Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - How To Handle Literally Anything | Sebene Selassie and Jeff Warren
Episode Date: April 24, 2024Debating the cliche: Does everything happen for a reason? Plus, the Meditation Party crew tackles equanimity, work/life balance, and meditation vs napping.Sebene Selassie describes herself as... a “writer, teacher, and immigrant-weirdo.” She teaches meditation on the ten percent happier app and is the author of a great book called You Belong. She’s based in Brooklyn. Jeff Warren is also a writer and a meditation teacher. He and Dan co-wrote the book, Meditation for Fidgety Skeptics. He also hosts the Consciousness Explorers podcast. He’s based in Toronto. If you want to be part of the show, please call in with a question or comment. The number is 508-656-0540. Or you can email us with a voice memo at podcast@tenpercent.com with a voice memo. Tickets for the two more Meditation Party retreats this year at the Omega Institute in Rhinebeck, New York are available now. The last one was a blast. Come join us for both. One is in May, the other October. Related Episodes:How to Stay Calm No Matter What’s Happening | Sebene Selassie and Jeff WarrenMeditation Party: The “Sh*t Is Fertilizer” Edition | Sebene Selassie & Jeff WarrenMeditation Party with Sebene Selassie and Jeff Warren: Psychedelics, ADHD, Waking Up From Distraction, and Singing Without Being Self-ConsciousMeditation Party: Magic, Mystery, Intuition, Tattoos, and Non-Efforting | Sebene Selassie and Jeff WarrenScience-Based Tools for When You're Stressed, Obsessed, or Overthinking | Dr. Jenny TaitzSign 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/med-party-howtohandleAdditional Resources:Download the Ten Percent Happier app today: https://10percenthappier.app.link/installSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
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It's the 10% Happier Podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hello everybody.
How are we doing?
Welcome to the party.
We've got a fascinating discussion today that covers a lot of ground.
How can you be cool with literally anything
that happens to you?
Does everything happen for a reason?
Is the old cliche correct?
This is the latest installment of a series we do
called Meditation Party.
It features Sabine Selassie and Jeff Warren,
two great meditation teachers.
We also take your voicemails coming up
with questions on work-life balance, obsessive thinking,
and meditation versus napping, which I loved.
For the uninitiated, just a little bit more about my guests before we dive in.
Sabine Selassie describes herself as a writer, teacher, and immigrant weirdo.
She's the author of a great book called You Belong.
She's based in Brooklyn.
Jeff Warren is also a writer and a meditation teacher.
He and I co-wrote the book Meditation for Fidgety Skeptics.
He also hosts the Consciousness Explorers podcast,
and he's based in Toronto.
Just a few quick housekeeping notes before we dive in.
Coming up in May in just a few weeks,
Jeff Seb and I will be hosting a live meditation party retreat
at the Omega Institute in Rhinebeck, New York.
It's a weekend affair.
It's a mix of meditation, Q&A,
and a little bit of socializing.
There's even an optional dance party.
If you can't make it in person, you can attend virtually.
And if you can't make the event in May,
there's another one coming up in November.
You can buy tickets through the link in the show notes.
Also speaking of the show notes,
there's a link in there if you wanna send us
a voicemail question of your own for future episodes.
Sabine Selassie and Jeff Warren coming up.
But first, a little BSP, blatant self-promotion.
Two little things to tell you about, then one big thing.
First little thing, if you go to danharris.com, my new website, there's a merch store up where
you can get 10% happier t-shirts and sweatshirts and a tote bag.
Also, if you go to danharris.com, you can sign up for my new newsletter in which I share
the two biggest takeaways for me from the shows on any given week plus three cultural
recommendations, books, TV shows, movies, TikTok videos, you name it.
Okay, here's the big thing I really want to promote.
We've got a meditation party retreat coming up at the Omega Institute,
which is outside of New York City, that's coming up in May.
There's actually another one coming up after that in November.
This is a weekend long thing I do with the great meditation teachers,
Semenay Selassie and Jeff Warren.
It is not your traditional silent meditation retreat.
We call it Meditation Party for a reason.
We do many sessions where we have a lot of conversation
among the three of us on stage.
We do some guided meditations.
We take questions from the audience.
It's highly interactive.
There's a dance party on Saturday night.
We've got a great DJ, Tasha the Amazon,
who's coming to play some jams on Saturday night.
Come for this.
