Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - Buddhist Lessons on Anxiety | Leslie Booker (2021)
Episode Date: January 28, 2022All week, we’ve been running “best of” episodes as part of our Taming Anxiety series – and this is the final episode in that series. Leslie Booker (who goes by Booker) is o...ne of America’s leading dharma teachers. She’s worked with incarcerated and vulnerable youth, she’s done mindfulness and cognitive-based therapy work on Rikers Island, and she’s written about best practices for teaching yoga in criminal justice settings. She’s a graduate of three different training programs at Spirit Rock, including their four-year Retreat Teacher Training Program.In this conversation, Booker makes the case that one of the most important, even life-saving, tools when it comes to dealing with anxiety is our ability to connect with other people. And - like the three characteristics, Booker argues that the experience of anxiety is inherently impermanent, unsatisfactory, and unreliable (or, in Pali, it has the characteristics of anicca, dukkha and anatta). Understanding this fundamental truth, she says, can help us see our anxiety with more clarity, and therefore relate to it more skillfully. Booker also explains why bringing awareness to our bodies can help settle us in our most anxious moments. Just a note: this interview was first recorded in May of 2021, so you may hear a few slightly dated references, but the topic of anxiety, for better or worse, is perennially relevant. Join Booker next week as we re-launch the Taming Anxiety Challenge, over on the Ten Percent Happier app. To join the Challenge, just download the Ten Percent Happier app today wherever you get your apps or by visiting tenpercent.com. If you already have the app, just open it up and follow the instructions to join!Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/leslie-booker-repostSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the 10% happier podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hey gang, we've got an extra special Friday bonus this week.
We're going to get a Buddhist take on anxiety.
As you may know, all week we've been running best of episodes as part of our taming anxiety
series.
And this is the final episode in that series.
We are also, as I've been saying, relaunching the Taming Anxiety challenge over on the 10%
happier app that starts next week. Our guest today, Leslie Booker, is the meditation
teacher for that challenge. This episode is therefore a great way to get a taste of the
practices she will be teaching during the challenge. Leslie Booker, who by the way goes simply by the name Booker, is one of America's leading
Dharma teachers.
She's worked with incarcerated and vulnerable youth.
She's done mindfulness and cognitive-based therapy work on Reckers Island.
She's written about best practices for yoga and criminal justice settings.
She's a graduate of three different training programs at Spirit Rock, including their four-year retreat teacher training program.
In this conversation, Booker is going to make the case that one of the most important, and even she will argue life-saving tools
when it comes to dealing with anxiety, is our ability to connect with other people.
She's also going to bring our attention to another Buddhist list.
You know, I love the Buddhist lists.
This one is the three characteristics.
Basically, she argues that the experience of anxiety is like all things inherently impermanent,
unreliable, and impersonal.
Understanding these fundamental truths, she says, can help us see our anxiety with more
clarity and therefore relate to it more skillfully.
Booker also explains why bringing awareness
to our bodies, you know, getting out of our heads
can help us settle in our most anxious moments.
And this I should say is something that she worked on
with me personally.
If you'd like to see her doing that,
you can actually do so because we filmed it
as part of the aforementioned taming anxiety challenge.
Speaking of that challenge, if you sign up, you'll be part of a community of thousands of
people.
You can invite your friends or family to join you.
You'll get a notification every time they meditate, in fact.
To join, just download the 10% happier app today wherever you get your apps or by visiting
10%.com.
All one word spelled out.
If you already have the app, just open it up and follow the instructions to join.
Before we dive in, just a reminder, this interview was recorded in May of 2021, so you may
hear a few slightly dated references, but for better or worse, the topic of anxiety is
perennially relevant.
We'll get started with Leslie Booker right after this. What does it even mean to live a good life? Is it about happiness, purpose, love, health,
or wealth? What really matters in the pursuit of a life well lived? These are the questions
award-winning author, founder, and interviewer Jonathan Fields asks his guests on the top-ranked
Good Life Project podcast every week. Jonathan sits down with world renowned thinkers
and doers, people like Glen and Doyle, Adam Grant,
Young Pueblo, Jonathan Height, and hundreds more.
Start listening right now.
Look for the Good Life Project on your favorite podcast app.
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Bokker, great to see you.
Thanks for coming on.
Great to see you again, Dan.
How you doing? I'm doing great. Better now than I'm seeing you. That's the right answer.
I know. I know how to do that. It's just my people skills. That's the end of it.
That's the end of it. We're talking about anxiety. I'm just curious. You've been meditating for a long
time. Do you still get anxious?
And if so, how do you deal with it?
Absolutely.
You know, my anxiety is pretty situational.
I know exactly when I'm going to get anxious.
And so I can sometimes meet it before it gets there by going for a walk,
going for a bike ride, doing something that's very somatic,
to kind of move that energy through.
And if it's happening in the moment,
and I don't catch it in time,
I take a moment and kind of feel into the experience of it.
So I noticed what's happening to the breath, to the body.
And then I wait a moment, and I see where I am then.
And so I can watch it sort of move and flow
and to watch it shape shift
and eventually just sort of dissipate.
So two strategies there. One is movement.
As you can tell from me, my movement is lifting a lot of weights.
I'm so ripped.
So movement can, or as you said, you sound like somatic to get the energy going.
And the opposite of movement, sitting still and watching anxiety do its thing.
And somehow seeing that it's changing all the time that it comes and goes can
be liberating.
So, is that a reasonable recap?
Yeah, that's a reasonable recap.
And, you know, from myself, again, if I can catch it before, I can do something about it.
But if it happens in sort of real time and I wasn't expecting it, then it gives me the
opportunity to pause and to see what's needing to be known in that experience.
