Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 476: How to Actually Be Present | Matthew Brensilver
Episode Date: July 20, 2022Today we’re gonna tackle one of the best known contemplative clichés: being in the present moment and inhabiting the now.The present moment seems to be a state we aspire towards, but are r...arely given practical information about how to actually achieve. But today’s guest, Matthew Brensilver offers just that— practical information on how to achieve being present. We also explore his argument that when painful memories surface in meditation, it acts as a kind of exposure therapy that acclimates us to the things we may not want to face.This is Matthew Brensilver‘s second appearance on the show. He teaches retreats at the Insight Retreat Center, Spirit Rock and other Buddhist centers. Before committing to teach meditation full-time, he spent years doing research on addiction pharmacotherapy at the UCLA Center for Behavioral and Addiction Medicine. Matthew is the co-author of two books about meditation during adolescence and continues to be interested in the unfolding dialogue between Buddhism and science. In this episode we talk about:What “be present” actually meansWhat to do when Buddhist teachings or meditation instructions feel out of reach and when we start compulsively self-assessing against themWhat to do when a memory arises in meditation, especially a difficult memoryThe brain’s tendency toward constant predictionThe benefits of meditation retreatAnd distinguishing between true alarms and false alarmsFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/matthew-brensilver-476See 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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This is the 10% happier podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hey gang, today we're going to tackle one of the best known contemplative cliches.
Being in the present moment, inhabiting the now, this is one of these vented states we
are exhorted to aspire to,
but are rarely given any practical information
about how to actually achieve.
Now, obviously there are lots of reasons
why you should want to be in the present moment
because that's the only time it ever is.
But my guess today is gonna make a very specific argument
for the utility of the present moment
in terms of your psychological well-being.
His argument is that when painful memories surface in meditation,
it acts as a kind of exposure therapy,
acclimating us to the things we may not want to face.
I love this, in part because it goes right at one of the fundamental misconceptions about meditation,
which is that so-called distractions are bad.
But often the memories, thought patterns, urges, and emotions that arise in meditation,
often that's the good stuff.
It's what you're meant to see, but in a new and different and hopefully more skillful way.
This is Matthew Brennsel, for a second appearance on this show.
He teaches retreats at the Insight Retreat Center, Spirit Rock, and other Buddhist centers
before committing to teach meditation full-time.
He spent years doing research on addiction at the UCLA Center for Behavior Rock and other Buddhist centers before committing to teach meditation full time.
You spent years doing research on addiction at the UCLA Center for Behavioral and Addiction
Medicine.
Matthew is the co-author of two books about meditation during adolescence and continues
to be interested in the ongoing dialogue between Buddhism and science.
In this conversation, we talked about what being present actually means, what to do when
Buddhist teachings or meditation instructions feel out of reach, and then when we start compulsively
self-assessing against these teachings, which sounds familiar to me, what to do when a
memory arises in meditation, especially at difficult one, the brains at times exhausting
evolutionarily wired tendency toward constant prediction, the benefits of going on meditation
retreats, and distinguishing between true alarms and false alarms.
I should say this is the second in a two-part series we're doing this week.
If you missed it, check out Monday's episode with the actress and director Sarah Polly,
who just put out a very personal new book about the relationship between our present selves
and our past.
Before we jump into today's show, many of us want to live healthier lives, but keep bumping
our heads up against the same obstacles over and over again.
But what if there was a different way to relate to this gap between what you want to do and
what you actually do?
What if you could find intrinsic motivation for habit change that will make you happier
instead of sending you into a shame spiral.
Learn how to form healthy habits without kicking your own ass unnecessarily by taking our healthy habits course over on the 10% happier app.
It's taught by the Stanford psychologist Kelli 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 download the 10% happier app wherever you get your apps or by visiting 10%.com.
All one word spelled out.
Okay, on with the show. Like, it's only fans only bad, where the memes come from. And where's Tom from MySpace? Listen to Baby, this is Kiki Palmer
on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcast.
Matthew Brenselver, welcome back to the show.
Nice to be with you, Dan.
So, let's start at perhaps the granddaddy
of all contemplative cliches, which is being
in the moment, being present.
How do you understand that phrase?
Yeah, I know.
It's, that's what the shirts say.
The shirts say be present, but that is a deep question, actually.
And do we understand the present as a kind of sliver of time that is sandwiched
between the past and the future? How long is now? Is the present just a metaphor? Usually when
people say, be present, that's just a kind of direction not to be identified with discursive thought, that we are present when we are not identified with
the narrative of the moment. And to not be present is to be absorbed and identified in the story of
now, whatever that story is. And then to be present is to reestablish mindfulness
to have some metacognitive awareness
of the phenomenal world of what's arising
and passing moment by moment.
And so usually to be present just means
don't be stuck in that bubble of thought, right?
But to be present is a pretty radical gesture, and it's one that
takes us through all of the past, and one that requires that we radically surrender the
vigilance we have about the future. And so to be present in it, like the most radical way I was thinking
actually during meditation this morning, this is what came up. To be present is to be willing
to die, which is a maybe jarring way of formulating it, but to actually be present is to surrender the sense of vigilance of orientation, of tracking
a phenomena as threat and opportunity, and to be this like just profoundly porous, defenseless
embodiment.
And that's a lot to swallow in a way. That's not the tagline
for, you know, that we, it's not what we put on the flyers for the meditation classes.
