what that is?
Yeah, I can. It's, let me start just a little bit about that we as human beings are relational by nature.
And a lot of meditation practices are done in a way where we bring attention to something
that's going on in early.
And yet, if you look at how life unfolds, it unfolds very relationally.
And so in relational meditation practices, in formal ways,
you learn not only to be aware of what's going on within you,
but you will also get instructions to be very mindful of, let's say,
another person who is sitting in front of you.
And relational mindfulness for meditation will also eventually after practice, mindful of, let's say, another person who is sitting in front of you.
And relational mindfulness for meditation will also eventually after practice, allow you
to do something that was kind of mind-blowing for me.
And that was that I'm able to be connected to this body-mind and being open to another
or others.
And so relational mindfulness allows you to be present with you being in relationship
with other people.
And sometimes when we're just doing mindfulness drawn more internally, we learn a lot also
about being present with internal emotions, feelings and thoughts, but relational
meditation takes it another step. And that is to really also notice, oh, what's going
on around me without losing this sense of my own body mind, right? Because so often when
we are engaging with people, especially when there's like a lot of content, we're maybe
totally 100% focused on them, right? And not so much aware of this.
And so that would be, you know,
to be short, our relational mindfulness is about.
I wanna start talking a little bit practically
about how listeners can practice this in their own lives.
But first, just a quick anecdote, I've mentioned this
a few times on the show, maybe too many times,
but I had a couple of years ago, I had the kind of semi-traumatic experience where I did
a 360 review where I was kind of invited a lot of people in my life to comment anonymously
about my strengths and weaknesses.
And there were quite a few weaknesses to my surprise that I was either unaware of or
didn't know other people could see and
It's very very painful but very useful experience and I gave the report
It was a long report filled with anonymous quotes about
Mostly my weaknesses a few strengths and I gave it to a
Really good friend of mine doctor Mark Epstein has been on the show before he's a psychiatrist and a practicing Buddhist.
One of his responses was, I think you've kind of fallen into a classic meditation trap
of doing a lot of meditation.
At that time, my life was actually doing two hours a day of meditation and being focused
internally, as you just said, but not enough externally.
It is not uncommon for meditators at whatever level to become quite self-aware in some ways,
but not in a key way, which is how are you with other people.
Does that sound right to you?
Does.
It absolutely does.
What also happened for me was when I really got in touch with formal relational meditation
practices was to really kind of it was so humbling.
I started to notice that I'm not that often so aware when I'm with other people, right?
And I kind of a similar path in the beginning of my practice where most of my meditation was
done with mindfulness, innuorately oriented.
And so that was kind of the first shock.
And when I'm sharing all this with you, I'm standing on someone's shoulders.
And his name is Gregory Kramer.
And he has this revolutionary mind in a way where at first
time I came into his class, I was actually visiting New York, still living in the Netherlands.
And I wanted to go to the New York Insight Meditation Center, and I just signed up for
the only weekend I could go, right?
Turns out he's there.
And I really felt like, oh, I'm going
to do a weekend of a lot of silence. That's what I wanted. And this is how he started.
He totally got me. He goes, the Buddha's teaching is about suffering in the end. Most of our suffering and stress is people's stress.
Most of the practices in lots of traditions are only focused personally.
This practice that I'm going to invite you into called Inside Dialogue will exactly bridge
that gap.
So my first response was, oh my God, are we going to talk and meditate?
How is that even going gonna unfold, right?
And I remember my first experience.
I was in a diet, you know, just one partner.
They were sitting in front of me.
And usually when I start meditating, when I'm just by myself,
my mind is planning.
It's fidgety.
It takes some time for all the snow to settle.
But here I was looking in someone's eyes,
guided with some very specific instructions,
and I was so present.
Because my mind had thought, oh, I'm
going to be quite distracted, which I'm usually
are when I'm
in a conversation with people.
But I got really focused.
We separated roles of speaking and listening in the beginning, but it also felt like when
the other person was just listening.
It felt like that person was listening me into being. And it unlocked a lot of insight into habitual
energy that I have when I listen and speak with other people. The first one I immediately
saw was me planning what to say next, not fully listening. You know, I also started to see like,
oh, this is what the Buddha means when he says,
like, this hunger to be seen in a certain way.
I wanted to be seen as a yogi who was focused.
So it allowed for a ton of information and insight
with the support of a lot of concentration and mindfulness
because you can't really fall asleep on someone, right?
And so I remember another teacher eventually commenting on this relational practice of inside dialogue, naming it a pressure cooker for insight.
And so it's really changed my whole view of meditation and it added another very valuable aspect of, huh? I can just
as well be mindful of the breath, for example, externally. And when our little
baby was born, and he's now six, I would sit in his room, and instead of me just
being mindful of my belly, rise and fall, I would just look at his belly going up and down, up and down.
And there was still the same awareness. It doesn't matter whether it knows something internally or
externally. And then I even tried and it worked as well on the New York City train pre-COVID.
I would feel my body breathe. And I would jam pack like a sardine, right? And I could just feel the person next to me breathe at the same time.
And so here I was thinking,
this is what the Buddha meant when he suggested,
oh, we can be mindful both internal and external,
even with something as the breath.