And sometimes the anxiety, the nervousness comes from wanting to do things really right,
to say the right things, to have the right message. And so when that arises,
I really let the ego take a back seat, because that's ego speaking to
me. That's my ego kind of jumping ahead of what I'm offering. And so I, especially when
I'm teaching, I just remember that I'm sharing practice and doesn't have to be perfect or
flawless. It just needs to be expressed in any way that works for me.
We're shooting the anxiety course, ironically, shooting an anxiety course made you a little
bit anxious.
It did.
Yeah.
It did.
There's something about working with a script that is not my normal way that I move through
the world.
And so, again, wanting to make sure that we hit all the points and do it right
and make sure that everyone's going to get what they need, it brought up a lot of anxiety in my body.
And I hadn't experienced anxiety like that in quite a long time, so thank you, anxiety chorus,
forgive me, something to work with. You know, and it was a joy to realize that a lot of my anxiety
comes from, you know, things that mean a lot to me,
things that I really want to do well with.
And so it was good to understand that, to realize that, to recognize it.
When you talk about working with a script, when we do these courses, it's not like we're telling you,
book or any other teacher what to say, It's that we interview you in advance.
We know what your views are on various things.
And then we kind of try to hit those points.
So it's not like free flowing.
We've interviewed you.
We know what you have to say that we want to use in the course and we're designing the
interview around getting you to re-hit those points.
But even that is different from just to kind of an extemporaneous conversation.
And so that puts you in a situation where you're, if I'm hearing you correctly, where
you want to do a good job, give us what we need.
And my friend, Jerry Kallona once said, stress is caused by giving a F.
I would have to say that is correct in my experience.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
And of course, like this was a big thing.
People are coming to this anxiety course because they're living with something in their
body.
It's that's kind of blocking them from living their fullest life.
And so I also want to make sure that we're offering the very, very best that we can, so
that folks can, so that folks
can be friend and become a little bit braver with their experience, with working with anxiety.
So the first thing you were talking about when we were discussing anxiety, mitigation strategies,
one of them was movement and the other was kind of the opposite of movement, stopping,
pausing, and you used a phrase, seeing what's needing to be known.
Yeah.
What did you mean by that?
Everything that we need to know can be found in the body and the breath.
And a lot of times we sort of bypass over that very loud message that's coming from us.
But when we pause for a moment and check in to
the felt sense in the body
to the expression of the breath and
that can be a holding of the breath or a lot of deep breathing
It gives us information as to what's happening inside of us
And so when anxiety arises in my body, it's not typically anxiety for anxiety's sake. There's something that needs to be known there.
Sometimes as you had too much caffeine today, I'm like, note to self, that's where the
anxiety's coming from.
Or you really should have gone for a walk in and moved some energy through.
Or yeah, you had a really rough night, sleep last night.
So let's try and get better sleep tonight. Or this thing really means a lot to you. So this is what's showing
up. And so my body and my breath gives me this information. And it allows me to course
correct, either in real time or the next day, to make sure that there's some regulation
in my body to give me that starting point that ground for mood to move from.
Because anxiety comes in a lot of different flavors and sizes, right?
So some of it is debilitating these big giant monsters that we can't seem to move.
And some are a little bit more manageable that we can sort of hold in the palm of our hand and we can see it right sized.
And from there we have a little bit more autonomy
with our anxiety.
What are your thoughts about anxiety right now?
Because we continue to be in this weird,
liminal space between full-on,
five alarm, fire around the pandemic
and somewhere in the United States, at least toward moving out
of it. Of course, in other parts of the world, it's fully involved fire. Nonetheless, we're
kind of either fully in the emergency or kind of tentatively moving out and being in an
emergency is anxiety provoking, but also moving out can be anxiety provoking. So where are you with your anxiety around this?
What are you hearing from your friends and students and your overall observations around
this moment?
In this time, I can't imagine not having a sense of anxiety in our bodies.
I feel like every day I watch the news and I'm still a little confused.
Like, wait, can I wait?
Should I wear a mask?
Should I not wear a mask? There's a lot of navigating, negotiating, and no
one exactly knows the right thing to do right now. And I think that not having a
really clear concrete answer to this is the right thing to do. You can give
most people a sense of anxiety right now. And so there's a lot of communication
which I think is really great with our family,
our friends, how we want to be together when we do begin to hang out again, how we want to show up
with each other. And especially our friends who have newborn babies or small children who are not
being vaccinated, what does that look like and how are we caring for their young children who are still building up their immune system?
It's a really good time right now because everyone's openly talking about their anxieties.
You know, we're openly talking about it. We're negotiating, we're navigating, we're really talking it through and family. I want to pick up a little bit you just said because in the anxiety challenge, one of the
things that you and I talk about on camera is this kind of paradox that on the one hand,
other people can be the source of our anxiety.
But they are also often the way out.
And I just want to play a little clip where the other person who's teaching in the challenges,
Dr. Luana Marquez, who's a great anxiety expert at Harvard, and she talks a little bit about
what, and this is the kind of clinical term of art here, but the value of social support.
So let's listen to that.
Social support is known to be the strongest buffer against any
mentoring, including anxiety. We know, for example, in every
semi-analysis, that individuals who actually had
larger social support, leave the longer, 50% survival rate
increased just in having social support. So social support is
biologically wired. We all have been wired to belong together
to support each other and it certainly can
help team anxiety.
I wonder what you're taking on this is Booker.
I know from Hefry spoke to you before that you kind of have a little bit of a squad that
you'll call if you've got something on your mind.
So many squads.
Yeah.
Squads plural.
That's good.
I like that.
I know.
I know.
Yeah.
You know, we can feel so alone and so isolated in this world, especially if there's something
that we think that we should know, but we don't know.
There is a fear that we're having that we need to process with someone.
