Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - Esther Perel on the One Thing That Will Improve the Quality of Your Life
Episode Date: January 3, 2024The renowned psychotherapist talks about the importance of accountability in generosity in her own life, and the one thing you can do right now, today, to make yourself happier.Esther Perel i...s a psychotherapist and bestselling author. She has a therapy practice in New York City and serves as an organizational consultant for Fortune 500 companies around the world. Her TED Talks have garnered more than 40 million views and her books, Mating in Captivity and The State of Affairs, are huge bestsellers. Esther is also the host of the hit podcast Where Should We Begin?In this episode we talk about:How to get around the obstacles that hinder connection with other people The role of conflict in relationships and why we shouldn’t be afraid of itWays to get better at experiencing anxiety or discomfort so that you can better handle the ups and downs of lifeAnd the simple thing you can do right now to make yourself happier Related Episodes:Can Anxiety Be a Gift? | Dr. David RosmarinLessons From the World’s Longest Scientific Study of Happiness | Dr. Robert WaldingerHow to Keep Friendships From Imploding | Esther PerelMating in Captivity | Esther PerelLove in the Time of COVID | Esther PerelEsther Perel: Turning Conflict Into ConnectionEsther Perel on the Other A.I.: Artificial Intimacy (SXSW 2023)Sign up for Dan’s weekly newsletter hereFollow Dan on social: Instagram, TikTokTen Percent Happier online bookstoreSubscribe to our YouTube ChannelOur favorite playlists on: Anxiety, Sleep, Relationships, Most Popular EpisodesFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/tph/podcast-episode/esther-perel-non-negotiablesAdditional Resources:Download the Ten Percent Happier app today: https://10percenthappier.app.link/installSee 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.
How are we doing?
When people are making New Year's resolutions, I think they mostly focus
on things like diet, exercise, finances, getting a new job, starting a meditation habit, things
like that. Maybe I'm wrong about this, but that's my general impression. We live in an
age of optimization. People are tracking their calories, tracking their sleep, tracking
their meditation streaks, tracking their heart rate, committing to arduous diet and exercise plans.
Some of these things are pretty healthy, although I would argue that you need to be careful
about not dieting or exercising from a place of self-loathing or conforming to societal
norms that may have nothing to do with your actual health.
But anyway, if you are interested in getting happier, healthier, and more successful. My reading of the data strongly suggests that the most effective lever, the thing you
really should optimize, is your relationships, which I very rarely hear anybody talking
about in terms of resolutions and optimization or general life goals.
Some of you may be familiar with this study, but the folks at Harvard have for 80 years or
so been tracking several generations of Bostonians to determine what leads to a long
life and a happy life.
And the number one variable was not diet or exercise or meditation.
It was the quality of people's relationships.
Why?
Because stress kills and stress can be reduced most effectively through having strong relationships. Okay, so that long wind up brings me to today's guest.
Who is one of, if not the smartest people I know on the subject of doing relationships better.
A stair per-rel is a psychotherapist and bestselling author. She has a therapy practice in New York City,
and she serves as an organizational consultant for Fortune 500 companies around the world.
Her TED talks have more than 40 million views and her books,
mating and captivity and the state of affairs are huge bestsellers. As there is also the host of a hit podcast called Where Should We Begin?
In this conversation, we talk about why accountability and generosity are so important to her personally,
how she handles competing needs in her life when it comes to relationships, how to make
real connections in an age of artificial intimacy, how to handle conflict, what to do if you're
an introvert, and one thing you can do right now today to make yourself happier.
This is the first part of a big New Year's series we're doing, which we're calling the non-negotiables.
We've compiled an incredible list of people
who we asked one simple question,
what are the must have practices and principles in your life?
I was a little worried when we started doing these interviews
that everybody was gonna say the same thing.
I meditate and exercise or eat right or whatever,
but I've been very surprised
how asking this simple question so often leads to fascinating and surprising areas.
We've got a great lineup today.
It's a stair Friday.
It's Bill Hader, the comedian who talks about creatively channeling his anxiety.
Next week, it's meditation legends, John Kabatzen and Pema Children and then Brian Stevenson, the civil rights icon who talks
about how he perseveres, no matter how hopeless times seem. But first, BSP blatant self-promotion,
starting this week on the podcast, we've got a special New Year's series featuring some of the
smartest people we know talking about the advice they can't live without. You're going to hear from
the legendary Buddhist non-Pema Children about one radical non-negotiable practice for her. And you'll get a masterclass
in kick-starting or refreshing a meditation practice from John Kabat's in. The series kicks off on
January 3rd, many, many guests, you're going to love it. Meanwhile, over in the 10% happier
app work, kicking off a meditation challenge that we're calling the imperfect meditation challenge hosted by my friend and colleague, Matthew
Hepburn, and featuring some great teachers, Carlisle and Don Mauricio, also friends and
former guests on this show.
It's free.
It runs for 14 days.
They're going to help you cut through perfectionism and shame.
Stuff that can derail your meditation habit.
If you want to start the new year strong,
this is for you. It kicks off on January 8th and you can join in the app right now, download
the 10% happier app today wherever you get your apps.