And so what it also did is it totally unlocked this idea for me
in a very visceral way that our emotions
are feelings, they are natural human experiences, not necessarily copyrighted by
bar or Dan. And that made a big impact on how I'm relating to the world and
relating to internal stuff. One thing that I will never forget,
this was when I was teaching meditation
in high school in Chelsea in Manhattan.
I would see the group of kids
for a whole school year four times a week, a lot.
And that group really connected,
and they actually liked doing meditation.
We had all kinds of fun games.
And then I realized this group I might actually be able
to do some of this relational stuff.
And so I paired them up at that time.
I had quite a bit of training in inside dialogue.
And the contemplation that I invited them into
was what's it like when you are judging school?
And a lot of talking was going on.
And then I saw them change when I asked them about
how does judging yourself manifest?
And it got quiet.
And it was just very concentrated talking,
but everyone was engaged at the end of that
session in a large circle.
There was one young man, Jonathan, who never forgets his hand on his heart.
And he says, I'm going to apologize from the get-go here, but I feel joy knowing I'm not the only one who judges
themselves. It's a 16-year-old young man. And when he set that down, everyone was
nodding in that room. And I asked him, Jonathan, can you see everyone nodding? He goes, yeah. And it was just that moment also, it was just a moment of, you could call it like a communal
recognizing, this is the shared human experience.
And so that's a very powerful aspect that arises when you start engaging in relational mindfulness.
You said so many interesting things there.
I want to follow up on one.
Do you talk about the Buddha exhorting us to be mindful internally and externally?
That's actually...
Both.
Yeah, both.
Right.
So, can you unpack that because that's in the Buddha's teachings
if you go back and read them?
Right.
Yeah, I can unpack that.
And maybe the best way is to kind of experience them.
And so, one thing that the Buddha invites us to be mindful of
is what you could call a feeling tone.
And a feeling tone arises in any given moment of contact that our senses make.
So I'll give you an example, not such a long time ago I came home from my daily routine of swimming in a cold lake.
And my hands are still cold and it feels unpleasant.
And so, you know, maybe if you're listening, you can also kind of feel your body and just
notice, is the body having a sense of, you know, feeling pleasant? Is it feeling unpleasant?
Or maybe something in between neutral. Let me just notice saying where
you're standing or sitting on or your movement. So you're aware of the feeling
tone of experience and changes all the time. That can be felt internally. Then the Buddha also suggested to be mindful
when feeling tones arise externally. And so maybe just imagining that someone is with you or
maybe there is someone with you, you can kind of see your surroundings, even animals, you can see when they are in pain,
when they feel unpleasant experiences, right? Or kids, or when it kind of from your perspective,
they look quite neutral, or when they're quite happy or feels pleasant. And so I have the privilege
of being around a six-year-old a lot, and their feeling tones change quite a bit over
the day. So whenever I'm aware of that, I go, huh, Lewis having an unpleasant feeling tone. So then
I'm aware of that same experience, you know, that same phenomena, if you will, externally. But
for many of us, we've been locked in our homes quite a bit,
privileged enough to have that choice. And so I've seen in our family, let's
keep it real, also a lot of unpleasant feeling tones in the vibes between my
wife, myself, and son. And so when you tune into the vibe of a community that in that moment you're part of, then you
could say you are aware of a feeling tone that's both internal and external at the same time.
And it's of course it's a perception, you not know 100%, but we're so relationally
wired, we can pick up on these things.
And when we train in this way through relational practices, we see it faster
when a specific experience or phenomena is happening, but it's not necessarily happening only internally.
And so that would be a way of looking at this.
I have a six year old son too.
The other day we were playing catch and arguing about who was going to go fetch the ball.
And my son said, well, either you're going to be annoyed or I'm going to be annoyed,
which do you want?
And I said, well, seven days a week, I'm going to take you being annoyed.
And he looked at me dead in the eye and said, that's why you're a bad daddy. That label has been thrown at me so many times. Man, it hurts. They are experts
at hurting your feelings. Yeah, they are. And they also already know about this stuff.
Yesterday I was doing another relational practice with a community, it's called Dharma
Contemplation, where we look at an ancient text that are coming from the scriptures, and then
as a community we flecked on it, and not just cognitively, but also the felt sense of it.
And we use the teaching that supposedly the Buddha taught to his son when he was
seven. So I really felt like this sense because it will be loose birthday soon in March
26. And the Buddha asked his seven year old son like, what's a mirror for? And his answer
was for reflection, sir. And then he started saying that in the same way you are invited to reflect on what you say, do, or think repeatedly,
and keep checking if it's for not harming you, if it's not harming another, or if it's
not harming both.
So it's everywhere in the Buddhist scriptures, this relational experience. And it makes total sense because
we are so relational. So I also felt very grateful when I was introduced to formal relational
meditation practices that there was such emphasis on it in the Buddha scriptures, but not so much
in what I had encountered thus far in terms of meditation. Because, you know, seriously, I was
and counter it thus far in terms of meditation. Because, you know, seriously, I was one of my first instructions was actually close your eyes,
you know, and go inwardly.