And I find that whenever there are big things happening in my life that I'm trying to navigate
and I try to work them out within my own system, I tend to get very confused and disoriented
and frazzled.
And I kind of just sit in this soup of chaos, which does not serve me. and I can sit there for weeks at a time.
And I also know that I can quickly pick up a phone and call someone or get on a text thread
with some folks and just name it. And immediately it almost just vanishes.
You know, there's that great quote, the only thing to fear is fear itself.
And I feel that a lot in my own experience is that when I'm just sitting in it,
it becomes bigger and bigger and bigger and something that just,
I'm unable to hold anymore.
But when I share it with other people, we typically find a lot of humor in it, or we can break it down and see what's underneath it because sometimes it's
not the thing itself, but it's about two or three layers underneath. And it can be a
core wound, something that is a reoccurring theme in our lives. And when I can see that,
I'm like, Oh, there it is. Got it. I know how to work with that.
But I'm not able to see that on my own.
I really need the perspective and the view of my songa, of my friends, to be able to
show that to me.
This notion of social support is so true as to be a trueism. But it's often overlooked in a Western individualistic
atomized society where we don't really emphasize it enough.
I, in my opinion, I believe there's a study
that had study participants look at a mountain
and gauge the height and then look at it
with somebody standing next to you and gauge the height.
And the mountain or hill or whatever it was seemed more manageable when you had somebody buy your side. And we all know that teamwork
makes the dream work, et cetera, et cetera. But because it's been relegated to cheesy slogans like
that, we don't operationalize it. We don't have many of us or me. I'll just speak for myself. I often sort of overlook just like you I'll sit in the soup.
For a while before I do the obvious thing of just talking to somebody about it.
Yeah, and you know like Luana said, you know, we are wired.
Not only for survival, but we're wired to be together. We are collective.
to be together, we are collective beings.
We are not meant to live in isolation. We are meant to lean on and get the support of
and to care for other people.
And when we don't have that opportunity,
it leads to illness, it leads to disease.
She mentioned it leads to an earlier death rate.
And so this is our biology.
This is what screaming at us to be in relationship with others.
And as I said earlier, it's a paradox.
It's ironic in that other people where the larger culture can be the source of anxiety.
Even though other people can often alleviate our anxiety, they can also be the source of
anxiety.
And while shooting the anxiety challenge, you and I talked about this notion of external
pressure.
And I really was kind of blown away by how open and raw you were about a period of your life where you kind of succumbed
a little bit to external pressures. And if you're okay with it, I just want to play a clip
because it was quite moving. Sure, go ahead. You've had experiences even in your meditative
career of feeling the pressure to meet external standards?
This happened so many years ago,
and it's still so tender to remember
a time in my life where I was not listening to my body
when I wasn't paying attention,
even though this is what I was out there teaching,
I couldn't turn inwards and take care of my own body,
my own health during that time.
I was on the road for three months straight.
Leading a bunch of retreats, I just kept pushing, kept pushing, kept pushing.
And by time I got back home to New York, my legs have began to swell
and I was in excruciating pain.
I was no longer able to walk.
All because you were chasing what you thought you were supposed to do. Yep.
I have a hard time imagining anybody who doesn't relate to that. And just in my own life,
I've just seen so many times, oh, I've just pushed myself so hard that I'm, I run my own health
down. I'm a jerk to other people. And it's because I'm chasing some ideal.
Yeah, it takes a lot of courage to talk about that. It sounds like that incident for you,
bookers still pretty raw.
Absolutely.
You know, I lived with illness in my body for over a decade,
which led to me having a radical history
wrecked to me 22 months ago. And so it was a really, really long journey to get there.
And hearing that clip again, I can't help but hear still the amount of blame in my voice.
Like, I wasn't paying attention to my body.
I should have known, I teach this, I should have.
And it's funny, like this is still something
that I'm in process with.
I'm still working with this.
And I think a lot of that comes from,
we don't see people who are suffering out on social media.
We don't hear a lot of teachers talking about
their struggles with things, we kind of talk about.
And now look at me, everything is great.
A lot of that comes from the fact that we want to teach
from the scar and not from the wound.
And they were not wanting our students to then feel like
they have to take care of us.
and they were not wanting our students to then feel like they have to take care of us.
But there's a fine line between that and naming what is true
that there is this constant exploration of our experience. This constant judging mind doesn't
go away. It's solvents with our practice, but it doesn't necessarily go away. And there's so much conditioning around blaming ourselves for illness, blaming ourselves for
our depression, blaming ourselves for the inability to get pregnant, the inability to stay
pregnant.
There's so much blaming, blaming, blaming.
And I think that's because there is this desire to show this
like perfectly polished life.
Look how happy I am.
Look at this great thing I've done.
Look at, you know, and when we talked about our social media,
you said that you wanted to have an Instagram of just your kids screaming in your cats.
And I feel like the cats feel king.
And I feel that people show like this is actually the reality of my life as opposed to these
five minutes when everything looks perfect, we would have a more realistic view of what
life actually looks like.
The people are suffering and it doesn't destroy them. You know, you can still have suffering, you can still have fear, you can still have pain and you can still survive and thrive.
It doesn't have to be one extreme or the other we can live with both.
I was joking about how I want to start a Instagram feed dedicated only to
like embarrassing mundane stuff, you know, if my kid having a tantrum or me and my wife arguing
or the cats scooting on the rug or whatever. Yeah, I do think we are presented with, this is not
an original observation, but you know, where are as you indicated, you know, presented with these
kind of curated,
Photoshopped, touched up versions of everybody else's lives,
and we can't help but compare ourselves to it.
So do you have thoughts about like,
what do you recommend?
Given that this is our reality,
most people aren't gonna turn off social media forever,
or even if social media wasn't around,
you'd still be looking at some sort of media
or just the people right around you.
