Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 534: How to Stop the War Against Yourself | Tara Brach
Episode Date: December 14, 2022It’s possible to actually be addicted to self-criticism, especially as a way to keep yourself safe. But evidence shows that’s not true, and today’s episode dives into strategies to deal... with your own self-hatred. This is part two of a series this week on forgiveness. In our last episode, Jack Kornfield focused on forgiving other people and in today’s episode, Tara Brach talks about forgiving yourself. Tara Brach is a meditation teacher, psychologist and author of several books including Radical Acceptance, Radical Compassion and Trusting the Gold. Her weekly podcast is downloaded 3 million times a month. Tara is also the founder of the Insight Meditation Community of Washington. In this episode we talk about:Why Tara says self-hatred “divides us from our ourselves”The benefits of learning the habit to stop kicking our own assesSimple meditations to help us with self-forgivenessQuestions that can help us understand what really matters to us, and what we really wantThe power of seeing the profundity in mundane experiences A refresher on a fan favorite meditation technique: RAINHow to start trusting reality more than we believe the beliefs about ourselvesForgiveness vs accountabilityFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/tara-brach-534See 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.
Hello everybody.
Our guest today makes an interesting point, a really interesting point, that you may
actually be addicted to self-criticism, to kicking your own ass.
And she has tons of ideas for kicking the habit. Many of us think self-criticism
is necessary because it keeps us safe that we would lose our edge without it, but the evidence
shows this is not true. So today we're going to take a deep dive into some wiser strategies.
My guest is a frequent flyer on the show. Tara Brock is a meditation teacher,
psychologist and author of several books, including radical acceptance, radical compassion and trusting the gold.
Her weekly podcast is downloaded three million times a month.
Tara is also the founder of the Insight Meditation Community of Washington. In this conversation, we talked about
why she says self-hatred divides us from ourselves, the benefits of learning to stop
kicking your own ass, simple meditations to help us with self-forgiveness, some compelling
yet jarring questions that can help us understand what really matters to us, what we actually
want, the power of seeing the profundity in mundane experiences, a refresher on a fan favorite meditation technique called reign,
how to start trusting reality more than we believe the things we're telling ourselves about
ourselves, forgiveness versus accountability, what's the difference there, how self forgiveness
can be a political act, and what she means by the phrase luminous wholeness.
Just to say this is part two of a series
we've been running this week
on the thorny subject of forgiveness on Monday,
Jack Cornfield focused mainly on forgiving other people.
Today, it's Tara on forgiving yourself.
This conversation was inspired by a Dharma talk
that Tara recently gave that my team heard
and really liked and we'll put a link to that talk in the show notes.
Okay, we'll get started with Tara Brock 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 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%.com.
All one word spelled out.
Okay, on with the show.
Hey y'all, it's your girl, Kiki Palmer.
I'm an actress, singer, and entrepreneur.
On my new podcast, Baby This is Kiki Palmer.
I'm asking friends, family, and experts,
the questions that are in my head.
Like, it's only fans only bad.
Where the memes come from.
And where's Tom from MySpace?
Listen to Baby This is Ski-E Palmer
on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcast.
Tara Brock, welcome back to the show.
My pleasure to be with you and with everyone, Dan.
Really appreciate it.
Alright, let's start with your story of the tilted Buddha.
What's that all about?
Okay, so a few decades ago, a friend of mine and I decided we wanted to buy a statue,
a Buddha statue for our DC community. And we went hunting around in
Provincetown and found a really beautiful and drachanous, really lovely looking
Buddha statue. But the night that you know I put it up on the pedestal and after I
taught that night I saw people looking at it and they were all their heads were
all kind of tilted to one side and they
Called me over and it turns out the casting had been tilted. It was a leaning Buddha
and so we had fun with that
We kind of named ourselves the Sangha of the leaning Buddhas just to sense it
we could have imperfect castings and still be waking up Buddhas and
that became a really valuable reminder
in a lot of ways that what we most get down on ourselves
for, hate ourselves for are really conditioning castings
that we really didn't have any control over
and everybody's got them to make it through
the day, their coping strategies. And if we can remember that, it all becomes a lot less personal
and we have more capacity to be forgiving, be kind towards ourselves.
To see whatever, quote unquote, flaws you may have as nature instead of something you designed,
it's bespoke and irreparably yours and your fault.
Exactly. Nature and really universal, I mean the most basic conditioning is this illusion that
I am a self and right hand and hand very close to that illusion is a sense that something's
wrong because when we feel separate there's a sense that we're threatened or that we have
to build ourselves in some way. So all the grasping and aversion of the universe comes
out of that universal illusion. That's the basic casting we've got. And then it gets amplified depending on our DNA
and our personal upbringing and the society we're in.
But it's not like there's a little self in there
that made some terrible mistake
and chose to be wearing this armoring
that we end up not liking.
What you just said raises a million questions
that I'll circle back to some of them. But I do
want to ask you about something I've heard you say, which is that self hatred or lack of self
forgiveness. And this is the quote divides us from ourselves. What does that mean? That means that
when there's a part of us, the judge that hates some other part of us, some part of life
that we view as flawed or bad, we're fragmented, we're living in parts, we're not remembering a larger
wholeness, we're not remembering the awareness that's there, we're not remembering the basic love that connects us to the world.
It's a very fragmented, small reality we're living in.
So we're really apart from our wholeness is another way to say it.
And wholeness, your contention is, is our natural resting spot.
We're just conditioned by the world into which we're born for inter-division.
Yeah, I often think of the metaphor, Dan, of ocean and waves, that we get identified with
a certain set of waves that we think is me, this kind of personality or intelligence,
are these markings of success or failure or attractiveness or unattractiveness and
forget that it's all made of ocean. And so the wholeness is really not my wholeness. It's the
infinite fuel to beingness that is inherently, I think of it as a kind of luminous openness
inherently, I think of it as a kind of luminous openness that's got a natural tenderness in response to the world. We forget that larger belonging and get identified in whether you think of it as the
waves or the covering or the casting. We get identified in a very small way.
Anybody who's new, anybody who's listening who's maybe not anybody, but some people who
are new to this whole meditation world, contemplative spiritual world might hear luminous
wholeness and say, well, what exactly does that mean? That means that in this moment, as you're listening, you might have an idea of yourself as,
oh, this is where I am on my path, and this is what's going wrong, and this is my family,
and this is my personality.
