Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 531: Could This Practice Improve Your Sleep, Sharpen Your Mind, and Decrease Unhealthy Cravings? | Kelly Boys
Episode Date: December 7, 2022Today we’re taking a run at something that is simultaneously a contemplative cliché and also a deeply desired psychological outcome: getting out of your head and into your body. So many of... us want an escape route from the spinning, looping, fishing narratives and grudges in our head and our guest today has some very practical suggestions to help us do that. Kelly Boys is a mindfulness trainer and coach. She has helped design and deliver mindfulness and resilience programs for the UN, Google, and San Quentin State Prison. She is also the author of The Blind Spot Effect: How to Stop Missing What's Right in Front of You Today we’re going to talk specifically about a type of meditation that Kelly teaches called Yoga Nidra, which has been shown to help you sleep, improve your working memory, and decrease cravings. In this episode we talk about:The difference between Yoga Nidra and mindfulness meditation, and how Kelly seeks to combine themThe value of being able to both observe and high-five your demons Working with our “core beliefs” about ourselves and the worldThe calming power of drawing your attention to the back side of your body throughout the dayWorking with “opposites” as a way to get unstuck in difficult momentsWhat Kelly means by the blind spot effectSetting intentionsFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/kelly-boys-531See 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 take another run at something that is simultaneously a
contemplative cliche.
It also a deeply desired psychological outcome getting out of your head and into your body. So many of us desperately want an escape
route from the spinning, looping, fizzing narratives and grudges in our head. And my guest today
has some very practical suggestions. Kelly Boyz is a mindfulness trainer and coach.
She has helped design and deliver mindfulness and resilience programs for the UN, Google
and San Quentin State
prison.
She's also the author of the Blind Spot Effect, how to stop missing what is right in front
of you.
Today, we're going to talk specifically about a type of meditation that Kelly teaches called
yoga nidra, which has been shown to help you sleep better, improve your working memory,
and decrease cravings.
I will let Kelly describe the practice in detail, but just to say from the outset, you
do not have to do the whole thing in order to benefit from what you're about to hear.
Kelly does a great job of extracting the active ingredients from yoga, Nidra, and ways that
you can integrate into your life immediately.
In this conversation, we talk about the difference between yoga, Nidra, and mindfulness meditation,
and how Kelly seeks to combine them, the value
of being able to both observe and high five your demons, working with our core beliefs about
ourself and the world, the calming power of drawing your attention to the backside of
your body throughout the day, working with opposites as a way to get unstuck in difficult
moments, what Kelly means by the blind
spot effect, and we talk about setting intentions, which both she and I initially found to be
a little sacrient, but have ultimately embraced wholeheartedly.
We'll get started with Kelly boys right after this.
Before we jump into today's show, many of us want to live healthier lives, but keep
bumping our heads up against the same obstacles over and over again.
But what if there was a different way to relate to this gap between what you want to do and
what you actually do?
What if you could find intrinsic motivation for habit change that will make you happier
instead of sending you into a shame spiral?
Learn how to form healthy habits without kicking your own ass unnecessarily by taking our healthy habits course over on the 10% happier app. It's taught by the Stanford
psychologist Kelly McGonical and the great meditation teacher Alexis Santos to access the course.
Just download the 10% happier app wherever you get your apps or by visiting 10% calm.
All one word spelled out. Okay on with the show.
Hey y'all, it's your girl Kiki Palmer. I'm an Okay, on with the show. bass, listen to Baby, this is Kiki Palmer on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcast.
Kelly boys, welcome to the show. Great to be here. Thank you. Thank you. All right, so let's start at a very, very basic level, which is Yoganidra. What is it? Yoganidra is the lying down guided meditation and it comes from the non-dual yoga tradition.
It was formed as a practice, not until the 50s, 60s and 70s, but the philosophy is rooted
in the Indian yoga teachings.
Non-dual yoga tradition, please define. Yes, so I'm referring specifically to
Kashmiri shivism, which is a form of yoga philosophy.
And it's rooted in the idea that we're not separate.
So non-dual means not to not breaking the world up into me and you,
self and world, that the ultimate understanding where I to go all the way with
the meditation of yoga is to see that I'm not separate.
This seems very similar to the Buddhist practices we've talked about a million times on the
show where you see that the self is an illusion, which is a very hard concept to grok, but the punchline is that you are not
separate from the universe, that you are to use the most cliched of all meditative cliches
one with the universe.
That's right.
Yeah, that's the fundamental realization of this practice.
And I was watching a documentary many years ago, the Dalai Lama went up to, I think it was a Hindu yogi in India.
And he said, you say self, we say no self, same thing.
And they started laughing and kind of smacked him on the back.
So that's where I think that these two philosophies coincide,
that in seeing the intrinsic kind of emptiness
of self and objects, you also are able to see
the interconnectivity.
And so in yoga, the philosophy would be my essential self or the true self is deeply
interconnected.
And the false self or that which I have misperceived to be who I am is empty of construct.
So just down back there to clarify it a little bit, in yoga, there's a lot of talk about
the self, I believe the term is ottman.
And that can be confusing or maybe even conflict provoking for Buddhists who are always yammering
on about not self, that the self is an illusion.
What you're saying and with the Dalai Lama and his
Hindu yogi friend, we're saying what we're all saying is that the Hindu notion of self includes
union with everything, which is basically the same thing as saying you don't have a self.
That's right. And it's one thing to take that as a philosophy and then another thing to really explore that and your lived experience and as you're in meditation looking at how you hold the world together and as you look at whether it's an emotion or a thought you see the intrinsic kind of passing nature of it or the intrinsic emptiness of it can also explore that you know when I've I've looked at these emotions and thoughts, what am I left with here after seeing this?
I'm keen as well.
I'm left with feeling this.
It can happen in to our connectivity with the world around me that I see this kind of
essential truth that who I am most deeply isn't what I thought it was.
It's actually kind of a paradox to think that there's nobody here, but the yoga frame
is that it's a self.
It's the essential self.
I want to make one little clarification and then ask a question.
The little clarification is, long time listeners will not be confused by Kelly's repeated use
of the word emptiness, but just for any newbies, or as my son says, noobs.
I guess that's the term of art in one of his video games for newcomers.
