Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - From Finding Mastery | A Conversation with Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn
Episode Date: October 20, 2023Our friend Dr. Michael Gervais at the Finding Mastery podcast is a renowned sports psychologist who found meditation by happenstance. We wanted to share this conversation he had with Dr. Jon ...Kabat-Zinn about the mind/body interactions for healing and clinical applications for mindfulness meditation training. Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn is a Professor of Medicine emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, where in 1995 he founded the Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care, and Society and in 1979, its world-renowned Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) Clinic. Order Dr. Michael Gervais' new book here: https://findingmastery.com/book/Listen to the Finding Mastery podcast here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/finding-mastery/id1025326955See 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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Hey everybody, Dan here.
As some of you may know, we started this podcast back in 2016 at the kind of earlier edge of the podcasting era.
It's like one of the few times in my life
I've ever been ahead of a trend.
If I'm honest, I was actually just copying
my friend Sam Harris who had a podcast
and I always copy him.
Anyway, back then, one of our early guests
was a guy named Dr. Michael Jervet
and he had his own podcast called Finding Mastery.
And in that interview, which by the way,
we'll put a link to the interview in the show notes here.
In that interview, we talked about how we found meditation, kind of by accident,
and how that led him down the path of becoming an expert in sports psychology.
He eventually worked for the Seattle Seahawks and Olympic athletes,
helping them perform at their best.
Now Dr. Michael Jervé has a book coming out called the first rule of mastery.
Stop worrying about what people think of you.
The book is all about understanding and overcoming one of the greatest
constrictors of human potential, our fear of other people's opinions.
Or as Dr. Mike calls it FOPO, you can get the book if you want to buy it at
finding mastery.com slash book.
We'll put a link in the show notes as well.
To celebrate the launch of the book, we wanted to share an episode of the Finding Mastery
podcast with you featuring the Godfather of Modern Meditation, John Kabatzin.
If you're a fan of JKZ, you know, he's always a trip, so we hope you enjoy this.
So check out the Finding Mastery podcast and go order Dr. Michael Jervais book at finding mastery.com slash book or at the link in bio. We hope you
enjoy this episode from his podcast with our good friend, John Cabot, Zen.
At this particular moment, we have to understand that mindfulness is not some kind of a
dime store relaxation technique that will make you feel better, reduce your stress.
It's really maybe the critical factor in whether we survive as a species in any kind of recognizable way.
Okay, welcome. This is the Finding Mastery podcast.
I'm Dr. Michael Jervé.
By trade and training, a sport and performance psychologist.
And I am fortunate to work with some of the most extraordinary thinkers and doers across
the planet.
Now, the whole idea behind these conversations behind this podcast is to learn from people
who are challenging the edges and the reaches of the human experience,
business, and sport, and science, and life in general. We are pulling back the curtain to
explore how they have committed to mastering both their craft and their minds in an effort to
express their potential. So through these conversations, you're going to hear their stories,
and you're also going to hear the habits and practices and mindsets that they use to help them achieve and experience the extraordinary.
We know that our minds are greatest asset.
And if you want to learn more about how you can train your mind, this is just a quick little
reminder here to check out our online performance mindset training course, where we've pulled
together the best practices to meet that unique intersection of the psychology of high performance and the psychology of well-being.
So we walk through 16 essential principles and skills for you to train your mind in the same
way that we train world-class athletes and business leaders. And you can find all of that
at findingmastery.net forward slash course. Now this week's conversation is special. It's with John
Cabot-Zinn. I'm fortunate to know him in a way that it feels really rich. There's a depth to this man
that is profound. If you're not familiar with his work, he's a professor of medicine
emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, where in 1995 he founded the
Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Healthcare, and Society. And then in 1979, it's world-renowned
mindfulness-based stress reduction, MBSR Clinic. His research between 1979 and 2002 focused on mind-body interactions for healing,
on various clinical applications of mindfulness, meditation, training for people with chronic pain,
and or stress-related disorders, on the effects of mindfulness-based stress reduction,
MBSR, on the brain, and how it processes emotions, particularly under stress.
brain and how it processes emotions, particularly under stress. He's the author of 14 books, including the bestsellers full catastrophe living, wherever you go, there you are, and mindfulness
for beginners. So his books and guided meditation programs describe meditation practice in this
very common, sensical, relevant and compelling way that mindfulness meditation practice has become a way of life
for thousands of people. And he's contributed through his introduction to mindfulness to the West
into mainstream institutions like medicine, psychology, healthcare, neuroscience, schools, higher education,
business, social, justice, criminal, justice, prisons, the law, technology, government, professional
sports even. Over 700 hospitals and medical centers around the world now offer MBSR. Thank
about it. MIT, deep educational experience, studied under Tick-N-Hon, younot Han came back with some insights to the West, introduced this way
of thinking about how the mind-body relationship works, and then put it to a program and like
change the world, literally has changed definitely the Western world.
I mean, he changes every room he's in, how about that?
Every room he's in. There's an
alignment that he has that is undeniable between his mind and his heart and that alignment is express
their words. And I hope you can feel it. And with that, let's get right into this week's conversation
with a legend, John Kabat-Zinn. John, how are you? I'm fine. It's wonderful to be here with you.
There is so much weight behind even the simple answer that you give.
And so, and it's complicated. Isn't it to say I'm fine in a way that is upside down?
Yeah, I'm fine with not being fine.
And also, my heart is torn apart in many ways,
given that we're two or three days
into the abomination of what Russia is attempting
to do with Ukraine and the amazing response
of democracies around the world and human beings around the world, including
in Russia, and the populists of Russia.
So, fine is always like a shorthand for like it's complicated, right?
But that's in some sense part of the subject matter I guess we'll get into is how are we
in relationship to experience of any kind, including really, really difficult experience because to my mind, that's how we optimize what's possible in the world in the direction of well being and ethical behavior and nonming and minimized all of the madness and violent impulses
that human beings sometimes have to other people that don't relate in the way they relate or look the way they and create levels of madness and sometimes of violence and often huge injustice that
you know really I'm feeling the way the earth is going that we can't count in this anymore,
that we have to reset the default mode of humanity towards minimizing the ignorance and greed and hatred and optimizing love and caring and compassion
and that we can do it all, that there's enough for all
and we know that in a way we didn't even 30 or 40 years ago
never mind 100 or 1000 years ago.