The last one we did was incredibly fun,
so we're doing two more this year.
Go to eOmega.com to sign up or to the link in the show notes before I go
I just want to say something about the 10% happier app
Many of you are familiar with the great teachings of Joseph Goldstein the amazing meditation teacher
We've got six courses and more than 50 guided meditations from Joseph over on the app, including our free introductory course, The Basics.
Download the 10% Happier app today,
wherever you get your apps and get started for free.
I'll also link to it in the show notes.
Hello, I'm Emily, one of the hosts of Terribly Famous,
the show that takes you inside the lives
of our biggest celebrities.
Some of them hit the big time overnight,
some have to plug away for years,
but in our latest series,
we're talking about a man who was world famous
before he was even born.
A life of extreme privilege
that was mapped out from the start,
but left him struggling to find his true purpose.
A man who, compared to his big brother,
felt a bit, you know,
spare.
Yes, it's Prince Harry.
You might think you know everything about him, but trust me, there's even more.
We follow Harry and the obsessive, all-consuming relationship of his life.
Not with Meghan, but the British tabloid press.
Hounded and harassed, Harry is taking on an institution almost every bit as powerful as his own royal family.
Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to podcasts or listen early and ad free on Wandery Plus, on Apple Podcasts or the Wandery app.
I'm Alice Levine.
And I'm Matt Ford.
And we're the presenters of British Scandal.
And in our latest series, Hitler's Angel, we tell the story of scandalous beauty Diana
Mosley, British aristocrat, Mitford sister and fascist sympathiser.
Like so many great British stories, it starts at a lavish garden party.
Diana meets the dashing fascist Oswald Mosley.
She's captivated by his politics,
but also by his very good looks.
It's not a classic rom-com story, but when she falls in love with Mosley, she's on a
collision course with her family, her friends and her whole country.
There is some romance though. The couple tied the knot in a ceremony organised by a great
uncelebrated wedding planner, Adolf Hitler. So it's less Notting Hill, more Nuremberg. When Britain took on the Nazis, Diana had to choose
between love or betrayal. This is the story of Diana Mosley on her journey from glamorous socialite
to political prisoner. Listen to British Scandal on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Seven Ace Alassi, Jeff Warren, welcome back to the show.
Thanks, Dan. Great to be here.
Good to be here, Dan.
I should have said welcome to the party. I'm saying it now.
All right. So, segment one, we generally talk about,
we've been roughly calling it the shit over time, but it's,
these are all works in progress, the time, but it's these are all works in progress the titles But it's generally time for us to complain about shit
And I I talked to you guys about this before we started rolling
I've been thinking a lot about something you said to me said but you have said to me several times in
fact the last meditation party episode we did
Which was from their retreat that we did in October of 2023.
The last episode that we posted was some snippets
from that retreat.
And one of the first things we talked about in that episode
was this tattoo you got that says, trust life.
And I remember, if I'm honest, and you won't be surprised,
seeing that for the first time and thinking,
what the fuck does that mean?
Like, what does that even mean?
You know, like, that just seems like, you know,
empty words, but then I,
this is always what happens to me when I'm dismissive.
It has become like a earworm for me
and something I've been thinking about a lot.
As you guys know, and I can't talk about it
too much publicly, but I've had a lot of work stress
for the last couple of years.
And in complaining to you about the work stress
in the past, Seb, you have brought up trust life and I
Think and I apologize now
I think historically I've not really taken it in and I still don't know what it means
Which is why I'm on this long ramble right now because I want to hear you talk about it
But I have been interested to explore what maybe it means, you know
maybe there's a reason why I've got work stress because it's the thing I should be working on.
And yet I hesitate a little bit
because that seems to dip over into the magical,
like the universe is serving me up,
the thing I need to work on.
And I'm not convinced that the universe works that way,
although I'm open to it.
Anyway, enough out of me.
I'd love to hear your responses
and also like how you apply it in your own life.
Yeah.
Thank you.
First of all, I want to give credit to Los Armiento, who's been on the show before.
And you know, I don't know if you know them, Jeff.
I know them.
I've never met them, but I know them professionally.
Yeah.
So this is their motto for life.
And they had asked me if I had sort of a mantra or motto that I live by and I thought about it
and I don't really, but now I've appropriated theirs.
And so trust life comes from them.
I think it comes from the universe, but ultimately it came to me from them.
And it's just been sort of a guiding post.
