Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - How To Be Less Anxious and More Useful in a Chaotic World | Oren Jay Sofer
Episode Date: November 29, 2023Buddhist strategies for navigating tumult— and even becoming a node of sanity amidst it all.Oren Jay Sofer teaches meditation and communication internationally and has practiced Buddhist me...ditation since 1997. He holds a degree in comparative religion from Columbia University and is a Certified Trainer of Nonviolent Communication and a Somatic Experiencing Practitioner for the healing of trauma. Born and raised in New Jersey, he is the author of several books, including the best-seller Say What You Mean: A Mindful Approach to Nonviolent Communication as well as his newest book, Your Heart Was Made for This: Contemplative Practices for Meeting a World in Crisis with Courage, Integrity, and Love.In this episode we talk about:26 qualities for both navigating and positively impacting a chaotic worldWhat inspired the title of his newest book Why the cultivation of attention and aspiration can be transformative toolsHow mindfulness isn’t just about feeling goodWhy joy can help us to persevere through challenges And How to reframe the concept of devotion so that it can apply to your everyday lifeRelated Episodes:Oren Jay Sofer, Practicing Mindful Communication Why Buddhism Is Inherently Hopeful (Despite All the Talk of Suffering) Rethinking Your Relationship to 'Stuff' | The Minimalists + Oren Jay SoferSign 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/oren-jay-sofer-new-heartSee 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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It's the 10% happier podcast. I'm your host, Dan Harris.
Hello, my fellow suffering beings. It is hectic out there. I'm talking about the news, but also the nature of our own
little worlds, often, our own interpersonal dramas, and then of course there's the tumultuous nature of
our own inner landscapes, all of the intra-cranial chaos, both reacting to and feeding the chaos around
us. Today we're going to talk to a renowned Buddhist teacher about how to be less anxious and
more useful in the face of the various
dumpster fires raging in the world both externally and internally.
Orange Asofer has been practicing meditation since 1997. He's also developed a fascinating
sub-specialty and mindful communication skills that I've personally
found to be extremely powerful.
He's got a new book called Your Heart Was Made for This, which lays out 26 qualities,
many of them inspired by Buddhism for both navigating and positively impacting a chaotic world
from managing how you interact with media to the role of expectations to the simple power
of mindfulness.
We also talk about aspiration as a powerful tool,
how joy even though it may sound a little saccharine,
can help you persevere.
And this is interesting, how to reframe the concept
of devotion, which might not go down easy for some of you,
so that it can apply to your everyday life.
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Hello listeners, this is Mike Corey of Against the Odds. You might know that I adventure
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Orange Ace Over.
Welcome back to the show.
Thanks so much, Dan.
Happy to be here.
Happy to have you here.
If I understand correctly, this new book was inspired by some tough stuff in the world
and in your life, including the pandemic and one death and one birth.
Can you kind of walk us through the biographical backdrop for this new work?
Sure, absolutely.
I started writing the book in the summer of 2020 when everything was going haywire. My wife was pregnant
with our first child. We had just entered a global pandemic. George Floyd had just been murdered
on national television and there were really awful wildfires out here in the west. Some of the
worst we've experienced. We had this one day where you couldn't see the sun. The sky was this kind
of very eerie orange.
And one of the things that I felt like I could offer as a meditation teacher was to write about
how to handle what was happening and how to develop more inner resources in order to
stay sane and balanced and also respond, helpfully to what was happening.
And all of this unfolding also,
and including getting ready to have a child
and bring a new life into this world,
started a deeper investigation of how do I respond?
How is this practice that I've been doing
for 20 years relevant?
How can we meet the really immense
rapid changes that are happening around the world?
So the book grew out of that and out of my own investigation into, how do we respond,
how is our practice relevant?
And it's kind of a natural progression in some ways, like as I look back, I started
meditating in my late teens, and then my first attempts at integrating the practice, as you know,
because it's how we met was to begin doing communication work,
looking at nonviolent communication and trying to bring the practice into relationships
in that way. And I've spent the last almost 20 years focusing on that.
And then more recently, really looking at how do we bridge that gap from the interpersonal
to more of the social and the collective. And that's really what I'm grappling with in the book,
looking at not just meditation, but the whole realm of contemplative practice and how we can
use it as leverage to respond to what's happening around the world.
You left this out and maybe this was for a reason and I don't mean to pick at a schedule.
No, I know where you're going.
Yeah, so my father passed away.
Yeah, during the final editing of the book,
the book was already written and edited
and the editing was really challenging.
It really pushed me to my limits,
which is one of the reasons I'm so excited about the book.
I was editing the book, in those early months of having a newborn with
sleepless nights, I would sit up on the bed with my laptop as my son was sleeping next to me and
edit the book. And then my father passed away suddenly earlier this year. And it really,
really shook my world in a lot of ways. The first parent I've lost.
Then I went back and needed to update a few things. The book is dedicated to him in part
because I feel like he embodied a lot of what I'm trying to transmit in terms of courage and integrity and unconditional love. But I also gained certain painful insights
about our relationship after he passed and some of the ways that my heart was not as open to him
as I thought it was. In the wake of his loss, I really saw the places that I was still
loss, I really saw the places that I was still reacting to the things about his life that were painful for me, his inability to really take care of his health being the main one.
So I had to go back to a couple of chapters because I talk about him and our relationship
throughout the book and integrate some of those insights about forgiveness and about mindfulness and how it reveals the different
places in our hearts and in our world, our lives that need attention. But sometimes we don't
see everything that we need to and we need the feedback of others or unexpected events
in our life to see clearly. So that's the relevance of that piece and didn't include it because it wasn't so much a motivation
in writing the book, but more of almost like a PS.
Yeah.
A PS that then had you do some retroactive editing
to bake it into the momentum of the book.
You know, this thing you said about your dad,
it just got me thinking,
we had a discussion on the show recently
with Sharon Salzburg about a common misunderstanding that people bring to Buddhism because in Buddhism, we talk a lot about love and compassion.
And we also talk a lot about non-attachment. And people are like, how can I integrate those two? And it really is, and this is just a TLDR about, you can still care for somebody, but without being too attached to them being a certain way,
and without being too attached to them writ large,
because they, like you, like everyone,
were all impermanent.