And I wanna draw right into the center,
which is our relationship with experience.
Yeah. So the center is of your life work, to be able to have the insights,
the deep insights that you just shared is first and foremost,
your relationship with experience and then being able to help others to do the same.
And is that how you frame the human experience
from the inside out is building an understanding
of the relationship that we have with experience?
Yeah, experience is a huge mystery.
Nobody understands how we experience,
how we get, have, understand, experience.
I mean, it's one of the biggest philosophical conundra and it's also in
neuroscience, like, you know, awareness and experience are like two gigantic black holes,
like we know that we are conscious, that we can be aware, and that we have experiences, but
we really don't understand how that comes about. And so we're busy in some sense thinking that we're the doer of our own experience, as
opposed to in some sense being in a very reciprocal interconnected dance with reality, all
of reality, a lot of which you can't see here is smell, taste, or touch, because there are all sorts of invisible forces also going on.
And the beauty of this kind of orientation and the fact that it can be infectious, just like COVID, that it has the potential to be a meme that will spread through the entirety of the human population is that it optimizes
our capacity to feel at home in our own skin, even under extremely difficult or stressful
circumstances sometime.
And at those particular times, when the proverbial stuff is hitting the proverbial fan,
that's the most important moment to not lose your mind.
But that's the moment where you're most likely to lose your mind,
because most of the time, our understanding of life is, you know,
we're very reactive to what we like or don't like,
if we like it, we approach it, if we don't like it, we reject it. And so, from that point
of view, we're always off balance. And when awareness cannot restore the balance, but
actually show you how unbalanced you are. And then the interesting thing about experience is it's self-balancing and
so we can find a new kind of equilibrium that we never knew we had and a lot of
people say who take the eight-week MBSR program mindfulness-based stress
reduction in hospital or something because they're referred by the doctor for one kind of chronic medical condition
and another, wind up saying, you know, I felt this kind of sense of belonging, this kind
of experience of being really who I am and being in my own skin.
I remember this from when I was four or five years old, and then I forgot it.
Now I'm 70 years old or whatever.
And all of a sudden I said, holy cow,
what happened to my life?
I love this for two reasons.
I want to share with you.
And this is, you're talking about the arc
from like five to 70 and then returning back to home
from a psychological standpoint.
And as you're talking, one, I have great respect
for how you have bridged the practice of wisdom and humanity with science. And so in so many
ways, John, you are a mentor of mine on how you conduct you and how you've been able to
kill. Yeah, for sure. And how you have created a canvas
to share it with so many.
And we'll get into some of your teachings
and your practices in a minute.
But here's the thing I want to share with you
is that early in my career,
I would talk about the psychology of excellence.
And I still say that language now,
but there's a difference in the way that I think about it.
Because the psychology of excellence really feels
metallic, shiny, right?
Like extraordinary from a podium or a gold medal
or like some metallic, I think is the right word
that I think about.
And I was sitting down with a world's best in business,
like a true global thinker in business.
He goes, Mike, I'm so attracted to that.
But you know, for me, it feels like the psychology
of excellence is being at home with myself.
I said, me too.
He says, so, do you think you changed that language
or just add to it?
And I was like, oh yeah, okay.
So what is the language? And so much of the
science turned to art is like getting the language in a way that feels precise and also has space
in that precision. And it's that duality. But can you riff on that for just a moment?
That's so beautiful because we started out with the mystery of human experience.
There's also the mystery of human language that no one understands.
Not even Chomsky, and Chomsky is very clear that there are certain elements of being human
that may remain mysterious forever, that no amount of science is going to ever completely clarify, just like
in some sense, the uncertainty principle, that there may be limits to the, because of
the way the human brain is wired, that we will not understand. So for instance, right now,
I know there's a podcast of people listening, okay, but, but what they're listening to is you and then me, in turn, moving our lips,
moving air out of our lungs and over the vocal cords and in concert with the lips moving and the
tongue moving and the entire structure of the mouth, words are coming out that are actually
vibrating through the air, going into a microphone,
vibrating the microphone, becoming electronic signals, and going out to some kind of receiver
that then reverses the process and the air vibrates and they vibrate the trinpanic membranes inside
the listener's ear. And then those auditory nerves carry to the auditory sort of cortex where it's decoded.
And you're following this sentence, which is getting longer and longer, and it's absolutely
grammatical.
And how do we do that?
I mean, let's say none of us know.
And when you watch a two-year-old, a choir language, as I'm doing with, you know, three
and a half now, but with my youngest grandchild.
Everybody should be like dropping whatever they're doing and just letting their jaw hang in awe of
how that happens. And the child can all of a sudden start articulating thoughts and motions and so forth, that a memory, a recall that is staggering.
So the long and the short of it is, I mean to take like another six months to completely unfurl.
But it's like these gold plated mirrors that all have to be in time to the big bang, than anything that humanity has been able to do before.
And we're listening through that kind of apparatus, we're attending to experience through our eyes, our ears, and nose, and mouth, and
our capacity for touch.
And the most important in some way, awareness is like a sense because you can, you know,
someone can touch you and we've all had this experience of being hugged by somebody who's
doing it mechanically.
And it doesn't feel like a hug.
You are aware of that, but they're not aware of it.
And it's like the worst feeling in the world
to be touched in a mindless way, a mechanical way.
And so, and everybody's had the experience of like somebody
who you really love saying to you,
well, you never listen to me because you shut down
at certain points because you know what they're gonna say
or you're, you know, we don't accord them
a certain kind of honoring or sovereignty because of habit of one kind or another. So when
you cultivate mindfulness or awareness, which is a synonym for mindfulness, then all of a sudden you
see what you're doing. And you no longer have to be trapped in it. And you can see the miracle and
the beauty of what's unfolding
and the mystery of it, whether it's the gigantic universe
of the fact that underneath the vault of our skulls,
we have the most complex arrangement
that matter in the known universe.