What are your thoughts on how to manage
the comparing mind and external pressures?
Is that remembering that we also might look flawless
imperfect on the outside,
but we understand what's happening on the inside.
I must say that we're constantly in this torment at state. But it's important to remember that just like me, these
folks that I'm looking at on magazine covers or on a subway platform or
walking down the street, they probably also just came from having a fight
with their partner. Or they also might be living with some sort of invisible illness or
some sort of invisible ailments of their bodies or disabilities. And so it's important for
us to remember that being born into this precious human form means that we get all the 10,000 joys and all of the 10,000 sorrows. And to let go of this delusion that anything or anybody is perfect,
is impossible for anything to be perfect.
That little phrase you use just like me, that's actually something meditation teachers will recommend as a kind of little mantra for people.
You look around and just recall just like me, that person
has to go to the bathroom. That person, if they don't get enough sleep, will be miserable. That person
may have trouble in their relationships. That person may have been raised by suboptimal parents.
They are still subjected, non-negotiable laws of the universe around aging, illness, and death,
around aging illness and death and that can just put things in perspective. Absolutely. And also for me it is led me into compassion as well because not only does
this person with this external perfect life not only might there be suffering inside their
bodies but also it really supports me at looking at people who are really heinous in the world, who
are creating a lot of harm and devastation.
And so when I remember that phrase of just like me, I can note that, yeah, maybe they weren't
loved as a child, maybe they weren't cared for. Maybe they don't have dear friends that are nearby
that they can really turn to to see how they're actually
showing up in life.
And so my heart begins to crack a little bit open
when I'm seeing the other side of that.
Much more of my conversation with Booker right after this. Life is short, and
it's full of a lot of interesting questions. What is 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 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.
I wanna go back to your story of having,
on this very busy teaching jag and you just kind of ran
yourself into the ground where you couldn't walk.
Because that obviously is related to external pressures
around what the society expects from us.
But it's also, it's a burnout issue.
Home and office are the same thing now.
And if you've kids, it's become so much more complicated.
And now some of us are being asked to go back to the office and upend our lives again.
And maybe the schools aren't open.
And so the burnout issues here, the driving ourselves and
sometimes not listening as what happened with you not kind of listening to the signals are best
friend, this body that most of us, you know, I've heard this expression that we're most of us are
like Macy's Day parade floats. So all head floating through the world, disconnected from our bodies.
But the body is trying to send you messages and it's easy to ignore them when you're in this kind of 24, 7 culture. So any thoughts
on managing that?
You know, usually as a retreat teacher, you have nine months to a year and a half to know
that you've got a retreat coming up because they need to plan and schedule and you know,
do all these arrangements. But I realized that working on Zoom,
it was like, hey, do you want to do our treat next week?
And I was like, sure, there's no space in between.
There is no lag time.
And so for some of us, and I just want to say,
it's also a blessing to be able to have an abundance
of work during this time.
And also a really huge lesson for me
to continue to check in and to say, I can, but should I? It's like, according to my calendar,
of course, you know, I have a day off before and a day off after, of course, I can do it, but
is there enough space and capacity for there to be a refueling, a re-nourishing of this
body, especially for those of us who are, do things in direct service when we're constantly
giving, giving, giving?
And it's so important that we pause and drink as we pour to make sure that we have enough
to give.
And in this, you know, last year and a half,
it's sort of like people forgot about the space in between.
They forgot about that space to rest, to replenish, to begin again.
We forgot about office hours.
What are your go-to's for rest?
That can mean, you know, lying on the floor and staring
at the ceiling, but it also can mean sort of active rest,
like exercise or meditation or whatever.
So what do your go-to rest strategies?
A big go-to rest strategy for me is laughing.
A few years ago, I, there was like a year period
where I won't stand up comedy every single day.
Sometimes I would wake up and turn on stand up just to get that to be the foundation of my day
just to get me going. And again, I think there's a somatic energy. You're literally shaking and
moving that energy out of your body as you're laughing. So to me, it's very somatic.
I love writing my bike and I love to cook.
So those are kind of three of my big outlets
to nourish and to replenish my body.
One of the big through lines,
just to pick up on the last word you said there, body.
One of the big through lines in your teaching is
the body or the, again, to use the
term of art here, embodiment. And this is another one of these concepts that can sound cliché,
the body knows. But blazingly true, you know, just, just really true. And when we were shooting the anxiety challenge, you had me do something
called somatic experiencing, which I, given my, you know, incorrigible skepticism struggled
with a little bit. But can you describe what that is and what you made me do?
I was very proud of you, Dan. You did it. You stuck with it for a moment.
You did it, you stuck with it for a moment. So what I had you do was to put a hand on the forehead and a hand on the back of your
neck.
And just to apply just the slightest pressure of both the hand on the forehead and the
hand on the back of the neck.
And it brings a sense of containment to the body, this sense of holding.
And I know for me sometimes when my anxiety arises, I feel a sense of like I'm floating out of my
body. Like I have no autonomy. I have no say in how I'm feeling
or how I'm experiencing that moment. And so holding onto myself gives me a moment of just containment
of stillness of holding. And I remember when we did this during the challenge, you had your eyes
wide open and sort of looking around like, what's it supposed to do?
Sounds like me.
It sounds like you, yep.
And I invited you back to where your body, I invited you to rust the eyes and to actually
feel into the felt sense of the body.
And I found that for a lot of students, friends, you know, people that I work with,
when I asked them to drop into their bodies
to ask what the body is saying to them,
what are they feeling in the bodies?
They will tend to look up as if they're looking
into the brain for the answer.
And that's what I saw you doing.
And so there's something about resting in the eye,
is about taking away external
information is coming in through the sense door of the eyes.