And of course, I want to live, but there is a sense of just to be radically open in that
way entails a willingness to care more about awareness than one's life, even if just for a moment,
even if just for a moment.
How is that for a starting point?
What have I done here, Dan?
Well, I know it's going to be a nice light conversation, frothy.
I'm already enjoying it.
So I guess where my mind goes, my mind goes in a million directions when I hear you say
that, but one of them is, damn, maybe I've never been present after all of these years of meditating,
maybe by this definition, I've never been present.
Well, how we define mindfulness, how radically we define presence.
That's an open question.
And sometimes I think it's very useful to define mindfulness in a very workable, accessible way.
But then there are all other definitions of sattti, the polyword for mindfulness that are
much more radical.
And for me, in a way, we have to start the mindfulness path by defining it, but to understand
what mindfulness is, in some sense senses, the fruition of the path,
not the starting point. I don't know what mindfulness is. I don't know what you're going
to ask me, Dan, or how stumped I'm going to be. I don't know what I've already backed
myself into here in these first two minutes. It's like we discover facets of mindfulness
every time we sit, every time we practice.
And there's a kind of freshness of that.
And we keep refining and bringing more and more depth and nuance, sophistication to what we even
constru as the present moment or to be in some kind of presence.
And so I do feel like, you know,
one of the complexities of practice,
we get so habituated and acclimatized to the notions of,
oh, this is mindfulness, this is my technique,
this is what I practice,
that it can bring a kind of staleness in.
And so I sort of challenge myself, like,
okay, I'm supposed to know what mindfulness is,
I am a meditation teacher, but maybe I don't.
Maybe I don't.
And what are the radical possibilities on offer when we actually open up in this very strategic
undefended way to what is actually here?
So for anybody who's listening the way I am, you know, in the completely self-centered
way of hearing you set the bar really high for mindfulness or being in the moment,
being present, whatever terminology you want to use.
For anybody who's listening like, I am in thinking, oh, I don't know if I've ever done that
and I don't know how to do that.
I think what you're saying is, with all of these ancient terms, mindfulness, concentration,
compassion, you can have a kind of beginning definition for mindfulness.
I often say it's the ability to see what's happening in your head and in your body right
now without being carried away.
You can have a beginning definition that's serviceable and works, but these are such rich, complex qualities of mine that over time,
you can see how vast they are and you can raise the bar higher and higher. And you're just
when you describe truly being president is in a way being ready to die. Well, that's just a
profound understanding of a quality that all of us have been able to cultivate to one degree or another.
Yeah, yeah. And I don't mean to sort of deify some exalted notion of mindfulness. And
it's not like every time I sit, I like cancel my lunch plans or something. You know, it's
like, no, I want to live, but there is this kind of radical surrender. And that is something that we can appreciate over time.
And we don't have to set that as some bar
that we're always striving to achieve
and almost invariably failing.
That is just actually compounding the sense of self
in the moment.
And that's really not necessary.
And so I feel like when we hear certain teachings that feel kind of remote, or there's some
kind of reach for us, how we relate to that is really important.
And if we turn that into another lesson about our own insufficiency, it just gets old and it's painful and it's not so inspiring.
It's like, okay, I hear lots of teachings all the time myself as a student and I'm just like, wow,
that is, there's a quality of curiosity and wonder and there's not this sense of me,
little Matthew, this incompetent meditation person who is aspiring
to some ideal. That is just more static in the system. And so, yeah, it's just whatever comes
alive in one's heart, just follow the thread of that sincerity. So if we hear you describing
So, if we hear you describing mindfulness or being present in this way, don't get caught up in trying to measure your practice against it.
Hear it, let it wash over you, and have it be something of a directional inspiration.
Check and see in your own practice.
Is that something you can relate to?
Do you see perhaps in some moments something
approaching that state arising in your own mind?
Yeah, that sounds good. We have to be very careful what metrics we use and apply, and how
often we sample the moment to assess our progress against some metric. You know, do sort of like, what are our barometers for meditative progress?
And I think the tendency is to have one barometer and to be checking it very frequently, far too
frequently. It's like after each breath, we check back to what our metric of spiritual progress is and ask.
Am I more mindful?
Am I more concentrating?
Am I more like that thing I heard on 10% happier?
And it's like, this is a call for one for patients.
Of course, we have to adjust and we get feedback
on our own practice and we change course and these things.
But we don't wanna be sampling data
after every breath to see how we're doing.
And then the other piece is that we usually focus
too exclusively on one kind of barometer.
Am I mindful in this way that I think
is supposed to be helpful or am I concentrated
in the way that I think is supposed to be helpful, or am I concentrated in the way that I think is supposed to be helpful?
And the practice has so many mechanisms of action. There's so many ways it gets under our skin.
There's so many ways in which it heals us and wakes us up that to focus exclusively on one metric
does it disservice to all the other ways in which practice may be functioning.
And so it's just the caution about being too single-minded about how progress unfolds
and being too compulsive about measuring that progress.
A pitfall into which I have experienced many, many times and continue to experience.
into which I have experienced many, many times and continue to experience. So let's go back, let's veer away from, at least for now, from what our mutual friend,
Joseph Goldstein calls the practice assessment tapes that many of us run.
Let's veer back to the subject of being in the moment that Apex predator of all contemplative
cliches.
And I'm trying to figure out where to go from here.