And in my years now of also teaching, specifically with young people,
and a lot of young people in difficult circumstances were like incarcerated or in homeless shelters,
the introduction into meditation as it being something
you do in orderly, might not be the right first step.
So what I've done also is, even in explaining, especially when if I would go into a group
of young men incarcerated, and I would be introduced like, hey, the yoga guys here, and they were like,
oh, I don't want to do this.
And then they said a lot of other stuff.
I want to repeat.
And so I had to kind of explain, you know, why, you know, they would give me like a minute
or so to, okay, tell me, what's your program about?
And I said, it's about awareness.
And I would ask, this came also from my training and relational practices,
I would ask, in here, when you came in here, would you say that you really need to be aware of
your surroundings? And then kind of, you know, the eyebrows go down, of course, man, what's wrong
with you, of course. Is that a sense of protection it offers you. Absolutely. I have to constantly watch my back.
So, I went, well, with meditation does it, it allows you to continue doing that because
that's a form of being present and it does protect you. You could also apply it more
inwardly and see if you can protect yourself from all kinds of thoughts, habits that might not be so helpful.
In Harlem, there's a man called Stan Kohler, and he teach meditation connected to martial arts,
and he would call meditation psychic self-defense. And so sometimes the way in is actually from
the external, instead of starting with you know being present internally.
I don't know if you remember this I actually came and spent an evening with you at a juvenile detention center when I did. Yeah. Yeah.
It's really incredible work you do.
So as promised, I do want to dive into practices for listeners that we can do that would allow us to kind of experience
or operationalize this notion of relational mindfulness.
You've described dyads, which is where you and another person sit across from one another.
I don't know that any of us.
I certainly, I mean, I've done dyads before.
It's kind of like a deathmatch of staring into somebody's eyes and it's incredibly uncomfortable.
And also very valuable.
I love that term.
Would you call it before a pressure cooker for insight?
I think that's amazing.
Right.
I don't know that diets are going to be readily accessible to most listeners.
So what maybe they will be, but let's talk about various exercises.
We could be as ranger as you want here so that people at home can do this in their own
lives.
Right.
Well, let me then start by specifically an insight dialogue to have some key instructions.
The first one is my favorite.
It's called pause.
Even me just saying it right now, I can kind of just feel a sense of, huh, and pause
can mean that you stop speaking and really take some time to connect again with the body.
Because what usually happens for me when I'm not mindful and I'm talking with someone, I'm kind of totally lost in the content
of what's being said, have lost a sense of connection with the body. And so a very first step
without even doing formal practices and they can be done also in groups of three and four
formally. So not just in diets and you don't have to stare in people's eyes incidentally.
It's the pause.
You know who my favorite pauser is?
Obama.
Sometimes he says some difficult stuff for me as a non-native English speaker, but he will
sometimes just pause.
Sometimes literally stop speaking.
Maybe he's doing that to also reconnect with the body or remember to being aware.
But when he does that, he also conditions the likelihood that
I start to become aware again too.
And this is a very concrete thing that you could do any time.
The only thing that is required, and that's really where the whole the trick of meditation,
the whole thing is about is do you remember? And so the likelihood of doing formal practice,
both internally, you know, oriented, but alsopersonally oriented, that will increase the likelihood
that you remember to pause in daily living.
So the kids I teach a lot, they so often ask me, why, why don't you have any tattoos?
I'll be honest, I'll tell them, I don't feel like I have a tattooable body, and I'm a
little afraid.
And then they go, okay, forget that.
What would you put on your body that'd be worthwhile for you? Because that's what we have, right?
We want to be remembered by something.
Now, I have a whole list of insights I could put on it,
but very prominently, I would want pause.
Because that really gives me the gift of remembering
to be present. And then when you pause, usually you get a lot of information, and especially
when you're among people, quite often there is a sense of tension, especially in the body. Like the zoom fatigue that you hear all over,
it might be just from constantly leaning forward.
And just kind of having that sense of when you pause, you maybe go,
oh, just tension in the body.
And not to push the tension away, but at least to get a sense of,
oh, I am quite tense. Right? Also, the
pause will allow, at least for me, to remember being mindful with people who I'm usually
so inhabit more with, my family, you know, the final frontier of spiritual progress when Jack Hornefield said, seriously.
And so what we know, I found it extremely powerful, the pause, when I'm with my parents,
you know, because that lifelong conditioning that I've had with them so often leads to habitual
energies. And so when you pause, then you can kind of connect again with this is what's happening both within you and around you. And then another thing that you could do, I don't like it so much as an instruction because it has a lot of negative connotations for people, but it's called relax. Because I was told so often, especially when I was in school,
the finger would be pointed at me and the teacher would say, now, part relax or focus, and both of
these things I couldn't do at that time. But when we pause and you're in a relational field with someone,
you may notice the tension that could also be just in your mind of like, oh, I need to come up with something
I need to say something whatever
Relax and not in a relaxed like relax like with the finger, but see if you can
Receive what's going on?
It's unfolding
And you give yourself also perhaps the space to literally relax body parts like softening
your belly, letting the shoulders hang down.
Most of the times when I'm at people and it gets stressful, the shoulders go up a little
bit.