But at the same time, there's a sense of the awareness that's maybe looking through your eyes right now,
the awareness that's listening to these sounds. There's a kind of natural
wakefulness that just knows that life is happening. And it's that knowing quality that really can't
be located in a solid, steady way. It's just kind of like a field of knowing. So that's more what
I'm referring to. And there's also a quality of care or kindness that when we
get quiet and we sense others in our life and we sense the natural world, we
sense a kind of belonging to it. And so there's a natural tenderness. So those
are the qualities I would describe as more innate. And like that's the oceanness, the sea of being,
and then the waves are when we get caught in the kind of narrative idea of what the self is.
I heard the kind of sentences you just uttered for quite a while when I was first getting
interested in meditation and I really didn't grok it.
And it was only just through doing it enough that I started to see, oh yeah, so awareness,
which can sound like this big concept.
It really is, if you're not stuck on just to stick with your metaphor with the waves,
if you're not stuck in every little neurotic impulse
that flits through your mind,
if you're not stuck in whatever emotion
is washing over you right now,
you can see that on some deeper level,
there's this kind of nameless,
you can't put your finger on it,
awareness, this raw knowing of whatever's happening.
And that, even as I say those words, I realize it might be hard for somebody to grok.
But it's there, it's non-negotiable, and it's not yours.
And it's seeable through not that many sessions of meditation.
And simultaneously, the less you're owned by all of the waves and in touch with the ocean,
the less, as I often say, when you sort of pull your head out of your
ass in that way, it gives you more bandwidth to be open to other people's needs, which you will
quickly see feels better than rumination. So anyways, that as a kind of a street version of
what you said is that an okay version of restatement? It's more than an okay version. It's eloquent.
And sometimes with some people I'll just say,
well, take a few moments and try not to be aware.
Just try not to be aware, just for a few moments.
And that's long enough.
It's like saying don't picture a polar bear.
And yet the awareness really is always there.
And the only reason it's obscured by our thinking, constantly living inside the thoughts.
And as soon as it's like you're flying in a plane and you're always inside the clouds
of thought.
And then when you get, you know, it is when you're outside of the clouds, you see the
clouds, but you also are aware of the vastness of the sky.
It's like as soon as our mind
gets quiet, there is a quality of a weakness of knowing, of presence of what we call awareness.
But I think what's interesting, and because we're really talking about how do we work
with the divide against ourselves, is that's part of what blocks it, is that when we're down on ourselves,
we get very contracted.
We get into a very small place and it's kind of like we're in this cocoon.
And one of the gifts of beginning to accept ourselves, peace with ourselves, love ourselves,
forgive ourselves, is that all of that spinning of
the thoughts of something's wrong with me and the feelings of contraction quiet down.
And then we have access to what's always been there, but was hidden, which is a real sense
of spaciousness and a real sense of kind of a very open-hearted quality.
In the excellent Dharma talk you gave on this subject recently, you talked about some of the
cultural societal genetic forces that lead us to this contracted state quite often. You cited things like generational trauma or DNA, the limits of our parents,
you cited things like generational trauma or DNA, the limits of our parents, aspects of the global culture, I'd love to hear you say some more about that here.
Yeah, well, we are conditioning on every level, and I mentioned kind of the existential
to think that we're separate from others and to react to that by grasping and fearing. But then on the level of our caregivers,
if our parents weren't attuned to some degree to us,
if there was in some sense of understanding and care,
then there's a feeling of more severed belonging
that we're more separate, that there's more fully
that there's something wrong.
So that, so the messages that our parents give us, and most of us had parents that in some way,
because of their own pain and fears, projected on us who we were and had some message be different,
be more, be better. And then, so we internalize that. So that happens on the on the
biographical level in our families. And then the society, we think society's
thoughts, we take on the ideas of the standards that our society gives us and
measure ourselves against those and the gap can get even bigger that I'm just to
look a certain way and I'm supposed to have this kind of success and
this body type. And so all of those are forces that really impact that sense of, am I okay or am I
not okay? And probably most insidious on a societal level is that we have a built-in hierarchy,
most societies do. And so especially for in one of the non-dominant groups,
especially if we're black, indigenous, person of color,
that's the most blaring in the United States.
There is a messaging through every institution,
through the justice system, through the schools,
every level of less than that your life isn't as valuable.
So there's all these different dimensions
of where we get the messaging,
but we end up having the belief deep down
that something's wrong.
And it doesn't help usually,
especially when it's really deep.
And I'd say the deepest is when there's trauma, early trauma, because when young children
are traumatized, the trauma feels bad and they make the association, this feels bad,
I'm bad.
And it's very, it can be very preverable in a way.
It's just very, very deep.
It doesn't help to say, oh no, it's not your fault.
You didn't cause anything, you're fine.
You're good.
That, you can't be talked out of it.
It really requires a, what I call a kind of a felt sense
processing where there's a reopening
to the deep place of woundedness
with a new and different way of holding with kindness.
We're going to unpack some of those words, the further we get into this interview where
phrases like holding something with kindness, we're definitely going to get to that.
But let me ask you first, I suspect this is something you hear all the time from people,
well, if I forgive myself, I'll never change.
I'll be totally resigned and I'll be eating rice cream for the rest of my life.
And I'll never get off the couch.
And there are so many things about myself that I need to change that are objectively
unacceptable.
So what are you telling me, Tara, bro?
That you're in good company thinking that. That's probably the main reason people have for not accepting themselves or forgiving
themselves is because there's a belief that by being on our own case, we will nudge
ourselves to change.
And that inner judge deep down does have a good intention.
I mean, the intention of the harsh inner or critic is to improve ourselves so we'll get to belong again so that we'll be
lovable. And so it helps just to know that. But okay, I'm judging myself because I
think it's going to help. But then what I usually invite people to do is just
check out, is it working? I mean, does judging yourself or not forgiving
yourself really help? And if you were better, how much would be enough? How much better
do you have to be to really feel like you're enough? And so most people, when they take
a close look at the suffering of hating themselves,
will find honestly that hating themselves
or judging themselves does not promote good personhood.
It doesn't really help.
Some major contributions have been made here
by our mutual friend, the great Kristen Neff,
the researcher at the University of Texas,
who really has pioneered the,
and she's been on the show many times, and many people will be familiar with her work, but just to
restate one of the top line findings in support of what you just said, Tara, that people who are
self-compassionate, in other words, have an inner coach rather than an inner drill sergeant,
who have their own back are more likely not
less to reach their goals.
And I just, I needed to hear that over and over again.