Emptiness in the Buddhist context is not in the pejorative.
Like if we in common English parlance
and we talk about emptiness,
it's not necessarily a good thing,
but in Buddhism, emptiness of self,
meaning that you're not as solid as you think you are.
That's a good thing because you don't have to take all of your thoughts and urges and
impulses so personally, you can see that they are not you and therefore you don't have
to be owned by them.
So that's just a quick clarification, but here's my question because Kelly, you used an interesting
phrase when you were talking about why any of this matters anyway.
You talked about how in meditation you can see how
you hold the world together. What did that mean?
So how I organize self-in-world, and if I'm in meditation practice, and this can be in
mindfulness meditation, this can be in yoga-nidra practice. I start to recognize if I'm able to explore my experience.
So sensations in the body, the breath as it comes in goes, emotions, and thoughts as they come
and go. I start to get underneath and see, oh, you know, there's this subtle way where it might be
actually very overt for some of us, where I'm holding the world and myself
you together in such a way that I'm actually completely
fused with what it is that I'm experiencing.
So if it's an emotion and I'm acquiring with it
in meditation or yoga digger, then I can start to see,
oh wow, I've been organizing around going through the world
that this is me and this is who I am.
And as I inquire into that and it releases a little bit, I start to feel more of this
spaciousness and perhaps interconnectivity.
I mean, we're not trying to push for that.
It's an insight that can arise in meditation.
It's not necessarily a belief to be taken on.
But as we inquire in the practice of Yoganidra, we begin to see that the way that
we've held, self and world, or constructed it isn't quite as solid as we had taken it to be
similar to what you mentioned before. I have a million questions about that, but I think the answers might emerge if we stay on the thread of the history
of this yoga nidra practice. You were starting to explain that it comes out of this Hindu non-dual
tradition, and then you explained what that was. Can you say a little bit more about the roots
of the practice and then maybe explain to us what the practice entails?
of the practice and then maybe explain to us what the practice entails.
Sure.
So, Yoganidra in the texts from like eight to 12th century
used to just be a phrase that described
this kind of conscious awareness
where we're deeply interconnected
and we see that things aren't separate.
So, it used to just be a phrase to describe a state.
But, Swami Satchinandasara Swati in the 50s and 60s
began to take the phrase yoga nidra, nidra means sleep.
And to have people be in the corpse pose,
near the Shavasana pose at the very end of yoga,
where you're just lying down in your back.
And he created this process that people would go through
that incorporated some of these yoga techniques,
but had at its root this kind of fundamental philosophy.
So the practice that he created looked like starting with an intention,
and then moving to do a body scan, and then breathing practices.
And the way he taught it was working with visualizations, archetypal images, and that kind of a thing.
And he found that people were feeling more relaxed.
They were learning better.
He was getting some really good effect from his teaching.
And so I kind of spread like wildfire.
There was also another person, his name is Dennis Boyz.
We sure the last name, except for he had an E between the Y and the S.
And he's a French person who also wrote a book on yoga, Nidrara before Swami Satchinanda Saraswati did.
So who knows if he studied with him or how that all happened, but both of those people
at the same time in the 70s wrote books on yoga nidra.
And then from there, in the yoga community, it just kind of took off.
And people were practicing it either at the end of a yoga practice or separately. And it was then taken by the person I studied with was a clinical psychologist Richard Miller.
And he built a model around it called integrative restoration or irrest.
And this was like a 10 step model that you go through that can work with trauma and heal
your psyche and help you connect with these meditative states.
So you'll see different forms of yoga nidra out there, but mostly it's a lying down practice
and it's guided, it's usually relaxing. It's really good for sleep.
It's interesting the relationship between meditation and sleep because the word Buddha means awake.
So it wasn't at least for him the intended use case.
So what is the connection between yoga and nidra and sleep?
Yeah, it's kind of like being as awake as you can while you are going into
states of sleep. So it's maintaining that awareness.
If you think even of the home symbol, so that's like the three and then the little curly
cue on side of it.
So the three is the waking state.
The curly cue beside it is the dreaming state.
And then the kind of half moon above it is the dreamless state.
So deep sleep.
And then the dot is called Tria.
It's the non-state or the awareness in which all states are coming and going. And so the practice with sleep,
in terms of yoga and dinner,
you're actually invited.
If you fall asleep, it's totally fine.
No problem at all.
In fact, some people simply only use yoga and dinner
to fall asleep.
So it can be very effective for that.
But the idea is to try to remain kind of consciously aware as your body is going
in and out of different states.
And so at its basic level, if we wanted to practice yoga and diger, we would need to download
an app or get to find some guidance on YouTube.
Like, how does one do this thing?
Yeah, there are a lot of yoga and diger sessions on YouTube that you could find in the place
where I used to work in study was the I rest institute and then there are a lot of yoga nidra sessions on YouTube that you could find in the place where I used to work in
study was the I rest institute and then there are other forms of yoga nidra out there. So it's really just kind of like when you're just
getting into meditation, you go, oh wait, okay, there's TM, there's mindfulness, there's everything that's how do I start? And you kind of do the same thing with yoga nidra where you start to look at what teachers are saying. Does that resonate with you?
The form I teach is more mindfulness-based.
So I'm interested in merging the field work
that I've done with mindfulness with yoga nidra
so that taking some of the woo-woo for lack
of a better word out of it and making it really accessible
and being able to articulate the mechanism behind,
like, this is why the body scan works,
because it's an insula workout,
and, you know, the insula is the part of the brain
that's responsible for interoceptive awareness,
that we just get in touch with
what's actually happening in our body as sensation.
So, that's my preferred method to teach it
in a way that's really practical and relatable,
and kind of pulls out any
feeling of a religious or philosophical kind of underpinning, but just says this is wisdom
that all of us can access where we to inquire in meditation.
What's the difference between mindfulness meditation and yoga and injure? What are the primary
differences and how do you combine them? So I would say the primary differences are mindfulness, if you look at the four foundations of mindfulness
or just being able to sit in a moment and follow the breath in, notice sensations in the body,
be aware of, as I've mentioned before, kind of emotions, thoughts, mind, states, you're doing the same
thing in the yoga ninja practice, but you start with an intention. And, you know, your
intention could be to work with a challenging emotion, or it could be to have some kind of
meditative insight that you're looking for, or it could be just a false sleep and relax.