And so when I hear you talk about your heart
not being fully open to your dad,
obviously that's not my preferred for a bridge,
but I'm repeating back yours,
just for the sake of simplicity,
your heart not being fully open to your dad.
Because he was unwilling or apparently seems like not
unable to be attentive to his health.
Yeah.
And so I wonder if there was a bit of attachment
in your love for him wanting to take care of his health more
than he was willing or able to?
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
I mean, another way that I talk about it
just to relanguage
it, is that I recognized afterwards that I was withholding some of my love from him, because
it was too painful. And yeah, absolutely, it's about equanimity or the lack thereof. And
I'm sure you and Sharon talked about, you know, how to define that word attachment and the
differentiation between the Buddhist word we're translating
and healthy psychological attachment,
a sense of emotional bonding that we have with those we love.
And I like the word Sharon uses to translate
the Buddhist term, Upadana, which she translates
as control.
And I think that the way I understand it is there was resistance to the pain.
So it's not so much, yeah, there's an aspect of me wanting to control my dad, wanting to,
you know, why won't you do what I want you to do?
And it was a long journey.
And I, you know, I feel actually quite proud of how far I've come, or how far I came over
the last 20 years since I started practicing and how much
I was able to actually accept him for who he was. We grew very close because of that.
And yet still, because I care for him so deeply, is painful. This is someone we love not well.
And so the withholding of my love, that sense of something not being
fully open inside was about my own inability to tolerate the pain of feeling helpless
in the face of his choices.
Yeah, so self-protection.
Yeah, yeah, some self-protection. And then the pain of regret, which is a very uncomfortable
but powerful teacher. Because a tremendously generous person, his name actually means to give his first name,
and even in his passing, he gave me a gift, which is this deep understanding of how to open
my heart to the people I love and not take things for granted.
He's present in my relationship with my wife and my son today because of that, and a really
beautiful way.
So the book is about how we use the Dharma and our own lives inside of our own minds, inside of our closest relationships, but also about how we engage with the larger world,
especially at a time when it looks like everything's going to shit, or at least that's we can talk
about that, actually, because I sometimes think we take the pessimism a little touch too far, but we can talk about that. If I understand correctly deeply influenced by what's called
socially engage Buddhism, this idea to like, let's get off the cushion and out into the world,
is the thesis there that if you're just meditating for stress reduction, you're doing it wrong?
I appreciate that question. You touched on a lot of important things there.
So maybe we can hit them one at a time
and just start where you ended.
I wouldn't frame it that way.
I think that meditating for stress reduction
is a valid motivation, it's a valid reason.
We all don't want to feel less stressed.
But I think we're limiting ourselves
if that's the only thing we're doing.
And, you know, I think your own life and work is kind of a testament to the power of these
practices to offer one thing that seems very simple and then to actually take us much deeper
into powerful questions about what's my life about and how can I contribute in the most meaningful way?
So the thesis of socially engaged Buddhism is that we have to apply the essence of Buddhist practice, which is understanding how and why we suffer and responding to that suffering to society.
And if we're practicing in a sincere way, that starts to happen naturally.
That when we start seeing more clearly and experiencing more compassion, which I know you've
been exploring and reflecting on deeply for the last few years, there's a natural movement
to respond, to injustice or to pain in the world's Tick-Not-Hon, the Vietnamese Zen master and poet and
peace activist. He was one of the kind of founders of socially engaged Buddhism, and one of the things
he said was that mindfulness has to be engaged. Once we see clearly, we have to act, otherwise,
what's the use of seeing. And the example from his life was so powerful
as he was meditating in the temple
with his monastics in Vietnam during the Vietnam War
and their bombs going off in the village.
And there's that sense of what are we gonna do?
Are we just gonna sit here and meditate?
No, we're gonna go out in the street and help people.
There's just this natural movement of
someone's in pain. They need help. I'm going to respond. And so this is the teaching of
socially engaged Buddhism. And I think this is an area where, for a variety of conditions and
reasons in the West, meditation becomes relegated to the domain of psychological well-being.
to the domain of psychological well-being.
And we limit the power of these practices to actually inform our response
to the challenges that we're facing today.
Does that answer the question?
Yeah, I think so.
Basically, it's okay, especially at the beginning,
if your motivation to meditate is,
to reduce your own suffering, stress, depression, anxiety, burn out, beginning, if your motivation to meditate is to reduce your own
suffering, stress, depression, anxiety, burnout, anger, whatever it is.
And the traditional teachings are that that's step one, and there are many steps involved
with improving your relationship to the larger world, which also, by the way, redounds
to your benefit, because we are intertwined.
Absolutely.
And I would even say it's more than okay.
It's actually encouraged.
Like that's where we need to start.
If we're drowning, we can't help somebody else.
We need to be on solid ground first in order to help someone else who's drowning.
So the first step is to sort of get some perspective, get a handle on our stress, the overwhelm
that we experience when we look at the news,
the burnout we're going through from work, and actually develop more balance inside.
That positions us to be able to be more effective in the world, whether we're looking at parenting,
our work, or civil society.
And so the book is really designed to look at both sides of that.
It's looking at how do we strengthen our hearts,
how do we develop the inner resources inside so that we're not drowning. And then how do we
investigate what's ours to do? There's way too much need in the world for us to try to do everything.
Which also means that there's too much need in the world to do nothing.
So each of us, I think, is invited just by virtue of being alive today and caring to look and see
what's ours to do. Where is the place that I can contribute meaningfully? And the beautiful thing
about that is when we get involved, when we actually start to or continue to respond to what's happening
in our communities, that brings energy. It brings confidence. It actually addresses the anxiety.
So I was talking with someone last night on a call I was teaching, and this person was asking about
certain kind of deep fear and pain of being rejected, that they orient to the world,
looking for rejection, feeling afraid of being rejected.
And the response I gave was a classical meditation teacher
response.
It was acknowledged how that's trying to help you
to keep safe and then practice loving kindness,
develop more of a sense of belonging and well-being inside.
And last night I was lying to go to bed, I was falling asleep and I said, Oh, I missed
the most important thing.
As it get involved with something, serve, help other people, then you'll start to feel
like you belong.