And when we rest the eyes, whether that's, you know, looking down to a spot on the floor,
closing the eyes all together, it allows our body to wake up as another sense gate.
So just as we use our eyes to see, our ears to hear, our nose to wake up as another sense gate.
So just as we use our eyes to see, our ears to hear, our nose to smell, our fingers to touch,
our tongues to taste, we can also drop in and feel our gut, our intuition that that primordial
wisdom to come forth and to be where we're getting information from.
It's not up in our brains, it's typically right in our guts.
You know, I know that I sometimes masquerade as a skeptic when I'm really not,
I mean, I don't actually do that that much, but I sometimes play up my skeptical
tendencies. That's my more accurate way to describe it.
But I'm not very, I am squeamish about,
but not skeptical of this notion of touch
as a form of relief.
I've seen some of the evidence around touch,
even when it's touching your own body.
This sounds a little inappropriate, but I don't mean that I would.
Yeah, it's right.
Exactly.
That it can be useful.
And for example, I, you know, my anxiety really shows up right in my chest.
And often it's when I'm writing, writing for me is the hardest thing I do.
And unfortunately for me, I have to do a lot of it.
And sometimes I'll just, and I've mentioned this
before in the show, but I'm gonna mention it again,
just because if anybody listening truly is skeptical,
I have found that just stepping away from the computer
a little bit and putting my hand on my chest,
even kind of like rubbing it the way I might,
you know, I have a particularly rembunctious cat,
Toby who likes to have his haunches kind of smacked
a little bit.
Just do a little bit of, like, it's all right.
And I'll just talk to myself.
It's like, all right, you're good, you're good.
You know, I know you might think,
your voice in your head might be telling you
that what you're writing right now
is flaming heap of garbage.
But it's, and that's fine, but you can still edit it.
You've got people who help you edit it.
You're good.
You are making progress.
Just giving myself a little pep talk
and it's embarrassing for me to talk about it in some way,
but I found it to be incredibly helpful
and the touch is a big part of it.
Yeah, and also you're saying it's embarrassing
to talk about it and you just spoke the words of so many people. You don't have
the audacity to say that in public. So that's huge to name that. And it's important for us to name
these things out loud, especially those of us who have a public platform to normalize fear, anxiety,
this is just such a normal experience. And these bodies. And I think that people feel like
something's broken because they don't hear people talking about it so much. So, when these feelings come up, they're like, oh, like something must be terribly wrong
with me because no one else is talking about it.
And I don't see that as a failing of the individual, but actually a failing of the collective, of
the community, for us hiding the reality of what it looks like to be a human.
And I want to speak to the tapping as well. You know, the touching of the chest or the rubbing of the chest
or the tapping in the center of the chest.
And I think a lot of us feel that tightness that gripping
as an expression of our anxiety.
And so bringing our attention to where it's up
heart of our body and just holding it, acknowledging
it, turning towards it as opposed to turning away from it, it allows it to be seen, to be
recognized.
And then to hold it, you know, there is placing a hand on the heart or I do a lot of tapping
in the center of my chest.
And that kind of begins to almost break it up. So it's not this big mass in the center of my chest.
When I tap, it breaks apart and I can feel all the individual pieces of it.
Like, oh, my childhood stutter is coming back. Oh, my desire to do it right.
Oh, my, this feels like my one chance to say this really,
really important thing.
Oh, I need to speak this because as a black woman,
as a black queer woman, I need to represent my people, right?
And so when I tap and I break that apart, I can feel all of those pieces.
And I'm like, oh, that's what's going on there.
Okay.
And it helps me to work with them one at a time, as opposed to all of them in one chunk of a time. So it makes my anxiety so much more accessible to get to
and to understand and to work with them as these little pieces.
Much more of my conversation with Booker after this
and we're going to be answering some voicemails from you.
We've got a bunch of voicemail questions here and this one is actually right on point because we've been talking about embodiment and this is a question along those lines.
So here it is.
Hey, so thanks for all that you guys do.
I can't even forget to mention how a whole learning is expected to extend up to the last four years of my life.
With meditation, it's singular.
My question has to do with physical meditation with excitement.
I'm merely grieving.
I know a lot of the focus and most meditations that focus me on.
And I do that, but I also have a very physical job where I work hard all day.
And I've noted, sometimes my brain gets anxious about what's the distance I'm feeling in my body right now.
I'm a Georgia Brett, am I a Georgia Brett? Because I have a hard job and I'm working hard, and I'm a Georgia Brett, because you're creating thoughts. So my question is, what are
some skillful ways of working with your breath and not letting different breathing patterns
under view? So yeah, say it again, probably you guys do. That's a great question, and I'm glad somebody with way more expertise than me is here
to answer it.
What say you?
Yeah, breath is a huge thing.
You know, the first foundation of mindfulness is working with body and breath.
And as I mentioned earlier, everything that needs to be known can be found through the
felt sense of the body and the quality of the breath.
And so it's really great that the person who called in was paying attention.
He was noticing that his breath was changing.
He was noticing that there is shortness of breath.
And I think that gives you really, really good information.
And so, you know, maybe there is shortness of breath because it is a stressful
job, because it is dream-uous. And when you're thinking about, is it part of my job, or if
this is happening in a regular basis, you know, definitely get it checked out, because it
could be something else going on. So there could be a medical condition that's happening.
But if you're noticing these patterns, you know, that,
hmm, shortness of breath happens when I'm at this part of my job or shortness of breath happens
when I'm in this conversation, it could be definitely connected to, you know, the emotional body,
the emotional life. And so a way that I found to be really skillful and working with breath is to drop the breath
down a little bit lower in the body.
A lot of people, when they begin to meditate, they really want to focus on what we call the
Anapanasati spot, the between the tip of the nose and the top of the lip.