The only way that I can relax and miss when I'm aware of that that's happening and pause.
So for me to become like a very powerful combo, like a mini mantra, pause, relax.
I like this a lot.
Let me start with pause.
What does that look like?
IRL, as the kids say, in real life.
If I'm in the middle of a conversation and I remember
and I agree with you, remembering is the hardest part of the practice, remembering to wake
up, remembering to do whatever it is that you aspire to do.
If I remember to pause, does that mean I literally stop talking and everybody notices
I've stopped talking or is it truly just an internal thing that I'm doing or both?
Or either?
For me, it's both.
And sometimes, you know, I will get like feedback, especially, you know, in the beginning
my wife would say, are you pausing again?
You know, I see you do it.
But it could be both.
It's also really the moment when you remember it to be mindful and you don't have to, it's
not stop.
Sometimes people think about meditation that you have to stop everything.
It's impossible anyway.
But it's way more like, ah, is there something sweet about it, about remembering, oh, I can
also be aware.
Because what that usually does, it gives you some space.
And you tap into being more present what's going on.
And you also tap into how you are relating to whatever you are experiencing.
So no, it does not mean that you have to stop. And it's also like
you described that you start to get new information of this situation because you are present to it.
So it could look like as I'm listening to you, I could remind myself to pause, which would simply
doesn't mean I stop listening, it could simply
mean that part of my awareness is also just redirected to the body. I've heard before, from a
friend of mine, a teacher named Coshan Paley-Ellisson, who's a friend of mine and you know him too,
and he's been on this show. He talks about just reconnecting with your belly or just remembering
the words soft belly. When you're in a conversation as a way to just
get back into your body for a second
instead of out of your swirling thoughts.
So I could, that would be an acceptable pause
under your definition, even though
wouldn't be halting the conversation.
Exactly.
And after practice, you could do what you suggested, you know, that you
could tap into your own body. But sometimes, I also find it extremely helpful to really become
aware of the body of whom I'm with. You know, I'm still listening. You know, you cannot not listen.
And you really start to see, you know, I love it when I'm in that
moment with someone I know really well. So, especially for example with family
members, you know, to really see them and see their body. So you're mindful of
the body, not so much internally, but you're really also present to how the way
their body is moving. It's the same movement in a way. And what's really helped me,
especially when I'm in situations that require a lot of energy or, you know, difficult behavior
among people, when it's both, when you really feel like I can connect to, let's say, the belly
and softening it, but also be present for my surroundings.
It's possible then to start play a little bit when there's a person who is costing me a
lot of energy.
I feel energy draining by their behavior.
My mindfulness would be 70% internal, and just maybe like 30% external.
And sometimes I'll switch it. And so, it also, the next thing that happens when you pause,
become present to a relational field and relax into both the body and
receive what's going on, then you become more open.
And you start to see that you can be very receptive, not only what's
going internally but externally, and
it gives you, it's very empowering to kind of shift that valve, like how much do I want
to kind of be external, right?
And how much is more helpful to stay, you know, like with the softening belly internal.
And that's where the both becomes very powerful, you know, is being mindful both internally
and externally at the same time. But just a technical point here, I think we're sometimes told by the neuroscientists that
we're actually only capable of paying attention to one thing at a time.
So how do we compute that? It goes so quickly. Okay, it's a hit you're just shifting quickly
between. Yeah. So if you were to take a microscope to your mind
In these moments you would see that if you're breaking it down to its elementary
Particles you would see that yet any given nanosecond you're only focused on the body or the other person
But given how fast the mind moves you can actually stay focused on your internal processes
What the other person is saying,
their internal processes to the best of your empathic powers
and both.
And I would imagine actually doing all of that
could perhaps really keep you in the field,
as you said, in the moment, in the situation,
as opposed to spinning off into your own stuff,
which is another place that we often go, I find myself stuck there a lot. So if I've got these
three objects in front of me, me, the other person, and the space between, if I'm playing there,
I'm less likely to be planning my next purchase on Amazon or whatever. Exactly.
Exactly.
And then what happens is when that is kind of established that sense of awareness that
you talk about, we can attune to what's emerging in the moment.
And that is so powerful, especially in a relational field, because we can feel when someone
is really present for us, and I get a lot of that feedback from my six-year-old when
he notices that I'm not.
And so when we're really present for what's going on internally and around us, both at
the same time, we can attune to what's emerging.
And we can also really become way more creative.
And it allows for a lot of playfulness, because I'm no longer thinking, oh, what is Dan
going to say?
Or when you are asking a question, when you are kind of in the middle of it, I see all
these things like, oh, I could say this, the Dan I could say that.
And you know, it's just, that's the nature of conditioning.
But I don't have to kind of follow that and stay very, so that, just like in meditation
practice, sometimes you'll go back to the breath, you know, one of the first like instructions that I ever got in Thailand, you can in relational feel, you can also go back
to the between or something that we are co-creating right now. And make that into your object, like,
oh, this is between, this is happening right now. I feel a sense of curiosity, kindness between Dan and I.
And tuning into that allows for presence.