You'll start to feel your own sense of self-worth and dignity because that's part of what it
is to be human, is to
want to have purpose and meaning and to be connected. And I think we overlook that a lot in meditation.
We just focus on the internal and forget that actually holding the door for someone
or getting involved with a local organization heals us also.
I mean, I meant all of that. I just just added this maybe controversial in some circles.
You may not agree with it.
So maybe I'm wrong.
I mean, you can disabuse me of this notion.
But for me, I hear a kind of enlightened self interest at every point
along that chain.
It is in your best interest to not be so fucking crazy or depressed or
whatever.
I'm speaking for myself here. It's in my best interest to not be so fucking crazy or depressed or whatever. I'm speaking for myself here.
It's in my best interest to not be so fucking crazy
because it doesn't feel good if I'm paying attention.
And once I've conned myself down a little bit,
it is in my best interest to work on my relationship
with people around me and people in the world,
the larger world, or even just what in local situation,
because that's gonna make me happier.
We're not calling for people to live lives of limitless self-sacrifice and self-mortification.
This is actually put in the Buddhists say good in the beginning, good in the middle, good
in the end.
Yeah.
No, precisely.
Yeah, that's one of the things I appreciate about the perspective you bring to these practices, is it really speaks to that very, very fundamental, natural human tendency to
go, what's in it for me? Why should I do this? It's because it feels good to give. It is in
light and self-interest to use the Dalai Lama's phrase there. Yeah. So you talked about the pessimism,
the narrative about what's happening in the world, and I really
appreciate that you say that because I'm not sure what all of your views are, but I do
think we need a balanced view.
And what I see a lot is unbalanced views that on the one hand, there's this extreme of
just emphasizing the progress, right?
Millions have been lifted out of poverty. Life expectancy is greater, right?
All of the benefits of modern society, which are true.
But there's also the other side, right?
There's also the sense that something is deeply wrong
in terms of the environmental crisis
that we're living through, the political crisis
around the world, the mental health crisis
here and abroad.
Then on the other side, we have the sectors of society or the media that are only emphasizing
that, right?
Everything's going to hell.
We're all going down and doesn't actually acknowledge the tremendous progress we've
made and the good that's actually happening, the innovation, the creativity.
So I don't think it's either or. I think both are true.
And if we only focus on one side, we miss the reality,
which is that both are happening,
and we can engage with and be involved in both sides of it.
Hey, man, that's exactly where I am.
I was just having this discussion yesterday with, I won't name this person because
I didn't get her permission, but this is somebody both of us know in the Dharma world.
And I was saying, and I felt a little kind of unsafe and tentative saying it, but yes,
I think it's true that there are lots of horrible things happening in the world, particularly with a climate,
but obviously also political instability as well.
Polarization aided and abetted by social media.
I'm worried about all of that.
And the data around alleviation and reduction of poverty,
and the data around life expectancy,
they appear to be quite strong.
And on top of that, I think it's just,
I'm wary of the overly dark view
because we do have this evolutionarily wired negativity bias.
It helped us survive.
And I fear that that bias seeps into a kind of,
you know, I'm seeing it with a lot of my friends,
this really dark view of the world,
this really dark view of the future, which is, it seems like half right. And I think we need to be both. And just as you said.
Yeah. And I think that one of the things that I'm trying to promote and argue against in my book
is the tendency to try to simplify things into simple binaries. It's either this or it's that.
And life is often more complex and nuanced. And I think this is an example of that. So even when we talk about the alleviation of poverty, at the same time,
we're seeing some of the grossest income inequality in generation. That's right. Both are true. So
there's nuance and complexity there. And that's what any robust, healthy, grounded,
robust, healthy, grounded contemplative practice will illuminate is that it's complex to be alive.
And how do we contend with that?
And how do we find our place within that?
How do you respond?
Inevitably, there are going to be people, I could hear them typing their tweets right now,
saying, or their exes, or whatever
they're called right now, saying, well, easy for you guys to have a rosy view of the
world because you're both rich white dudes.
So maybe we have a bias and are missing key things.
Yeah.
When I hear that, I need to look at first of all who's saying it,
and to make space to listen to where they're coming from.
I say, I appreciate when people give me feedback
or have a different perspective,
because it gives me an opportunity to investigate and learn.
And yeah, to the degree that that's true,
we both have a lot of advantages because
of our various aspects of our identity and are going to experience the world through
that lens.
It's one of the things I talk about in the chapter on mindfulness is that we need to apply
mindfulness to our relationships and to investigate like what's the bias that we're seeing
the world through.
So I'm wanting to make space for other views,
and I'm wanting to also hold complexity.
One of the things that I see destroying movements
for a social change, and it's tragic,
and it's ironic, is the way that the narrative becomes
this kind of us-them binary.
You're either with us or you're against us,
or the dynamics of cancel culture,
or the right wrong mentalities.
And if we're looking to actually heal and transform
some of the dynamics that are creating so much injustice and oppression and
suffering in our society and around the world, we also need to look at the roots of that in
our own minds and how we create an enemy, how we reduce things to just saying it's either this
or that. And that's one of the gifts, I think, of meditation and contemplative practice is that we're able to turn that critical
lens inwards and see where am I coming from and how can I transform the way I'm showing
up and the way I'm working for social change so that I'm not unwittingly recreating the
very dynamics I'm seeking to heal or to change.
Yeah, I think just to put a fine point on this, I think just a lot of things are true at
the same time. And speaking for myself, because I'm not in your mind, I know I have lots of
blind spots and biases. The problem is, I don't know what they are because definitionally blind
spots are hard to see. And so I'm very open to being wrong on an ongoing basis. And I think
in terms of the state of the world, it's to use your word, it is complex.
And I actually think that's the sanest place to be
when viewing things, actually,
will keep you sane to be open to the complexity
because choosing either side in a binary
is actually gonna make you more blinkered.
Yeah.
Coming up, Orange Ace Over talks about
what inspired the title of his newest book and why
the cultivation of attention and aspiration can be extremely powerful tools.
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The book has 26 Buddhist tools for dealing with a world that is complex, to mulch us.
Before we dive into some, we'll do a sampling of some of the tools.