I mean, I've tattooed it onto my arm because of all of the challenges
that have been thrown my way for many, many years,
maybe since I got to this planet in some ways.
But definitely in the past few years,
I've just had a tsunami of challenges,
of health challenges, of relationship challenges,
and spoken about that on this show before.
At the same time, my life is really beautiful
and I have a lot of resources and privileges
and support and love and community, including you both.
And that feels like a disservice to only look at the challenges
and feel like life is against me somehow,
or the universe is out to get me in some way.
Trust life allows me to be with,
and this is the practice, right?
Be with what's happening with some measure of allowing,
having the flexibility to move with the challenges.
So it's not about denying the challenges
and trying to paint them over with rainbows and kittens.
So it's really meeting what's there
and the multitude of feelings,
which sometimes I have trouble with.
You know, it's hard last year.
I think I spent a lot of time really in shock
about the end of my marriage and not able to fully process.
And that's probably some wisdom too, to have some titration, to be able to feel the feelings
when I was ready to feel them.
But that's also about trusting life and allowing the experience, but really keep moving towards
the freedom, the joy and the love that's already here.
So that's sort of been my orientation to trust life.
It's not about saying that everything is perfect
or definitely not happy all the time,
but there's some way that I can see
that there are balancing forces all the time.
And I really feel like it is something that we can take into not only our personal reality,
but into what's happening in our collective right now too.
Really being able to feel all the feelings and have our responses to what's happening
and also move towards whatever can support us in making the change that we need to make
and taking care of ourselves, taking care of our community,
trying to support the positive things that we want to see in the world.
Is it your view that there's a metaphysical or magical component here where I, the phrase
I'm about to utter catches in my throat in some ways because I think it's often used
in unthinking rote ways, but everything happens for a reason.
Do you think of trust life as existing within that zone?
Why are you laughing?
You're looking at each other and laughing.
Because I think that Jeff and I share a love of some systems
of understanding and knowledge that lean towards us.
And there is a lot of debate and even controversy,
even within something like astrology,
which one of the main systems that I use
about the nature of free will and determined futures.
And there's a lot of conversation about that.
But yes, there are long studied tested models
Yes, there are long studied, tested models and systems of understanding how life plays out that inform my belief and trust life as a living philosophy.
Yes.
And we should do a whole show about astrology.
I don't, you know, it's like, I'm careful about talking about
this. I mean, you know, if anybody just looked at my sub stack, they know that I'm all about
astrology, but it's hard to talk about it in polite company or in the public because
there's so, there's so much misunderstanding, you know, like people think that astrology
is just sun signs and astrology is actually very complicated math
And so if you don't want to go into the depths of it, you're just gonna have this
It's the way people thought about meditation for you know decades in in
Western
scientific
communities I
Do want to bring you in at some point Jeff? So I'm really happy to be a fly in the wall here
I do want to bring you in at some point, Jeff. So I'm the pick on this.
I'm really happy to be a fly in the wall here.
Yeah.
That fly will get swatted at some point, just to be clear.
I probably should say this again to you and both of you,
because I'm watching you choose your words very carefully,
which is uncharacteristic in a good way.
You don't have to be careful around me.
You might be projecting out into whoever's listening
and worrying about what they're thinking,
but I operate under the Joseph Goldstein,
and he got this from Samuel Coleridge,
willing suspension of disbelief.
What the fuck do I know?
I don't know anything.
I come at things skeptically,
but I'm not judging you negatively
for believing in something that can't be,
or having a suspicion of something that can't be proofed
because science may not have caught up to it yet.
So don't hold yourself back from me.
It's not I'm holding myself back from you because we've had this conversation before.
It's more that we would need so much more time and probably an expert in the fourth chair
to really break down the complexity of astrology.
It's not just astrology, there are other systems.
And the debates around it and the pushback,
and I don't feel knowledgeable enough
to sort of make that argument here,
but I've done enough of my own homework
to be able to study it without that skepticism, right?
But if I had to whittle what you're saying down,
it's something along the lines of, yes, I, Semené,
view the trust life mantra through the lens of some degree
of mystery and magic that I do think the universe
is giving me what I need to work with.
And yes, and that is in some ways dependent upon your study of things
like astrology.
Is that a rough fair summary?
That's exactly right.
Yes.