DJ Kashmir, who is the amazingly named human being,
who is one of our indispensable producers on this show,
is the one who teed up this interview with you,
and he was inspired by having heard you give a talk
on a meditation retreat that he attended
that you were leading recently.
The title of the talk was memory prediction becoming
and the present.
So I started at the present, the end of the list. But let's work our way through the beginning of the list. Let's start with
memory because as you said, I think a lot of us feel like if memories are surfacing in meditation,
well, then that's proof that we're doing it wrong because we're stuck in the past instead of
militantly focusing on that here and now. So what say you vis-a-vis memory and meditation?
now. So what say you vis-a-vis memory and meditation? Well, at some level we could think about the present moment as the culmination of the entirety of
the past, that the present moment is the kind of wave crest and the ocean is the past.
the ocean is the past. What is here now?
What is the present moment made out of other than the sum of the past, of all causes and
conditions?
And so this notion that we just sever ourselves from the past, from memory in some automatic
way, and we force our mind into some slot that we define as the present is to my mind
a mistaken notion. And the path of meditation, the path of mindfulness, the path into a deeper
sense of presence takes us through memory and the past. it takes us through the anticipation and prognostications
we have about the future.
And so the sense that we should just utterly seclude ourselves from the past is not really
viable.
I would say we really actually heal our past through meditation practice. There's some saying somebody
said forgiveness is giving up hope for a better past or something like this, but the truth
is that we remember from a deluded viewpoint and in ways the experience, the intensities
of any given life are just, they're just more
than we could digest.
And so life can feel like a meal that is too big to consume, basically.
And we have these unfinished, undigested business of memory, of habits that have incredible
inertia. And part of meditation practice
is actually transforming our very sense of the past.
And we don't do this explicitly.
We're not trying to re-narrate our past as we practice.
But of course, as we sit and we try to be present,
what arises is the kind of,
whatever is undigested from our day or our week
or our year or lifetime.
And what is kind of undigested,
what has not been metabolized,
what is still kind of electrified in our own histories
needs to be known and blessed with presence. We bless our past with wisdom and love.
And so we're there innocently trying to be still to find some silence. and whatever is incomplete in our own history calls out for our attention.
And it calls out for a new kind of understanding,
calls out to be known from the perspective of wisdom,
to be known with awareness and love.
And this is actually how we complete our past.
And so we don't have to do some explicit life review in our meditation practice,
but it will organically happen. It will organically happen that the electrified memories of often
some kind of pain, some kind of awkwardness, some kind of shame, some sense of loose end of our life that feels problematic.
This will arise, the harm that we've done, the harm that's been done to us, this will arise.
And just over the course of the months and years of practice, we will be asked to habituate to all of our memory. At one time or
another, it will all return. And people feel like this is an interruption, a kind of intrusion
in their practice. But is actually what I would say is one of the core mechanisms of how we cultivate our own being on this path,
and how our past starts to become more and more whole. And in this way, it becomes less and less
sticky. It becomes blessed with the wisdom and love that we've cultivated now that we did not have when we
experienced that moment, right? And so there is this sense of like
integrating, gathering up the shards of our own history and essentially writing
and rewriting our autobiography. And it happens quietly.
It happens quietly.
It doesn't always happen so explicitly.
But over time, the sense of our very life,
our past is written in light of,
we would say, Dharma, in light of this path of practice.
Coming up, Matthew Brenselver explains his contention that mindfulness practice is a kind
of exposure therapy.
He illuminates the brain's exhausting tendency toward constant prediction.
And he explains what is meant by the phrase liberation is the cessation of becoming.
That's the kind of verbiage you hear escaping the lips of Buddhists all the time.
He's going to unpack that for us after this. Hey, I'm Aresha and I'm Brooke and we're the hosts of
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Follow even the rich wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen ad-free on Amazon Music or the This is fascinating and it sounds right to me as an amateur meditator, but I'm going
to press you to get really practical about some of the rather grand terms you use.
That's not a criticism, but they are sort of big words.
Like you talked about blessing the past with presence and wisdom and love and awareness.
What does that actually mean and how does it get done?
Yeah, so memory arises.
And sometimes it's in the form of some explicit episode
from our past.
Sometimes it feels like just some lingering,
emotional, affective agitation,
or some energy coming through the body.
And in those times, it's important to be willing to experience the past in the present moment.
So we give this kind of radical permission for the past to arise, that memory, those images that we have, the associated feeling,
affect in our body, we give permission for all of that to arise without any sense of
contention or fighting with it. And so we're allowing the fullness of the past to be known in the present moment.
And then for me, it's like we're just allowing that past almost like an energy that is
wire bound tightly in our own heart, mind, body to just unfurl in the space of awareness. And so it's not even explicitly trying
to re-conceptualize something that's happened in the past. It's allowing the energy, the intensity,
the stickiness of memory just to be discharged in the present moment.
just to be discharged in the present moment.
And sometimes, of course, we'll get stuck back in it and we'll be reliving it in a way
that feels very first person.
All of a sudden, I'm there, I'm reliving it.
And what he said, what they said, what she said,
we're in the kind of the protagonist of the movie
without being conscious that we're watching a movie. And then we reestablish some mind from this.
Ah, my body feels like this. Ah, there are memories of that. And oh, the kind of affective
flavors of the mind and body feel like this. We become conscious of all of that and we become willing to just
absorb the kind of body blow of the intensity of that.