But let's talk about the title.
I gave you a little grief earlier about the word heart, which is the word heart.
But this is in the title.
In the title.
The book is called, Your Heart Was Made For This.
And I'm not asking this to be a wiseass.
I genuinely want to know what's behind the title.
Yeah, yeah, thanks.
We'll just respond to the lead in there, the intro there.
I wouldn't even call them Buddhist tools.
You know, while I talk about some of the Buddhist roots
of the book, I really see them as universal tools
and humanistic tools is courage, Buddhist,
is curiosity, Buddhist, no, these are core facets of our
humanity. And that's really what I'm trying to speak to and offer is a kind of a road map
for strengthening these very, very potent transformative capacities we have as human beings,
so that we can have the humility to take feedback when we are, when we're wrong or someone is seeing something that we're not seeing, and also to discern like where the places where I can plug in and contribute.
So the title your heart was made for this. It's a little bit of a play on words in some ways. One of the things that I feel and hear from a lot of other people is when the world appears in this very dark way of what is
the future going to be, it feels overwhelming, and there's a sense of almost despair or cynicism,
right? Like, it's too much. There's nothing I can do. And so on the one hand, it's a sort of
hopeful message of like, actually, we have what we need
or we can cultivate what we need to deal with what's unfolding in our lives and in the
world.
The reason I say it's a play on words is because at the same time, I'm trying to remind
all of us that on an evolutionary level, we were not designed to live in the world we're living in.
We evolved to live in small communities with people that we know, to have a shared sense of meaning and purpose,
to have periods of downtime that are restorative on a regular basis. We were designed to have
information just about the things that we know immediately in our community, not to be
bombarded with stories of tragedy from around the world that we oftentimes can't do anything about,
nor to be sort of like molded and shaped by social media algorithms and technology.
So in a very real way, I think that we find ourselves in a world that is at odds with
our neurophysiology.
So on this level, the title your heart was made for this is more pointing to our capacity
to fulfill our potential.
I really believe that our, and you can use a lot of different words for heart.
You could say our mind, you could say our spirit, you could say our consciousness, you could
just say being human, that we have this potential to be incredibly fulfilled, kind, and powerful creatures to really use our life to blossom, to grow in these
amazing ways. And that's what our heart was made for. And that's what the book is offering,
is this kind of instruction manual to realize our potential. And then that positions us to play
a role in the healing and transformation of our lives, our families and our communities.
Yeah, I mean that makes a lot of sense. I mean it does you mentioned I've been forever working on a book and it's actually a
It really kind of lands in the same idea that you're articulating here, which is that
we are designed for this kind of
engagement and I often talk about how especially especially men, we optimize for sleep and optimize for exercise
and diet and all this stuff.
And it's not just men.
A lot of us are optimizing these days.
But if you really want to optimize the thing to do
is to work on your relationship.
If you are looking to be happy, healthy,
and live a long life,
because we are such embedded creatures,
we aren't isolated, egos, peering fretfully out at the world
from behind our eye sockets.
We're part of the world.
And those relationships, it's not just your intimates,
it's also the larger world.
And so that is our design.
And because that's our design,
we're perfectly situated each and every one of us
to deal
with a world that can seem pretty shitty sometimes.
Yeah.
You know, one of the things about having a kid that's been so enlightening in both the colloquial
and the sort of more technical definition of that word is seeing how innate these qualities are, seeing our sons joy, just it being and exploring the world,
and seeing how he's only one
and how natural it is to want to contribute.
So I was making breakfast this morning
and I gave him the little box of almond milk
and I said, can you put it in the refrigerator?
Can you put it back and he was so excited to walk over the fridge and put it in.
I said, can you close the door to the refrigerator for me?
And he's so excited to be able to close the door.
You know, it's like we want to participate and contribute to those around us.
And for so many reasons and in so many ways that gets distorted and twisted by shame and
obligation and duty and all of these experiences and messages
we receive from compulsory education and the media and oftentimes our families that kind
of covers over this very, very natural impulse to experience joy when we are connected and
contribute.
So you've got these 26 tools, my bad for calling them Buddhist tools, these 26 tools very
much I think influenced by Buddhism nonetheless.
Absolutely, yeah, I won't hide that.
Nor should you, definitely not here.
This is a friendly place for Buddhism and Buddhism.
We're not going to get obviously to 26, all 26 of them and people should read the book,
but let's touch on a few of them.
You start with attention.
Why attention?
Absolutely. What we pay attention to
shapes our inner atmosphere and it affects the choices that are available to us and
specifically there is a
multi-billion dollar industry competing for our attention.
We know that the more screens can capture our attention, the more advertising revenue
and profit someone is generating.
If you can influence attention, if you can control attention, you can influence action.
It's profit and it's also action, behavior.
So I start with attention because developing agency over where we place our attention
is the first step to empowerment and transformation. If we can't choose where we place our attention,
someone else is choosing it for us, or we are dragged around by our habits.
So the simple exercise or experiment I invite people to do and anyone listening can do this
right now is to just notice what you're seeing and now notice what you're hearing. Notice the
sounds around you. There you go. You just shifted your attention. You just chose where to put your
attention. That very basic fundamental capacity that we all have,
we can choose to strengthen it.
And to actually choose where we're putting our attention
is a radical act.
We can begin to make different choices
that actually strengthen us,
rather than stress us out and leave us exhausted.
So when you have five minutes between things,
where are we placing our attention?
Are we ruminating on all of the things that are worrying us
and the things that we have to do?
Are we picking up the phone and scrolling through a feed?
Or are we able to really consider
what would be useful right now, what would feel good
and nourishing right now?
How are we using our attention inwardly? What are we thinking about? What are we focusing on?
And how are we using our attention outwardly? Are we just using the screen to self-regulate?
Or are we engaging with the things that are really nourishing in our world to actually recharge us,
noticing the sky, noticing the trees, enjoying a breath of
fresh air. So when we reclaim our attention, we garner tremendous power and resources inside
because we are taking back something that's fundamentally ours and that is a limited resource.