It can be that broad,
and then you check in at the end of the practice,
how's that intention now?
So I would say that's one difference.
I'm sure in some mindfulness practices,
you do set intentions.
Another is,
your conidure can be really great for trauma sensitivity because you begin the
practice by feeling a sense of safety and ease in your body.
And so you're kind of starting from wholeness and the feeling of I can be here and I have
a sense of ease and rest in my body.
And then as I go through the practice, I might meet something that's challenging, but
it's held within
that context of safety and ease.
And I think that is one differentiator as well.
It's very somatic focused, which I know meditation is as well, but it's everything even
a belief that you're holding.
You look for the the correlate in your body of how you feel when you believe that to be
true. What is the science, if there is any showing about this practice, either Yoganidra in its
pure form, whatever that means, or as it combines with mindfulness?
Yeah.
So, Andrew Heuberman.
So, he has a podcast, the Heuberman Lab podcast, and he's a scientist out of Stanford University.
He has studied yoga nidra in his lab at Stanford,
because he's a big fan of it,
and he calls it non-sleep deep rest.
And so he studies non-sleep deep rest practices
in his lab, yoga nidra, self hypnosis.
And what he's discovered is that, interestingly,
it kind of resets your dopamine levels
when you do a practice,
like Yoganidra. And this is kind of important because this means it gets you a little bit out of
that kind of drive state or the state where you haven't gotten what you wanted in our collapsed
and kind of resets back to a homeostatic place. The other thing that he found in his lab was that it improves working memory.
And I think this has shown to be true
in other research studies too.
If you study something before you fall asleep,
then you wake up in the morning
and you're more likely to have integrated the memory.
The same goes with yoga and hijab.
So it's a practice that if you are advertising forward,
it's a practice that can possibly help you
sleep, make you less attached to getting what you want and sharpen your mind. Yeah, yeah, at its best.
At its best, it's also one of those practices just like meditation where every single time you go in,
it's like a crap shoot, you know, it's just you get what's actually there. And if you go in, it's like a crap shoot, you know, it's just you get what's actually there.
And if you go in, because you just want to fall asleep and get relaxed, you might actually
find how anxious you are. And that's all that you're experiencing. And so it's interesting
that it quote works. And it also stops working when you start to have a really strong agenda
that you have to get somewhere.
But so it's interesting,
because your woman's calling it non-sleep deep rest,
but that sounds very different from mindfulness,
which is you're definitely not sleeping.
There should be some relaxation, but it's not deep rest
because it's quite active,
you're investigating your experience
as it happens in the moment.
So how do you mix that quality of mindfulness, this kind of warm, journalistic interrogation
of your own experience into this practice that's been called non-sleep, deep rest?
Yeah, well, you know, I think once our bodies get enough rest and we're not just exhausted
doing eocognitive to sleep, then you're simply meditating, but you're
in a lying down position. So what this does is it takes a little bit of the doer out of it, you know,
when you're sitting, you have a really strong feeling I'm meditating. When you're lying down, there's
a little bit more of a feeling of a receptivity. And especially because it's a guided practice, you're able to still inquire into your experience,
but there's more of a sense of being
than, you know, I'm doing this practice.
And I think that is pretty powerful,
especially for working with the unconscious
and the things that drive us unconsciously
that can emerge to the surface
when we're in a liminal in between,
relax state, what Andrew Huberman calls a conscious nap. So these two can work
together even if on some level they seem like they might clash. Yeah absolutely
I've seen that because I started with my meditation practice with yoga
nidra and I actually got a little precious with it. I thought that it was the deepest form of meditation.
It was like really the only way to do it.
You know, as one does, I think,
when you get really excited about something.
And then I got, you know,
sort of introduced to Google's whole world of search
and site yourself at the search and site yourself leadership
institute.
And at that point, I started to be just a beginning of an understanding of what kind of a modern day
articulation of mindfulness is after doing tons and tons of retreats in this other method.
And I began doing more meditation retreats in the mindfulness and I discovered the similarities
between the two. They're more similar than different. It's just that the posture is quite different,
and I would say Yogan-Idra focuses more
on the contents of consciousness and says,
hey, all right, I have this anger
has been coming around for 30 years.
I'm actually going to engage with it in the practice.
And the guidance is asking me to invite anger in.
Like, what would anger look like if it just came in the door right now?
This is a little bit like parts work that you're doing right in the middle of your meditation.
All of a sudden, you're engaging with anger and you just see it's your eight-year-old
self and you kneel down on the floor and ask it what it wants and it says, I want you
to listen to me, you know, I I have a message for you here. So, it's using almost active imagination practices in young young kind of practices to look at,
bringing that unconscious to light, and then interacting with these parts in a way that integrates them
into the wholeness of who I am.
So that then when I get to those deeper insights of meditation,
they can land instead of, you know, sometimes
it's like if you are sitting retreat and you have this deep insight into the nature of
emptiness, for instance, but you've carried a depression inwardly your whole life and
never worked with it.
Well, the amount to which kind of there's an unintegration or disintegration is the amount
to which you might get stuck there
in that thinking emptiness starts to feel
a little bit like depression,
because this part hasn't been welcomed,
but where I, too, in meditation, turn towards the sad
12 year old or four year old, or whatever it is,
and welcome it in and learn what it needs
and have it be an ally and be a part of who I am,
then when I have these spiritual kind of or meditative recognitions,
they can point me back toward my wholeness rather than having some kind of part of my psychology just take it and run with it. I apologize to listeners for what I'm about to say because it is
something I've said before in the show.
So you can fast forward through this or bear with it or, you know, send me an angry note on Twitter. But for me, the biggest development of late of my contemplative career,
short and unspectacular as it is.
But the biggest development for me was moving from just a pure mindfulness mode
where I would see whatever came up in my mind and not try to engage with it or entangle
with it or bring in my eight-year-old self or anything like that, just deconstruct it through
mindfulness.
You know, see, oh, I see that anger's arising.
Maybe I can just name it as anger. it through mindfulness, you know, see, oh, I see that anger is arising.