And we as one of my teachers, Shins and Young says, we love it to death.
Yeah, we love it to death. We normally try to hate things to death, but here we love it to death.
And this doesn't require us to tell some elaborate new story. It's like the intensity, the stickiness of our past feels electrified in the same way.
It may retain all of its poignancy.
We are not severed from our past or something like this.
We have learned a lot from it.
We have learned what and who we can trust, what and who we cannot trust.
We have learned so much, but the kind of gripping, re-experience and quality of the past
is transformed.
And in this way, I often say mindfulness practice is a kind of exposure therapy.
It is an exposure therapy. Yeah, it is an exposure therapy. Normally, we in the clinical world,
you do exposure therapy for some anxiety or post-traumatic stress of one kind or another.
And the idea is that avoidance and catastrophic thinking and ideas about our own
lack of resilience keeps the psychological pain in place.
We do not actually learn the important new lesson.
The fear is kept in place by patterns of avoidance.
And so the idea is instead to approach and to systematically desensitize oneself to whatever
the feared object is. In meditation practice, it's not systematic
decensitization practice, it's really unsystematic decensitization, it's unsystematic exposure, meaning
whatever can disrupt my peace will. But that is a core element of practice. Whatever can disrupt my peace, will. I just have to sit long enough.
And what disrupts my peace is not my fault, and nor is it an accident. The nature of the pain that arises for me is different than yours. And it's not an accident that it arises
in this particular constellation for me, nor is it my fault. I don't know. There's something
about that word blessing that I'm not an especially religious person in many respects,
but that word feels right just in the sense of, I have this image of memory arising
and like the way somebody gets knighted or something like that. I don't even know the
what I'm talking about, but it's like I think of a sword touching one shoulder and another,
and I have this image of like, yeah, with memory, it's like we touch with wisdom,
with deep understanding and we touch with love.
And in this way, we're really habituating
to everything that might disrupt our peace.
Anyway, I'm using, you said, get concrete
and maybe I'm using more grandiose language, Jan.
So do something for us.
Do something.
All right.
Well, here's what I will do.
I like, I really like everything you're saying.
I'll do my thing of just dumbing it down even further because that's how I understand
things at the dumbest possible level and build from there.
And so I would say the way I'm taking in what you're saying is I'm sitting there in meditation
trying to focus on my breath coming in going out. I might then get ambushed by a memory of some horrible thing. I didn't seventh grade
and the blessing with wisdom and love and awareness and me sound I'd reach to some people but really it's pretty down to earth
It's like okay. What's love if not acceptance, right? I'm not fighting it.'s pretty down to Earth. It's like, okay, what's love, if not acceptance, right?
I'm not fighting it.
I'm just, all right, it's here.
What's wisdom, if not the decision not to take it personally?
So I don't have to see this as my memory.
I don't have to get sucked up in the story of it.
I probably will for a few nanoseconds or so,
maybe even 10 minutes, but at some point in my pop out
and be like, oh yeah, this is, what is this memory
consistent of?
Maybe a few shards of visual data, maybe some feelings in the body. So
that's love, that's wisdom. It's all happening right now. That's the present moment. And of
course, all of this is awareness. And then once you've loved it to death, meaning you haven't
fought it, you've seen it for what it is, a set of sensations, and then you go back to your breath.
And then maybe something else comes up.
And then you do this process at infinitum,
and in this way, you're really healing your relationship
to the past.
Anyway, is that a recapitulation
that is that bears some resemblance to the original?
Absolutely.
Yeah, I'm not pointing to some epically sophisticated mode of practice.
It's more describing, I think, what is happening when we do practice. And we think that all the
goodness comes from being with the breath or discovering the stickiness of memory.
And beginning to actually understand our past in light of our current wisdom,
because the painful episodes of our history at some level,
they get encoded in a kind of more primitive frame of reference.
And we really want to understand a certain kind of the innocence of our pain,
what made that painful.
We want to import some of the wisdom we have now into the lack of wisdom we had in that moment.
That's what helps digest this. And this happens, I think, just in a organic ways
over the course of practice,
it's not a project that we have to do.
We don't sit down and say, okay,
I need to heal my past in this way.
We just are willing to learn from everything,
be softened by everything.
And then, of course, we start to see that part of our fixation about the past,
maybe some small sliver of it is purely about the past, but so much of what we're doing
is trying to leverage the past in order to ensure our future, that we bind ourselves to the past and the future in our attempt to secure the
safety of the present moment. And so the past is often not meaningful just in its own
right. We're trying to extract some lessons in order to ensure that our future might be all right.
And this is also such a natural habit of mind.
And we see that we do tie ourselves to the past and to our future.
And the present can feel very squeezed by the rest of all time, you know, what is past, what is future, and the present
gets very claustrophobic. And so some part of our practice is about healing the past,
and then there's this other dimension of letting go of the future and entering the bottomlessness
of the present. But maybe we're getting to the second
word. I don't know what the title was. I don't remember. Okay. Well, we are getting to the second
word. You're very, very kindly doing my job for me. The title of the talk that the aforementioned
DJ heard on his recent meditation retreat, which you were leading was memory prediction,
the coming, which I'll leading, was memory, prediction,
the coming, which I'll get you to define at some point, and the present.
So we've talked about memory, and then you brought us to prediction.