If you've ever stayed at an Airbnb, you know that it can be a fun and affordable way
to visit a new place. But have you ever considered whether you could be an Airbnb host? Maybe
you're planning a long weekend
with friends or family this fall while you're away.
You could Airbnb your place and make some extra money
to help pay for the trip.
Maybe you have an extra bedroom or in-law unit
where friends and family come to stay with you.
You could Airbnb it and make some extra cash
while it sits empty.
You could be sitting on an Airbnb and not even know it.
My wife and I have talked about doing something like that before.
We certainly love staying in Airbnb's, especially when we go to the beach.
But again, Airbnb, as an experience, isn't all about you staying in somebody else's
home.
Whether you could use a little extra money to cover some bills or for something a little
bit more fun, your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at airbnb.ca slash host.
As there, Pearl, welcome back to the show.
My pleasure to be here.
It's always great to see you in person or virtually.
It doesn't matter.
It's all good.
Thank you.
Same for me.
I'm just curious, what are the non-negotiable practices for you that you need on a daily or daily ish basis in order to, you know, keep your shit together and keep your life running?
Meaning things that I do on a daily basis that I need to do, because otherwise my life would be
out of culture. It's a combination of doing good work, attending to my patients with integrity,
attending to my team, with integrity. So there's a piece of it that is just showing up. A non-negotiable is to show up where I am expected.
And to show up fully, to be giving.
I think I have a non-negotiable around generosity.
And that means who do I owe a call to?
Who do I need to think about?
Who do I need to check in with?
That's a non-negotiable.
That involves my family, but not only.
It really extends beyond.
And then a few things that I like to do for myself, I wake up and I practice yoga almost
every day.
Rather, strenuous yoga.
But it is part of a group that is a community of friends that has become, I won't say
a non-negotiable, but it has become such a cohesive force, because it's been three and a half years since the beginning of the pandemic that we gather every morning.
And honestly, there's no other group of people that I have touch points with four times a week.
There's nobody else that I know about how they are four times a week. It's become the front and center for each of us,
even though we are not all each other's close friends necessarily.
So that showing up at 8 a.m. is a non-negotiable.
Let me go back to number one and obviously there's commonalities between the two.
You think of showing up in whatever context for your team, for your patients, for your family
as a form of generosity.
Yes, because I want to be present, not just there, but present.
I want to be focused. I want to give my full attention. I don't want a distraction, which is very uncommon these days.
This is one of the last places that I have left, where even though I used to say it's the last techno-free
environment, that's no longer the case because I often do see patients on Zoom as well.
But it's about, I'm not multitasking. I'm not thinking about anything else while I do
this. And this could be anything having to do with creating a course or doing a podcast
episode where it's basically life therapy sessions that you listen
in as a fly on the wall or seeing patients in my own private practice. I find that when
it's so distracted these days, it's so hard to keep focus, to read 100 pages in a book
and not lift your head as I used to do. That's what I call showing up. And giving the best of what I can,
and not letting people down who have expectations,
or letting myself down of my own expectations,
all of that for me is showing up.
What are the biggest barriers to showing up for you?
If I am preoccupied, you know,
covering a range of issues that make me anxious and that take me hostage
and capture my attention away from where I am, that is a barrier.
But interestingly, it can also work the other way around. is that sometimes when I'm most preoccupied or anxious or even sad because something really
sad has happened, I find that those are the moments when I often work the best.
Because if I manage to step outside of myself, I feel like I'm in touch with something
very raw of life and that I'm able to use that in my work with other people. So it goes in both directions.
A certain level of reminion, obsessiveness linked
to something that preoccupies me.
And it's that powerful that it can take away my concentration.
That's a barrier.
And yet you said that it's so interesting.
You said that there are, if I'm hearing you correctly,
particularly with sadness, it can be the opposite
of a distraction.
It can somehow get you out of your head
and give you sort of a fuel for showing up.
It's more that I feel like I'm in touch with something
that you are trying to talk to me about.
And because I'm in touch with it,
I'm more able to respond with a different pitch.
It's a conversation I used to have with colleagues.
It's like some of us would say, you know,
when I'm really in distress, I can't work.
And I would say sometimes when I'm really in distress,
the thing that helps me the most is to work.
Because it takes my attention outside of myself
and I can focus on somebody else,
and probably on some level,
I so don't want to focus on myself
that I'm even more focused on others,
and I have even more of an openness
that is available to me.
So that's how I present it.
Let me try a theory with you.
It may be completely off, I'll just float it.
But after 9-11, and we've seen this after other major cataclysm globally, people were raw in a way and in touch
with the inherent precarity and impermanence and poignancy of life. Facts that we tend to armor up against in our daily lives,
but if we're shaken up enough, we get back in touch with it.
And in those moments, actually, it is in some ways counterintuitively easier to be
available and altruistic and compassionate.
Does that roughly describe what the mechanism is for you?
Yes. Yes, I have it now as well.
There's such a dread of instability.