I mean, it's so complex.
I mean, it's like, you know, they say,
north of 100 billion neurons, just in the head alone.
And that that are continually talking to each other through trillions and trillions of
synaptic connections, many of which are changing constantly on the basis of what came before and
experience and training and all sorts of things like that. And, you know, so the fact that we would feel lost
or out of sorts or depressed in a certain way
or anxious, it's like, wait a minute,
we're not honoring in a certain way
what the full repertoire of our humanity
is offering to us.
And it's only offering it to us at one moment.
And that moment's called now.
It's the only moment we can ever
apprehend experience, the mystery of experience, and then, and who's apprehending it? So the
mystery of the experiencer. And there is no experience. There's just experiencing. There's
just attending. And when we fall into the subject, object dualism,
and is of me who's having my experiences,
there's a certain degree of self-delusion
associated with that, because we don't
understand the nature of self.
And so that's, then, of course, we
think that our narrative is who we really are.
And we want to optimize our narrative, optimize our bank account, optimize our happiness quotient
or whatever it is at the expense of the rest of the world because we think of ourselves as separate,
which is the most profound illusion of all, which is why in the meditative traditions, the question, who am I?
becomes the question par excellence, like taking a, you know, can open her to your head and opening it up and actually realizing that we're not who we think we are, we're not who we
say we are, we're infinitely bigger than the stories we generate. And when you thank you for that.
That was a lot, you know, I realized that was a lot,
but it was kind of written on what you were saying.
It was a, you know, it took variance.
You took me for a ride.
I mean, like all of it.
And you scientifically wax poetically
and in a way that I'm able to follow.
I see them as completely intersecting the science and poetry art.
They're all different ways of knowing or understanding the fundamental question.
Why did they send that telescope up?
I mean, billions of dollars out there past the moon.
Why did they do that?
We understand what it means to be human. And where are places in the universe?
This is going to tie into the fundamental question, who am I? And then also add it to some of the
brain structure you're talking about to get to the place of the science that I am enthralled with.
The jaw dropping part, the beauty of the science of psychology,
is that bit where we're able to make sense of something. So we've taken all of this information,
and then it's got to get filtered through in a way that the experience is sense-making for us.
We have the ability to say, oh, that is this or that is something else or I like this, I don't like that, which is, this is where we start to get in trouble because of like an
oxym, what's it called?
Oxym raisers?
Oxym raisers.
Yeah.
Like, oxym raiser, which is just trying to make the most obvious definition of what happened,
but it's so complicated. So when we go into that
place of awareness to experience and in the awareness making that opens up the
aperture to understand the experience at maybe a more accurate in a more accurate
way or a more profound way or to realize that you don't understand the
experience and awareness of not understanding.
Which is really important because from a science point of view, I'm not an engineer.
So it would be different for engineers because things got to work.
But from a scientific point of view, the greatest scientists are the ones that realize how little they know
and they know that they don't know it,
and therefore they put their energy
into pondering that interface, like right where we go up
to everything that we know.
And then you just stay here.
It's like a meditation practice.
You just stay with what ones and master I trained with,
called don't know mind mind or not knowing mind.
But that's a function of ignorance. It's a function of wakefulness and openness.
And then the brain is so beautiful in organ where the human being is such a beautiful entity
that they're not knowing but contemplating the space of not knowing,
all of a sudden what arises often,
and this is as much a miracle as seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching,
is an insight.
That before you didn't, the moment before you didn't have,
and then all of a sudden you saw a connection,
scientists have this experience rarely, but it's very powerful,
where for a brief moment, they know something that no one else on the planet knows, because
they put two and two together and came up with four for the first time.
And that's really, but that's a capacity that we all have, you know, if we're talking
about children, if we're talking about spouses, if we're talking about partners, it's like
we live with the conceit that we know
who we're living with. We don't even know who we're living with. We don't even know who we are,
none of a mind who you're sleeping with, or you're a children, or anything else. We put everybody
in a kind of a box of a certain kind, and it's very reassuring when they respond more or less the way we hope they will and then everybody's happy,
but what if they don't? So it's really, I think, a profound opportunity to exercise this muscle,
so to speak, of not knowing mind, of a kind of awareness that doesn't believe its own propaganda, which is what is most
important in science is you don't believe your own your own theories, you have to put them to
the most rigorous of tests. And so, you know, that's what really
where the rubber meets the road in science is having incontrovertible evidence
that something is as it is.
And then it's still all the relative even Newton
had to make way for Einstein
once the world had evolved a little bit more.
And even Newton, they couldn't figure out.
I mean, Newton knew that what he was saying
was like absolute nonsense.
I mean, that they just couldn't figure out even the
law of gravitation, you know, gravitational attraction. What conceivable energy would pull two masses
together? And they just couldn't figure it out. I mean God was the only appropriate answer but
there wasn't very satisfying. And it took until Einstein to actually realize that it's not a force gravity.
It's like the wave, the universe space itself, space time is shaped by mass and bent by mass.
So the things fall into orbits, so to speak, or of attraction.
into orbits, so to speak, or of attraction.
John, how do you study? Because you're one of the rares
that can go across many disciplines
and not lose the sophistication of those verticals.
And so how, this is a life journey, I understand.
But it might be important for people
to understand a quick flyover for you,
like the chapters of your life,
and to know that you're classically trained,
and then you kept going.
And so I do want to understand how you have, let me tell you a story.
Somebody pulls up in a Ferrari,
and it's like an oppressive car,
and somebody, one person could walk up and say, wow, where'd you buy that car?
Another person could walk up and say, how'd you make the money to buy that car?
Another person can come up and say, what fascinate you?
Right.
So I'm interested in what fascinate you and trying to understand underneath, like, how
do you generate the insights that you have?
And I know you're going to say mindfulness for a long time.
No, no, I'm not.
Actually.
But can we do two parts?
It's a long question, which is quick flyover,
like the chapters of your life, or important phases of your life.
And then it will be relatively brave there
to get to the question of how you're
able to study and develop insights.