And I believe one of the things you learned in your research for this talk, and just
generally, I know you're very interested in sort of neuroscience, is that increasingly
neuroscientists are thinking of the brain as a prediction machine and how else to form your
predictions if not mining the past and the present. Yeah, so there's a lot of currency around
prediction and predictive processing and this is a kind of theoretical and empirical approach to understanding a brain function that your other
guess could speak much more eloquently about is really above my pay grade. But I came to it through
the sense that the emphasis on prediction used very closely to the phenomenological experience of trying to be present.
And the sense of just the lure of the future,
this sense of tumbling forward,
the sense of the kind of vigilance,
which we don't even really notice
until we sit down and try to be still.
But then we actually can sense just how profoundly our motivational systems
are oriented around ensuring more moments. And this makes sense as an animal contending
with this tiny animal, me contending with unimaginably vast forces of nature, of change, of entropy. And I sit down
and I say, okay, let me let go of the past, let me let go of planning and worrying and
in a future orientation. Let me just be with the breathing. But there is a kind of ambient vigilance of any animal that is just oriented around survival
and protection that is oriented around safety.
And safety is always about the future, right?
I'm safe now in this moment, but is the next moment going to be safe.
And so safety is about the future, which means safety is about prediction.
It's about what is happening next.
It is about the trajectory of this moment.
And does that portend okayness for me?
Does it portend more moments?
Is this moment on a kind of trajectory towards more safety. And one of the effects of that is it feels like the
present moment is only ever a canary in the coal mine of the future. I know that is a weird
image or metaphor or some what analogy. I don't know what it is, but that's
what came to me. I was like, oh yeah, each moment, the present moment just feels like the canary
in the coal mine of the future. And so we're just trying to sense like, is everything okay?
like, is everything okay? Like, is the landscape of threat and opportunity okay?
And to do this, we're modeling our sense of self,
we're modeling our sense of time,
we're modeling the directional trajectory,
you know, the trajectory of this moment.
And we're asking so compulsively, is this okay?
Am I okay?
Will I be okay?
And this happens at the depths of our brain and our being.
And so we start to become sensitive to this imperative around survival,
around protection, around vigilance,
and the kind of lore of the future.
And so to be present is to contend
with these super potent forces of memory,
of the future, of safety, of protection, and the path into a deeper kind of presence
takes us through all of this.
So let me pause for a moment.
That description of, am I okay?
Am I okay?
It's just kind of rocking me back in my seat because, yeah, I think that's what's coursing
through my mind all the
time.
And it got me wondering about whether there's a link between MIOK and the obsessive self-evaluation
that you referenced at the top of this discussion that many of us bring to our meditation practices
and everything else.
This kind of perfectionism is it it linked to anxiety, as I say
it, of thinking that's a pretty obvious question, but what say you?
Yeah, yeah, I didn't make that connection, but I think you're right. The compulsive measuring,
using the whatever metric, barometer, or of the success of our meditation practice, the success of our life
is about ensuring that we're on the right trajectory. And that maybe at base is linked to safety
and survival and the integrity of our own body and all of this. And yeah, we think we're just
checking in on how concentrated I am, but we're really asking,
am I going to be alive in the next moment or something like this, right?
Is my life headed in the right direction?
Is this moment headed in the right direction?
And that is so innocent.
We want to appreciate the innocence of that movement of the mind, and we want to appreciate the claustrophobia of it too,
and the confinement of hallucinating the sense
of self that needs fixing, that is headed somewhere
that has a past and is moving towards a future.
I just become this enormous self-improvement project.
And I'm a mess. I'm always going to be a mess. From that view, there are always going to be loose ends.
And I'm always going to be this discrete entity that is basically broken, that is aspiring towards
that is aspiring towards some less broken state. And the whole gestalt of that mind state has some suffering in it.
And so it's so innocent, but it's a very confined state when we find ourselves in the trenches of that.
Maybe when we are able for a few moments to drop the, am I okay?
Am I okay?
Am I okay?
Am I doing it right?
Am I doing it right?
Am I doing it right?
Maybe that is the readiness to die
that you discussed earlier.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
To be present is to consider what a
futureless moment would feel like. And
that's almost impossible to even conceive. But
this is part of why we have contemplations
about death. Some of it is about the
poignancy of whatever time we have left.
Some of it is about cutting through the pettiness that
will matter zero on our deathbed. But some of it is to consider what would be here, how deeply
might the heart surrender if this moment were futile. And so that is a very surrendered state. That is a very
porous state that is very undefended, all the ways in which we fixate the
sense of self and we fixate a sense of time. Of this is what just happened, this is
where I am now, this is what is coming the way we fixate and orient to what we like, what we don't like, what is
pleasant, what is not pleasant, where the threats and opportunities are of this moment.
All of that just becomes this like incredibly compelling but claustrophobic cluster. And so to be willing to like live this moment
as if there is no future requires a lot of trust
and a lot of devotion in a certain way.
It's like we put all of our hope into the present moment.
And this is why we practice in places that are conducive
to safety where we don't have
to be especially vigilant.
This is why the ancestors of this lineage practiced in seclusion, for example.
And this is why we take the precepts.
We agree at the retreat where DJ was.