This world is really in a very, very shaky place
and I am experiencing a combination of sadness
and fear and grief and compassion and longing
and a desire to connect and to reach out and for others to reach out
to me and all of this emotional landscape comes with me to work. What's the type of stuff on the more
on the more on the more I'm following you then you took me to a very serious solemn place so here we are.
you then, you took me to a very serious solemn place. So here we are. I'm happy to go wherever this dance leads us. I'm curious you said before that if you're pre-occupied,
that actually can take you out of the room for your family, friends, patients, team members.
Do you have psychological Achilles heels, things that actually your prone to be to be preoccupied by? Oh, I think a very easy one would be if something is going on with my kids.
That's like number one, you know, you're only as happy as your kids are happy.
So I have memories, it's not happening so much now, but I have memories of, you know,
I can barely focus because I am thinking about what the Schmerz are dealing with.
That's an easy preoccupation.
Health matters, health issues, my own or people that I love, that's a big one.
There's a way in which it's a contradiction, okay?
And it works on both sides of the contradiction.
When my inner world or my world, my life, is not stable, it's more challenging to provide stability for the people I work with.
On the other end, when my world is unstable, it opens up, it gives me access to a range of emotions that I'm not necessarily in touch with on a daily basis. And that range of emotions does open me up to
working with a level of depth that I often think is even bigger than the one I strive for
in a regular day.
Does that do you relate to that?
Yeah, I mean, I do. I mean, I think about when something happens in my little world or in the world writ large, that is destabilizing.
It puts you back in touch with the fundamental, sorry to use this word again, non-negotiable realities of life, which is that this thing moves fast.
There's no guarantee that the next breath is going to be successful for you or for anybody you love.
And the ground beneath our feet is not as stable as we would like to think.
And we spend a lot of time and I think are in many ways programmed for denial of these
underlying realities, but when they become salient, there is a kind of, I don't know if I
love this word, but like a tenderness that is available.
It is, it is, it's a fragility.
It's a tenderness that is a response to an awareness of the fragility of things. So you,
you want to protect it, you know, you feel suddenly that things can really go wrong. So there's a
cherishing, there's a holding the fragility, and that is a tender expression. Yes, I think so.
The other non-negotiable you listed at the beginning of the conversation was yoga.
I noticed a commonality between the two things you listed, the first was showing up and the
second was yoga. The commonality, at least one of them, is that both involve other people.
These are not solitary pursuits. Correct. Correct. Because my life is more organized with the presence of other people.
I'm very well aware of that.
And there's a level of accountability.
So it's also because of your question.
Your question is, what's a non-negotiable?
And I think a certain level of accountability for me is a non-negotiable.
I expect it on the other side.
So that's a word we haven't used,
but in effect it's a lot of what I'm talking about, right? So this yoga group is a thing I would
like to, if I could package it, I would sell it because it's been an amazing experience. You know,
it starts in the pandemic. I realized that I'm really not somebody who's going to have discipline by myself because I need social accountability. And I'm also not going to go and buy classes
online at whole thing doesn't work for me. So I start to talk with one or two girlfriends
and I say, why don't we do it together? And then I say, okay, I'll lead. Of course, I'm
not a teacher at all, but I've listened to my teachers for enough years that I can repeat even what I can't do.
Anyway, we are about 15 or 16 now.
We're not always there at the same time for every class, but we made four times a week.
We just met this week on the roof of one of us, and just to gather, some of them had never
met in person.
And literally, imagine four times a week as you wake up, it's basically among the
first things you do, and you meet these people, and you discuss various things of life. And
then 10, 15 minutes later, we get going, and we are serious. And there's five teachers among
staffs, four of them that are really, you know, trained and licensed. And it becomes this incredible
cohesive force. It's an intergenerational group
that spans from 30 to 67. Babies were born, parents passed away, you know, relationships
broke up, relationships were gone. I mean, it's an unbelievable thing. It's really a novel,
actually. It's a beautiful novel to write. And because the characters are hilarious. And we wear this week literally saying,
what makes this an interesting group? And it says all of this, it's the different generations,
it's the different backgrounds, it's the serious and fun, the light and the heavy, the mischievous
and the solemn. It just inhabits so many nuances. And in that, it lives this hour and 15 minutes of intense, dedicated yoga that has literally changed.
None of us were serious practitioners before, but we had nothing to do during the pandemic.
So here we are.
So we became devoted to this thing.
And it's communal, it's supportive, it's remote, we do it on two continents.
Sometimes people get to meet in person and practice, it's like an amoeba, it's just a very
interesting flexible shape of a group that has become, without planning a very important stabilizer in many people's
lives.
That's the best way to describe it.
And you can do it with a movie club, a book club, a yoga club.
It doesn't matter.
But there's something about the frequency of it.
Because when you're younger, you're in college or you're in, you know, at work with people
that you see every day, the friendship is built around sharing life together. But often later on, your friendships are the people that you meet
to talk about your life too. But it's not the people we don't you experience the most amount of time.
You don't see them at school, you don't see them at work, so you see them at dinner. And this thing
has switched that around. You can actually, you know, share life without having to just retell life.
Long explanation for a thing that, but because I literally went to the group this week, so I had a lot
to say about it. Long explanations are welcome here. And I think it's really fascinating what
you're pointing to. And it reminds me of one of my favorite esterisms, which is the quality of your
relationships will determine the quality of your life.