Well, to go backwards, I mean,
I, we don't know how insight develops. It requires patience.
It requires interest, curiosity.
Like, why is it this way and not some other way?
And then like pondering that kind of thing.
So that's, I think, a human characteristic.
I have to tell you that I am not a big fan
of creating some kind of narrative arc of my own life
and being the receiver of various projections
or narratives about how this I am or how that I am of any kind, because
they're toxic to me. I've had enough experience of it to realize that the more I get those kinds
of projections, the more I have to develop my like in Star Wars, you know, kind of like a
repelling shield, you know, I don't remember exactly what they called it, but kind of a shield to
repel those kinds of forces because I'm not really the interesting subject even though we're
having this podcast and so forth. The reason we're having this podcast, I would say,
not of having had a conversation with you about it, is because of the listeners.
session with you about it is because of the listeners.
Okay, so it's not so much like, oh, can I be or you or anybody else that we want to sort of elevate, be an inspiration to the people.
It's more like when we are in conversation like this and people are listening,
they begin some subset often
who haven't already tuned us out for something else
that might be on their mind.
They begin to resonate with something inside themselves.
That is very, very powerful,
that often is just that way.
Like, you know, when I was five,
I had this feeling, and now I'm 70,
eight or whatever it is, and I haven't felt that way. Like, you know, when I was five, I had this feeling, and now I'm 70, eight or whatever it is.
And I haven't felt that way since,
and they attributed to the meditation practice.
But what they really attributing it,
what it's really,
the source of it
is our willingness to recognize each other's beauty,
to recognize each other's wholeness, WHO, and to not put each other's beauty, to recognize each other's wholeness, and to not put each
other in boxes depending on our income, whether we're movie stars, or whether we're big shots,
or whether we're sports heroes, or, but to just realize, like, because all of those are just kind of like
two-dimensional narratives that they, you know, nobody knows who Tom Brady really is.
The question is, does Tom Brady know who Tom Brady really is?
Or anybody else that is the hero of the moment?
So for me, all of my work and the reason we're having this podcast from Mike with the
viewers, because if we're putting out through these mysterious airwaves for other people's years to resonate with, is like it's not just
year that resonates.
And I'm interested in, if anything is resonating someplace
in the heart, or in the bones of our listeners,
and a kind of recognition that, you know, I could be more in touch with who I really, really,
really, really am instead of the narrative,
good, bad, or ugly that part of my mind
is continually putting out there that says,
I'm not good enough or I'm like, you know,
in order for me to be happy,
everybody else has to be and fill in the blank what it is.
And that is a
liberative invitation. It's like, hey, why don't we wake up and free ourselves from all of the
sources of suffering that actually for the most part we blame or project out there on other people
or circumstances, but ultimately, we're to blame because we're not taking responsibility for our beauty and then cultivating it,
watering the seeds of our own human dignity embodied, wakefulness, the mystery of experience that
you were pointing out and the power of this function that we don't have to acquire that we're born with, but never
get any schooling in hell to inhabit, and that is awareness, human awareness.
And so you don't have to improve on yourself.
All you need to do is recognize that there's no improving on yourself if you're willing
to drop in to awareness and let things be as they are and then let the curriculum do you?
I don't know if that makes any sense to the listener,
but that's kind of my response to like
the chapters of my life, so to speak,
because I think that that would be in some sense
a kind of, you know, sort of an inappropriate detour
given the urgency of what humanity is facing on the planet in so many different ways.
Thank you for gracefully.
Saying that.
You bring up something really important, which is the, I'm not okay. You also have mapped very clearly
that there is the mystery of the unknown. And if you don't work with the mystery of the unknown,
it's a, it's a fast train to anxiety. If you don't work with that, that nagging voice and that
feeling that you're not good enough, we end up finding ourselves
with self-doubt, we end up finding a smallness that we can never truly express the gifts that
we already possess.
And so I've got an axiom I live by, which is that everything you need is already inside
you.
Right.
So let's go to work.
Including the stuff that you don't want,
because people, you know, everybody's different than some of us are born with
challenges that others of us never experience.
And so we can always look around and say, I want to be that person.
But that's not really a choice that any of us get.
So the question is, how do I be this person in my fullness?
One of my heroes is Stephen Hawkins.
I mean, when he was in his early 20s,
he got a myotropic lateral sclerosis
and for the rest of his life.
He was in a wheelchair and then ultimately lost even speech
and had to be electronically amplified
and everything else is one of the greatest physicists
that have lived.
And he actually went and experienced zero gravity
in some plane trip around the world
where they can create zero gravity
to train astronauts and so on.
And he did that, experiencing zero gravity
in his wheelchair, which the zero gravity
is not an impediment.
And he was one of the greatest physicists since Einstein
to interrogate the nature of the universe,
black holes, all sorts of things.
And anybody else, we said, oh my God,
I was just like, killed myself.
I mean, there's no, how could I live like that?
He found a way.
And he said, well, then he's special.
He's like, you know, he's not like everybody else.
He must have been some genius.
My point is, everybody's a genius.
To first the proxamation, those hundred billion, you know, neurons inside your head and another 100 billion
glial cells, and nobody really knows what they're doing, and everything, your entire body,
I mean, like we're all walking miracles. And the more we actually honor it without generating
some big egotrip around it, and you say, well, okay, you may be the center
of the universe, but so is everybody else.
Then we can have a very interesting way
of dealing with global warming and all of the problems
that humanity and the human mind,
when it doesn't know what self is creating on the planet.
And I see this as a kind of distributive movement.
It's not about like heroes or saints or particular people
who like, you know, have transcended in one way or another
and become, you know, sort of put on other people's pedestals,
but exactly the opposite, that we're all capable
of learning, growing, healing, and transformation
in the direction of wakefulness of before we die waking up as
Thoreau was saying to the actuality of who we are, to experience as you started
out saying. And I love that and in my experience I'm not deluded. I may sound
deluded as we have this conversation like you know who talks like this but I
don't think I'm deluded at all because I've seen thousands and thousands of do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do and meaningless and everything else. And then in a few short weeks of cultivating intimacy
with one's own embodied awareness through a discipline,
I mean, it does take a certain kind of interior work
and then bringing it out into the world.