I need present tense to hear it over and over again because I revert to my cultural, familial,
personal conditioning quite frequently.
Anyway, so if anybody's listening to this and thinks Tara's serving up meaningless
goo,
you are wrong.
Tara is correct.
Research shows not just in terms of being our own inner coach, being kind towards ourselves,
it actually improves our relationships with other people.
I know for myself in terms of being down on myself as a mother that the more that I was,
I went through a phase where I just felt like I was just driven, working really hard and didn't
feel like I was giving my son enough attention and really aversive to myself for it, really
down on myself.
And I realized the more down on myself, I was the more impatient and controlling and
judging I was of him. And that as I started working that one and seeing that well behind
my drivenness, this was my fear, I had fears of failure and I was trying to soothe that
fear and trying to feel better about myself. And when I just committed to, okay,
forgiven, forgiven, it's a imperfect and I love them. The more I did that, the more when I was
with him. I actually became like way more spontaneous and playful and available on all levels.
And so that's just a personal example, but most people find there's a direct correlation
with our capacity to let down our own armor against ourselves
and it actually allows us to be more open to each other.
I completely buy that story that you just told.
And I would just add, and I'm sure you already know this,
but I say it for any hardworking moms in the audience
as the son of a hardworking mom.
It was incredibly important for me to grow up
with a driven hard charging boss
and meaning that she was a boss in her workplace.
And so that was, I suspect, and I don't know your son,
that both your hard work in the
world and your hard work on yourself paid off for him.
That's just my gut.
Well, you probably helped the healing process along by speaking for my son a little bit.
Thank you.
I'll have to let him know.
That'll help.
Good.
Well, I was speaking from pure projection,
but again, as the son of a hardworking mom, I loved it.
And it's been really good for me to have her in my life
in many ways.
Much more of my conversation with Tara Brock after this.
Like the short, and it's full of a lot of interesting questions.
What does happiness really mean?
How do I get the most out of my time,
here on Earth?
And what really is the best cereal?
These are the questions I seek to resolve
on my weekly podcast, Life Is Short, with Justin Long.
If you're looking for the answer to deep philosophical questions,
like, what is the meaning of life?
I can't really help you.
But I do believe that we really enrich our experience here
by learning from others. And that's why in each episode, I like to talk help you, but I do believe that we really enrich our experience here by learning from others.
And that's why in each episode, I like to talk with actors, musicians, artists, scientists, and many more types of people
about how they get the most out of life. We explore how they felt during the highs, and sometimes more importantly, the lows of their careers.
We discuss how they've been able to stay happy during some of the harder times, but if I'm being honest, it's mostly just fun chats between friends about the important stuff.
Like, if you had a sandwich named after you, what would be on it? Follow Life is short wherever
you get your podcasts. You can also listen to Add Free on the Amazon Music or Wondering App.
Back to lack of self forgiveness.
You refer to it as an addiction which really caught my eye slash ear.
What do you mean by that?
Yeah, so let's, if we define terms, I think of forgiving as a kind of disarming our hostility
against ourselves.
It's not like we're doing something as much as undoing something.
We're disarming our hearts.
We're seizing to attack ourselves.
We're seizing to diminish ourselves.
And that the addiction is to hold on to this belief of,
I'm bad,
and then to keep attacking, to keep pushing,
to keep shoving, to keep trying to get the self to be better.
And it's not our personal addiction.
It's like, if you look at our species
that when we sense something's wrong,
our flinch responses to blame,
because we're trying to fix it, we're trying to reduce something's wrong, our flinch responses to blame. Because we're trying to fix
it, we're trying to reduce what's wrong. And often we blame others, so we could just
as well be having a conversation about how our reflex is something's off your bad. But
we often turn it inward. And both of them are addictions and their addictions that if you look at our world situation are the cause for all war and suffering that as soon as we get afraid.
We blame we create another and we attack.
And often that other is a part of ourselves.
And it can be hard to kick that habit because we have this story as we've already established that if we drop it, we're going to die to put it in the most extreme terms.
We won't survive.
Exactly.
It's our main sense of agency.
It's control.
And I find this most strong when I work with people who have had a lot of trauma in early
years, that holding very tight to that
sense of damaged goods, it's very deep in the psyche that in a way, it's almost like I'd rather know
where I stand than not know, than not knowing is way too dangerous. Then I'm risking annihilation.
At least if I know I can defend myself properly against myself.
annihilation, at least if I know I can defend myself properly against myself. Yes, this like defensive pessimism. And just as you said, if I've got the full picture
of my dysfunction, then nobody can pull one over on me. I got it.
That's exactly right. We can at least do what we can to protect ourselves. And the other
piece is the fear of uncertainty and not knowing itself,
that who would I be?
It's like for many people,
and I often ask this question,
because it's such a powerful one of who would you be
if you didn't think something was wrong with you?
And what I found is that when there's been no work
at that disarming of hostility,
people are very blank or it's a shaky kind of thing.
It seems impossible.
It's like everything I know about who I am has been kind of colored by the sense of,
I am somebody who's not OK.
I am, I have badness.
But once there's been some disarming of that hostility, once there's a little more light in space
and just a little more spaciousness,
then that question is a really powerful inquiry
for deeper transformation.
So we can look back to that one,
but it's a powerful question.
Well, I think it's so interesting
because we think of the word conceited
as being somebody who's super arrogant,
constantly re-upping the story about how great they are.
And to threaten that is very threatening
for the individual.
But the same can be true in a kind of
Bizarre World way on the other,
on the flip side of the coin.
Many of us are walking around with this conceit
that we're a monster.
And to threaten that is also threatening because as you just very eloquently stated, it raises
the question, well, who the hell am I then?
Right.
What you're pointing to in a way, and this is part of Buddhist teachings, is that conceit
doesn't have to do with positive or negative.
It's the way we're holding a self.
And any threat to our beliefs is a threat to our stable sense of self.
And we just really want to hold steady to what we think we are.
In this same vein, you ask people to contemplate some,
I think, very pleasingly jarring questions, deep questions.
And I want to restate one of them to you and get you to kind of hold forth if you're up
for it.
Here's one.
How come I want to change so much?
How come it matters so much to be different?
I love that question.
Could you say a few more words about it?
Yeah.
There's a whole process of tracing back what matters,
what's really generating both our wants and our fears. That's very revealing. So, if we're
really hooked on wanting to be different, we're afraid to be bad and we want to be good.