We take the precepts, meaning we agree at the very
first evening, we agree, we are not going to harm each other. We are not going to harm each
other. No one here needs to fear one another. This is the commitment and explicit ethical
commitment that we take. And there are many reasons we do that, but part of it is that
there is no way to relinquish vigilance in the absence of some modicum of safety. And as we become
more and more safe, as our inner life becomes more and more safe. We surrender more deeply into the present moment. And strangely, that also
prepares us to deal with the lack of safety that is the human condition, and to contend with the
forces of impermanence, of unreliability. This is what we're training ourselves to do, but in a way, it's like kids are
much better able to open to the contingencies, the uncertainties, the unpredictability of human life,
if they have been protected from those forces for a time.
You know, if a parent insulates a child from all of the forces of uncertainty, of hardship, of suffering, they are insulated
from that, and that protected experience, hopefully, if they are fortunate, that protected
experience allows them to actually open to the truth of the universe more fully. And so,
in the same way, we need to seclude our heart to actually
open to the intensity of the human condition even more fully.
Do we need to be on retreat to access the depths of what you've been talking about in this
conversation? Retreat is helpful, but I don't think it's strictly necessary. I feel like everything I'm saying is on offer
in just the rhythms of our practice,
but retreat is, for most people,
is indispensable in the development
of some of the understandings.
And I don't think it's strictly absolutely necessary,
but for most people,
just the sense of what mindfulness is,
the radical potentials of awareness,
don't usually dawn on people until they have some days
of seclusion, and certainly in my own experiences,
it was easy to think that I knew what mindfulness was
because I had been practicing for a couple of years,
I think, before I sat up for a certain treat.
But I don't feel like I really started to appreciate
the multi-dimensional depth of even what mindfulness is
until I started to sit in retreat with some seclusion
with these artificial set of conditions
that help us relinquish some of the vigilance.
I agree with that.
I think you can get enormous benefits
from doing mindfulness on a day-to-day or daily-ish basis,
but you can get even more if you go on retreat.
After the break, Matthew talks about finding respite from lives that he says are lived,
and these are his words smashed between the present and the future, and he explains the
importance of distinguishing between true alarms and false alarms.
Keep it here.
Let's go back to your list.
We've covered memory and prediction, one and two on the list.
The third was becoming. That's a bit of a term of art in the Buddhist world. What does
it mean?
Becoming is the sense of the continuity of self across time and the impaling force of the future, the future that is pulling us into it,
moment by moment, that sense of what we had been discussing, that sense of the present moment merely as a kind of down payment on some future.
And we live like that so profoundly
without recognizing it,
the sense of never exactly arriving,
the sense of happiness always being
momentarily deferred,
the sense of,
I will get there some time. This moment is about some future when I might finally allow my heart to rest.
But we never arrive. It's forever deferred.
And we can live our whole life in that way.
And there's a kind of tragic quality to that of never
allowing the heart to fully rest because the present is only ever a down payment on some
happiness, some time, somewhere.
And so that sense of me located here, happiness located out there, and I will get there, and it will be a journey. I will
journey. The Matthew within Matthew, the little Matthew inside, will go from point A to point B,
and then I will rest. That gives some flavor of the sense of becoming. And we can have that
in our lives, of course, but also meditatively of just leaning
into the next moment to the next, well, let me just get a little more concentrated here. Let me
get a little more insight, or what was Dan talking about? Let me get a little bit more of that. Let
me get a little, you know, all these things, right? We have sort of trying to extract something from the moment. And the gesture
of awareness is to offer the heart up rather than extract something. But that process of extracting
something and getting somewhere, of moving somewhere, of finally arriving, of finally being able to
arriving of finally being able to climb up on the bank of Samsara, you know, the bank of this human realm, that never comes. We're always forever contending with the forces of change. There are no banks in this river. And it's like to envision our happiness as only ever being when we
can climb up on that bank is becoming, is becoming. This sounds deeply ingrained. How would one even
begin to transcend see through drop this pattern.
I don't know, Dan.
Right.
That's not what you're supposed to say.
Oh, no, that's not, oh, okay.
Well, cut that, definitely added that out.
Here we go.
Let me just, no, it is really deep, really deep.
And I do not claim to have anything like uprooted that habit, I really
feel like that is such a radical relinquishment of the urge for another moment. It is in the deepest sense, like a total surrender of all territory of self.
And that is not my experience, but I have a kind of reverence for what that might be.
And we can have some intuitive hit of what that can feel like in our own practice. The sense of, actually,
in one of the sutras, one of the Buddha's disciples said, liberation is the cessation of
becoming. Liberation is nibbana is the cessation of becoming. That tumbling forward, that sense of leveraging the past in order to
ensure a future of being stuck in time, we can have a sense of what it is just having some degree of freedom from that tumbling forward,
from that becoming.
And that doesn't mean that we are indifferent to death and life or something like this.
That doesn't mean that we do not still appreciate whatever time,
whatever moments we have that doesn't mean we don't plan and organize our lives and organize
efforts to help alleviate suffering. We can do all the future. And there's a lot of relief
that comes from this. And this is, I feel, preparation to die too. It is, we are actually
acclimatizing to moments that don't feel stuck in time in the same way that feel
without future. And maybe, I don't know, but maybe this is of use when we really don't have
another moment. Maybe this is of use when it is our time. And I feel kind of compelled to develop my heart in such a way that it retains its integrity
even as my life ends. Just to pick up on that phrase of I think you said developing or cultivating
your heart, I think as we roll into the final sections of this interview, I wonder if there will be a sort of
yearning on the part of listeners for some thoughts about how to operationalize all of this, because
what you've talked about has been incredibly, in my opinion, resonant, it feels really true,
as I keep saying. I wonder if you have some thoughts about how we can do a better job with whatever
amount of practice we're up for to bring these things to life for ourselves?