So there's no inside or outside.
That people will say things after eight weeks of MBSR practice,
like, you know, you save my life or things like that.
I mean, by the thousands, and I say,
I just, that's really good to hear,
but I didn't save your life.
You saved your life by waking up to aspects of dimensions
of your own experience that you weren't paying attention to.
And then, of course, we need support.
This is not something one person can do by themselves.
But this is becoming a global movement.
The science of mindfulness is like following the same curve as COVID follows.
It's an exponential curve.
Only we're not trying to damp it down.
We're trying to accelerate it even more.
And I think that, you know that everything that's happening geopolitically
is in some sense, reminding us, OK,
you want to have a nuclear war now over Russia or over Ukraine.
What are we thinking?
How could that possibly be worth anything at all?
We need to wake up to our own madness in a certain way and let everybody live and
maximize the beauty and yes have laws that actually prevent a certain kind of
you know institutionalized injustice whether it's on the nation nation level or on the international level where we minimize institutional injustice and othering
and maximize homestasis, homestatic well-being also with the planet because we've given it a fever
and it's getting worse and worse and worse. The huge numbers of human beings live in very, very vulnerable places, but more and
more of us are soon nobody's going to be privileged in that regard.
So what's getting lost in this exponential curve that you're talking about of mindfulness, what is getting lost in the
popularization of this beautiful ancient practice?
I don't know because I don't pay that much attention to the popularization of it.
It's true that it is being popularized, but that's, there are people who will try to take advantage of or maximize
their own sort of position with whatever other people find interesting when it reaches a certain kind of level in society. So yeah, there's a lot of
hyping of mindfulness and people talking about it and maybe even teaching it to, you know,
can't even spell the word mindfulness. That's the way I joke about it. But the fact is that there's
so many serious people out there teaching mindfulness in hospitals and medical centers and clinics and now schools
and in the political arena and everything else that it's kind of like has the potential to
put us back in touch or perhaps put us in touch for the very first time with the name that we gave ourselves as a species, homo sapiens sapiens from the Latin
separae, which means to taste or to know.
So with a species that knows and knows that it knows,
which means not cognition and metacognition,
but awareness and meta-awareness.
So with a species that is aware and is capable of being aware
that we are aware and then,
therefore, making really wise choices. And we haven't quite lived our way into that yet.
So I see this as kind of an evolutionary arc that there's no guarantee we're going to make it
because the forces of darkness inside the human psyche, when it doesn't know itself,
I mean, we've seen what it did to Europe, you know, you know, in the 40s and the atrocities
that were committed by, you know, the countries that were like the, you know, the quintessence
of European culture. And now, Russia and Ukraine.
And it's just everywhere that we need to actually start taking care of the body politic,
not just of the planet, but of how we're all going to live together on this planet in a way that optimizes
just what I said before, you know, a sense of being at home in your own skin and in your own country
and in your own culture, in a way that you don't have to go to war with the rest of the world in order to do.
So I would say that I sometimes use the analogy of a blood supply that in your body, which is the
in the classical Buddhist teachings of mindfulness,
mindfulness of the body is called the first foundation of mindfulness.
Okay, we pay attention to the body,
including the breathing, the counterpart of that is the body politic.
We need to hold the body politic in awareness.
So we need to actually recognize that say in your body,
every cell of your body in their hundreds of trillions,
thousands of trillions of cells in the body, every cell needs blood supply, every cell needs a
blood supply. Well, on the planet, every human being needs an equivalent blood supply,
and equivalent blood supply, enough to be able to live in a way that furthest human dignity, safety, well-being, connectedness, belonging. And then we'll work out the rest. But if we're
privileging certain people or races or countries or continents and raping or pillaging or exploiting others, including
Antarctica, which doesn't have anybody to protect it.
We need to take care of Antarctica because that glacial ice sheet is really important
than the same with Greenland.
So how about we put our heads together and put our hearts together and figure out how
to take care of everybody on the planet and not just the humans because we need the animals,
we need the insects, the pollinators, we need the plants, we need, why can't we wake up
to that?
I would say that that's the medical equivalent of taking care of people with chronic pain
or heart disease? I'll add to the analogy and tell you why I think that's the case, is that if I want to
oxygenate, bring blood and the appropriate oxygen to my body, I might work out.
I might hydrate.
I might eat a nutrition that is going to promote that.
And so there's lots of things that I might do
to be able to promote that more healthy internal ecosystem. But those become difficult to do if I am
unable to meet the demands of the environment. Allah, I am chronically stressed. Allah, I don't have
the psychological skills to be able to meet those demands because I never was taught how to
Develop those psychological skills and the demands of the modern world are fast and real and then I'll add one more layer of complexity is that
most of us will have experiences in our life that are traumatic
Matter of fact, I think that we're all going through this world with high agree
There's a small tea or big tea, right?
Exactly.
So there's a high likelihood that someone's going to have an acute stress in their life,
and there's also a likelihood that there'll be chronic stress that is above the threshold
of health, and that is because we don't have the internal skills to work with the external
environment.
Now, so why am I bringing this up? Or there's just the, you know, the, the
inevitability of things that are beyond our control, like saying war, you know, I'm bombing
and loss and all of that. And so then, right, and the reason I bring that up is because
if I am in survival mode, I am not going to spend the time to say, how do we help
Antarctica, as the corollary, meaning how am I going to help my community, if I can't
feed my family, how am I going to help the antartic, if I can't quite even get my neighborhood
together.
So I think that there's layers to it and which I know you're incredibly sensitive to.
Where would you start people like that you say wherever you are on the spectrum, if you're suffering, if you're struggling or you're thriving, wherever you might be,
how would you nudge them to take some action towards enhancing awareness, building the relationship
with experience, to get to insight, and eventually to wisdom, and to work from wisdom, and
to be a global citizen, making a positive impact in as many places as we can go.
So, how would you just nudge those?