And to just trace it back and say, well, what would that
give you? If you were different, what would you get from that? And then somebody might
come up with, well, if I was different, then I could relax or then I could trust that
other people would love or respect me. And if you keep going deeper and deeper, you get to what you might call
our core longings, which have something to do with the domain of belonging, of knowing our belonging,
a feeling connected, a feeling at one. You know, there's the deepest pain, a separation, and so that
yearning's there. And it's very healing to be able to identify
that, to be able to identify, well, what is it? I'm really wanting because then you start
seeing, oh, so what I was going after, that's what I really wanted was love. But what
I was going after was to in some way, manhandle my personality and try to look better. So you start getting that. Okay. A wise crack, but a genuinely wise crack from a meditation teacher friend of mine is coming
to mind. The teacher in question is Jeff Warren who is just fantastic and a friend. And I once
heard him say that some people get into meditation because they want a little
bit of stress relief.
Others get in because they want deep ecstatic and light and mid-experiences.
But the further you get in his experience, you see that really all you want are the
cliches, peace and love.
I'd go diddo, diddo.
And there's a little bit of a frame on that I'd add, which is because that's
what you are. You want to be what you are. And that shifts it a little bit, because
you're really not trying to get something. You're trying more to disarm or relax back
into what's already here, but been obscured.
What do you say to people who are like listening to the two of us talk about
what we are on some fundamental level? And it just don't feel like they have any
access to it. Don't believe us. How what can we say to convince people that you
do have access to reservoirs of it won't be bulletproof and permanent? But you
do have access to reservoirs of peace and love that you
might
dismiss as new age hook them.
Well, sometimes it's just simply to
reflect on what you really want and keep going deeper into what really makes that important and
even under that like what really matters and
then to sense that you wouldn't even be able to have that longing,
unless some sense of that experience, some tendril, already lived inside you.
You wouldn't be able to long for love, unless you knew love on some level.
You couldn't long for truth, unless there was something inside that really was a wake like that. So I think anything
we long for is already here and the longing is just a way of calling us back to it. That's
just one practical exercise that really helps us go, oh yeah, of course, how could I want
that unless I have to know something about it? The other way, and this is another practical training, is that
when we have glimmers of being more who we really know we want to be, when there's glimmers
of silence or quietness or awe or beauty or gratitude or love or whatever it is, to unpurpose pause, and it could be by full
breasts or counting to 30, but really let ourselves feel saturated by the feeling of
that experience. So we actually get familiar with the felt sense of the
qualities that really are our best or our deepest or whatever we want to call them.
And there's a whole lot of neuroscience behind that that our habit or default is to fixate
on negative stuff and identify with it.
And the more we have experiences that are what we what I sometimes think of as our
innate goodness, I sometimes call the gold or who we really are,
but the more we have wafs of that or tastes of that,
and we pause and very consciously
let the feeling fill our body and breathe with it,
it actually moves from the explicit to the implicit mind.
It gets remembered more regularly.
And what usually happens is that only negative stuff drops into our implicit memory and comes
back.
But this makes it more sticky when the positive stuff more sticky.
And that becomes, they say, this is what shifts from a passing state to a more enduring trait, more of a sense of
oh, so even when the waves are angry and are jealous or whatever, underneath these qualities
are here.
That was such a well-answered question, in my opinion, just to restate it in reverse order.
One move is we all have these even mundane levels, these many transcendent
experiences throughout the day. You might notice the beauty of your environment. You might
savor some affection from a little kid or a pet or your partner. You may have breakthrough,
either on your own or with your team. And just learning to be a little tech douchey about this,
just learning to kind of double click on those experiences
so that they get into your viscera, into your cells,
is a way to touch on the depth that Tara and I keep talking about.
And the other I also like, because for a newbie,
this is an intellectual exercise
that doesn't involve us having to have some deep
contemplative experience.
We can just look at, okay, what do I want?
I was saying, the me of 15 years ago, I might have said, well, I want success.
Why do you want success?
And then the further you trace that down, it's going to get pretty embarrassingly quickly
to love and safety and peace.
And there you are again, that evidence for uscheptic would question us about,
which is the capacity and the deep desire
for these more profound states that kind of live
beneath the surface of our superficial lives.
Yeah, I love hearing it back again
because it feels so important that we think truth is what it is because of
our habits.
And if we break our habits of just paying attention to what's difficult and instead cultivate
or calling taking in the good, it actually shifts our whole perception of who we are.
And just to add one other piece to it, which I find really interesting, is you can start stormy
weather too. So let's say you're feeling fear and you say, well, inside the fear, what's this
fear trying to do? What does this fear want? And if you go deep enough, it is trying to protect me. It's life that is loving life. And there's something
so powerful about sensing that any emotion when you trace it back is some dimension of
our being, our organism, our life wanting to live. And it takes away any of the judgment that flies around the particular expressions
when we can remember that all forms are trying to live, to thrive, to flourish. And so I just find
that tracing back really helpful. And just even the language of this is life, loving life has helped many people
I know.
Yeah, your old friend and collaborator, Jack Cornfield, has referred to it as the organism
trying to protect itself. Which I think is a very, for me, powerful phraseology. And I
wonder, does that in any way connect back to something you said a few minutes ago that
I wanted to make sure we spent some time with this notion of innate goodness or what you call the gold. And just to say for listeners,
Tar's been on the show holding forth on this very subject. The gold, our basic goodness,
our Buddha nature is it sometimes called and we'll put a link to her previous appearances on the show.
But just to get back to that subject, the fact that at root are attacking of ourselves is, and frankly, all of our greed, too, is really the organism
trying to protect itself.
Is that an evidentiary point in favor of the gold?
Absolutely.
And it's protecting our promoting in some way, being able to appreciate it.
And often the language could be simply with fear,
well, thank you for trying to protect me. I'm okay right now or with greed, thank you for trying
to promote, and it's enough. I have enough. It's okay. Just that wakes us up to a larger space
than the emotion itself, and that's the whole deal with meditation.
Is that if we can, instead of being caught inside the wave
and thinking, oh, that's me, I'm the greedy one,
we can be the awareness that's aware of the greed,
then if we're not taking it personally, there's no suffering.
There still may be discomfort,
but by seeing it and knowing, this is just
another expression of life trying to promote itself or protect itself, it really gives us a certain
kind of freedom. So let's talk about, we've been putting it off a little bit, let's talk about
some meditation practices we can do to really touch in on these deeper qualities that you keep pointing to.