And then after a while, I don't even have to tune into that just like the breath, because
it feels like there is some continuity of kind presence, awareness. And then, you know, there's so much more receptivity to both what's going internally and
externally.
So then, how that manifests in relationships is that we can really speak, for example,
from the tip of the moment.
And not that we blur everything out.
This is really also a practice of what the Buddha would call, why speech. because when you are aware, you can keep checking quite simply, is it true?
Is it kind? Is it helpful? And is it timely? Because you're so attuned, also to what's,
you know, the cues you're getting non-verbally from another human being or an animal or several beings. And so we also start to notice that what we receive verbally is just one part of being
in a relational field, but what we receive non-verbally is huge as well, like the picture of your voice,
the speed of your speech, you know, all kinds of physical gestures you do when you speak
when you move.
So it also allows for really being attuned to what's called for in the present moment.
Much more of my conversation with Bart Van Mellek right after this.
Celebrity feuds are high stakes.
You never know if you're just going to end up on page six or Du Moir or in court. I'm Matt Bellissi
And I'm Sydney Battle and we're the host of Wonder E's new podcast Disantel where each episode we unpack a different
iconic celebrity feud from the buildup why it happened and the repercussions what does our obsession with these
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You mentioned the booties instructions about right speech.
I just don't want to let that pass by without hanging a lantern on it just so people are clear. I believe the instructions
were, do you say what is true? Let's say what is useful. Let's say it at the right time.
And appropriate and kind. Oh, sorry. I got three of the five. Well, sometimes I do appropriate and helpful, I combine them, but there's actually five,
yeah.
You talked about being able to say, if you can, of course, you're going to notice that
I'm listening to Bart speak and all sorts of, you know, there's various starbursts of
thoughts about clever things I could say in response or follow up questions or what's
the audience going to want to know and how can I keep track of that, et cetera, et cetera.
I don't need to chase all of those.
I can let them go as natural horizons.
That leaves me when it's my turn to talk, having really listened to what you just said.
That leaves me with the capacity to do what Zen teachers talk about this a lot, which
is to be spontaneous.
Exactly. Exactly. Yeah. In the beginning, it felt challenging for me to be invited to attune
to the emergence of what's going on, ideas and thoughts that come up within me,
or what I hear from other people in formal meditation in this way, because
we're so used to having this idea of control. And so what we're going to say next or what
we're going to be planning for. And we're also so used, especially with people that we know well, that we can have already
fill in what they might say or how they're going to do it, especially in relationships
that you have for a long time.
And this practice really invites you to be very fresh in the moment.
And I found it extremely helpful to attune to this emergence when I'm in that feel of really being present.
And I'm starting to trust it. I'm really starting to trust that I might not have something to say, you know, or trusting that when a person is really taking their time to speak, to not interrupt them,
it's been so helpful because then speech and being in relationship becomes my practice too in a way. And if I can make a plug for creativity and meditation,
there are so many ways that you could do formally, that helps you to be present. And this could be one.
Right? I found it in the beginning so limiting that most of my meditation teaching was offered
for example with either my body sitting or not really moving much but still and maybe
a little bit of walking.
Now that I've gotten way more exposed to other ways of being mindful, my practice now for
example, my formal practice,
if I can, is mindful swimming.
Really brings me, like, for a continued period of time
in the present moment.
I also teach in a VA hospital in the Bronx,
and there was one man who constantly kept visiting our group
of PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder, diagnosed veterans.
And he said, oh man, I wish I could join you. I want to be Zen, man. And I said, so join us.
When he said, no, no, it's about sitting. You have to say, we even ask if we have to sit cross-legged,
like a Buddhist statue. He said, no, no, no, we just sit in chairs. Join us. And then when he
started all of a sudden half way, he says,
stop, please, I need to move. I can be present, but I need to move. So I asked him, so how would
you want to move? And he goes, can I pretend as if I'm salsa dancing with my wife?
And I said, I asked the other said, is that okay for you? And it's fine. And so he was doing that,
but he was very present. While we were doing some yoga
chair poses in the yoga chair and sitting quietly, but I really want to encourage everyone
to find ways in your life where it's quite easy to start cultivating and training this
sense of being present. And for a lot of people, it could actually be
in a relational way.
Now.
I really plus one on that in a big way.
And I think there's a lot of evidence in terms of,
people really struggle mightily to establish
the habit of meditation and mindfulness.
Absolutely.
And so there, I think there's a lot of evidence
that supports that if you can find the easiest way in,
that's probably going to be the winning strategy.
And so if you can figure out
are there places in my life where just being awake
for this, you would have it doesn't look like
the Buddhist statue I saw outside the spa at the airport,
it's working for me.
And so that kind of creativity,
I think it's a really
skillful. It's right speech part is what I'm trying to tell you. It's helpful.
I do want to go back to pause for a second because we talked about pausing
in a way that, you know, your wife won't catch you because, you know, you're not interrupting the conversation, you're not stopping, it's a kind of an internal process
that nobody's gonna notice.
But there is a way I suspect to pause Obama style
where you actually stop in the middle of what you're saying.
And so somebody might notice that this guy
is actually pausing.
So what does that look like?