All that is super helpful. Let me just play the not the skeptic, but the
drowning person who might say, I got to look at a computer all day long for work. And then
I'm exhausted at the end of the day. And I just want to scroll. And I know it's not good
for me, but I get sucked in. And by the way, I've got all these other emails and texts I need
to answer. So I got to be on there anyway. I don't see how I get away from this
garage. Yeah, I don't have the luxury to do that, right? Yeah. So there's two things here. One is
not being idealistic and making choices where we have agency. So the tendency to be idealistic, painting a picture that's not actually possible versus
what's it like when you get up from your desk to say to go get another cup of coffee to
just stretch your arms for 10 seconds.
How does that feel?
There are little ways that we can integrate these practices in the book into our lives that
don't involve some Herculane shift.
That's number one. Number two is that all of the qualities kind of work together in the book.
And this is one of the things I say in the introduction is that it's written chronologically,
chapter one to 26, but we need to use our own intelligence and start where we are. So there's
a chapter on rest. So when I hear what you're
describing, which is the challenge so many of us are locked into, chain to a computer working
at a desk job, it's like, well, what's actually needed? Maybe it's finding more strategies for rest
and it's being able to just shut your eyes for 30 seconds before you switch from doing this email to the next meeting.
So, making it really manageable and also using wisdom around, how am I training myself?
And this is really one of the fundamental principles behind the book, which comes from Buddhism,
which is that we're always practicing something.
We're always practicing something. We're always practicing something.
So are we practicing being frustrated, stressed out,
rushing, impatient?
Are we able to practice being thoughtful
with ourselves, kind, generous in small ways?
When we start to recognize that everything we're doing,
and again, this is about attention, every choice we're recognize that everything we're doing, and again, this is about attention,
every choice we're making, everything we're doing is actually shaping our own mind for
better or for worse. We can start making different choices, even small ones every day, so
that we're growing stronger, more resilient, more flexible, rather than more strung out,
more tired, more flexible, rather than more strung out, more tired, more exhausted.
Extremely helpful.
You don't have to make the Herkulean shift start small and start little breaks of mindfulness
or rest into your day and see what happens.
Another entry on your list is aspiration.
And I think that harkens back to a question you raised earlier in the conversation.
I believe you used the words, how to figure out what is ours to do.
Yeah, this is such a powerful capacity that we have as human beings.
And I think one of the reasons why there's so much depression and anxiety, so much despair
and hopelessness is the loss of aspiration.
So aspiration is the sense of what's
possible for us in life. It's a certain, almost a longing inside for something better,
for something more fulfilling or meaningful or just or good. And the reason it's so important
is because if we don't have an aspiration, it's like our north star,
it's where we're headed. What's the point? What's the purpose? If we don't have that, we don't have
energy. Aspiration brings energy. It invites us to really look inside and say, what's most
important to me in my life? What am I about? So, you know, for those who are parents, just having that motivation, that intention, these
are synonyms for aspiration, like, I really want a parent with care and attention and respect
for my children.
And then we come back to that every time we get triggered, every time you want to, you
know, scream or lose your shit with your kids.
It's like, wait, no, this is my aspiration.
This is what I'm striving to offer, to bring into my life.
Or just even something as simple as, I want to treat everyone I meet with kindness and dignity,
because I feel better.
And that's the kind of world I want to create.
So this function's on an individual level in terms of orienting us and our life and
giving us a sense of purpose and energy.
And it also functions on a social level.
You know, the Declaration of Independence is an aspiration.
It's an aspirational document that has sparked movements for sovereignty and democracy
around the world in revolution.
Dr. King's famous speech, I have a dream, it's an aspiration.
So we see in social movements the articulation of an aspiration, you see, se poire, the
United Farm Workers slogan galvanizes people behind a vision of what's possible and actually
energizes us and calls us to martial art resources and say, let's do something different.
So we can do this personally in our own life and we can do it on a larger level. And again,
it doesn't need to be grand, right? Like if you're stuck at home with long COVID, your aspiration
might be, today, I'm going to go outside and look at the sun. It might be, I'm going to take a shower
today. That's my aspiration. I'm going to do'm going to take a shower today. That's my aspiration.
I'm going to do one thing to take care of myself. That's enough. It gets the energy going. It
orients us. How's it all land with you? That all lands really well. I mean, I found in my own
life, motivation has been such an interesting area of investigation because I see that the more
mindful I've become, the more I see that I have craving motivations.
I want to get, I want to be successful, I want to, everything I do to, you know, this
podcast to be successful, social media, book sales, blah, blah, blah.
And when I see that sometimes I am revolted and tell myself a story about how I'm a horrible
person, which is stupid because motivation as our
mutual teacher Joseph Goldstein likes to remind people is a range.
And so yeah, those Craven motivations are going to be there for all of us, but there are
a whole some motivations.
You just have to look for those too and then do your best to emphasize and remind yourself
what your aspiration, intention, motivation is.
And so little tricks like, you know, and this is something that courses in a big way through Buddhism
of like reminding yourself all the time by setting your intention.
My intention is to put in Dharma, speak to alleviate the suffering of all beings or something like that.
And that can be enormously energizing.
Absolutely.
I would even take it a step further
and say that those selfish motivations that arise
if we actually get curious about them
and cultivate some empathy and compassion for ourselves,
we can start to recognize the really beautiful, healthy
needs beneath them to go back to some of the non-violent communication models. I want to be
the most popular, rich and famous. I was like, okay, well, what's going on there? What do I really want?
You know, like, I want to take care of my family. Well, how beautiful. Or, gosh, I really want to be loved and seen,
how tender. And we start to actually recognize that, oh, wow, I am taking care of my family. Isn't
that wonderful? Or, hey, I can actually receive the love that's already here in my life and start
to feel fulfilled inside without needing to chase after that phantom of status and fame.
So those very motivations that we might cringe when we recognize can actually take us more
deeply into ourselves and become something quite liberating and empowering.
Agreed.
And that's really where I've come is to see the various embarrassing parts of my personality
with some warmth as parts of my mind that are doing their best to protect the various embarrassing parts of my personality with some warmth as parts of my mind
that are doing their best to protect the organism
doesn't work all the time, but it's been very helpful.
Yeah.
Having said that under the rubric of aspiration,
in a world where there are so many problems,
well, how do we figure out, we can't boil the ocean,
you see, expression I hear a lot,
we can't do everything, how do we figure out our bit?