Yeah.
So I feel some ambivalence because on the one hand, I know I'm like super vague and impressionistic
and kind of very unclear about how to actually operationalize any of this.
And this is a problem that I have as a teacher, Dan.
This is a theme of self-critique that I contend with at various times.
And I sort of try to psych myself up to get more concrete and operationalize something.
And I can't always get myself to do it.
I can't always get myself to make it more concrete. So let me say a little bit. So on the one hand,
very sympathetic to the desire to have practice instructions. But I think one of the implications of what we're talking
about is that practice itself can be hijacked by the tides of becoming. And so some of what
I'm pointing to is actually just to have a certain faith in the practice that I'm trying to unpack the mechanisms of it in a way that are
hopefully resonant. And this is the genius of this path. It's already encoded in the logic of
the instructions. It's not something else that we need to do, that we need to busy ourselves with.
It's happening. It is happening wordlessly. and that is just purely a reflection of this kind of
lineage, you know, and the genius of it, really. But yeah, there are also things we can do.
There are. You got me again. I'm going to get it to a grudging land. I'm so glad you're dead.
I'm so glad you're here. I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here.
I'm so glad you're here. I'm so glad you're here. concrete ways to make sure that I understand it clearly enough. So I think we can look at
this sense of this total non-rejection of memory, this radical permission for memory to arise,
and for the affective resonance to blow through the space of awareness, just to let it blow through.
blow through the space of awareness just to let it blow through and
then this whole of the future the sense of
this tug of ensuring that this moment is
okay that this moment portends more moments that arises as a kind of agitation and it arises as a kind of agitation, and it arises as a kind of a way in which we're modeling the present moment.
Literally sometimes in our own mind, we're like with imagining the present moment, we're imagining
the outlines of our body, we're imagining the room, we're imagining what's coming next, we're imagining where that pain is in my knee as I'm sitting,
we literally have like a model of all of this, right?
And we're trying to translate that, we're leveraging that model into a kind of estimation
of the safety of this moment. And the practice is to metabolize, to
economize all the agitation of that, all the phenomena of the
predicting and the modeling of the self of the next moment.
All of that is phenomena arising and passing. It comes in the
form of subtle images we have of kind of dreaming of my own body.
You know, like this is what it looks like. I'm literally picturing that with my eyes closed.
I'm literally picturing the room. I'm picturing the bird of the sound that I just heard. And I'm trying to not be surprised or startled by anything. It's like, how do I not be
surprised by the next moment? And that impaling force, we recognize that as the gestalt of a certain
kind of fear, that to me is even more fundamental
than ignorance in our suffering.
It's said that ignorance is the kind of wellspring
of all suffering, and that may be,
but to me, for my money,
even more fundamental is the kind of basic ambient fear
this urge towards safety and security.
And so we actually notice the gestalt of that in our body
and mind. We know that as phenomena arising and passing. And if we can feel safe enough, if our inner
life feels safe enough, if our past feels safe enough, we can begin to surrender some of the vigilance. And so for me, the way it looks is a certain kind of ambient, affective agitation or fearfulness
or defensiveness that I can like sense.
It's not mystical.
It's like the sense of needing to defend, of being vulnerable, you know, and rather than try to shore up and become
invulnerable, we become more vulnerable. We actually move towards the vulnerability. We surrender more
and more deeply and it takes some trust in this path of practice, some trust in the logic of the practice, but we are bringing mindfulness,
equanimity, love to the energies of becoming.
It's very helpful when teachers do what you just did, which is to name and crystallize
a mental trend or phenomenon that I may have a kind of ambient awareness of, but not
actually anything remotely resembling a clear seeing of.
And so you've just named it, and what we can do is bring that into our practice, into
our lives as something we can try to spot as it arises and bring a kind of warm acceptance of as a way to hopefully
over time turn the volume down on it.
My close.
Yeah, I think that's right.
That's right.
We greet the vulnerability of our animal condition with a lot of acceptance and love and patience, and rather than demonizing ourselves for always
shoring up our boundaries,
always becoming territorial in one way or another.
We see that, and that is born of a certain suffering
and compounds a suffering.
But we see that in the kind of innocence
of the movement of our mind in this way.
And so, yeah, of course we do this, of course we do this, right?
And of course, the urge around safety takes all these defensive forms and takes all these maladaptive forms
and actually compounds suffering even in trying to alleviate it. We just have a kind of
infinite forgiveness for our own human fallibility and those movements of our mind. We love
them to death. Where are you on the gambit that some teachers and therapists will suggest of
giving the fear or giving that animalistic self-protective character in our mind a kind of name and
greeting it warmly when you see that character
rearing its head
Right. Yeah, yeah, the idea of like name it to team it kind of. Yeah, like it's better
To give it a name maybe even slightly playful name or something rather than just to be lost in a Morpheus
Nameless dread. Yeah, I'll take a lost in a Morpheus nameless dread. Yeah,
I'll take a name over a Morpheus nameless dread. I think that's right. And sometimes we have to
appreciate that our labels can outlive their usefulness too. That our labels are useful for a time.