How do you do it without it coming off
like some technique you're using on somebody?
Right.
Well, first of all, these relational practices
that I've been talking about,
they're not like communication tools.
They are really tools to remember to be present
and support you in the continuity of it, right?
But I've personally felt like if it's coming naturally to you
after a while, to pause, and that could look like that you kind of stop speaking for a while,
I've noticed that it actually makes people more attentive and oneself as well.
Like, I have like a decade of experience teaching young people who are not receptive in the beginning to meditation in middle school suspension schools, what have you and to get their attention in the beginning, I would kind of raise my voice or I would speak quickly, none of that worked. Sometimes the most effective way of also gathering my thoughts again,
really connect with my body and the softening of the belly, perhaps, was through stopping.
I have a little bit of an advantage as a non-native English speaker,
is that sometimes, because this is not my language, I have to kind of
pause to find the right words. And so maybe, you know, for native English speakers who use it all
the time, like maybe just pretend also sometimes that you're kind of, you know, giving yourself
more time to really find out what are the words that need to be expressed.
And it's so interesting to see how, how where the words come from.
Now, how does that happen?
That process, I find it extremely interesting, like they kind of bubble up.
And even the act of speech, I find it amazing.
Like right now, my vocal cords are vibrating in the Netherlands.
Mediated through the internet, you here this Dan,
your ears, I don't know the exact English word for the thing
that vibrates in your ears, is vibrating right now
with the vibration of these vocal cords.
And so this communication is unfolding,
mediated through the internet.
And it all starts with these images and thoughts that come up and so quickly, they form into
words.
So with some formal practice, it's also very interesting to see like, what's the difference
between mindful speech and habitual speech?
Now we can only start seeing that in a moment when we wake up and we go, oh, that was a period
of time of unmindful speech.
And I might have said something that wasn't fitting the five aspects of why speech.
And so in this way we learned through repeated reflection as the Buddha was suggesting
to his seven-year-old at the time. Even right now, it feels as a protection to pause for
me right now. And it doesn't mean I stop speaking, but it kind of gives me also time to check
in because I'm seeing you, like your nonverbal
expression.
And when we're so attuned to checking, oh, this Dan may be wanting to say something, I
can pause.
And so also the timely nature of speech that the Buddha talked about, one can only know
this when one's present, for the relational relational field that you are co-creating
with someone.
I do sometimes feel guilty because this is an unusual
conversation because I'm interviewing you.
So I occasionally have to break eye contact
and writes a note because I want to make sure
that I don't forget to ask you a question,
but I also want to write it down so that I'm not having
to hold it in my mind while I'm trying to listen to you.
So you have to put up with me occasionally looking down
and writing notes, you've been very patient with it,
back to pausing for a second,
just to really put a fine point on it,
so I understand it.
I really like that distinction you made.
This is not a communication technique.
This isn't something you're doing to make sure your points are blending with the other
person.
This is really a, this is psych-exself-defense, actually.
And so the pause, it doesn't have to be some, I'm thinking out loud here, but I can
imagine it doesn't have to be some big tactic, some theatrical thing you do to, you know,
it could be just, you know, for example,
I noticed not infrequently that I get carried away
and start saying a bunch of stupid stuff.
And so I might say, you know,
let me pause for a second.
And then start talking again.
And it's not, again, it doesn't have to be,
I kind of hate it when I feel like somebody's using
a technique on me or they're being, you know,
like, performatively mindful or whatever.
Yeah, so then my inner dialogue gets pretty sort of
unhelpful in those moments.
So I don't want to do that to other people,
but I do like the idea of the psychic self-defense of,
let me stop this snowball before it gets all the way
to the bottom of the hill and, you know,
knocks over a small child.
So yeah, that strikes me as really useful.
Anyway, does any of what I've just rambled about make sense?
Yeah.
The listeners can't see it, but that's been nodding.
And this kind of connects back to that example
of this high school young man, Jonathan,
for him this was a huge insight when he realized he was not alone in self-judgment.
And so what you just described, my bet would be that almost anyone has had a similar experience
that you just described. And I think talking about our experiences in this way is also very helpful because it helps
you to start seeing clearly certain patterns.
So what you just offered, Dan, is helpful for me because I will probably remember that
when I see myself doing, I'm having the same habitual
feel as you just describe and I go, oh, I might remember even your name, like, oh, Dan.
You know, and when that remembering is happening, usually there's mindfulness.
And so the more we start to name all these experiences, it becomes easier to recognize them when they are operating
again. And it also makes us more compassionate when we see them operating with other people.
Because when you were saying, I was like, Oh, man, I hear you. Also, when you said about,
you know, how your son sometimes calls you, I forgot the exam wording here. Oh, I've even been called, I hate you.
It was even worse.
And then I remember telling this to a friend, like, oh, Lou just told me that he hates me.
And he just said, I've been hated by my daughter for a really long time.
I hate you.
And I think that's really what is so transformative in this practice, is that we start to see that
all these experiences, whether they happen within us, around us, or with other people,
they are just in a way nature operating and unfolding.
And from a meditation perspective, all we're asked is, can we be with it?
And when we're with it, we create more space to take skillful action.