Yeah, I think that's really the question, Dan,
for our times.
And it's a kind of co-on to use a word from Japanese
and Chinese chan Buddhism.
It's a question that we hold in our mind
that takes us to a different place,
to really just ask the questions sincerely and learn how to engage with
it in a very honest and wholehearted way. So, like some of the messages that run through the book
are things like take care of yourself, listen for what you care about, learn to recognize your own
gifts and skills, what is it that you can offer? There's
so many ways to contribute. And some of it, I think, is about learning to see ourselves
not as isolated individuals, but as members of a community as a part of whether it's our local
community, our family, larger civil society. We have tremendous power when we start to see
ourselves embedded in a network
rather than as these isolated, separate people each trying to recycle or get off fossil fuels.
That's not going to actually get us anywhere because the issues are much more broad and complex
and structural. So I think it's about this sincere wholehearted engagement with the question and developing the capacity to to listen deeply and trust ourselves.
And I have a lot of faith and confidence that if we're each doing that, we will have this beautiful mosaic of skilled empowered members of the world all working together to make changes.
Coming up, Warren talks about how mindfulness
is not just about feeling good,
why joy, even if it sounds a little tweaked,
can help us persevere and how to reframe
the concept of devotion,
sometimes a tough concept for skeptics,
so it can apply to your everyday life.
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Work our way down through your list.
Another entry on the list is mindfulness.
It's not going to be surprising that you put mindfulness on the list, given who you are
and what you do.
But you really do go out of your way to make a point that I think is something that people
may need to hear, which is that mindfulness given that the word has become so common these
days and we have all these books about mindful parenting, mindful loyering, mindful sex, it's not just about feeling good, it's deeper than that.
Yeah, and mindful is bringing this into relationship with our life, right? It
allows us to not just observe, but to actually feel what's happening and be
aware of it, which is the first step of transformation.
It's like James Baldwin said, not everything that is faced can be changed,
but nothing can be changed until it is faced.
It's kind of this fundamental principle.
If you want to be healthier, if you want to be happier,
if you want there to be a world with clean air and clean water and forests for our children,
we need to actually be aware of what's happening first before we can engage in it.
The word mindfulness has been sort of co-opted by the wellness industry and repackaged
as this kind of very simplified pacifier, right, that's just about feeling better.
And not only does that limit its potential benefit, but it's actually dangerous,
because it disconnects us from at least half of what's true, which is the difficult things that
we experience, the difficult emotions in our lives, the difficult conditions in our world,
and engaging with those painful emotions or challenging circumstances
are precisely what we need to actually begin to heal and transform them. And so one of the reasons
why I've been so connected to 10% happier is because I see the company and the app and the show
trying to do something different. In spite of the somewhat cheeky title or name, like actually trying to
present what mindfulness offers in a more thorough and robust way, that it's not just about
feeling good. It's actually about engaging with all of what it is to be human
so that we can live a complete whole life and respond to what's needed.
Yeah, I appreciate that.
It has been great to have you on this ride.
Speaking of, this I think is directly relevant
and it's a word you've referenced a couple of times
in this discussion and it's another entry
on your list of 26 joy.
And we're talking about the joy of working together
in a project that we believe to be meaningful.
But there are lots of flavors of joy. Can you talk about those flavors and why it's so important
and relevant to this conversation about dealing with a jacked up world?
Yeah, it was really startling for me when my wife and I got married a little over two years ago now
that I had to work to open my heart to feel all of the joy.
I actually didn't have the capacity. I would get overwhelmed. Every time I practiced taking my vows
or thought about standing up there in front of our community and exchanging rings, I would break down crying because I didn't have the capacity yet to feel grounded
and stable and open and feel that much joy.
I've been in love with this woman since I met her, been together for eight years, and we
were finally going to get married.
I had to work to open myself enough to feel all that joy.
And this was really eye-opening to me to recognize that we can increase our capacity to feel joy.
I think that we as human beings need joy
as much as a plant needs water and air and light.
It's innate to us.
And if we don't have some joy in our life,
that's a very difficult and sad way of being.
And there's the kind of surface joy being in touch with life, from having meaningful
relationships, from giving ourselves to something wholeheartedly and feeling the sense of deep
satisfaction that comes.
And I think one of the tragedies of the influence of technology that we've already talked about
and the power of social media is that we miss so much joy
in our lives because we're too distracted or we're moving too quickly.
I think one of the challenges for all of us today is to learn how to slow down and appreciate
life in small ways.
And what that joy starts to do is it recharges us. It nourishes us so that we do have the energy to keep working two jobs and still raise the
kids or get out and vote.
So one of the things that I see in my work a lot is that there's these kind of two traps
around joy that people tend to fall into.
So on the side of the kind of wellness industry,
we get this narrative that we've already talked about of just kind of like feel good and be happy.
And we associate whether it's meditation or healing just with feeling good. And then we cut ourselves
off from anything painful. We try to put a false positive spin on it. And we're not actually available to the rest of life.
On the other side, I think the problem that a lot of Buddhists fall into is associating
spirituality or meditation just with suffering and being serious and actually feeling afraid
of healthy pleasure or joy.
And we can get worried like this is going to feed attachment or desire.
And as we start to cut ourselves off from actually feeling joyful and
experiencing the beauty and the pleasure in life when the practice is actually
feeling all of life.
It's opening to everything, which includes the pain and the joy.
What do we actually do to feel joy?
Maybe one of these easier said than done things?
So I think it starts by just learning how to be present
and open.
I think that again, joy is a natural experience and capacity that we have as human beings.
In order to feel joy, we have to be willing and able to receive to let things in.
So, we just had the Autumn Moon Festival.
The full moon of the Autumn season is a big, big festival and Chinese culture
and other Asian cultures and the other night my wife and I were going to bed and she said,
let's go outside and look at the moon. Now, if I say, oh, I'm tired, I don't want to go outside,
let's just go to bed. I miss the joy. We're not willing to be available, to go and look, to actually
see it. If we go outside and I'm thinking about, oh, I got to get up early and I've got
that phone call and how am I going to do this? I'm not available. If I'm able to be mindful,
to be present, open, curious, and to just see the moon, to see it fresh.