And it is therefore very important to nurture relationships in many different
contexts so that you have people you can march arm and arm with through this
very unstable and precarious situation of being alive.
So I imagine some people listening to this might think,
well, I'm not a stair parallel,
I don't have as many friends,
I don't have access to so many interesting people.
Maybe I'm lonely, we're in the middle of an epidemic
of loneliness or I work remotely,
I don't get to meet that many people.
How do I start this thing?
Yeah.
I started with one person.
I said, you know, I'm having a hard time doing this alone.
How about you?
This could be I'm having a hard time going out of the house
to making a walk, running, whatever it is.
I'm having a hard time doing this alone.
Many of us lack that kind of motivation.
But if somebody waits for you,
it gives you the second remaining.
The meaning is no longer just the activity, but the person you share the activity with.
You know, and then constantly people say, there's somebody who wants to join, there's
somebody who wants to join.
That's how this thing grew.
They all start by being people that are my friends, but it's also because I'm very
interested at this point, especially talking about the loneliness epidemic to create situations
that are not artificial
intimacy. That's a thing that I'm very preoccupied with,
real life, flesh, present. That's why I also started with
the showing up. And adult friendships, I think that
friendships were tested during the pandemic.
Friendships are being tested right now in this acute
period of polarization
or period of acute polarization is more even correct. And what does adult friendship
represent? You know, families often disintegrate and friendship, it's the first relationship
we choose really when we are little. And it remains the most reciprocal relationship throughout.
we are little and it remains the most reciprocal relationship throughout. So I'm very interested in friendship at this moment.
And I would say to all of the people for whom this becomes interesting,
it starts with one, then it becomes two.
And then you will notice how much hunger there is for this.
You don't have to go look for people.
People will present themselves to you, but you have to tell them that you're doing this.
Like, I don't necessarily go around talking about my morning activities, but now I think
I have a story I want to share because I see what it's doing for the 15 other people,
and not all of them have the same kind of social circle that I do necessarily, but something
changed in their life, especially
the younger ones, you know, it's like 30-year-olds with 60-year-olds. Nothing more important than
intergenerational, which used to be done naturally by extended families, but we don't have
that. So we are so locked into our own cohort, people with kindergartners together and
people with teenagers together.
And you know, that's not the way that wisdom gets passed.
All these elements find the activity and then just think of one or two people and just
say, this is what I would like to create.
Are you interested?
And then let me know what happens.
What if you're an introvert?
An introvert can write a message and just say, you know, I've listened to this kind of music.
Are you interested in this music? Introverts are not social. They experience their sociability differently.
I think we have to be very accurate about that. Introverts may need to replenish a loan and then accumulate the energy to be with others versus
extraverts who get energized by the presence of others. But that doesn't mean that introverts don't
like the company of people. There's a range of introversion. There's a lot of people who are very
sociable that tell you, I'm an introvert. It's about not being alone. It's about being supported.
It's about having witnesses to your life.
It's about not feeling that when you go through the heart things of life,
you're doing it without an empathic witness.
And that's what makes all the difference.
And especially in this moment, reach out to people.
Just tell them, I was thinking of you.
I think what's happening may be affecting you, you know, it affects me.
You know, don't be afraid if you reach out and somebody says,
no, no, everything okay, well, then you say that's so nice to hear.
But it demands the minimum of what is the thread that will help us not dry up in solitude.
No, solitude is the not the right word in a loneliness, not even in loneliness, but in a loneliness.
Coming up, Esther Peral talks about how to get around the obstacles that hinder
connection with other people and the role of conflict in relationships and why we shouldn't be afraid of it.
we shouldn't be afraid of it. Quick reminder, you can join the free 14-day imperfect meditation challenge over on the
10% happier app now.
Create the meditation habit you've always wanted this January with my friends Matthew
Hepburn, Carlisle and Don Maricio.
Download the app now to get started.
Just to build on that,
this is about me interviewing you,
so I won't say too much here,
but I had an experience where two years ago,
I retired from my job as an anchorman at ABC News
where I was working on the weekends.
And so I didn't have much of a social life
as a consequence for the 10 years or 11 years
where I anchored on the weekends.
And simultaneously there was a pandemic as we all know. And my family and I moved to the suburbs
where we didn't have any friends. And so when I retired I found myself with these empty
blighted spaces on the weekends. And I really had to start over my wife and I together.
What did you do? What did you do that you feel really made a difference?
Yes, that's exactly where I was going.
So one is I just made it clear to everybody.
Old friends and knew that I was available and that I was in yes mode.
And if there was a party in the city and involved me driving, I was still going to go.
And I was going to show up for things that my friends were organizing, the type of stuff I used to not show up for.
The other thing I started doing was getting much more consistent about doing something
you mentioned, which is reaching out to people at random times, just to touch base and
even people I hadn't heard from in years.
Well, they hadn't heard from you in years either.
Yes, exactly, exactly.
I'll give you just one example that I found particularly poignant, which was just the
other day, a friend of mine popped into my head.
I hadn't seen him in a couple of weeks.
We're very close.
And so I do see him regularly, but I hadn't seen him in a couple of weeks.
And I just sent him a quick text to say, how are you doing?