This practice also really has shown me, Dan, is that I would be very good at doing nothing,
or saying nothing when actually it was required for me to say something,
you know, where in workshops reflecting on patriarchy, racism, social injustice,
I would just kind of be quiet and hide behind thoughts that were saying, oh, Bart, you're from Europe, you don't really know how the situation is in America. What do you have to say about this?
You're from Europe, you don't really know how the situation is in America. What do you have to say about this?
And I wouldn't say anything.
And after a while, you know, I also started to notice what's the impact of my silence.
And I noticed and I actually got feedback from Fran saying, like, well, look,
you're just hiding in that privilege of you.
You can be silent.
And so this practice of really becoming more also attuned to what's going
around us without losing a sense of self can make a sensitive to the impact that we have
even when we're not speaking. It really feels like it's totally enriched my meditation
practice as soon as I started to really see it in a more broth away and start incorporating relational mindfulness.
Yeah, I'm really sold. We explored one of the very useful
techniques that you provided, which is pause. But there was
another one you mentioned that I just want to go back to put a
little bit more meat on the bone and people can use it in their lives, which is relax.
Right.
That's, if I understand correctly, that's a different practice than pause. Am I right about that?
Yeah, it kind of follows it.
Pause is the remembering of awareness?
The instruction and insight dialect to relax is then to physically see if you can
maybe soften the tension that was noticed by pause, like softening your belly.
I sometimes have to loosen the jaw.
You know, I'm a grinder, especially when it's an uncomfortable unpleasant
relational field that I'm co-creating with someone.
So that has a physical aspect that's relaxed
Demental you cannot really relax your mind
but what you could do is to have an attitude and Very deliberately maybe even say to yourself,
receive, receiving.
Even if it's like very unpleasant,
can you receive the experience of that unpleasant?
Because what it allows for you to do is to be bearing witness with it.
Maybe you can even go as far as saying allow.
So relax then becomes like, you know, your pause, but you can then also very use that space
to go, can I receive and allow what's happening right now. I might eventually you know condone what's happening but the actual experience
right now. And so when you would say pause is a remembering of awareness, relax is connecting with
kindness. I think the two of them then and they come together. Gregory Kramer, who created this practice, says that,
relax that attitude heals what pause reveals.
I really liked that because if the attitude of mind is one of receiving what's going on,
what's unfolding, it usually has a healing quality
because there's kindness there.
So, pause allows you to become aware.
Relax is kind of like, you know,
you choosing kindness and ease as best as you can in that moment
by having a receptive, maybe even allowing attitude
to the experience that you're having.
To be clear, though, that is not a quiescence or a passivity.
That means accepting what's happening right now, not necessarily being blindly reactive
to it, but responding in the wisest way possible, which may be not explicitly you know, not explicitly not condoning what's happening right now.
Exactly. Exactly.
So pause, relax. Those are two good related tools. Are there other tools within this world of relational mindfulness insight dialogue that you think would be sort of reasonably easily operationalized by listeners.
Yeah. So, after pause and relax,
another instruction is called open.
This really allows you to start playing with
this idea of being aware of something that's internal,
and also noticing when you're more aware of
something external and both.
The great way to do this is with nature.
So maybe pretty soon after hearing this, if you can maybe go to a park or nature and practice
open and see what happens.
And in a very concrete way, what you could do, you can even do it in or in or is to start
with feeling your body as best as you can and just listen to
how it speaks to you.
So more mindfulness directed internally.
And then see if you can look at something, an object, I'm just looking at a microphone
right now. But see if you can still feel the body and slowly opening up to, this could be a tree outside,
it could be a moving animal, could be a rock. And to see what it's like to open to another experience that's unfolding outside of you,
but mindfulness can be aware of it.
I think that's one of the reasons so many people, especially in the midst of this pandemic,
find a sense of ease, refuge, if you will, by going out in nature.
Because it naturally opens the mind.
And so what I would suggest that you could do is
stance it, whatever your posture is, start first internal.
And then to slowly, maybe start with sounds.
Can you feel the body and still hear the sounds of this voice?
Sounds that are coming in from the space you're in.
Those are of external experiences.
Man opening your eyes and maybe opening up to right now in the Netherlands already the daffodils are coming out.
I'm really kind of becoming open to that, still feeling the connection to yourself,
but it's also fine when you notice you're totally getting into this experience of seeing the daffodil,
and allowing yourself to play with, huh? So sometimes the awareness is a lot more exoron.
Let's find, too, there's no, this this is all about balance and because life is always changing
Your balance has to change every time too
And so that could be one way where you can also start playing with
Opening into the field of awareness not necessarily losing a sense of yourself in it
That sounds like a great formal practice that would train up the ability to
play in conversation, to play with moving between or balancing awareness of your own stuff,
awareness of the other person's stuff and awareness of the field between the two, three, four,
five, whatever number there are of you. So we do this open practice and then we're able to bring it into relationship as yeah. That's all right. Yeah, it does. An easy way to start is with, let's say,
let it trees or like things in nature because there's way less judgments around trees. I've only
judged a tree once because my sister has a habit of planting her Christmas tree back in her garden and
then puts it back in when it's Christmas again.