And what happens if we are bringing our attention to that part of where the breath is without
having a lot of experience or on that particular breathing technique, that it can actually bring
a lot of anxiety to our bodies.
It shortens the space in which we have to breathe.
And so if you're one who is typically already experiencing symptoms of anxiety, it can
actually exacerbate it. And so when I'm teaching mindfulness of breath, I tend to have people start
with the breath very low in their belly. And so bringing their hands through that space just below
the belly button. And feeling the belly expand like a balloon as you breathe in and feel the breath deflate
like a balloon as you breathe out. And so placing the hands over the belly and just feeling
that rising and the falling of the breath can allow us to have a sense of connection to the breath in the body
and also gives us enough space for the breath to move through so it can really support the nervous
system to settle down. I also will sometimes see if I can breathe through the bottoms of my feet
through the palms of my hand or just to see if I can feel through the bottoms of my feet, through the palms of my hand, or just to see if I can feel the breath move
through my entire body.
So that'll take the tightness and the restriction
of noticing the breath just at the nostrils.
And my mentor for many years, Philip Moffett,
would always say, this breath is like this. And this breath
is just like this. And I was always like, it's like, what? Just finish your sentence. But
you know what I understood he was saying was, eat breath changes. So yeah, this breath felt
like that. But it curious about this next breath.
Noticing the beginning, the middle, the end of that breath.
And how at the top of that breath, it might kind of pause and swirl and then turn back
to an out breath with the beginning, a middle, and an end of that breath.
And so the breath can become a very embodied experience as we feel the
expansion and the contraction, the rising and the falling. We can begin to flow
into a sense of rhythm with the breath in the body, which can again create a
little bit more space and capacity for us to be with. What is arising at that moment?
The caller talked about having an active job and then noticing at times you feeling short
of breath and not being able to figure out is this because of stress or because of the
activity.
I'm wondering what you think about deep breathing, deliberate deep breathing.
In what way? Like deep breathing for the, tell me more about that.
Yeah, just to sometimes I'll notice that if I'm clenched up, hunched over my computer,
trying to figure something out on some irrational deadline, that if I just take a break and take
a few deep breaths, that I feel better.
Absolutely. And a lot of that comes from
when we are really tensing and tightening,
a lot of times we're not breathing our full breath,
we're in this constriction and tightness in the body.
Of course, there's going to be constriction and tightness in the breath.
And so taking a pause to notice that, and then allowing the full breath to be known in the
body can also kind of reset us and allow that breath to have more rhythm, to have more flow,
to a tab more continuity to it. And yeah, I was curious about the strenuous job, because that can also be a sign that maybe this isn't the right
job for your health. If the breath is always tight or constricted, if there's always a sense of
shortness of breath at work, like let's investigate what's happening at the job and what maybe can
move or shift or be transformed, so that there is more spaciousness in the breath.
Again, the breath gives us so much information even if we cognitively aren't wrapping our
head around it. There's a lot that can be known through the telling of the breath.
Speaking of work stress, this next voicemail comes from Holly and she wants to talk about anxiety
as a consequence of workplace stressors.
Here's Holly.
Hi, my name's Holly and I do have a question about anxiety.
I'm a registered nurse.
I used to work in a very high pressure area of nursing often being involved in life
or death decisions with patients and it obviously was very stressful.
And my question is, I'm just more looking for suggestions for types of coping mechanisms
that people have for anxiety that someone might have general anxiety and have somatic symptoms
when they're off of work, but their symptoms are triggered or exacerbated by the high
stress nature of their work. I ended up leaving the bedside partly due to the high stress
of it and feeling like it was causing burnout.
And I'm sure that in some ways my anxiety contributed to that.
And so if I were to go back to a high stress part of nursing,
I would be curious about having more coping mechanisms for that.
And then also just maybe knowing when it's time to admit that your anxiety limits the
type of work you can do, whether that is a thing, obviously a very personal decision.
Anyway, a discussion about that would be great because I do know a lot of people who work in high stress professions such as healthcare have high functioning anxiety
and I'm sure they'd be very interested in hearing more about how other people deal with
that, how they're able to continue working in that high stress environment for years and
years without their anxiety limiting them. So thank you.
I hear a lot in that question. One is the notion of high-functioning anxiety.
I like that phraseology. I hear a lot of myself in that high-functioning anxiety.
So how can you roll with that coping mechanisms? I believe that was another phrase
you used for that. And then the other is, when do you know when actually the amount of anxiety is not tolerable,
it's not for you, you need to make a change.
And is that you being limited or is that you just being sane?
Again, a very fine line, right? As you know, I worked with highly vulnerable populations
for about 12 years in New York City.
I worked with young folks who were incarcerated.
Some of them are at the beginning of their life sentences
at 13, 14 years old.
I shared practices of yoga and meditation
with folks who were experiencing homelessness,
living with addiction, trans, gender, sex workers
who are living with HIV and AIDS.
So for a big chunk of my life,
it was a pretty stressful job.
Even though I was teaching yoga and mindfulness,
there is something about going into a gel
and hearing the gates lock behind you.
Even though I knew in an hour or two hours I could leave, that still really impacts the
nervous system.
And so for me, it was so integral to take care of myself twice as much as I would going into a regular, I don't know what a regular
low-stress job is, but you know, enter whatever that could be for you. But I realized how important
how integral it was for me to really, really, really care for myself. To mentally, emotionally prepare myself to walk into those spaces, and to kind of ritualize
letting that go, shedding that off of me once I left those spaces.
And so one thing that I do that I have done and I will do again once I start teaching in
real life again is to resource to the room that I'm in whenever I'm
walking into a new environment. And that means to go in and to pause, to feel my feet rooting on the
earth, and to feel how my body is responding. Belly, tightening, hurt, flipping, breath, tightening, or no staccato breath.