He called me immediately, which is rare.
He said, the universe just delivered you into my lap, the perfect person.
I'm at the vet.
My dog is really sick and I have to decide
whether to put him down.
And I need somebody to talk to about this.
And we talked it through and he cried a little
and he made his decision.
And I just thought, you know,
I don't believe in anything metaphysical.
I don't have any proof for it.
But that's just an interesting example of how,
if you get in the habit of being
externally oriented, interesting things can happen. So just to not scare off the introverts
It's really not about being externally oriented. It's about staying connected. Yes. Yes. It's really about staying connected and
so many forces these days are
hindrances, obstacles to connection, to real connection,
food that feeds you, not artificial food.
And it's a strange thing that that suddenly becomes the thing when it's supposed to
say in public, but it is so basic and we are losing the basics because there is a social
atrophy going on, where we are lacking the
skills for the situations that we need to face with people.
What are two situations that are very challenging for a lot of people in relationships?
One is to ask for help, which you're friended, and one is to disagree.
I've been spending a lot of time thinking about conflict these days, you know, and how
people stay connected with people they disagree with, or they have a divergence of opinion,
or they have different values, or that whole set of things reinforced by the political
situation of the moment, but it's happened already before. So conflict and help are two essential
So conflict and help are two essential challenges,
big topics of relationships. And one of the things that helps them the most
is the one-on-one connection.
And so it's a beautiful thing,
a, that you just spontaneously reach out,
b, that he just said, oh, just in time, someone for me.
And that he then said, I need you.
And then that he made his decision with you
and that he could process the immediate emotions
surrounding the decision with you.
And you will never forget this.
Neither of you will never forget this moment
because he will remember the day he had to decide
about letting go of his dog.
And therefore, that's going to associate in his memory with you.
And that's going to associate with this friendship that he had.
And this is how we live not feeling alone.
What helps us not feel alone?
You know, there's the concept of object constancy, right?
When you're a little kid and you drop a toy,
and for the first time, you realize that the toy still continues to exist, even though you're
not seeing it and then somebody picks it up for you and then you throw it again, they pick it up,
you train again, but you learn that you continue to exist even when the other isn't the here,
that you live inside of them. To be internalized by other and to internalize others is the fundamental fabric of connection that helps us not to feel alone
in the world. On a big level alone, I'm talking. You know, I'm all alone. Of course, we are alone
in front of death. And, you know, there's that truth. I know that answer, but there is
there are loneliness that is fundamental aspect of life and then there is the psychological reality of
a loneliness. And that is what you experience with your friend. He lives inside of you. You thought,
yeah, what's happening? And he took the hook and went with it.
I love everything you just said. And to get back to the question you asked before, like, what
have I done? And therefore what can one do to kind of make up for the social attributes
that the culture is in many ways imposing on us.
Another thing that comes to mind related to what you just said
is I don't know if I would have been able to crystallize this
until we got into this conversation
that I kind of want to be the person
that other people talk to when shit's going wrong.
It feels so good to help others.
Yes. It does, you to help others. Yes.
It does.
You don't have to be a therapist.
I do this for a living, but it really feels so good.
You feel honored when people come to ask you, not always, but sometimes you just feel like
I'm so glad that I'm the person you're thinking about.
I'm not talking about all the help that we need to dispense that we didn't choose.
I have that too.
But this type of help that you describe, to be the one that one reaches out, you're the
one I can talk to about this.
Wow, that's a compliment.
I wish many people should receive.
For me, a key learning within this, and I'd be interested to see whether you agree with
this, is that I don't need to fix any of these problems.
I just need to, as Brunei Brown says, sit in the dark with them.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
You know, the definition of trauma is not the thing that happened to you, but it's the
fact that it happened to you without the presence of an empathic witness.
So many times, you know, we will figure out what we're going to do,
dog or something, you know, we'll sit with it. Ultimately, in that sense, he is alone. He's the
only one making the decision, and your friend is the only one who's going to live with the consequences
of his decision. In that sense, he's alone. But he's not alone because he can share it with you.
But he is not alone because he can share it with you. Say, it's this both end.
And your presence changes his experience of this whole process.
That's how you live with both of these realities at the same time.
Being connected while you are alone in making a decision,
but you're not alone in the decision.
So I like what you say. And is that
a new discovery for you that you like people to turn to you?
I think I've felt this way for a while, but I didn't really, I wouldn't have been able
to articulate it. So clearly had we not had this conversation.
So what is it that we said that made that clear for you?
You're asking for a level of recall that I am currently unable to achieve. I think it's just
something that's been bubbling in the background of my psyche for a while. And I said it to my friend too, you know, he expressed some gratitude and I was like, look, we are really close friends.
I'm going to play to the whistle with you. In other words, I'm going to be friends with you until too, you know, he expressed some gratitude and I was like, look, we are really close friends.
I'm going to play to the whistle with you. In other words, I'm going to be friends with
you until the game is over. And so whatever is coming up, I'm your guy. Like you can call
me. And I feel that way about a significant number of people in my life. And that's a good
feeling to have.
Do you call them?
Yes. Yes. I take very seriously Do you call them? Yes, yes.