There's one that's a little that's kind of,
and these are taken directly from you.
There's one practice that's a little bit sort of more
beginner level, but let's do that first
and then we'll go to some of the deeper stuff.
You recommend sort of a review of the previous day
or the day that's just passed as a way to work
with forgiving yourself or not judging
yourself. Can you describe the practice? Yeah, sure. If we watch our minds, we're going to find that
there are, it doesn't have to do with deep things that were, I'll never forgive myself for doing that
in the past and that we're holding on to, but ongoing small ways through the day that we have this idea in our mind of how we
should be and we didn't meet it.
And so it could be some way that, oh, it could be, let's say you and I are talking and
I had some idea of being more fluid and spontaneous and I felt a little more linear and tight, or
it could be that I was then later with my husband and I wasn't as generous as I had meant to
be or wanted to be, or whatever it is. At the end of the day, if we look back, we'll
see that there were a lot of times that in some way our persona, our way of moving through didn't match your idea of being good.
And it's really helpful to kind of forgive,
to clear away whatever armoring our judgment
we've been accumulating through the day.
And the reason it's good to do is because we do it
at the end of the day, we'll start doing it
more spontaneously throughout the day.
We'll just start noticing, oh, I'm feeling a little tight.
Oh, there's a little bit of a down on myself,
myself feeling, and in the seeing, there's some freeing.
It's just like that, it gets like that,
unless it's deeply rooted, that's a whole,
we'll go into the deeper practices.
So the end of the day practice is simply to review
and notice where in some way you're
holding a little bit of judgment, like not enough, fell short.
And I just whisper the words forgiven, forgiven, because those words work for me, but in some
way send the message of disarmament.
It's okay, accepted, accepted.
Whatever we want to do, it doesn't have to be
words, other words, can be useful in kind of undoing parts of ourselves because we are thinking
creatures, the communication can help soften. And with an attitude of kindness, just knowing
the whole deal with forgiveness is that we can't will it. We can be
willing. We can have the intention. And the intention goes a long way. And it
really opens the door. And I know for myself that you know when I was in my
20s and I really hit hard times that I just was so turned on myself that it took a kind of a dedication,
like knowing, okay, this is right at the center of my spiritual life, like anything else
I want to experience is going to come out of, in some way, befriending myself.
So there was an intention, and sometimes I couldn't, sometimes I couldn't.
So it's the same thing at the end of the day. You just have the intention
to let go of armoring around the heart.
I just want to emphasize that point because it strikes me as very important.
When you are doing this practice, you're lying in bed or you're getting ready to go to bed or it's first thing in the morning and you're reviewing the previous day or the day that's just finished and
forgiving yourself for all of the
allegedly stupid things you did.
You don't have to force yourself into a forgiveness that isn't there. There's something about the
bicep curl of intending to forgive. Just the way we do a bicep curl toward friendliness or compassion
if we're doing Brahma, the Hara practices where we're imagining people in hurling phrases
at them like may you be happier, may you be safe.
We don't have to feel the thing.
It's the intention to feel it that will build the muscle over time.
That's exactly right, because I have worked with people who have really hated themselves.
And I'm thinking right now of a woman I worked with over the years who was just binging
a lot, a lot on sugar and so on.
She just could not forgive herself for that and for ways that she just kind of had that
learned helplessness.
She'd just give up on things and she just couldn't forgive herself for how she was doing her life.
And so we didn't try for forgiveness. She knew she wish she could forgive.
And that is the beginning of self-kindness just to even wish you could forgive.
And so that's the place to start. Because there's something in us, some wisdom, some love in us
that doesn't want to hurt, that wants to be happier.
So we start where we can.
It's not something you necessarily can do, but the intention
actually creates an atmosphere that's incredibly conducive
to having it unfold.
Somewhere along the way, in the course of the hundreds of interviews that's incredibly conducive to having it unfold.
Somewhere along the way, in the course of the hundreds of interviews, I've done with researchers
and meditation gurus as somebody, and I think it was this guy Sean Acore who was on the
show several years ago, somebody recommended to me that I do sort of an evidence-based
gratitude practice at the end of the day where I just think back at all the good things that happened during the day
and try to take it in.
And I'm just wondering whether this end of the day
forgiveness practice might pair well with that.
Well, I like you bringing it up because
if all you do is look at, oh, what did I do?
How am I holding against myself?
That can be, you feel lightening up after doing it, All you do is look at, oh, what did I do? How am I holding against myself?
That can be, you feel lightening up after doing it, but my husband and I have a practice
at the very, very end before we say goodnight of just asking each other what we're grateful
for during the day.
There's something about gratitude that is so sweet. And again, as we were talking about before, it reconnects us more
with who we're most at home with being. So I love that as a kind of a way, a very sweet way to end
the day, or to start the day, or in the middle of the day too. Healthy cocktail. Yep. Much more of my conversation with Tara Brock after this.
Okay, so let's go deep now. What are the practices you recommend for dealing with the kind of deep
either self-hatred or lack of self-forgiveness that many, if not most of us, harbor?
either self-hatred or lack of self forgiveness that many, if not most of us, harbor.
Yeah. So before I describe the practice itself, I was reading, I got a while back,
Carl Menendr, he's a famous psychiatrist.
He once said that if he could convince patients in psychiatric hospitals that their sins were forgiven, 75% of them would walk out the next day.
for a given 75% of them would walk out the next day.
And I think about that a lot, that how core it is,
this being turned against ourselves,
the self against the self,
that like fundamental course split,
and how much suffering builds around that,
how much then we go around seeking evidence for more of it. And so I bring this up because
whatever practice it is, it's not a one shot. It's more again out of some deep sense of caring
about ourselves that we say, okay, it really matters to include myself and all beings in my heart.
And I really do think of it as a disarming the armoring around our hearts. And so the proc I often will teach
forgiveness in the frame of rain, which I can walk through with us. Rain is as
many of you know. It's a weave of mindfulness and self-compassion. And it's a
weave in four steps and the value of four. And it's a weave in four steps
and the value of four steps,
because it's not necessarily so cut and dry,
but it can be generally done that way,
is that when we're stuck,
when we're emotionally stuck,
when the limbic system's taken over,
we lose our access to executive functioning,
we forget our way back.
Those are the times we most need help.
And so it just helps to have four steps. And so the acronym RAIN is recognize, allow, investigate,
and nurture. And there's another piece that follows it that I'm going to get to, which makes it
profound and transformational, but I'll wait on that.