And I think our community, our listeners are on it. Like there's,
they're sure. And they already value mindfulness. But sometimes it's hard to make a case for it
when I'm so busy. I'm not saying me, like it's, you know, it's just
foundational commitment in my life. But sometimes it's hard for me to, you know, so like,
there's a couple of things in there for you,
hopefully to respond to as one is making the case, but more prior to that is like,
where do you, how do you nudge people to get started in a direction?
One basic principle is you start where you are.
So, and that's huge.
As soon as you decide that you're going to embrace your own experience as it is, with the ultimate
aim of living life fully and having it presumably be fulfilling, that's the biggest step
of all. The rest is detail. The other thing that's really
important to emphasize is that the meditation practice is not when your asses on the cushion in
a full lotus posture sitting like a Buddha in a statue of the Buddha in a, in a museum or a temple someplace.
The real meditation practice is how we live our lives moment by moment by moment by moment,
when the proverbial stuff is hitting the proverbial fan, when you're anxious, when you're depressed,
when you're lonely, when you're in despair, those are all part of the curriculum. And every single one of those moments is a door in
to wakefulness and awareness.
And when you understand that, that's what meditation is
rather than trying to get to some special woo woo state
where everything is like a culpacetic,
because that can set you back 30 or 40 or 100 years if you always try to get someplace else.
Instead of, oh, wait a minute, I got completely wrong.
The idea is to be where you already are completely.
Even if it's miserable.
And then you can ask very interesting questions.
You can become like a scientist of it.
And it's like, is my awareness of my pain
or suffering or trauma or misery actually miserable?
And you can discover in a second that, no, it's not. And we're not talking about dissociation.
If anything, we're talking about recognizing that there are hidden dimensions of our own being
that are so big and so wise, and we're talking now about experience and awareness, that they're
they're not suffering even if the narrative is that you're suffering. I'm suffering. I can't
stand this anymore, whatever the narrative is. The other piece is that we need each other. I mean,
we talked about it a little bit because we were having a podcast, we're not having a podcast just for you and me to talk.
We don't need to do that on a podcast
and just do that.
But people are listening in.
And so those of you who are listening in,
if anything of this is resonating,
then this is the meditation practice.
This conversation is a part of the meditation practice.
The fact that you haven't already tuned this out and gone someplace else.
It's like, why is that?
What's touching in you?
And how can you nurture that?
How can you feed it?
Just this if you were like feeding a cat or a dog or whatever.
Feed your own aspiration to live the life that's yours to live starting where you're at.
Now, another thing you'll need, and a podcast won't cut this one at all, you'll need a friend.
You'll need at least one friend that you can talk with about your meditation practice, about your fear, about your how bad a meditative you are, which is just a thought, there's no moment
that's not an absolutely wonderful moment
to actually wake up and then see what might be possible.
Even in the midst of depression, depression
as people who are great cognitive researchers
who develop mindfulness-based cognitive therapy have shown.
Depression is a disease of dysregulated thought. When you're completely self-centered and it's all about me
and what's wrong with me and why they don't like me and everything else,
isn't that the reality of anything? These are just thoughts, but they're thoughts that if you don't know their thoughts
anything. These are just thoughts, but they are thoughts that if you don't know their thoughts
and you suspect they are the reality of things, I mean, you know, you can be imprisoned by those thoughts and the horrible feelings of black hole of depression for your entire life. So,
the stakes are incredibly high for us to actually reclaim our full humanity. And I just want to emphasize one more thing
about the formal meditation practice.
There's no one right way to do it.
It's not like, oh, just get a hold of my app
or my CDs or my guided meditations.
And that's the door in.
No, they're an infinite number of doors in.
The door in is actually your heart,
is actually your body, is actually your breath, is actually,
if you have a friend on the planet, it's that. If you have somebody who really loves you and that you
are really in love with wonderful, and if you don't, love yourself, not by inflating yourself into
something you're not, but by recognizing your own beauty, your own internal beauty,
you were beautiful as a child.
What makes you think that you somehow outgrown that?
That's the one thing you don't actually outgrow,
but you can ignore it.
And if you ignore it long enough, it atrophies.
Access to awareness atrophies.
Access to your own beauty in your own heart, atrophies.
The good news is it comes right back as soon as you don't take your narrative of yourself too seriously.
So I'll finish this little riff by saying mindfulness is far too serious to take too seriously.
And I'm serious about that because we really do need to process whole thing with a major dose of sense of humor
and a recognition that we're all in this together and if it's not one crazy notion or another
that yeah, we're all kind of a little bit nuts and attached to our own way
and despising this that and the other thing if it doesn't accord with our own way.
But when we drill down to what where we started with just bare experience, awareness itself,
our open-hearted wakefulness.
And you have at least one friend on the planet who sees that in you and can support it and
maybe meditate together formally or at least talk about your meditation practice.
And in that context, everything that's going wrong
in your life, it's no problem with things going wrong
in your life, welcome to the club.
That's part of what the humanity is.
It's like some things go wrong for a while,
but it's all impermanent.
It's impermanent.
It's not gonna last that long.
So the point is much more rather than
attaching to outcome, which is a big mistake in the meditation practice, to actually be the knowing
that your awareness already is, always has been and always will be, including the knowing of how
much we don't know. And that is liberating, right, at the very first moment,
in the middle of your meditation practice or your life, and the very last moment too. So it's good
in the beginning, good in the middle, good in the end. And they're an infinite number of doors
into it, so you have to find your own way. With the capital W, I might say. The word, the word way.
Yeah.
John, I could, I could,
Is this making any sense?
Yeah, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
it's super grounded.
I mean, we could talk like this for hours,
hours, I know.
I really appreciate our, you know,
interactions along these lines and the kinds of probes and questions that you're inviting.
But it really is the adventure of a lifetime, or I've even, you know, in recent years, the older I get, you could say it's, I'm losing my mind, but I don't think so.
I think I'm actually discovering my heart in a certain way that maybe I didn't when I was
younger and tougher and more, you know, just energised in certain go-getter type of ways.