They concretize something. But then the flip side is that they
kind of reify something. So we just want to be sensitive to when our labels and when our kind of
conceptual categories are useful and when they are actually solidifying something in us that is
actually, that is indeed more amorphous or something like that.
Yeah, and in this, I mean, it's important to say a lot of what we're doing is learning to
distinguish true alarms from false alarms, right? It's like in the end, we're actually habituating
to false alarms and true alarms. But it's important to acknowledge like yeah the body is the alarm bells are going off all the time and so often they are actually false alarms.
It's not actually an existential threat. It's just an egoic threat, right? And it's just a threat to our control or something like this. It's a threat to the sense that we shouldn't feel pain
or whatever, but it's not a true alarm, right?
It's just the sense of this moment
is a kind of prediction of future harm or something,
but it's actually okay.
And so we're learning to de-escalate some of the arousal
around these false alarms.
And then, at some point, we are really meeting the true alarms, the things that actually
are a genuine threat that do represent the end of our life.
Our practice calls us into that terrain too, but importantly, there's millions of false alarms that we want to learn to deescalate
because one clinical model of pain, there's a saying like pain is the prediction of bodily
harm, pain is the prediction of bodily harm. And to deescalate from the catastrophizing
and all of this, it's like, okay, let's just use that framework.
Okay, pain is a pretty, is this okay? Is this actually represent tissue damage or some
existential threat? No, my knee just hurts like two out of 10 on the pain scale. I'm okay.
And so, all right, I'm being told that this portans disaster, but can I de-escalate that?
And a lot of times, we fail to distinguish between the two out of ten and the eight out
of ten or something.
It all feels catastrophic.
And so the false alarms need to be distinguished from what are really true threats.
And for the true threats, that
requires different medicine. It really is often just about making sure people are safe and protected.
Just the last question from me. We've worked our way through the list of four. We started at the end
of the list just as a reminder, the list is memory prediction becoming in the present. We started
at the present. I just want to end there and just open the floor to you just in case there's a way in which you want to tie a bow around this and
bring us back to the present moment. Is it perhaps correct to say that the punchline here and I
don't want to be glib, but I can't help it because that's just my wiring is that if we can bring
this warmth and wisdom and by wisdom, I don't mean like to conjure
images of double door in the minds of the listener, I mean, just seeing things as they are, seeing
that they're not as solid as we might think they are, that they're passing, et cetera.
So subrhing some warmth and some wisdom to whatever's coming up in our mind, that is
being present. Yeah. What's coming to me is that the logic of the practice is more sophisticated than
we'll ever know. And in a way, we grapple with trying to understand it and measure it
and measure ourselves and measure all of this. but there's a certain way in which we're just
actually surrendering to the logic of the path of this practice. And the goodness that we've
been discussing just accrues without us having to manufacture it, right? It just is embedded in the logic of the instructions themselves.
And so, yeah, we have to understand, you know,
what is happening to us, what has happened,
what we let go of, we have to understand the fruits of the practice,
we want to get the kind of final vision of what we're doing,
but it's okay to be patient and hold open the questions
and instead just do the practice.
I think Sharon Salzberg said, for a long time, I was trying to do the practice and make
it work.
And then at some point, I just was doing the practice.
There's just a lot of brilliance in that refrain from her. So where does
this leave us, Dan?
This is typical of me, but I wonder whether you didn't really take the bait on it, but
it does feel to me like if we can have what meditation teachers call an open heart, not
my preferred phraseology, but just sort of an attitude of, as you keep saying, sort of warms
and wisdom toward whatever's coming up, that feels like the way to inhabit the vaunted present
moment more and more over time. Absolutely, absolutely. Yeah, what the present is changes over time,
it changes over time, how we conceive of that, how we experience time, it changes over time, how we conceive of that,
how we experience that, it changes over time. But yeah, that sounds great to me.
Anything that you wanted to say that I didn't give you an opportunity to say?
No, I don't think so. I don't think so. We got all four words. We got all four words, Dan.
Then I will ask you this. Since you've been on the show before, you've already subjected you to this,
but it's possible that people won't remember what you said
the last time I asked you this question.
So can you please remind folks if they want to hear more
from you, learn more from you, how can they do so?
My website is my full name.org,
MatthewBrenzelver.org,
that would be the best avenue
and if you don't spell that correctly
google
is your friend
also the show notes of this podcast or your friend
because we'll put a link to it right there
thank you for spelling my name correctly
and the show notes
yours you're assuming we will do that but we'll do our best
and if we make a mistake we'll hold it with the loving acceptance and an open heart.
There you go. Open heart. Dan just just bring it. Yeah.
Surrender. It's such a pleasure. Always Matthew to have you on the show.
And I really appreciate your time. Thank you. Thank you very much.
My pleasure, delight to be with you and talk about these things.
Thanks again to Matthew Brent silver.
Before I let you go, one important order of business, our team is preparing a special episode
about anxiety.
And we would love your help.
If you have questions about anxiety that you want answered, please record a voice memo
and send it to us via email at listener at 10% dot com. That's listener at 10% all
one words spelled out dot com. We might just play and answer your question right here
on the show. This show is made by Gabrielle Zuckerman, DJ Cashmere, Justine Davy, Lauren Smith,
Maria Wartell, Samuel Johns, and Jen Point. And we get our audio engineering from the good folks over at Ultraviolet Audio. We'll see you all on Friday for a bonus.
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