Maybe I can just name it as anger. I can see how it's manifesting in my body.
I can therefore see that what here to force seemed like a non-negotiable,
unmanageable juggernaut of an emotion that was intrinsically part of me is
actually this kind of impersonal multifactorial force moving through that I
don't need to be completely
owned by, I did my best to do that for many years.
And then after a while, I started to integrate more of, I don't like this term, but what
some people call like the heart practices or loving kindness, M-E-T-T-A, meta practices
where you can consciously develop a sense of friendliness toward other people
and yourself.
And then I started to, when I saw my anger arise, actually send it warmth and realize
it's trying to help me.
This thing that I was so ashamed of, my capacity for rage.
So is all of the yammering I've just done relevant to the process you are describing.
Absolutely.
In the beginning, it's so powerful to be the observer to what before you've been fused with.
And to be able to do that for a long while to get fully in your body, the truth that these passing states aren't who you are.
get fully in your body, the truth that these fasting states aren't who you are, and then to move
further and to be able to be compassionate with these parts is exactly the work that I'm describing.
After the break, Kelly talks about parts work, deconstructing your core beliefs, and she lays out a exercise for Physically centering yourself throughout the day. Keep it here
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You've made several references to parts or parts work.
We talked about this on the show before, but just in case people miss those episodes
or unfamiliar with
parts work, can you define that?
Sure. In the context of Yoke Nidra, parts work would be, say there's an emotion that
you've had in your life for most of your life. So mind's anxiety. I got into meditations
I had major panic attacks, so we share that in common. And so if I were to consider that anxiety isn't just something to be gone rid of,
and were to look in meditation at the anxiety, notice it, feel in my body,
I might also, especially if it's a recurring emotion, notice,
okay, like if a door opened, and anxiety came in the room, what does it look like?
And when I do that, I'm kind of objectifying an experience in order to interact with it.
And when I begin to notice, so maybe myself at eight years old when the mosquito, you know,
and the cabin was like my traumatizing event. And so blessed my mom and dad's heart,
but wasn't enough mirroring or something
that happened in that moment where it just stuck
in my system, this feeling of anxiety
and then started to play itself out.
So when I say part, I mean, if there's an emotion
and you start to see that it's connected with an aspect
of yourself that you haven't
Actually gone back for and you just keep
Quiet or you keep trying to push it down or get rid of it
But it's something that actually has a message and needs something like connection or something else like
caring or acceptance
then as I interact with that part
The next time I have anxiety, I know there's
something pay attention to that I'm not accepting or let me turn towards that part and be an ally
and then accept that into the wholeness of who I am. Same with core beliefs that we hold.
So, you know, I'm not worthy to be here, whether it's lack or deficiency, we all have something.
Like, I don't have what I need or I'm not worthy to be here, whether it's lack or deficiency, we all have something. Like, I don't have what I need, or I'm not worthy to be here, basically.
I'm not worthy of love.
And if we can personify those beliefs into parts, then we can actively, can work to welcome
all of these aspects of who we are.
And see then that there's an awareness of all of who I am.
And then the task and meditation
where we interested to take it would be
to turn attention then towards the awareness.
That's aware of everything that's here.
And as I do that, then that's where I start
to have these meditative insights into what you're talking about
with Buddhism and emptiness or with yoga
and this sense
of oneness or interconnectivity.
Right.
There are like levels you go down.
First, you just think of yourself as I'm going to use this word again, this sort of undifferentiated
juggernaut, this core entity that's moving through the world.
I'm just all Kelly all the way down.
And then at the maybe the next level for
some people is seeing, oh, Kelly's got parts, the scared part, the feeling insufficient
part, the whatever other parts are there. And then you can work with these ancient neurotic
programs and a friendlier way so that they're not just, you know, owning you every time they
achieve salience in the magic eight ball of your mind. And then the level
deepers to see that there's some unnamable, barely knowable aspect of your mind that is simply
aware of the whole pageant. And that's emptiness. That's when you see that that awareness
you can't claim as yours. And that's where things get very weird and very interesting and very like to use a loaded phrase
liberating. Absolutely. For me, some of those insights came earlier on out of the blue.
And so then I got into meditation because I was trying to understand what it was that I had
recognized. And it was deeply liberating, but also the integration and the living that out
into a human life takes time.
And took me about a decade.
I'm still 15 years in in process,
but it took me about a decade of a lot of intense practice
to look at these essential insights of meditation and what it looks like to actually embody that all the way down as you're saying, you know, from a level of mind to emotion to how does it live out when something happens at work or in relationship, all of it.
And then it's an ongoing journey that I did have a decade long time period where it was kind of 24-7 for me.
24-7, what? Doing the work of meditation, I couldn't turn it off. And I would say that's still true,
but it feels more kind of like a calm background operation, rather than what was before a lot of intensity for me.
I had to really work with anxiety and different things that I was experiencing
that were, you know, a challenging marriage I'd gotten out of and that kind of
thing and it took time to be able to integrate these meditative insights into
my life and into the lived experience of who I am. You said the meditation was
sort of 24-7. What aspect of it was most salient for you? Was it
the, I contain multitudes part, the Walt Whitman like seeing, oh yeah, there's a lot of different parts
of me? Or was it the level deeper of, yeah, what is it? Who is it that's even aware of all of these
parts? And that can be a kind of a shattering insight because then these
cohesive self that we are clinging to has no ground to stand on what was the active ingredient of this 24-7ness?
It was mostly the the second one but had to apply to the first and
So I mean I remember when I had my first kind of meditative insight out of nowhere, just looking at kind of a calendar on the wall.
And I've never done psychedelics.
And so I called my, the time boyfriend and I said,
none of this is personal.
It's amazing, you know, it just was this clear as day to me.
And then I started getting into going to retreats and trying to understand what it is.
I'd just kind of seen out of the blue.
And so for me, I bet reverse engineered it,
whereas typically people would do practice
and then come towards these insights.
And I just stumbled upon the insights
and then have spent time understanding
what that means as a lift,
like how do I live this out?
Like no, okay, all right,
none of this is personal, what does that mean?
No, I won't wait too far to this side of nothing's personal.
And you know, I've kind of come back more to the middle
that, okay, it's personal and not.