And then I do a resourcing practice, and this means to turn the head from side to side.
And this is something that you see animals do in nature when they come out of the cave,
and they sort of pause.
This would also be what your cats do as well.
They kind of walk into a room and they pause and they look around to see what's going
on.
Who's cats next?
Exactly.
Who's going to scratch my hunches?
Yeah.
And so animals walk into his space and they're activating that limbic brain, their animal
brain.
And so as they're looking around, they're activating that part of their brain
that's right above their spine.
And they're noticing where there is danger,
or there is shelter, or there is food, or there is water.
And so as humans who share that part of the brain
with animals, we can do that same thing with resourcing.
So as I'm turning my head from side to side,
I'm keeping my eyes wide open.
And I'm noticing different colors that
are in the environment.
I'm noticing shapes.
I'm noticing textures.
I'm noticing elements of nature.
And when I can resource and kind of get my bearings
and to understand where my body is in space,
to understand that I'm okay in that moment
that I'm safe, that I have what I need to feel protected,
that it allows my nervous system space to rest
and then I could go in and do my work from a regulated space.
And for a lot of us, especially when, you know,
you're working as a nurse or a social worker
and that's your job to get in there and do it.
But we forget that we're not machines, we're not robots, we're human beings with nervous systems that need to be regulated.
So in those five or 10 seconds that it takes to do that practice, my nervous system can regulate.
And then when I'm in direct relationship
with those I'm in service too,
they're able to attune to my nervous system
that I've cared for.
And for a lot of people, they'll say,
I don't have time, it's emergency, I have to rush in there.
What would it be like to take five seconds, just five
seconds to feel your feet rooting on the ground, to bring a hand to the belly and to feel your breath
breathing itself in and breathing itself out, to look around for a moment and get your bearings,
your bearings and then to move in it's completely transformed how you interact and how you can do your work. And I also really appreciate it. The question about it's a time to not do that kind of
work anymore. And for a lot of folks doing work at that level, at that speed, at
that intensity, it has a shelf life. And, you know, my career in working in direct service
with vulnerable populations also had a shelf life. And I could feel it coming on, but I
also took a lot of intentional time to reflect upon, you know, how much of my
ego was saying, but this is who you are. This is what you do. Of course, you just suck
it up. You just do that work. And how much of it was my body saying, I think we can do
something else, you know? And we get so fixed and rigid about who we think that we are, that we don't give ourselves
the space to grow and to transform and to move into a new way of doing our work.
And so I appreciate that question is even on the table for Holly that she's considering, huh, maybe this isn't the right thing. And,
you know, also we don't want something that's just a coping mechanism. We don't want to just have
this technique, this tool that we do just so we can cope, just so we can get through the day.
We really want something that becomes who we are and what we do in part of our rhythm of preparing to move into work.
It's just as we get up, we refresh our teeth and take a shower or we have breakfast and go to work
to incorporate things like resourcing, especially in these high stress jobs,
just to make that a part of our everyday experience.
And then we'll know, you know, again,
the body will give us information, is this enough?
Or is this not the right fit for me anymore?
And to honor and respect that we move through different seasons
and our lives, and we do something for certain periods.
And maybe this time that we've grown out of that, or we need to transform and do our work
from a different location.
One last voicemail here, Parker, this one's about anxiety as it pertains to issues around
race.
Let's take a listen.
Hi Dan, my name is Judith Bill and I really appreciate the work that you and your team do and bringing
us really great content from your topic.
So I am a Black woman and have struggled with social anxiety as well as the times generalized
anxiety.
And I think you have been pipping me to the sometimes during the period of unrest after George Floyd
and he was the last year that actually I think that my social and generalizing value is
deeply linked to expansive racism.
And I guess I was just wondering if that is something that your guests might be able
to answer, specifically that relationship between anxiety
and sort of structural and systemic racism,
as well as interpersonal racism and the fact that
it is a kind of experience that can really cause significant trauma
that is hard to see.
The color found by which is the fact that it can happen repeatedly and in many instances
happens without anticipation in a situation
where you were just having a wonderful day
to walking down the street on a summer's day.
And some of your life is in some instances
very, really, and materially adverse, typically at risk.
And so I guess I'm wondering if that's something that they could be to and
speak to, how that is something that once you navigate, both from the perspective of like the science behind it,
as well as just practically to move around meditation and such.
Thank you very much again for all that you do.
Appreciate the work that comes with it.
Thank you.
Thank you.
And that sounds really true and really hard.
And I know Booker, you specifically
didn't want to get to this voicemail.
What are your thoughts on it?
You know, as folks who have historically been marginalized,
whether you are folks whose ancestors were kidnapped
and enslaved, or if your ancestors were rounded up
and put into internment camps,
we have social and collective and historical traumas
that live in our bodies.
And so these social traumas are caused by
experiences of prejudice and discrimination that we feel on a personal level
related to our gender, our race, our sexual orientation, our disabilities. And when
those things are threatened, it really impacts our
nervous system because it is a direct attack on our right to be here,
and our right to live and to be free.
And then there's collective and historical traumas that are caused by events that are targeted
to a group of people, and they impact us for generations. So these are things like the American Indian genocide and you know
again enslavement, the Holocaust. These are things that are passed down through
generations, that's in our DNA. And so folks who have historically been marginalized, we're already living with this trauma in our bodies.
We are already living in communities that are heavily policed.
We are already witnessing our brothers and sisters being murdered and beaten up on the
daily evening news. And so it makes sense that with that being our
history and then you put on top of it a global pandemic that our anxiety is at an unbelievable level.
And also because we are we are wired together, we belong to each other.