How many times have I seen the moon in my life?
I'm 46 years old, right?
I don't know how many times I've seen the moon, but that's all in the past.
I've never seen this moon right now on this night, and I just open my eyes and see this
big, beautiful, yellow orb in the sky.
It's like, wow, look at that.
And some joy arises because I'm available.
I'm present, right?
So, you know, drinking a cup of tea
to be able to be present and smell the aroma
and feel the heat and taste the quality of it.
The joy arises naturally, just like a spring out of the earth when we're available to
receive the pleasure, the goodness, the beauty.
I remember many years ago, my wife and I were living in San Francisco.
I was walking home and I saw these two people saying goodbye on the street. And someone was saying to the other person, they were saying, thanks so much for the ride.
They were beaming. And they gave the other person a big hug. And it made me so happy. Just to see like, oh, that's so great. That person gave them a ride. And they're so happy. Right. Just being available to the goodness that's actually here in the world and the beauty and the pleasure
that's available to us as human beings in really small ways starts to bring joy.
But again, that goes back to mindfulness, to being present, which goes back to what,
to attention.
Where are we placing our attention?
Are we able to make choices that put us in the right place
in our own mind to actually be available to what's here for us?
You also say in the book, don't force it. With joy or? Yeah, you need to be available to it,
but you also don't want to like, will yourself into it unnaturally
and then beat yourself up if it's not coming, et cetera, et cetera.
Yeah, there's a certain kind of balance and a trust in the process.
And I think there's also something to be said for, like I was saying before, it's not just about feeling good.
There's a certain quality of joy that's almost like a deeper joy that moves into a kind of contentment that comes from being able to be present in our life with everything.
There's a wholeness that comes from opening to all of it the blessings and the hardships as a joy that comes from not from getting what we want, not about what we experience, but how we
relate. And this is a very kind of deep satisfaction from living fully and feeling the whole range of what
it is to be human. So it starts with being available for the pleasure and the beauty and the goodness,
and then it takes us deeper. And the, you know, the other piece here, so again, to sort of connect it to this larger
question of how does any of this apply to the unraveling of so much in our world, we need
joy to work for change. It's heart, it's overwhelming, it's disappointing, it's depressing
at times, it's enraging at times, we need joy to work for social change,
to think about the civil rights movement
and all of the songs of joy celebrating the justice
and the nobility of the cause,
or that wonderful sort of pop slogan
that is the kind of this condensation of Emma Goldman's work,
the anarchist and feminist activists from the 20th century, whose kind of teachings on sexual liberation and creativity and radical anarchie was summarized
in this phrase. If I can't dance, I don't want to be part of your revolution.
I love that. Okay, so there's another entry on your list that could be tough for some people
to swallow, at least initially, perhaps myself included devotion. Yeah. What do you mean
by devotion? I love that you asked the question down. It's one of my kind of favorite, favorite
chapters and favorite things because of precisely what you said that a lot of people pull away
or get turned off by that. And I was very turned off by anything that seemed devotional
when I first started practicing
because it brought up all of these associations
of blind faith and letting go of my own agency
and intelligence and autonomy.
So I define devotion as our willingness to give ourselves to something completely. It's a way
of relating to anything with love and loyalty and trust and generosity. So some of the synonyms
that I offer in the book as a way of kind of getting a feeling for what I mean by devotion
of kind of getting a feeling for what I mean by devotion, our sincerity, whole-heartedness, enthusiasm, even reverence. So to be devoted to something means that we give a lot of our time,
our energy, our attention so we can be devoted to our family, we could be devoted to our craft,
our work, and instrument. So the devotion isn't defined by what we're devoted to our craft, our work, and instrument.
So the devotion isn't defined by what we're devoted to.
It's defined by how much of our heart to use that word,
we bring to it, how much love, how much attention,
how much of our whole being, are we bringing to the activity
or the person or the thing.
And what's so amazing about devotion is
number one, I think it's a very, very deep need for us as human beings. There's a
certain kind of hunger, a spiritual poverty, when we don't have devotion in our
lives, when we don't feel like we can give ourselves to something wholeheartedly,
it sort of erodes our capacity for fulfillment.
And what comes into fill that void is all of the wears being
sold to us by the media, by a growth driven capitalist economy,
by an exploitative worldview that because there's this hunger
inside to feel whole and to be fulfilled, sometimes we're not even
aware of it, so we try to fill it with objects, with accumulation, with status. When part of what we're
really longing for is a sense of deep connection and sincerity in our way of being and life, our way of living. So devotion, yeah, it's a deep need,
and I think it heals us.
I think it brings us back into a sense of alignment.
Well, comes to mind when I hear the word,
in a Buddhist context is, you know,
there is devotional practice that some of our,
you may have done it yourself,
and I know a lot of our mutual friends in the Dharma world
have done where you really are like prostrating yourself in
front of a statue of, you know, a Buddhist deity or something like that. And I actually
don't know much about this. So I'm not in any way disparaging it, but it makes me a
little nervous. And so I guess you're not really talking about any of that.
Well, so thanks for, thanks for raising that and just being so explicit about it. What
I'm doing is I'm starting there because that was my introduction to it too.
I'm Jewish.
I went to India and started meditating and then I hear all these statues and people bowing
and I was like, whoa, this is not cool.
I am not bowing to that statue.
Everything, every cell in my body was like, this is not what a Jew does.
You do not do that, right?
And so I started there and then started to learn more
about what is that about, like why,
what does that mean and what's the purpose?
So it can be that if that's the language that speaks to us.
But what's important about that is not the statue
or the bowing, what's important about it is what is it evoke inside?
What is the purpose of that? The purpose of it is a sense of wholeheartedness and a sense of
connection to something larger than ourselves. So we can meet this need for devotion through
religious observance or spiritual practice, but of course, that's not for everyone.
That's not the language that our heart speaks.
I find it difficult to find another word for it.
If that doesn't speak to us, well, there's so many other ways to be devoted, right?
We can be devoted to our spouse.
We can be devoted to music.
We can be devoted to our spouse. We can be devoted to music. We can be devoted to justice.