We'll do those, and so I'll just walk through those four steps
on how it relates to forgiveness.
And maybe hitch it to a story.
I'll just give the kind of,
the story was in the talk, I think,
of a woman who was a deep one,
because she was married, had a daughter who was a teen,
I think.
She had a fair, she wasn't, she was not just the hardworking mother who didn't have that
much time, she was pretty neglectful, ended up leaving the marriage.
Her daughter called her a narcissist and really allied with the husband and she agreed with
her.
She felt like she was a basket case herself.
And so she did a lot of work.
And some of the work she did was with rain.
And she also did 12 step groups and a lot more.
And what she had to do is come face to face
with a deep sense of, I am flawed and I am bad.
I am pure badness. So, rain,
not just to give you how a sample session would go, the recognized means, okay,
let's take a kind of global sense of what's going on and what's the most
strong emotion that's here right now. And for her, the emotion was guilt and aversion,
maybe shame.
And then the A of rain allow is just let it be there.
It means don't try to fix it,
don't try to change it, don't ignore it, just let be,
even for a few moments.
And it's really powerful,
because it's like in that
pause, there's actually a possibility of beginning to then deepen attention. And that's the
eye, the investigate. Now, with investigate, many people think it's going to be cognitive.
It's 95% somatic.
It's mostly in the body, because our issues are in our tissues.
We have to go through the felt sense to really have a shift.
There's a little cognitive, but not too much.
So investigate for her.
I asked her what she was believing, and her belief was,
I've been failing all my life in everything that's important.
And I invited her to feel that feeling of failure
in her body and it was a kind of a hollowness and an ache and a squeeze. And something I often
will do in helping to somatocize to get into the body and the felt sense is I'll say, well,
express it through your face and your posture.
And for anybody, it's practicing on your own.
It's really helpful because we're so mental and we need ways to come into our body.
So when you make the expression on your face and you actually, for her, the kind of hunting
of her shoulders and the caving of her chest, it helped her to actually
access the deep sense of pain, of shame, of hollowness, of wanting to disappear. And then the
investigating went right to that vulnerability and how long I just asked her, how long that I've
been there, as long as I can remember,
what came to mind for her was the feeling
of wanting to disappear very early,
because she was so bad when her parents split up,
and she just felt like it was her fault in some ways,
very young.
And we kept investigating,
well, how has it affected your life
to be moving through life, feeling like so flawed and like a failure?
And that's when she started weeping the sense of how many moments of potential connection of being able to enjoy a sunset or really feel creative or had been shut down by this basic badness feeling. There's something
about seeing the landscape of your life, you get a kind of soul sadness. Sometimes
when you realize how much self-hatred has gotten in the way of really living
moments, there's a real deep one. So she started weeping and that's when we
could move to nurture, which was, you know, I said, so what is that place that feels so vulnerable and so bad and so hurting? What does it need?
And it needed to feel forgiven. And in some way, to be reminded that she had goodness
in her. And she, so for nurture, often people will offer to themselves, they'll sense their most wise self, their most loving
self, and offer a message to that vulnerable place.
And that's really, really beautiful.
And that's a practice to do over and over again, that nurturing.
For her, she was so regressed or caught in that actually traumatized young place that she felt like she needed that forgiveness
to come from something larger.
And so in a way, she was saying, please forgive me to the universe, to the love in the universe.
And so that's what she did.
She felt that young place going, please forgive me.
It's like, please love me.
And then the nurturing was,
and Viter her just to feel nurturing,
love, care, kindness, forgiveness,
coming from the universe,
like kind of a sunlit sky,
kind of shining down on her and bathing her.
And that was nurturing.
That's the end of rain.
And we stayed there for a while.
And as you and I talked about before, Dan, with nurturing, if staying with the feelings of being
forgiven, of being held, of being loved actually allows it to get more familiar, you know,
in your nervous system. And then after that, and this is the way that rain concludes,
if you really want it to be transformative, there's what I call after the rain. And after the
rain, it's just like after a real rain, when, you know, it's after the rain that things start
purking up and flourishing and growing, the invitation to her is just to notice the quality of presence that was there.
And the experience after that much attention and kindness was for her a real sense of
lightness, openness, just tender.
And I sometimes will invite people just to notice
what shifted from, when she started as a kind of bad self
to this presence it's here,
because that presence, that tenderness is more
the truth of who we are than any of the passing narratives
or feelings or our beliefs.
And so that's what she did.
She sensed that.
And then I asked her the question I brought up earlier, which was, who would you be if you
really trusted, there was nothing wrong with you?
And she said, I can't even barely put it in words, but there would be a freedom that
feels like the most precious thing in the world.
If I didn't think anything was wrong with me, there would be a freedom that feels like the most precious thing in the world. If I didn't
think anything was wrong with me, there would be freedom. So this is just an example of rain,
and it was a very powerful one, and I want to really highlight this. She had to do a number of rounds
because that conditioning is very deep. Those beliefs and those feelings to continue to disarm the
heart so that that became more the experience that she could live in than the old one of
being a small and bad self.
Yeah, I could imagine it would require years of rounds.
We're not talking about quick fixes here.
This is deep work.
My meditation career is nothing compared to yours, but I've been doing it for 13 years, and I'm still a mess in a million ways.
But you know you're a mess, and that's really, and you're kind of benevolent about it. So
and I've actually said that lightly because I'm not affirming your messiness.
Let me affirm it for you. Yeah, yeah.
But no, you're good with your mess and you use your mess to help people trust they can
wake up out of a smaller identity into something more happy, more free, more loving.
So that, to me, is the whole point of this.
And for her, yeah, years, I think it's a lifetime for all of us and not to underestimate the power of glimmers and the hope that gives and how that itself in a very fundamental way shifts us.
Because once you see what's possible, even if it's not permanent. And as I said before, bulletproof, it really gives you a North Star.
It gives you a North Star. It gives you a North Star.
It builds, to me, the basic expression of freedom is trust, that there's trust in reality
in what is.
And that every time we do reality practices like mindfulness and like self-compassion,
which undoes and allows us to reopen to what's here.
We start trusting reality more than we believe the beliefs about ourselves.
That is where the transformation comes from.
So her trust really woke up.
Let me see if I can formulate a question.
I'm hoping that this will resonate with you and with listeners and it won't just be just irretrievably selfish.
But let's see if I can get there.
When you were talking about who would you be if you didn't believe there was something
wrong with you, I was wondering in your patient or client was saying, I don't know exactly,
but it sounds like a freeing place.