And so even if it's not happening to us directly, we can feel the impact of our community.
We feel that pain, that suffering, that fear in our bodies. And so I don't want us to downplay and say, but that was my ancestors, I shouldn't
impact me. It's really important that we acknowledge that we name it, that we talk about it, that
we never forget the harm that's happened to folks of color in this country, and that we continue to lean on and to care for each other
and to never stop talking about it
because that's where healing comes from.
Well said, I do wanna go back to the anxiety challenge
and our interview from the challenge.
Because there's something you said that I think is it's worth bringing up here that in Buddhism,
you can get a little critical if you want a Buddhist for being a little dark with our
emphasis on things like impermanence, nothing lasts.
But you know, there's a pleasant side of impermanence, too, which is nothing
lasts, including anxiety.
So I just want to tee up something you said about that from the anxiety challenge.
Take a listen.
We don't fall the sun for setting at night.
We don't fall the clouds for raining.
This is just what happens in nature.
And so just inside our own bodies, things
arise and they pass away. We have these anxieties and then these fears. And then they pass just
like this wind is passing through right now. So take us home here. The floor is yours. Just
riff in any way you want on those notions. When you're speaking about impermanence, impermanence is one of the three
characteristics, the three markers of existence. And they are, the polywords are
Anitta, Dukha, and Anata. Anitta is impermanence. Dukha is just feeling of just not being satisfied. And then Anata is the sense of
of no self. So letting go of this notion that we are inherently these unique
beings. We're actually a collective of all these different things. There isn't
anything that says you are a booker, you are a Dan, we are just a collective of
arms and legs and flesh and blood and mucus and and all that good stuff. And so our
friend Ruth King says it in a really pithy way that it's not permanent, it's not
perfect and it's not personal. And I love that. It's been so helpful, not only in teaching, but especially in my
everyday life, it's so important to remember that if I'm super uncomfortable,
if I hate this experience, or if I'm riddled with stress, it only lasts a certain
amount of time. And there's something so liberating about knowing that it's not going to last forever.
There is something so joyous in remembering that these unpleasant feelings don't last forever.
That they're going to move and shift and change form that we're
going to turn towards it and get curious and it's going to dissipate and show us
all of the different pieces that it's made of. And so even our anxiety itself is
not this solid fixed matter. It's made up of all these different things that are constantly
changing. And sometimes when it feels like, that's not true. My anxiety is always the same
all the time. I always have it. I invite people to bring a hand to their belly and to feel
their breath breathing in and to feel their breath breathing in, and to feel their breath breathing out.
And then to notice, did you have anxiety,
that gripping, that tightening in the chest,
did you have that experience in that moment?
And it's important to remember that,
even if we feel like these things are always happening,
there's always space in between.
There's always that space in between where there is alleviation from it, where there is
a pause from it.
And it's actually impossible for things to stay the same because we are a microcosm of
the natural world. And what happens in the natural world is that
things are constantly changing.
And then my office is slated afternoon.
I've noticed the light shifting
throughout this time that we've spoken with each other.
I've noticed a really annoying motorcycles on the street
and I find my body kinda tensing up. And then about two seconds later,
it's gone. It's glued on. I wake up with the sun each morning and I love sunrise.
And there hasn't been one single day where I'm like, oh, why did that sunrise go away?
single day where I'm like, oh, why did that sunrise go away? Like the nature of the sun is too rise. It's like that moment where the sun is so vibrant and so
bright and so so alive. And then that brightness of that morning sun, it fades.
And I've never held on wanting that sun rise to last forever.
But I sit and I relish and I watch that experience as it rises
and as it turns into the morning sun.
And so a lot of our suffering comes from believing that things
are permanent,
that they're going to be this way forever.
Our suffering comes from believing that things
are supposed to be perfect,
that we're never supposed to get sick or get old,
that we're never supposed to have a bad day,
and our suffering comes from believing that we are alone in this world.
But other people don't have these same experiences.
It comes from forgetting that we belong to each other.
So yeah, I think that's what I have to say about the three characteristics.
And that's what I have to say about the three characteristics. I like it.
Well, some parts of it, I don't like not your comments, but the inherent dissatisfaction.
Yeah, sometimes that's no fun, but it also is the way it is and better to see it clearly
and be aligned with it than to fight it all the time.
Absolutely.
I was watching the videos for the anxiety challenge the other day.
You did a great job in those videos even though I know it was a little stressful.
And you did a great job in this interview, which I also know was a tiny bit stressful.
So thank you very much for doing it.
I want to remind everybody that they can check, book her out in the anxiety challenge and
then in the anxiety course, which we'll live on in the app. And if people want to learn more about you
beyond the challenge or the course or the app,
where can they find you?
They can find me at lesliebooker.com
and I am newly on the gram.
So you can find me at the real booker project
with all of my imperfections.
They'll be there.
Awesome.
Great job.
Thank you again, really appreciate it.
My pleasure, Dan.
Thanks.
Thanks again to Booker.
Thanks as well to everybody who works incredibly hard
to make this show a 2.5 times a week reality.
Samuel Johns, Gabrielle Zuckerman, DJ Kashmir,
Justin Davie, Kim Baikama, Maria Wartell, and Jen Poyant.
I would be remiss if I did not shout out our compatriots
over at ultraviolet audio who do our engineering.
Thank you to those guys. We'll see you all on Monday for a brand new episode.
It's a fascinating one with Alice and Gopnik,
a renowned expert on cognitive development.
We're gonna talk about two incredibly interesting things.
One, how caring for other people is a form
of enlightened self-interest that she thinks can be trained
and then scaled to the level of entire societies.
And we're gonna talk about what we can all learn
from babies that will improve our lives now.
So that's Monday with Allison Gottneck.
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