And then one time she had a tree, it looked miserable.
That was the first time I actually saw myself, you know, judging a tree.
So, but so this practice of open, I would suggest starting with something that, you know,
sparks little judgment. And another thing, Dan, I love that you use as well,
is the verb play.
Because when I came to America,
the first weird experience for me,
I think there was on a plane, a flight attendant
would come to me and my wife, and we were still eating.
And the flight attendant goes,
are you finished working on this? And I'm
like working. You know, in Dutch, we don't have a word for work and food and eating. It's just
totally two different worlds, right? And then when I've been in America now for about 12,
almost 13 years, I noticed how much that word work is used in American language.
It's way more used than in Dutch.
And even in the world of meditation,
I would have people come up to me and say,
oh, I think my mindfulness is good,
but I have to work on my compassion.
And so, again, coming back to what really is helpful for you and establishing and maintaining
a practice is maybe to switch the word work and make it into play.
And I've seen that in my little boy.
When he is playing, I have a sense that he's not wishy-washy, he keeps repeating the same
stuff over and over again.
He's not afraid to make mistakes.
And just like a musician doesn't work their music, there's a sense of joy that comes
with it.
So I just noticed you using that word.
So yeah, thanks.
Well, I stole it from our mutual friend Joseph Goldstein who talks about playing in meditation
a lot.
I don't have any original ideas.
Me neither.
I feel like we've done some good, and I'll use this term slightly playfully here, on
introducing the concept of relational mindfulness, and then giving people a few easy takeaways or I don't want to use the term easy too
politely but like doable things to play with in their own lives around pausing, relaxing, opening. Do you feel like we've given people a suitable introduction or is there
something that we've missed that we absolutely should dive in on before we let people go. No.
No, I think this is, we recovered a lot.
Yeah.
The one thing that I think is just key is really appreciating a moment of when you actually wake up
in the middle of whatever you're doing in daily life.
Because you know what that means?
It means the practice is working.
You know, and I just always saw myself usually going like, oh, that's not been mindful at all. Look
at me. A lot of self-judgment. Good to notice. But lately, it's way more like, huh, it's a sense of
joy. So it's all close with this. Like, it's the pause that remembers. It's the pause that remembers.
And I really like that.
The pause that remembers.
At the Insight Meditation Society, when I teach there, there's a space for the staff to
eat and the teachers.
And then the door back to where all the meditators are in there in silence.
The door knob on top of it, it also says,
the pause that remembers.
So that would be the main takeaway, that word pause, and then really feel what it's like
to be present in the midst of the messiness of daily life.
Next time I see you, I fully expect you to have the word pause tattooed on your
wrists, so I'm gonna hold you to that. I've been hold many times once actually I was on a
retreat and the person after the retreat thanks me and was wonderful blah blah blah, but
bar I am a tattoo artist. I got my gear with me. I'll offer to you for free. And that chickened out.
I thought about getting the letters. I
feels a little sort of earnest in an off brand way, but I think it could be useful. F T B O A B for the benefit of all
beings. Oh, as a reminder to stop being so, you know,
selfish and self-involved,
I had that somewhere, you know, near my hand,
on my wrist or something like that,
it would be, it would be useful reminder.
But I too am, I'm pain averse and chicken,
so, and I don't like you jump and freezing lakes
on the regular, so I'm truly pain averse.
Well, this has been great.
It's great to see you and learn from you.
Like Wes.
And thanks for doing this.
Appreciate it.
Thank you as well.
Just a thought.
Maybe we could get that tattoo together.
Yes, I would do that.
You?
I really would.
If I went with you, I would do it.
Okay.
Thank you, promise. Okay. with you, I would do it. Okay. Okay.
Thank you, promise.
Okay.
Thank you, holding his pinky up.
Oh, wait, before I let you go, after we made that promise in public, if people want to
learn more about you, where can they do that?
I am active at the New York Insight Meditation Center.
I'm in New York, based usually, so there they can find me.
I also teach at the Insight meditation
society. And we've talked about our dear friend Joseph Goldstein. I'll be co-teaching a
retreat with him in the beginning of April. And on my website, my full name, Bart van
Malik.com. We'll put links to all of these in the show notes. So if you want to learn
more, learn from the man himself, you can go do that. Bart, great job. Thanks again. Likewise. Thank you so much, Dan. Be well.
Thanks again to Bart. Oh, I just want to plug something here on Bart's behalf. He's doing
an upcoming retreat with Joseph Goldstein and Roxanne Dalt through IMS, the Insight
Meditation Society. Starting on April 3rd, there's a link to sign up in the show notes.
I just got an email from Joseph about this retreat.
He's very excited about it, so go check it out.
This show is made by Samuel Johns,
DJ Cashmere, Kim Baikamah, Maria Wartel,
and Jen Poyant with audio engineering
by ultraviolet audio.
And as always, a shout out to Ryan Kessler
and Josh Cohan at ABC News.
We'll see you all on Friday for a bonus
from the great meditation teacher, Orrin J. Sofher. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUT OUTRO [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC [♪ OUTRO MUSIC on Amazon Music. Download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and add free with 1-3-plus
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