I was just, of course, thinking about that for myself and also adding on a question that I think would also be equally compelling and
maybe freeing, which is, who would I be if I really believed I was safe or didn't have to be
anxious in order to keep myself safe? And I wonder if self-hatred and anxiety or comorbid in some
meaningful percentage of the population? So is the question that if you really believed you were safe, who would you be?
Yeah, yes, because I think so much of my life is really in a defensive crouch,
because I am anxious, thanks to, and we're both Jewish here, so we both have plenty of...
Cultural feeding in on this one.
Yes.
So, and I just think that when you invoke the word freedom or when your patient or
client did that, I was thinking, yeah, that not walking around with the story that I'm
always and forever a shitbag, that would help.
But it would also help to have on some level of belief that, yeah, I'm gonna be fine
probably and I don't need to be anxious all the time.
Yeah, so I think it's a great question
and I think that they're part of the same cluster,
the feelings of safety and the feelings of goodness
and a goodness and the reason why is because
or social creatures, we want to trust
that we belong and that we'll be welcomed and we won't be banished. And if there's something wrong
with us, shame goes hand in hand with the feeling of not belonging, the fear of not belonging.
And so if you are really trusting your save, that means you trust that you belong.
you are really trusting your save, that means you trust that you're, you belong. You trust that you're a part of the larger whole. And so you can go from either angle, really. And
that's why a practice like loving kindness practice is so powerful. And when I say loving
kindness practice, I don't mean necessarily specifically repeating the classic phrases, but any practice that is
an intentional practice that softens and opens our hearts, let's us come back home to
a more open-hearted kind of experience, is freeing because in that open-heartedness,
there is a knowing and a trusting of belonging.
And if belonging isn't the word that resonates, it could be oneness or connectedness
or interdependence. But that's the reality that when we know it and trust it, we can relax.
Just to maybe we'll cut this, but just to stay with the me of it all to be just completely
hogging the mic here. My specific, most prominent version of anxiety is not belonging.
And maybe it root, that's what it is.
But it's often like career-based that everything's going to fall apart.
And I can feel how that fear constricts me creatively and interpersonally as I move through
the day.
And so that, it doesn't always, I mean, I think I've done a lot of work on it,
but it's still there.
And I think that's what I was thinking of
when I talked about anxiety being comorbid
with self-criticism.
And I can't quite articulate how,
but in my mind, there may be some linkage
between constantly telling myself I'm bad
and constantly telling myself I'm bad and constantly telling
myself everything could fall apart.
So let me ask you a question then.
What do you imagine if everything fell apart would be the worst thing?
Like what would be so horrible for you if it fell apart?
I imagine that all the time.
I try to actually work it in a quite deliberate way.
Not just the one of my favorite Buddhist terms is proponsha, these sort of horror movies
we make in our mind in an instant often.
And then there's a related practice that I'm intrigued by from the Stoics, which is to
therapeutically imagine the worst case scenario, because then you realize it's not that bad.
And so I actually quite frequently do that.
Okay, Dan, if X, Y, and Z happens, what's going to happen?
Like, you lose your house or whatever, I'll be fine.
My wife and I, she constantly tells me if she catches me in a state of concern, we'll
figure it out.
And I know that. And yet the anxiety
does come back.
So I wonder whether there may be more to go on that, that it's not just, oh, you'll
lose the house or I just, I wonder if you keep going and saying, really, what's so bad
about it? Like, and I'm asking you that because I feel like I'm somewhat similarly.
A lot of my emotions circle around not failing at what I'm doing versus other things.
And so I just wonder for you what it would mean to what is not having it not work out mean.
And it may not be that you have something right this moment to say more than you have.
I think there would be the answer to the feeling that surfacing is something like humiliation
maybe.
Right.
So humiliation, and if you keep tracking that, humiliated in the eyes of...
Exactly, right, right.
My friends and my family, I guess.
Yeah, so same for me.
And so there's this kind of basic, worth thing that everybody will like me and include
me and I'll be all fine and respected as long as I do well.
But as soon as I don't do well, all that comes into question.
So it's just building an identity and a safety and an okness around performance.
Yes.
But it does come down to severed belonging, I think.
Interesting.
But just let's keep in touch on it.
No, I think you're right.
I do.
I think you're right.
Taking it a step further as you recommend gets me right to that,
which goes back to the thing we were talking about before, which is all of us.
All we really want is peace and love.
And what is belonging, if not love.
Yeah. Yeah. I think that's true.
Speaking of love, I want to finish on, and you touched on this a little bit,
but let's just put a fine point on it.
to finish on and you touched on this a little bit but let's just put a fine point on it.
Some of the benefits of learning to kick the habit of kicking our own ass and one of them, you list at least two, but one of them is that it and these are your words,
frees us to love without holding back. Can you say more about that?
more about that. Yeah, so in the moments that were down on ourselves, our beliefs and our feelings and our body is constricted. And as we begin to see the constriction, and just because
we care, we want to be happier and so that we kind of let go of some of that judging and really hold ourselves
with more compassion, offer that nurturing. There's a sense of enlarging, of occupying a larger
space than that self that was spinning around down on itself. And in that larger space, there's a lot
more possibility for love to flow with other people and with the world.
There's just more in love with life that's possible.
So it's really the movement from a constricted, turned in kind of attention on fixated on what's wrong with me to an opening, an undefended opening for we're able to be in communion and connection with our world.
So those are big words, but it's actually the felt experience.
And people notice in a moment that you really can sense,
wait a minute, it's not my fault.
It's not my fault from this way.
You really kind of get that this is the conditioning,
that there's no self in there that wanted to be bad.
In the moments that we get, it's not my fault.
In the moments we get that we were trying the best we could, that was life-loving life
in its own contorted way.
Some tenderness opens up.
And one of the metaphors that I share in this talk that I think is so useful for people
in opening up that loving is the story.
I tell of a person who's walking in the woods
and they see a dog under a tree
and they go to pet the dog and then the dog lures you
at them really aggressive and it's fangs-beard and so on.
And so the person goes from being
friendly to being really blaming and angry, but then they see that the dog has
its leg in a trap. And then they shift again from that anger and blaming to, oh,
poor thing. I mean, they may not get close because they realize that the dog's
dangerous, but their heart shifted. And when we start seeing ourselves that way, that when we're acting in ways we don't like,
when we're acting arrogant, our defensive, our critical, our deceiving people, whatever
it is, our legs in a trap.