And I think also the other thing,
I couldn't get away from the awareness
that I was suddenly in touch with.
And it's interesting not to be able to sleep block
or when you're sleepwalking, you see it immediately,
like where you get lost in something,
and it's just seen.
And the process of that, I don't mind it, but it's like it couldn't turn off.
And so it was both the working with my life part and the focusing on the awareness and
all of the kind of meditative insights that come from that.
I would not quite sure I understand.
Would you say this awareness that you couldn't turn off even though you don't mind it?
What does that mean that you couldn't daydream anymore?
Well, I think it through a time period where that was hard for me to do, but what I mean
by it couldn't turn it off. Like, it's as if I got in touch with that
and then couldn't forget it,
including when the moments come in my life
when I'm like completely fused with an emotion,
I still, there's some part of me that still deeply knows.
And so it's almost like that part turned on
and hasn't turned off.
If that makes sense, it sounds weird when I say it, but.
Okay, I'm gonna say something that you probably
not gonna wanna comment on, but just in case listeners
are new to all of this and thinking of us, Kelly Nuts.
This maps onto my very weak understanding
of what in the oldest of old school Buddhism,
teravada Buddhism is sometimes referred to as
stream entry. It's often considered the first and earliest stage of enlightenment,
pretty accessible to mere mortals.
You don't have to have spent your whole life in a cave in order to achieve stream
entry. Again, this is my very rough understanding.
So Buddhist scholars, please go easy on me. But it roughly is this waking up to the illusion
of the self in a way that is an upgrade of the software that doesn't revert. And once
you've entered the stream, you are in this lifetime, or the next or the next or the
next in excerptly headed toward full awakening. Now again, this is not me
making this argument. This is me explaining the way it's viewed in
this ancient tradition. The thing about stream entry is in some
traditions, you're not supposed to say a stream enter. So I said all
that you don't have to comment on it, but I will stop talking in
case you have something you want to say.
said all that, you don't have to comment on it, but I will stop talking in case you have something you want to say.
Yeah, I started at that meditative insight.
And so it was very much a waking up for me.
And then since then, it's been, I think, what some people call waking down.
Where you get integrated all the way back down into every nook corner and cranny meaning
absolutely does not mean that anyone is perfect.
You know, I don't believe anyone has ever been perfect, but just there is a feeling like
you can't go back to a more fused way of being in the world, including when there's fusion
that occurs.
Yes, you can get confused momentarily about the fact that your anger is not actually
your anger. It's an impersonal coming together of psychic ingredients, just the way a hurricane
is an impersonal coming together of atmospheric ingredients. You can get momentarily confused,
but it's only momentary.
Whereas for most people, the untrained mind, we are walking around with this illusion that
all the stuff that's happening between our ears is ours, is us.
Great way to say it.
Okay, so we've achieved two things at this point.
In the interview one is, I think we've given people a decent understanding of Yogan-Didra and its history and its current iterations. And we've also, I think, really
established a little bit more about your background and why this practice and others have
been so useful to you. What I would love to have us move to is this, since Yogan-Didra
does require guidance and we're not going to do that right now,
what can listeners learn through your description of the practice that they can take into their
lives immediately without actually doing this whole thing? One thing to take away would be,
what would it be like to kind of rest back into a quality of awareness?
So you could even, right now, as I'm speaking, feeling the entire back side of your body and allow a sense bring attention to the whole backside of the body and also being aware of what's present and
then what would it be like?
Now, if you were to kind of move through your day in that way where there's this kind of resting or holding presence, your own that's here,
aware of the coming and going.
So not needing to hold yourself separate
from what you're observing.
So there's this kind of relaxation
in the body that happens,
you know, when that kind of refusal
of what's here is dropped.
And one quick way to do that would be to consistently throughout the day, happens when that refusal of what's here is dropped.
And one quick way to do that would be to consistently throughout the day check in, return
back to this felt sense of awareness, and let it be something that isn't necessarily
so directed from the mind, but that is a felt sense exploration as you go through the
day.
That can be game-changing for sure
so
We can't every once in a while in the hurly burly of the day
drop out of our spinning stories and into
Just this very simple awareness of the back of our body, back of our head, neck, our back,
back of our legs.
That makes a lot of sense to me in that I get how that getting out of your head and into
your body just in this very simple, accessible way can cut short the overthinking and fretting
that we're often doing.
Where you lost me a little bit and I blame myself not you for this,
is how that pertains to allowing everything
to arise and pass in our experience
without either clinging or refusing.
Mm-hmm.
So if you consider that, in some sense,
awareness would be like the background
to what's coming and going,
and what's coming and going is in the foreground.
So it's almost just the somatic correlate of that.
So I'm just gonna feel, I'm just gonna feel
this whole backside of my body,
and that there's something that as I do that,
there's like a nervous system down regulation.
Kind of, someone's got my back, or I've got my back,
or life has my back, you know?
And as the nervous system can downregulate,
then much more likely to be open and curious
to whatever it is that is arising
much less likely to get lost or confused.
Or when I do have that just immediate kind of kindness
and rested awareness that receives that.
So it disrupts this idea that, you know, I have to go through my day being like perfectly mindful,
but rather what would it be like to go through my day, it's like deeply rested and aware of what's
here and also taking a spontaneous action to whatever it is that I do see. So no dormat,
this is not a doormat practice.
It's very active and engaged,
but it lets our nervous system know,
I don't have to do this,
I don't have to be in control actually,
I'm not anyways kind of an illusion.
So it just cuts through that mind illusion
and brings your attention to the body
and it might be a practice to try for some people
and it might not resonate with others.
Yeah, and we'll give people a menu.
But just to stay with this one, there is a metaphor you were using there that's not uncommon
in contemplative circles, which is the stage.
If you watch a play, there's a stage, and then there are all these actors and the scenery,
the set, the props on the stage.
We tend to get totally lost in the actors and the dialogue and the scenery,
and forget that it's all playing out against a backdrop.
And when you can get in touch with the backdrop, then you can see, yeah, this is all a play
of light and sound.
It's real on some level, but on another level, I don't need to be as fused with it or
entangled with it or confused by it.