I take very seriously what I'm sure you know,
Dr. Robert Waldinger, the guy from Harvard.
Yes, but you should say who he is
because it's one of the most extraordinary studies.
Yes, so this study,
well, you want to describe it,
you're more familiar with this than I am.
I mean, it's one of the longest studies done on men,
specifically, and on the social life of men, you know,
for six decades, I think he has been doing this study, right?
About six years.
And the most important piece of data or information is that the majority of these men, when they
talk about quality of life, happiness, fulfillment, satisfaction, et cetera, will emphasize one thing above all,
and that is their social connection.
The quality of your life depends on the quality
of your relationships.
Or the quality of your relationships
determines the quality of your life.
Turn it in every direction.
It's not their work.
It's not their achievements.
It's not their money.
It's who cares about them and who do they care about? That's how I work, it's not their achievements, it's not their money, it's who cares about
them and who do they care about.
That's how I would summarize it.
What would you have said?
I think that's exactly right.
And as Waldoger has explained on this podcast and on others that what they found is that
longevity is very much linked to the quality of people's social connections.
And he says the mechanism for that is that stress
is generally what kills us over time.
And that stress can be reduced through
having strong relationships.
And he crystallizes it in this phrase that I love
and that I would get potentially tattooed on myself,
which is never worry alone.
And so you asked me, do I call other people
if I've got a problem?
Yes, I do.
Well, often my number one confidant lives in this house with my wife. But if she's not available,
or you know, I want to outside opinions, I will not do it alone. I used to, and I don't anymore.
And I think that because it's a study of men, it has even more power.
Because it's a study of men, it has even more power. Because there is a sense, you know, an internalized set of messages by which men often think they have to do it by themselves.
That the depend on others is a diminishment of them and a belittlement of who they are.
And that the power comes in the stoicism and in the fearlessness and in the self-reliance, etc., etc.
And there's a reason, man, die a lot earlier and women, and often alone.
And it doesn't have to be this way. And it wasn't always this way. That's the other thing.
This is a rather recent development in our Western societies. I think it's important to say that there's nothing intrinsic in masculinity that sets us up for that.
That's so interesting. Yes, so it's not impossible to overcome this conditioning because it's not
right in our DNA or in our chromosomes as male identified people.
No, and I mean, when you look at the research and you look at history and you know, in 19th century, I mean, men were surrounded by men.
You know, they had a different way of defining friendship and things that they shared as part of
friendship, but it's okay. Friendship can be multilingual. It's not one way to experience friendship.
Agree completely. Let me just go back to something you said earlier as there about conflict.
And that you've been thinking a lot about this
What are the headlines in in your thinking of vis-a-vis conflict and relationships?
You know
It's an interesting thing. I started to think about conflict because I had a sense
That more and more people were coming to talk to me about how they don't know how to maintain a connection
with people they disagree with.
Friends, families, and family members. And as a couple of therapists and a family therapist,
you're working with conflict is a central piece of the work. But I wanted to conceptualize it.
And I actually created a course on it. It's one hour course where I just summarized,
And I actually created a course on it. It's one hour course where I just summarized,
you know, what I think is important for people,
because when you deal better with conflict,
what you're actually are doing is connecting better.
The conflict is just the obstacle to the connection.
It's not like you wanna just do a course on conflict.
So it's called turning conflict into connection.
And what I wanted to say is conflict
is intrinsic to relationships.
I mean, we are meant to argue.
We are meant to sometimes fight.
Sometimes fighting is extremely useful.
It restores a wrong.
It creates a different balance.
It allows for certain things to be changed.
I mean, this is not a negative in and of itself.
And therefore, there is productive conflict
and there is destructive conflict.
And I wanted to parse that out. What's the difference about that?
What are the feeding strategies that people consistently get into
when they enter into the dark space of conflict, the cycle of conflict?
For example, kitchen thinking, right? It's like, instead of having an argument about the thing that we are arguing about right now, I am bringing back our entire history. Everything else that happened between us,
even things that we had long resolved, they come in handy at this moment. And if you pile up all the
dirty dishes in the sink, you can't wash a single one. So you can't have a conversation. And the
minute the intensity of one argument drops, the person brings back something else.
And what about that?
And the last time this.
So there's all these defeating strategies.
One of the main ones, which is very important in this moment,
is fundamental attribution error.
We think of ourselves as more complex than the other
when we polarize.
And we think that when we do something, it's circumstantial.
I didn't respond because I had different things happen
to me that made it challenging for me to respond.
And so unfortunately, I wasn't polite or caring or,
but you didn't respond because you are a cold person
and you are a caring person
and you are an irresponsible type, et cetera.
So, my nister circumstantial and yours is characterological.
This is happening at this particular moment as well.
Totalistic thinking, you are this, you always, you never, you know,
rather than understanding that much of this is rooted in our experience
and it's pseudo-factual talk. But we think that we are making statements
about the other defensiveness, blame,
and basically what is polarisation is, I say something that provokes you and makes you then say
the thing that is harder to me. I heard you, you're going to hurt me back plus. And we escalate,
we escalate, and we find ourselves both in complete different corners in a massive trigger chain.