What this meditation practice is, or what mindfulness really is, it's a love affair with reality. And reality is
unforgiving, you know, it's like it's not forever. So if we're all going to die, although the scientists
are working to hack that one so that, you know, ultimately will all be immortal. But can you imagine
with the kinds of problems we have, if we were immortal, how annoying we would eat everybody.
But for now, at least it's impermanent. Life is impermanent. Everything is impermanent.
Even stars are born. They have a lifetime and they die, the universe itself. You know, it's like, so if everything's impermanent
fundamentally, then that question about who I am becomes
really important because we only have this moment.
And this moment, ironically, when you step out of time,
is infinite.
So if you are living more in the now, then you've got
resources and dimensions to call upon, hidden dimensions actually of our own humanity
that are intrinsically wise, that are intrinsically insightful, that are intrinsically compassionate,
that care about other people. And so rather than making ourselves the center of the universe,
if we cared more and acted more out of the caring for others,
we would actually be infinitely happier
than just putting ourselves first all the time
and then trying to be maximized
our own small-minded happiness
when we're much bigger than who we think we are, much, much bigger than
the narratives we generate about ourselves. I love the insight about
be the ocean as opposed to the puddle, right? There's the vastness of like, you could, I don't
know how you would disrupt the ocean, the magnitude of the ocean, it have to be something outside of
our known. Well, we're managing to mess that up too, actually,
from the ecological point of view.
Maybe. Yeah, I know.
Okay. So just a couple more questions to honor your time.
One is, okay.
One is you said something really important about the dysregulated
conversations we have with ourselves in context to depression.
And this might feel like a non-sequitor, but I'm fascinated with this storyline that we have
that's sometimes conscious, but most of the time non-conscious, where we're trying to sort out
if we're okay, relative to what others think of us. Yeah. And it's a very dangerous proposition
to externalize our self esteem, our self worth,
our self value, our sense of self,
to the collective them.
What does that person think of me?
And it's pervasive.
And it's, so I'm in the science,
I'm in the interrogation part
of trying to understand that right now.
But can you just think about, like, why do you think we're so concerned with what other
people think of us?
I think it's cultural.
I really don't think that it's that way in all cultures.
In many cultures, the we is more important than the me.
And the tribe or the collective or the, you know, is really more important than your particular,
you know, place in it. On the other hand, ironically,
in those kinds of cultures,
you have a profound sense of belonging because the weas made up of individuals.
I really feel like, as I said, depression
is a kind of disease of thinking
and it's also a disease of perception, thinking and perception,
of course, are very closely related. So, you know, it's partly like the interpretation of things,
you know, somebody walks by you on the street or in the corridor at work, and they don't say hello
to you. And, you know, and this is an example that the mindfulness-based cognitive therapy people
use a lot.
It's like, and then, you know, there are a lot of different interpretations of somebody
you know and like didn't say hello to you.
And if you tend to be a depressive person, you'll make up like a gigantic drama about
how they, they're angry at me because of something I did or thought, or even how would anybody know what you thought.
But, and then you amplify it over and over again
in your own mind, and you just generate, you know,
the black hole sort of vortex of depression
that you fall into.
It really is a disease of thought.
Awareness is like a finger touching a soap bubble. If the disease is the
of thought is the soap bubble that we've manufactured by blowing air into soap or hot air into
our own story about how that person doesn't like us and they don't like us for a good reason because we're so unlikable.
That's like you just fabricated a soap bubble, which you're calling the reality,
which completely diminishes your value as a human being. And then you compound that.
You know what a finger does to a soap bubble? A soap bubble is flying in the air and for a while it's just gonna be fine until, and if you touch it with your finger,
there's only one thing that ever happens to the soap bubble
and that is it pops.
The Tibetans would use a slightly different language
for that when they're talking about thought bubbles.
Okay, as opposed to soap bubbles, they self-liberate.
Like bubbles coming off the bottom of a pot of boiling water. They nucleate at the bottom, little bubble, they get bigger as they come to the top, and
then they go puff.
But if you want to make something of it, the content of that thought, then you can drive
yourself down into that black hole of the pleasure, but refreshing, but you're doing it to yourself. As soon as you see it,
for that moment, you're liberated. And if you do it moment by moment by moment,
liberated, liberated, liberated, liberated, liberated, it becomes like an exercise. You have to
practice because the thoughts bubbles are going to come like constantly because we're so addicted
to our own thinking that we actually believe that that's the reality. Whereas they just
thoughts with no neuroscientists even knows what a thought is. And yet when we
get bitchway to them and we start to believe their content, they can be like nails in the coffin. Einstein
I think was famous for having said, you know, if you have one good thought in your lifetime and
he probably had more than one, you're ahead of the curve and I tend to agree with him, you know,
that a lot of our thoughts when you start to watch them, they're at best hugely inaccurate
to watch them, they're at best hugely inaccurate. And they're unbelievably self-centered.
And since we talked about who we think we are,
has virtually very little to do with who we actually are
and what our full potential is,
then the kind of awareness that liberates them,
you already have that.
It's not like you have to get it.
It's not like, oh, now I have to go to school
and get a degree in awareness.
No, you were born with that human capacity for awareness.
What we need to actually exercise
and what we do in formal meditation practice
or in formal way of life itself is the meditation.
It's just reminding ourselves over and over again
that it's access to the awareness that's that's
obscured because we're lost in thought all the time. As soon as you're aware that you're lost,
you're not lost anymore there because the awareness is there and that awareness is the awareness.
There's only one. So it's liberative of all those soap bubbles and those soap bubbles are coming
more frequently than the text bubbles in a comic book.
So it's not that complicated. That's the beauty of this is that yeah, you, I mean, there's profound
philosophies and, you know, sort of a contemplative phenomenology and historical and
merloponte and all sorts of ways of understanding
some of the deep structure of how we relate through language
and through experience and through the senses and so forth.
But this is kind of common senseical.
It's like, we all have the repertoire.
Genetically, we have the repertoire for wakefulness
because that's our true nature.
That's why Linnaeus called us, almost sleepy and safe, and it's our true nature.
We need to, in some sense, get back to it and now is maybe it's good to end on this note
that this isn't all hands-on deck moment on planet Earth.