And if I'm hearing you correctly with this practice,
you're kind of getting our body to do that work for us.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
And then the neat thing is, when you do that,
then you have more choice in agency
on that things that you do want to focus on in that play.
You know, and it's like, hey, okay, I've noticed
that I'm really noodling on this meeting I had last week and I can't let it go. And there's
something going on here. I'm going to zoom in on that in meditation practice and really
work with what's here and what that brings up for me. But it's all in the context of
being in touch with this background awareness. And so when our nervous systems are settled,
we're way more curious about our actual experience
and we're way more likely to see clearly.
It's kind of common we've all gotten triggered
and then totally misperseed, right?
And I think of meditation as helping us see
where there is misperception and rest more
in the clear perception
and let that guide our actions and behaviors and how we live into the world.
Coming up, Kelly Boyz on how to create and cultivate a reliable inner resource,
how to work with opposites as a way to get unstuck, the value of setting intentions and how cheesy it
sounds and why we might want to do it anyway.
And what she calls the blind spot effect after this.
A few minutes ago, I interrupted you as you were trying to move on to another practice
as we tease out some of the active ingredients of Yogan Nidra.
I apologize again for that interruption.
Where were you trying to take us? Well, there are two more. Okay, well,
do one. This relates to the feeling into the backside of your body and it also relates to the
down regulation of your nervous system. And I think it's coming to me to share this because
some of these practices aren't necessarily embedded in straight up mindfulness.
And there are in some places, I'm sure TARB Rock works with this,
where you create an inner resource
or a place internally where you feel safe and secure
and a sense of well-being.
And I mean, I've taught this in prisons and jails
and UN humanitarian workers.
And it's pretty universal
that we all share a need to access quickly
a sense of safety and ease in the body.
So that when we're triggered,
we can more quickly down-regulate
back to kind of like a baseline of ease and well-being.
So a practice that you could consider
would be what memory do I have, or maybe it's a place in nature.
It's a place I build in my mind and my imagination
that when I'm here, I feel truly at ease.
I can completely be myself, no social face.
I'm just me.
And words may come to you like safety and security,
or it may be just like, okayness or peacefulness.
But that when I have this image, and usually one or two images pop up,
I have worked with people where it's been harder,
and then we have to really ask a lot of questions
to get to what would feel like a good image to use.
But then you feel the correlate of that in your body,
remembering how you felt when you were there.
Eventually in time, you let the image go, and you just stay with the felt sense of that. And so this is a really
important practice as well because if I can embody this kind of ease and well
being and safety, and I know that it's accessible to me at any moment, then
perhaps when I'm facing life's toughest challenges,
this might coerize with the challenge
because I've done so much practice.
And that I'm not necessarily
faking myself out with it,
but my mind doesn't know the difference
between when I was in that experience
and when I'm bringing it to my now.
And so this is the power
of being able to connect
with the sense of inner resource.
And that's a part of the Yoganidra training that I did with the I-Rest method, where they
use that.
And that's very effective for people like veterans that have PTSD, but really anyone,
you know, because we're all going to face life's hardest moments if we haven't already.
And this gives a sense of resource and resilience
to face what comes.
So I'm trying to think about how,
well, first of all, just to say that,
you know, I mean, the thing that has excited me
from day one as I've gotten interested in meditation
is the notion that all of these mental states
that we want and need to do life better are skills
and that you can really get better at them
And so what you're talking about here is a sense of okness as a skill
So that when things get turbulent you have the okness as a refuge and I like that
So I'm just trying to think how would I practice it for me the place where I think
Okness is easily most easily accessed on a day-to-day level is, I have
a seven-year-old son, homey gives great hugs.
So hugging my son feels like, for me, like, the epitome of okayness.
So if I could just a couple times during the day, or maybe even as a formal part of my
meditation practice, conjure that and see how long I can abide in it, then I'm doing
what you're describing. Absolutely, it's a great example. It's a great example. I would say if you
can incorporate it into your meditation practice, and if not, then yeah, a couple of times during the day,
if we don't return back to it again and again and get that body feeling of it,
it won't be as likely to arise
when something challenging happens.
But when the next challenging thing happens
and you go, oh yeah, that's right, my sun's hugs
and immediately you have a different felt sense
in your body.
Now, the work with your knidder, you can do opposites.
So you go back to the original trigger, feel that, and then you go back to your sun's
hug, feel that, and then you kind of go back and forth.
And as you kind of titrate back and forth between the challenge and the resource, then it
brings you more back into that quality that we were talking about of the compassionate
awareness.
You mentioned there was a third practice that we can extract from overall
Yogan Nidra and apply sort of in a free range context. Yes, opposites. So that was actually a good
segue into it. So I think it was young that said there wouldn't be sadness without happiness,
or maybe he said there wouldn't be happiness without sadness.
Everything coerizes with an opposite, but what happens is we just get fused with one end
of the spectrum.
And so if I could give a tool around opposites, and this again is going to have a body
correlate.
So if you could just consider kind of your left hand and the maybe squeezing or in releasing
your left fist and then feeling any tingle or sensation, whatever is present in your left
hand, and then gently bring attention to or sensation, whatever's present in your left hand.
And then gently bring attention to your right hand,
maybe squeezing, releasing your right fist,
noticing all of your attention that's absorbed
in your right hand.
Okay, now both simultaneously, both hands.
You've just done kind of an opposite's practice.
So consider doing this with something
that you're experiencing during the day.
So disappointment.
And you would consider the emotion of disappointment, maybe consider your left hand as if you're holding disappointment.
What would be in the opposite hand? What would be in your right hand if you weren't disappointed?
What would be there? And this isn't kind of trying to delete your experience and replace it with a positive one.
You're just reminding yourself that there's this whole spectrum of emotion, and on the opposite
lives something called satisfaction or pleasure or whatever your opposite is.
It doesn't have to be the right opposite.
So if you're experiencing the disappointment and you're kind of stuck in it, you would
kind of hold it in your left hand and then consider your right hand holding the opposite
of satisfaction.
And then do the same thing, go back and forth between the two and then holding them both simultaneously.