And this happens in intimate relationships and this happens in families and this is happening now
on the vast social landscape of our countries. And I just thought, you know, if I can do something
on the micro, maybe it can have some effect on the macro. But helping people save themselves from these cycles,
it's probably one of the most challenging aspects of our work
and one of the most important aspects of our work.
Did I explain that well?
That.
Very well.
I have a million more questions and super compelling
and I think universally relatable.
I've heard it argue and I wonder if you agree
that there is healthy conflict and then there's high conflict.
Maybe this is just another way to say what you said before
about productive conflict and destructive conflict.
We need some level of conflict,
but it can lapse into a vicious spiral.
Yes, I mean, you can call it healthy. It's not an adjective I find
particularly useful here, but when I was doing the course, a scene came back that I
had actually not thought about in a while, you know, Friday night in my house we
often had family dinner. And we would launch into the most
accrimonious political conversations with we're in the 70s, so you can decide what are the issues we
were all fighting about. And we would scream. And I would say, how can you think such a thing?
And what kind of person says this kind of thing? I'm like 16, 17, 18. And in the middle of the
argument, somebody would say, the apple cake is delicious. And then we would continue.
And we lived with very powerful, strong differences
of opinions about major events of the day,
but the connection was preserved just by this little bit
that said, the cheesecake is good or something, like that.
So what is not healthy or what is destructive is when you attack the person, when you want
to shame them, when you talk to them with contempt, when you belittle their concerns, where
you tell them, oh, you have a problem, let me tell you about my problem, or you think
you have a little boo boo, or you think you are in pain, or you think you have made a problem. Or you think you have a little boo-boo or you think you are in pain or you think you have
made a problem? Let me tell you about a bigger problem. When you disqualify systematically what the
other person is saying. When they say five things to you and you take the one thing you can
disagree with and you start to argue just on that one thing when everything else would have demanded
a little acknowledgement of your part. Or in other words, I think there are three main themes that undergird every type of fighting,
no matter what the subject is, because it's not what you're fighting about, it's what
you're fighting for.
So that's what you're working on, right?
What is it that these people are fighting for?
Are they fighting for power and control, And they feel that there is an imbalance
and the priorities and the decisions
of the other take precedence?
Are they fighting for care and closeness?
Do you have my back?
Can I trust you?
Or are they fighting for respect and recognition?
Do you value me?
Do I matter?
These are three ideas that I take
from the work of Howard Markman.
And I think it's very clear and very simple.
And when you present it like that to people,
they know instantly.
It's not the kids, it's not the money,
it's not the sex, it's not the in-laws,
it's not the values, it's any of these three
that is underneath.
What are you fighting for?
And I thought, this is part of the atrophy
that is happening too.
You know, this is part of the atrophy that is happening too. You know, this is something I want to say.
I'm on a roll.
One of the questions I asked at a recent talk that I did,
there were almost 4,000 people.
And I asked, did you grow up playing freely on the street?
Did you then?
Yes.
Do your children grow up playing freely on the street?
I try to encourage them to, but they don't. Right. And you know, in that transition, what we lost is years of
unmonetored, uncoriographed, unscripted social negotiation between children who negotiate rules and breaking the rules and making friends and breaking up friends and being jealous and competing and making up this entire toolbox of social skills that the conflict. And that entire apprenticeship is disappeared. That's part of the social
atrophy. And that's part of why people cut off family members, friends, other
speed that is unprecedented because I shouldn't have to be uncomfortable with
somebody who thinks very differently from me,
that has social consequences for a society at large.
That doesn't just stay in the domestic realm.
Coming up, Esther talks about ways to get better at experiencing anxiety or discomfort
so that you can better handle the ups and downs of life.
And the simple thing you can do right now to make yourself happier.
I did an interview recently that has really stayed with me with this Dr. Russ Marin who runs
the Center for Anxiety at Harvard.
I like to joke that that's probably not the most fun place, the Center
for anxiety. But his one of his theories, and you just touched on it, is that part of
what's driving this epidemic, never before seen levels of anxiety, is not that the world
is in any way less safe because by every objective measure, it is safer. We are wealthier,
we're more educated than it's ever been. But what's
happened is this diminution, this atrophy and our willingness to be uncomfortable. And so any
little pings of anxiety, we tell ourselves that we've got a big problem as opposed to understanding
well, that is just part of being alive. Right. And I think that one of the things that is contributing to that is that we are basically
often today experiencing from very early on a type of assisted living.
We have a set of predictive technologies that are telling us how to get somewhere and
what to watch and what to listen and who who to date, and where to shop, and everything shows up.
And every one of these predictive technologies has a goal, which is to remove friction,
to remove obstacles, to remove discomfort, to make it smooth and polished.
And that has had an incredible effect on levels of anxiety.
Because life is filled with uncertainty and discomfort and friction and obstacles.
And if you develop a sense that things should be like that,
without anything disrupting you, and you get lured into it,
when things happen, you do not know how to handle it.
So we know that there is an increase of anxiety, that is a direct consequence of the inability to tolerate uncertainty,
to tolerate obstacles, frictions, and the lack of practice.
What you describe is the fact, what I'm trying to ask myself is,
where does it come from and what contributes to this?