This is not like, well, I'll just like keep doing my own like the, no, the world needs absolutely
all of us to tilt things in the direction of greater sanity, your sustainability, justice
rather than injustice, modulating our behavior and our use of energy so that we actually make the planet habitable for other species and for our own children, grandchildren, and children and on there.
So it's like we couldn't have been, we's true that there are a lot of people out there
that are like in a different, in a different Dalton universe
where truth is, I mean, like with your door well,
truth is fiction, freedom is slavery,
and there are people in the Congress and all throughout,
you know, throughout the government
that actually drinking that Kool-Aid. But, you know, that Kool-Aid.
But ultimately is the Kool-Aid of death and the Kool-Aid of suffering and also of greed, hatred, delusion and harm. And so this is a real moment, a real, you know,
sort of unique moment, I would say, for us to wake up
as a species and take care of what needs taken care of,
while we have the chance, because the window of opportunity
is not going to stay open forever.
Of all of your writings and books right now,
which one would you hope if somebody is new to your work
that you would say, you know, I think this one
would be a good place for them to start.
Like I really like what I did in this book
for now in the context of what's happening right now.
Yeah, I guess it would be mindfulness for all
the fourth book in the coming to our senses series
because the first part
of that book, each book has of these four books has two parts and the first part of that book
is called healing the body politic. And I think at this particular moment we have to understand
that mindfulness is not some kind of a dime store relaxation technique that will make you feel
better, reduce your stress.
It's really maybe the critical factor in whether we survive as a species in any kind of recognizable
way.
So I would say that.
And then the second half of it is much more poetic and has to do with science and biology
in our place in the world.
And then if you get interested in that, you go back to the other four that actually teach
you how to meditate and talk more about why.
But the real meditation practice, I just want to say it again for the listeners, is not
necessarily a daily rigorous formal meditation practice, which I've been doing that for, you
know, close to 60 years.
And I highly recommend it.
But the real meditation practice is how you live your
life moment by moment. I hear you say that and I go in and out over the course of the 20 years
that I've been practicing, like in phases, and I can recognize I'm sharper when I'm formally trained.
Oh, no question about it. I'm better at that secondary or primary practices you're calling which is living awareness. I'm if it's like I'm out of fitness, you know,
like when I when I train my body like I can respond in a more agile. Exactly, but you know it's hard
to sit there because it's a lot in the beginning like you're doing nothing and and it is a big
difference between doing nothing and non-doing. So you're practicing non-doing it is a big difference between doing nothing
and non-doing.
So you're practicing non-doing.
And that sounds very Chinese and Taoist and so forth,
but it's actually any kind of elite athlete
would understand non-doing.
Because what do we do a lot of the time?
We get in our own way.
And then it's not like our competitors that are beating us,
we're beating ourselves by not actually recruiting the full dimensionality of our capabilities.
So this is something like a muscle, you can exercise it.
And so I say what I say about the real meditation practice is your life,
but my ass is on the cushion a lot, not just once during
the day, but for at least once for an extended stretch of time. And also to practice mindful hot
the yoga, because you've got to take care of the physical body too, because this is the marathon
to coin a cliche. This is a marathon, not a sprint, and, and, you know, your health really be
quiet is moving.
With a certain kind of yeast, all like run around for dinner or squat and dig
meat, so whatever.
And we still have that biology.
We have to actually move the body a lot.
And when you do it mindfully, that just becomes part of your meditation practice.
Digging roots.
I haven't thought about that.
Yeah, that is great. Okay. part of your meditation practice. Digging roots. I haven't thought about that.
Yeah, that is great.
Okay, John, not to be a reductionist, but is there in just one word?
Is there a word that you understand most?
Well, first, when we have to establish what it is that I understand most,
and that's the essence of the question.
If you would say, if we were to be a duck, we would be filling down this conversation.
That's what you're asking into one word.
And maybe I didn't say this.
I can't even remember that taking your seat,
as we were talking about in formal meditation practice,
is in a certain way taking a stand in this life,
in the only moment we ever have, which is this one. So taking a seat, taking a stand,
and I would say for myself that when I take my seat in meditation formally, it's a radical act,
and it's a radical act of sanity, and it's a radical act of love. So if there was one word
that you're asking for to describe the whole thing, this is extremely easy to misunderstand,
but the nature of wakefulness because of the first thing you recognize when you drop into awareness is the interconnectedness
of everything, and you're belonging within it, that the nature of that is love, but it's
not self-centered.
It's distributive, and that we share each other's hearts in infinite number of different ways.
And that's what we're doing on this program through the auditory function that people will be listening.
And I'd be really curious. 20 or 30 years, you people out there listening to this.
Write us and let us know, because we'll still be around, of course. Write us and let us know
what this conversation generated in yourself and how it worked out over the next 20 or 30 years.
John, if the word inspiration means to breathe life into, yeah, and it does. Yeah, you are,
you breathe life into me every time that we engage and Oh, you're sure well, it's only because of you and and the questions and the
heart that you bring to it that's again why like I really feel like it's
never been about me for the arc of my own life. It's all about we and what we can do together. And so I really want to thank you for,
first of all, the interest in actually having a conversation
of this kind and then shaping the conversation
in the ways that you have.
And it's a true honor to have it with the being conversation
with you and also to know that you're out there doing what it
is that you're doing to contribute to moving the bell curve of humanity towards greater sanity.
Amen. Thank you, brother. So good. And I cherish our relationship, the experience that I have
I cherish our relationship, the experience that I have with you and how you always remind me about how simple things are and how the magnitude at the same time.
So that tension between the two is a good thing.
And the other thing which I mentioned was that it's like, it really is critical to have
one friend that you can talk to about your practice, your life,
who you are, if it's somebody that you're married to and love or in some kind of relationship,
but we all need at least one person that knows who we are in a way that even we don't know who we
are and sometimes they reflect it back to us.
You're going to make me a better partner.
Thank you, brother.
OK, big hug.
OK, talk to you soon.
Talk to you soon.
See you soon.
OK.
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