And the interesting thing about holding opposites simultaneously is that your mind can't very easily be on two objects at once. So often there can be like a relaxation or even an insight,
like a third, more true insight. Like, yeah, I'm disappointed and I'm starting to see this other
person's perspective or whatever it is. Just kind of helps us get unstuck. It could be with a
thought, it could be with an emotion, or it could be just with the palms of your hands. But opposites
can be really powerful to help us realize that whatever it is that
we're experiencing isn't the only thing going.
Yeah, I can see how that would be kryptonite for stuckness.
It could just be a pretty healthy dose of perspective.
Yes, inducing cognitive perspective taking.
Yes.
So we just went through three practices that we can do.
But it strikes me that there might possibly be a few more.
You talked about a key ingredient of yoga and Idra being setting
intentions. And now I want to own that for people like me who are
incurably skeptical that the term, even just the terminology setting
intentions might sound a little, I don't know, Tweet. but I believe actually there's quite a bit of evidence both in contemplative traditions
and now I'm a little over my skis here, but I think also in the research that setting
intentions can actually really be quite helpful.
So what say you about intention setting, even if we take it out of the context
of yoga, Nidra?
It's very powerful. I definitely have felt like you, I, the cheese factor, you know, when
I think of setting intentions, it's like, want, want, you know, for me, when I first came
to the practice. And I actually didn't really do it that much. I just skipped that part
of the practice. And then I came to see the it that much. I just skipped that part of the practice.
And then I came to see the power of it.
So I think what's important about setting intentions is it's kind of building, it's like
if you look at it like you're building self-trust.
So set an intention to do this or to practice in a certain way or to be more mindful when
I'm talking to my partner, whatever it is.
And then I get to check in with that and see how am I doing.
It does set me up for behavior change and for self-awareness.
And when I do the thing that I set the intention for,
it builds a self-trust loop.
Like, okay, I actually set that intention in. Did it?
That means I can do it again.
And so I think it could be applied to many different situations, but if you're wondering
where to apply the setting of intentions, it would be, what is it that's most important
to you?
And how can you set intentions around that?
Because it's so easy to get distracted these days.
And it can really help, especially when you self-critic,
doesn't check in for you, but you're just curious.
How did that go?
I didn't do that at all, or that intention
was actually not really aligned with what I'm wanting,
or I find that I've just ignored my intention
because I want to keep doing that thing
that is feeling good to me.
And so it's just an inquiry, like a lived inquiry that we make. And so I think it would be really
powerful to do, I like setting intentions in the morning. I'm a journalist. I got that from
the search inside your self-program at Google. That was the first time I journaled. I think that was
eight years ago or more, and I've journaled almost every day since then. And I said intentions, and I better believe that I definitely do more follow-through than I would
have prior to the setting intentions days, for sure. And it can go all the way to setting an
intention to inquire into some aspect of meditation that I'm really curious about.
meditation that I'm really curious about. I'm plus one in you.
I, when I can remember, try to set an attention first thing in the morning.
And yeah, it's helpful.
It's a North Star.
And I might forget to set my intention for weeks.
It's always the same intention, just like to do good work and not be an asshole.
But I can forget to do it for weeks.
I can forget to touch base with it.
But it comes back and actually thinking about
getting a tattooed on my arm.
Because remembering is the hardest part of this whole thing.
Absolutely, I love that.
Yeah, and I think what you're speaking to actually
there is one aspect of the intention setting
in the particular form of the organitor
that I trained in called irrest where you work with
what's my heartfelt intention.
Like the what is it that's actually going to be kind of my same daily
intention for a long period of time.
And you might phrase that differently, or it might be just exactly as you
phrased it, but that's getting to the core of really what you're here
about in your purpose.
All of these words weighed into a territory that for me, I'm uncomfortable
with because they can sound cheesy, but I feel like they're so powerful in the application. So
I'm a convert to setting intentions for sure as well. One of the chapters in this book that I've
been writing is called Embrace the Cheese. Get over yourself. I look forward to reading that.
I look forward to being done with it. Speaking
of books, you wrote a book called The Blind Spot Effect. What do you mean by that term?
And how does it relate to everything we've been talking about today? Yeah, I think of
the term as kind of the impact of these unconscious impulses that we have that are related to core
beliefs that we're holding or attendant emotions that are
driving us unconsciously. And that make kind of messes in our lives where we're kind of living out
these patterns that we don't even consciously see other people around us can see or maybe we see
some of the effect, but we don't quite know the core. And so I do think it relates to yoga
nidra and the practice of meditation what we're talking about today because for me meditation is being And so I do think it relates to yoga and ninja
and the practice of meditation,
what we're talking about today,
because for me, meditation is being able to kind of illuminate
where we're misperceiving.
And as we do so, we can kind of integrate
these different impulses and beliefs
and core ways of holding the world together that
weren't totally true. As we do that, we get more whole. And I think that matters
for how we are in the world. And there's, I don't have to tell you, you know,
there's so much happening in the world right now that the invitation for us would
be to get out of our own way more and more.
And so the blind spot effect is exploring how can I get out of my own way, you know, how am I in my way that I don't even see and know?
I wrote it because I was uncovering my own and I feel like it's been a helpful process for me.
So I wrote a book with being able to look at some of these emotions and beliefs and the core blind spot of me at the center of my world.
That's the core one that if you hack that one,
then it kind of filters up. And yet as we discussed earlier, you can hack that core belief,
but it needs a lot of integration. It can be confusing, scary. Absolutely. Yeah, I have often
talked about being a 14-year-old kid, having just smoked a joint and the bleachers of Newton South High School, freshman basketball
game, and realizing that the self is an illusion and it being distinctly uncomfortable.
So ease into this stuff, people.
Yeah, absolutely.
So there you go.
I think it's beautiful.
You know, when you look back on that moment, probably it was so uncomfortable at the time,
but how amazing that that was elicited in you and where you are now. I think it's amazing.
Yes, but now my brain has gotten very good at panic, unfortunately, so there's that to deal with.
In any event, I want to get to a phrase that you've used a lot in the course of this conversation
and see if there's a practice that you can recommend for us
Even if we're not going to do yoga nidra just to say before I let you go we're gonna go through in detail
Ways for people to access yoga nidra practices from you and others
But just say somebody's listening to this and you know they either don't have time for it or they you know
They want to get a little taste of it right now before they go explore it
or they know they're never gonna explore it, whatever.