And I would say just as somebody who doesn't yet know whether astrology and related fields
of human endeavor are actually accurate in any way, it seems like you could practice trust life without necessarily buying into the fate slash destiny or universe,
giving you what you want aspect of it.
For me, trusting life has been useful within the context of my own travails,
just to think of like whether I'm getting these challenges because I need them, that's one thing,
but they're here, so why fight against them unnecessarily?
And why not view them as tests that are worthy of taking
and passing and challenges that are worthy of taking on?
Yes, and that's the most important skill to build,
actually, is that attitude towards all of life
and experience that, well, if it's happening,
it's happening.
There isn't a sort of, it's meant to happen, but it is happening.
And so to be in contention with it is bananas.
Exactly.
And serves no one and nothing.
Okay.
So I'm a big giant banana smoothie because I'm in contention with a lot of this stuff.
And yet I, that's why I think why trust life
keeps wheezing its way into my consciousness.
Well, astrology could help you, Dan.
Oh my God.
Yeah, I'm kind of in between the two of you.
I think of it primarily as an attitude,
but I'll build on that.
The basic attitude for me is this is the curriculum.
This is the thing I say to myself. I don't say trust life, I say this is the curriculum. This is the thing I say to myself. I don't
say trust life, I say this is the curriculum because this is the curriculum life is giving
me moment by moment and I can't deny it because it's right here. And in the past, I've spent
a lot of time fighting the curriculum. I do not want to learn this lesson now. I'm not
ready. I don't have capacity. It's too bad and I've been run over by the curriculum, but it is still the curriculum.
And now I just have, I can really feel there's been a sea change the past sort of year in
my life, you know, with the intense challenges of parenting.
They're amplified by the kind of neurodivergent piece of both my wife and I being, having
different kinds of nervous systems that get easily blown out under the stresses of parenting and
So there's lots of overwhelm and and then to say nothing of the global situation
Which is just prayed so heavily and hugely it's constantly on my mind constantly on my heart and so just to put that out there
I know Seb pointed to it too. It seems grotesque to talk about
Trust life or that somehow things are meant to happen as they're happening when there's so much tragedy and horror happening
right now.
And yet this is the curriculum, because this is the curriculum that life is giving us right
now.
And so when we accept that this is here, that, you know, obviously the follow-through is that it can lead to an increased capacity
to respond in more intelligent ways.
And the collective practice of continually saying, for me, this is the curriculum, this
is the curriculum, of opening to it, of letting it be here, it's let me see each of these
different challenges as the thing that I needed to learn to get
me to the next level of what I can give back.
And so I wouldn't take back a single one of them, a single one of my, you know, suicidal
periods, my intense physical injuries, my, you know, different personal traumas and things
that have happened because every one of them has forced me to look at and learn something
about this conundrum
that is now.
And this is where it does get mystical or however you want to put it.
The longer I live, the more there's a sense of coherence to that.
The more certain things that have happened in the past, challenges that I've had to
work with, they make sense now from this place of more maturity, more integration, and it's
as if they were all selected somehow.
You know, it's like the organic, mysterious process
of life has created a kind of,
it's hard to even talk about this,
but there's a kind of a coherence and a logic
that makes meaningful sense.
And I feel like I live more and more inside that.
And that comes from that view of seeing that
this is the curriculum.
But do you see what I'm saying about the higher level thing?
It's not, yes, these are the things that happen and these are things you're supposed to have
learned and yet the kinds of challenges that I face now, it's as if I were ideally trained
by my past to meet them.
Not just in myself, but in what I see in the people around me and my community.
So that's a kind of trusting life.
And this points to seeing your own life as a spiritual path.
You know, it's the conversation that Seb and I had
on the way up here around being your own teacher
and choosing to relate to all the things
that have happened in your life as your teachers
and all the people you have met
to begin to put you into that position of true,
I don't know what you want to call it, responsibility,
autonomy, centering you in your life as your own teacher.
I do see what you're saying that you,
or I think I see what you're saying,
which is that this is the curriculum,
which I love by the way, that's a tattoo in and of itself,
is a great MO for any sentient being.
And you can use it just as an equanimity practice.
This is what's happening right now.
Can I be cool with it?
Whatever is happening.
And the higher level, which I think is the phrase you used, is optional,
which is that over time you might come to see that there is something magical,
mysterious, metaphysical about it.
But that's up to you.
Yeah, it's up to you. And also, even if you don't even need to go to, metaphysical about it, but that's up to you. Yeah, it's up to you.