There's something hurting behind that. There's some vulnerability in there. When we can start sensing that,
we get more tender and then we start looking at other people and it's much quicker.
That we can see ourselves reacting to things we don't like,
but then looking more deeply and sensing,
oh, okay, so how's this person's leg
in a trap?
So we get more loving and we also get more compassionate
because we start seeing more clearly
where everybody's living with their own hurts.
It's like be kind, everyone you see is struggling hard,
we start getting that more.
Oh, I completely agree, you said it was big words,
but I think it's actually common-sensical too, that if you're
less stuck in cycles of rumination around how bad you are, that's just more airtime
you can give to other people.
And the more you have a sense of OK-ness of ease of e. Your own dysfunction or ugly
mess or whatever, the more you see that everybody's got their stuff and it can make you less
judgmental.
So I completely agree.
Let me just run by you before I let you go.
The other benefit, and you may have already covered this, but I, you mentioned this in
your talk, and so I just want to give you a chance to say more if you feel like it.
The other benefit of self forgiveness, you say, is that, and these are your words, it allows
us to open beyond a limiting identity to taste the mystery of who we are, that timeless,
formless loving awareness.
Those are big words.
Yeah, those are, and this is what I was talking about in after the rain that when we've disarmed the heart, let's say you've
been blaming yourself for years for in some way hurting somebody in your past or continuing to be
hurtful. And somehow, rather, you get big enough, you open up enough to see that it's coming from a wounded place.
You care, you're kindred yourself for the wounding.
There's more space.
When you then sense, well, who am I?
The more forgiving and kind you are, the more you don't feel solid.
You don't feel constricted.
Rather, there's more of a kind of a field, a kind of tender
field of being. And this is something not to necessarily take my word for, but importantly,
since in the moments when you're feeling kind towards yourself or others, in the moment when
you're feeling forgiving towards yourself or others, just
investigate a little and sense the quality of self that you experience. And I think you'll
notice that it's much more diffuse, it's much more open, it's much more filled with
light and tenderness.
Last question before I let you go, I say this from a place of totally agreeing with you about self forgiveness and self compassion.
And yet, what role in all of this is there for accountability,
given that many of us, all of us have genuinely made mistakes and heard other people?
Yeah, it's actually really important question.
I mean, I'm glad I want us to have this as part of it because one of the misunderstandings about forgiveness
is that in some way we're condoning what we've done
and that we're just able to say,
oh, okay, now I can forget about that one.
And it's actually quite different.
I found that what forgiving does is,
when we respond to ourselves with that kindness, is it makes
us more responsible.
That when we're not forgiving ourselves, we're caught in a kind of constriction that actually
has us repeat the behaviors that we don't like over and over again.
But when we start forgiving ourselves, we have access to more of the resources that we really
need to behave the ways we want to, so we actually naturally become more accountable and
responsible.
And the reason is that truth, I mean, there's premature forgiveness and there's spiritual
bypassing what that means is that we're saying, oh, I've forgiven myself and we're not really going through the steps.
And that's a lot of delusion.
But to really forgive ourselves requires that we open to a really deep sense of
often unpleasantness and vulnerability and touch into a kind of self-compassion
that's very awake, that's very aware.
And then it extends to our
world and we want to be responsible and accountable.
Is there anything I should have asked but failed to ask?
No, more that we're speaking this interview is on November 9th, and it's the day in the United States after our midterms.
And there is just such a parallel to the suffering,
the inner suffering of being divided
and the suffering in our world of living in hostile cocoons
with different realities and with really living in a way that breeds such distrust and that expression,
the center won't hold, that there can't be real communication and a healthy society because of it.
And it's the same way we can't communicate with our own being and be healthy if we haven't forgiven ourselves and so feels like the same principles are really important
that we lead as we look at our world and look at others that we don't agree with. We lead with
the intention to see past the behaviors to the hurt that's underneath, and that we lead with the intention to bridge the divides,
because there really is no happiness or freedom unless we bridge the divides.
In this way, the personal is political.
Absolutely, and forgiveness, self-forgiveness truly is a political act.
At the very least, it can, as we've discussed, make you more pleasant to be around.
And as it reduces your judgmentalism toward the people in your orbit, you can extend, extend
that infinitely beyond to people with whom you disagree.
That doesn't mean you condone their views or their actions, but you can have some empathy for it in a way that makes it
much more workable rather than shouting across an unbridgeable divide.
That's exactly right. So you're not feeding the violence that keeps spinning in our society.
You're actually part of the healing at whatever level.
This is genuinely my last question. If I can get you to shamelessly plug,
pre-forgiven shameless self-promotion of anything you're putting out into the world resource-wise
that you would want to direct people towards. Yeah, boy, I was coming in so selfless, Dan. I don't
know. Let me help you. Let me help you. Cloud Sangha. I know you're involved selfless Dan, I don't know. I wasn't thinking of so promotion here, yeah.
Let me help you.
Cloud Sanga, I know you're involved in that,
am I right about that?
Yeah, so yeah, that's a beautiful one.
So Cloud Sanga is a online community
for people that really want to bring mindfulness
into their relationships and have a group of people
to deepen intimacy with,
a spiritual community, a mindfulness community, and they're mentored by really fantastic experienced
teachers, small groups of age. So that CloudSunga really is a way to have online community that is
quite powerful. And then, of course, the other is as your deepening attention
to the extent that you feel like, wow,
these practices are waking up my heart and mind,
and I want to share it with others.
At some point, to consider the mindfulness, meditation,
teacher certification program, which is TCP,
as a way to both deepen you on your own path and also to assist others in waking up.
I heartily recommend both of those and also just to say,
the tar is written a bunch of books. I will have mentioned these in the introduction, but they include
and are not limited to radical acceptance, true refuge, and trusting the gold.
She also has a podcast that you should go check out where you can hear her Dharma talks.
So she's done a lot in this world, and you should go check out all of it.
Tara, thank you very much. Really appreciate your time.
I love being able to do this. Thank you, Dan.
Thanks again to Tara. Thank you as well to everybody who works so hard on this show.
10% happier is produced by DJ Cashmere, Gabrielle Suckerman, Thanks again to Tara. Thank you as well to everybody who works so hard on this show
10% happier is produced by DJ Kashmir, Gabrielle Suckerman, Justin Davy and Lauren Smith are supervising producer is Marissa Schneiderman
Kimi 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 on Friday for a bonus.
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