You've talked a lot in this conversation about core beliefs.
I might have just articulated one
when I said my brain is very good to panic, right?
So that's maybe one of my core beliefs
that could be limiting or could be a blind spot for me.
Do you have any thoughts on how we can work with these
core beliefs as they float up through
our mind through the day?
Absolutely.
Yeah, I have a chapter or two in my book about some ways to do it, but I would say it's similar
to what we described where.
When you hear yourself kind of saying some similar things again and again, and as you
said, you were kind of catching yourself, going, oh, my brain's really good at panic. And then you
might inquire, how is that related back to a core belief? I might be holding to be true
about myself, about who I am. And notice throughout the day, what are the other kind of beliefs
or thoughts that you have that seem to have a signature to them of, well, who knows what it
is in your case, but of something that kind of leads itself back to a core belief that
says, I am this or I'm not this or I need this, I'm not that.
And the way to work with it is gently to inquire what feels most salient, most true when I believe it.
So if it's something like, I use mine, there's some way that in a core way, and I don't always feel this,
I don't feel this right now, but I can feel this way.
So that's another key, is it's not that you always feel it, but that when you believe it, it's very believable.
So for me, as I'm not safe, I'm not safe,
going back to the mosquito in the cabin.
And what you wanna do is get to the core.
So say it in one sentence if you can,
and then start to welcome it in
just as you would anything else in meditation
and emotion, whatever is present,
the movement of the breath.
So, oh, there's this thing here, I'm not safe.
And if I do that part's practice, what'd she say?
Oh, yeah, she said like, open the door and see what comes in. Okay. If I open the door and see
what comes in, it's myself at this age that felt this way. And then I just do that same
practice where I'm encountering this core belief. But the key with that is it usually has
a message. And so you want to ask, what is it that you want? What is it that you need?
And is there an action I can take to give you what you need?
So you're really interacting with this personified core belief
in a way that is getting to the root of the misperception
in the belief.
And so you don't just go to the opposite.
I'm safe everywhere, that's not true.
I won't be able to believe that.
But oh, maybe mine is, I'm safe with myself.
And I start to discover, okay, when I feel unsafe,
that's a message for me to know I'm safe with myself.
And to welcome this part in more.
It's a little tricky.
Our core beliefs can kind of hide.
They usually have to do with lack or deficiency,
one or the other, sometimes both.
And when we're able to name them and welcome them and then really get them messages
and interact with them, they become these allies. So that would be what I would say.
Kind of overhear yourself as you go throughout the day. What are the ways that you express
about yourself that might be related to a core belief?
And it can be helpful to have people in your life who are willing to point that out. I remember
core belief. And it could be helpful to have people in your life who are willing to point that out.
I remember being in a one-on-one session, for many years I went through a dive, was a
volunteer in a hospice and it was part of a Zen program and I was having a one-on-one
session with one of the teachers.
A guy who's been on the show many times, Cotian, Paley, Ellison.
And he asked me a question about why I had done something and I just said, because I'm
an asshole.
And he said, that's schtick. And I was like, oh, yeah. And
then I've had other people point out, like you, you rely on that. You know, my wife will
point out that I often make a joke when she complains about my behavior. I'll say I can't help
it. I'm a bad person, which, you know, is like me making a joke and trying to deflect.
But it is actually something, a story that I was telling myself.
And having that pointed out to me led me to interrogate it.
And clearly, I mean, yes, I have the capacity to be a schmuck, but I,
it's not always true. And so I can see through the lie.
As soon as I interrogate it.
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah, that's a great example.
And then going, where did I first pick that up?
And is that internalized voice from someone else?
Or did I just do that as a defense?
Like you say, you start to do all of that inquiry.
And then you get more clear on where it's coming from and on what message and how it
can be an ally.
So it's like, oh, when I do that thing,
this is actually what I'm wanting or feeling underneath.
And as I get in touch with that,
then that action that I take out of that insight
can change things.
Yes, the brain, as Dr. Judson Brewer
points out all the time, is a pleasure-seeking machine.
So if we're doing something, our brain thinks
we're getting a benefit out of it. It serves some purpose. So, you know, the brain is not
always right. In the words, you might be doing something that feels pleasurable to your
brain in some twisted way, but it's actually totally stupid, but it's worth interrogating
it. So you can be less stupid. I love that. Can you hold forth on for those who are interested in yoga nidra how we can access it?
Please start with your resources that you've put out into the world.
Sure.
So I have a YouTube page that has some guided yoga nidra practices on it that are audio.
And I also teach a class every week through the Olympic and Berkeley and it's online. And so then those classes
are put onto my YouTube page as well. So every single week,
there's a new video of me doing a teaching and then a
yoga ninja practice. I also want a bunch of apps in the
aura ring and think people are falling asleep to my voice
in a lot of different places with a yoga ninja. And yeah,
there are other resources. So you can check out, as I mentioned,
I had worked previously with the IRIST Institute.
And one of the teachers there,
I would recommend is Fyuko Sao-Wamura, Toyota,
is quite amazing.
And then there are other teachers out there
that teach Yogan Nidra that community decides
a woman in the States and Douglas in Canada,
James Reeves in the UK.
So these are some names of people I recommend,
but also I would say, you know, just get into it
and see what voice resonates with you in the style
and there's plenty to be found out there, for sure.
We will put the links in the show notes,
everybody, so you don't have to have your pen out,
especially if you're driving.
Kelly, thank you very much, really appreciate it.
Thank you. It's really nice to be here with you.
Thanks again to Kelly Boys. Thanks to you for really appreciate it. Thank you, it's really nice to be here with you.
Thanks again to Kelly Boys, thanks to you for listening and thanks, of course, to everybody
who works so hard on this show.
10% Happier is Produced by Gabrielle Zuckerman, DJ, Cashmere, Justine, Davie, and Lauren Smith.
Our senior producer is Marissa Schneiderman.
Kimmy Regler is our managing producer and our executive producer is Jen Poient.
We get our scoring and mixing
from Peter Bonaventure over at Ultraviolet Audio. We'll see you all on Friday for a bonus
meditation from the great Seven Aselessie.
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