We can be devoted to parenting,
like washing dishes and changing diapers
can be devotional acts.
I think of that beautiful line from Rumi,
from Coleman-Barks translation.
There are a thousand ways to kneel and kiss the ground.
Or one of my favorite teachings
from the Jewish Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel when he marched with
Dr. King in 1965, he said, I felt like my legs were praying. That's devotion. We are giving ourselves
wholeheartedly to something because we value it. I'm being repetitive here, but just to sum you up,
I think, well, we may have some reaction, some of us to the idea of devotion.
It really is speaking to a universal need of being part of something larger than us.
Being part of something larger than ourselves and this experience of wholeheartedness and
sincerity, being able to give ourselves to something completely which unifies us instead
of always being fragmented inside or trying to get somewhere else,
it's that experience of, you know, gardening and you get totally lost in it, or taking a walk
through the park and just enjoying the trees and the breeze and you're devoted to being present
and appreciating the park. So wholeheartedness or sincerity as the other
aspect of it.
But it really does come right back to the court thesis of the book, which is a good life,
a happy life, happiness, broadly understood, is one where you are taking care of yourself
and paying attention to the world and engaging in things that bring you out of yourself.
It's that paradox. It's that exchange.
Yeah, it's integrating both. And again, it's that sense of like so much of the limitations
of either worlds that we look at, whether it's the world of wellness and healing and spirituality,
or the world of social change, is the lack of integration of the two, being able to take
care of ourselves and give to the world, being able to give to the world and take care of ourselves.
Is there something I should have asked today, but failed to ask?
I mean, I guess I touched on it, but it could be fun to talk a little bit about how being
a new parent has shifted my perspective and challenged me, you know, as a long-time practitioner and teacher.
Yeah, I mean, that's interesting because you're 45 or 44 when you had your first kid and you'd
had all these years of meditation practice being in these somewhat austere, renunciate environments and all of a sudden you're like surrounded by baby products and baby poop and
it ain't as dignified as a meditation retreat. Not at all, no. And it is its own kind of very
intensive meditation retreat in a very real way, particularly the early months. My wife and I sometimes joke about being older parents that we traded energy for
wisdom to the degree that we actually have some wisdom. I mean, it's been incredibly humbling.
Some of the hardest parts of it have been seeing my own limitations, my own impatience
and anger and reactivity when I'm under-slapped or stressed out,
seeing some of the unconscious sexism or kind of conditioning of patriarchy in my relationship with my wife.
I identify as a feminist.
I'm all about trying to understand how the world shapes our experience based on our social position.
And to see just some of the assumptions
that creep in unconsciously around power,
like I know what's right,
or even who gets to speak first,
that's been very eye-opening and humbling.
That has also been just this tremendous gift
and a real teaching on so many levels. All
of the years I've spent training and nonviolent communication and teaching about how it's
not selfish to have needs and we can't really get along and have meaningful relationships
if we're not able to acknowledge and own our needs and talk about them with one another.
And then to have this utterly helpless, entirely dependent, needy creature appear in our lives.
And to see how much generosity and tenderness that need called forth in me and my wife and my mother-in-law
was just so beautiful. And then to also see like how so much of what I have believed for so long
about the goodness of our hearts, the goodness of being human, to really see how true it is in having a baby and seeing just the joy of
just being here,
seeing how other people interact and relate with him has been remarkable.
So many of the defenses and social barriers fall away when I'm out on the street or wearing him in the carrier or something,
and people see this little happy baby.
And just their face is just beaming and seeing the goodness
that's there underneath the stress and the harriedness
and the anxiety and all the difficult things
that are part of being human also,
but that cover over that innate brightness and goodness.
Well said. Congratulations again on the new book and obviously on the new baby. Before I let you go
for real, can you just remind us of the name of the book and point us to any other resources you've
created and put into the world that we should know about? Absolutely. Yeah, thanks. So the book is called Your Heart was made for this
contemplative practices to meet a world in crisis with courage, integrity, and love.
And it's available anywhere where books are sold. But if you go to my website,
or njsofer.com, you can get a free guided meditation series when you order the book,
which is like a little bonus companion for the book. And I'll be teaching online and
in different parts of the country for the next many months on the book. So feel free to join me
at an event somewhere and check it out. Congratulations again. Thank you, Aaron.
Thanks Dan. Yeah, thanks for having me and thanks for the rich conversation. at an event somewhere and check it out. Congratulations again. Thank you, Aaron.
Thanks, Dan.
Yeah, thanks for having me,
and thanks for the rich conversation.
Aaron has been a frequent flyer on this show,
so if you wanna take a deeper dive into his work,
we'll include some links to his previous episodes
in our show notes.
You'll get to hear him talk in greater depth about his work
on the overlap between mindfulness and interpersonal hygiene or communication skills, which, as
I've said before, have been immensely helpful for me.
Thanks again to Orrin and thank you most of all to everybody who worked so hard on this
show.
10% Happier is produced by Lauren Smith, Gabrielle Zuckerman, Justin Davie, and Tara Anderson, DJ Cashmere 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 leaves our marketing
and Tony Magyar is our director of podcasts. Nick Thorburn of Islands wrote
our theme. If you like 10% happier, I hope you do.
You can listen early and add free right now by joining Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or
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Prime members can listen to add free on Amazon music.
Before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey at Wondry.com slash survey.
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Hey everybody, it's Dan on 10% happier I like to teach listeners how to do life better.
Uh, I want to try.
Oh hello, Mr. Grinch. What would make you happier?
Ah, let's see.
And out of business sign at the North Pole,
or a nationwide ban on caroling and noise, noise, noise.
What would really make me happy is if I didn't have to host a podcast.
That's right, I got a podcast too.
Hi, it's me, the Grand Puba of Bahambad, the OG Green Grump, the Grinch.
From Wondery, Tis the Grinch Holiday Talk Show is a pathetic attempt by the people of
O'Vill to use my situation as a teachable moment.
So join me, the Grinch, listen as I launch a campaign against Christmas cheer, grilling celebrity guests, like chestnuts
on an open fire!
Your family will love the show!
As you know, I'm famously great with kids.
Follow Tiz the Grinch Holiday Talk Show on the Wondery app, or wherever you get your podcasts.