There's never just one thing. I'm giving you one example
because it's one of the most salient ones.
Artificial intimacy also contributes to that high rise of anxiety
because you live in a situation, you know, here's the script.
I'm talking to you. I'm saying something really important to you.
And I hear you say, aha, aha, and I know that you're doing something else.
You're texting someone else or you're multitasking. And I'm sharing something important.
And I'm having this experience of, are you there or are you not there?
I'm big ears lost, we call this. Amigurus last makes people feel very anxious too,
because you don't know,
are you with me or are you actually not with me?
So there's a host of different situations like that
in our social life,
living at this moment that contribute to this heightened anxiety
or to the inability to tolerate discomfort.
Well, we have a couple minutes left, but if there was one or two things that you could recommend
to people to get better at experiencing discomfort and anxiety so that they can fortify themselves
for the inevitable ups and downs of life, what would those be? I think your line about don't worry alone is crucial.
You know, I think that I said number three
when you asked me the nail negotiables,
who do you owe a phone call to?
And I'm saying a phone call, which is after the text,
because the voice, the voice is so important.
I mean, you and I both are podcasters.
Most of us, the people know your voice
and my voice by listening with airports
to very gripping conversations.
Or for me, it sessions with couples and individuals
that are just so you're right there.
You just, you've never ever seen the intimacy
of others to such a degree.
So I say to people, call.
The voice is the first thing we develop in
utero. It's an important aspect of our connection and of not being alone. If you can, who do
you own apology to? That's another big one. Who do you want to take a walk with? Just
basic things like that. So I am a major promoter of social interaction. It can be, you know,
who do you want to go to a live concert with? When you buy tickets for a concert, buy two,
or this is an interesting thing. When I did this talk in London that I just mentioned before,
I asked people to stand up if they had come alone. And I was really amazed, a third of the audience came alone, to an evening
on relationships. And I thought, wow. And then I said, all of you sitting next to someone who is
standing, please introduce yourself and make sure that they don't leave the way they came as the
new kid in the class. So it's about engineering these kinds of interactions.
I was coaching a patient of mine, a group of young people.
I said, you're going to go out.
Why don't you check who's having dinner plans?
People may often be busy three weeks before,
but they're not busy the day off.
It's an amazing thing how many people
are going to spend the night at home.
Who wants to go have a bite?
You don't cook, just bring people, four people into your house
and just each one bring something or cook together.
Nothing has to be fancy.
We did a whole study on families in Ukraine and mothers in Ukraine, a couple years back.
And what was so interesting is that what did people want the most to help them with their anxiety,
with their sense of dread, with the war that was raging around them, is to come together in a kitchen, cook, and talk as they
cook. Don't just talk. Do something with your hands. And if you can do something with your feet,
be in motion. Because then the body processes this, and it discharges some of the tension,
and you can co-regulate together as you are in the kitchen or as you are on a walk
So it's these touch points that I think are
crucial for our basic well-being at this moment. I mean I can go on and give others
But I spend an enormous amount of time telling people to do these little motions and then I say to them
Just send me a text with a check.
So I know you did it. If you want to tell me more, go ahead. 99% of the time people just send me even
a smiley just to say this was such a good idea. I would never have thought about it. You're going swimming,
call somebody. You're going to the gym, call somebody, because there is always someone who needs the one who's going to go anyway
in order to do the thing they want to do, but wouldn't be doing alone because they're on the couch and they're just saying,
ah, not to net, I don't have the energy, but I've never known anybody who went and regretted afterwards.
Mm-hmm. I'm going to put some links in the show notes, a one to your conflict course, and also to
I'm going to put some links in the show notes, a one to your conflict course,
and also to talk that you gave it South by Southwest,
that you texted me a couple months ago
that I just thought was unbelievable.
In that talk, you mentioned ambiguous loss
and some of the detrimental impacts
of having a friction-free life courtesy
of digital technology.
I just want to say in closing here,
and I hope you already know this,
but I'm just such a massive fan of yours in person and
professionally and you're just doing the Lord's work. So thank you for coming on the show and for everything you do.
It's a pleasure. It's always a real treat of a conversation and I wasn't a role.
I love that. I love that.
Thanks again to Esther.
Absolutely adore her.
We mentioned a couple of other episodes of this show in that conversation.
As you may remember, those episodes were with Dr. David Ross Maren from the
Center for Anxiety at Harvard and Dr. Robert Waldinger, who coined what, what
maybe my next tattoo never worry alone. and we've put links to those episodes
in the show notes for this episode.
We've also put links to my earlier conversations
with Esther. She's been a fantastic guest
on the show a number of times.
Before I go, let me thank you for listening.
I really mean that. Go give us a rating or a review
if you are so inclined. And most of all,
I want to thank everybody
who worked so hard on this show.
10% Happier is produced by Gabrielle Zuckerman,
Justin Davy, Lauren Smith, and Tara Anderson.
DJ Kashmir is our senior producer.
Marissa Schneiderman is our senior editor.
Kevin O'Connell is our director of audio and post production.
And Kimi Regler is our executive producer.
Alicia Mackie leads our marketing and Tony Magyar
is our director of podcasts.
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