And also, even if you don't even need to go
to the metaphysical place,
like the thing I hear again and again,
and I see again and again,
is someone meets a life challenge
and they've decided to turn it into someone else's healing.
Whether it's your kid dealing with a rare illness
and you suddenly create a parent support group around it,
or whatever it is, you see it again and again.
It's the way we make meaning of our lives
is to take the thing that was challenging and transform it.
That's how you make meaning out of your own suffering.
You transform it into something that you can then pass on
to somebody else in some way.
And I just see that played out again and again and again.
And that's the same thing I would describe
as that sense of coherence,
the sense of now the arc of your life has,
there's more
meaning to it because of those things.
You know, if they didn't happen, it wouldn't have that.
Yeah, you asked me last night if I regretted something about the way I responded to my
cancer early on and I can't even comprehend the idea of regret anymore because it happened. You know, that it's just, that's the nature of the reality I'm in.
Maybe in a parallel universe, it didn't happen that way, but that's how it happened.
And I don't think I could understand the lessons I'm learning now then.
Right.
I had to experience everything that I experienced to be at the point where I am now, where I can say,
oh, I really need to work on control.
And I looked at that years ago, but I'm at the point where I am now able to release control
and fear and all of the, you know, my bugaboos in the way that I need to release them now.
It's making me think, sometimes I think about the effect
of practice, the effects of practice in life
as these three parts.
And they're kind of like different time scales.
So the effect for say like you do a meditation,
there's an effect in the moment where, you know,
you can be feeling tense or you can be feeling bereft
and you can do a practice of a few minutes
and it can actually shift things a little bit.
You feel more open, you feel more settled.
So there is an effect in a moment that's really valuable.
Sometimes people who don't understand meditation think it's all about the effect of the moment.
But we know that more attention by more experienced teachers is the effect over the second scale,
which is the effect over months and years, where you're training your nervous system in a sense to be permanently
more open, more available, more sensitive, more responsive.
So we understand that to be true too, is that this is the scale of habit change.
But there is this other scale, and that's the scale of your whole life.
And this is what I would call the kind of spiritual dimension of practice in some way and it's you
practice and the more you're practicing the more you start to feel like you're
coming into relationship with the whole the whole of your life the whole arc of
your life having a meaning the whole arc of the that your network the community
connections the whole arc of the planet, just existence itself,
whatever you want to describe, there's this sense in which it gets more and more integrated
into what feels like one thing that you're in.
And there's no words to, I'm kind of trying to point to what it is, but this is where
I think practice goes.
And I think different people will talk about it in different way, but I think trust
life is one way to talk about it. Isn't there a way to understand that third part without any,
and again, I hate to be the guy who keeps doing this, but without anything too mysterious. I mean,
obviously there's a lot of mystery in it. But the answer is, of course there is, because there's a
way for every single human being on the planet to come to that understanding, and they're going to
come to it in their own way.
And for some it won't have anything to do with those things.
It'll be seen entirely through an ecological lens or through a science lens or through
some humanistic lens and it's complete in and of itself.
That's the point I'm making.
You don't need to buy into anyone's cosmology to come to that place.
You have to make it your own.
But people do that.
Yeah. I mean, any science class will get you
to the fact that we're all connected.
We're all part of a whole, I mean.
Yeah, when I hear ecologists talk about,
and people talking about the environmental movement,
I just hear the same thing coming back,
just spoken about in a slightly different way.
I love that, the three tiers,
and that place of this third spiritual understanding is so, we were talking a little
bit about this, that sometimes people misunderstand the word ease as sort of a fruit of the practice
because they mistake it with easy.
But it's not that things aren't uncomfortable or there's no suffering left.
The end of suffering doesn't mean pain goes away.
But you have a relationship to it that's more easeful.
And that, yes, doesn't need a cosmology,
but I would make the case for these other ways of knowing
and seeing the whole that have enchantment
and soulment of the universe and mystery.
They're also just fun.
Totally.
That's my number one case for it.
Yeah, I would much rather live in an enchanted magical universe than like-
I want to live in a dead ball.
Can we live in a dead ball?
When you tap into these very tried and tested methods of understanding enchantment, it's
like they give you a window into, oh my God, isn't that so cool? Like you can see these patterns
and you can see all of these things
that you can't see with your ordinary knowing and senses.
See, this is this really, really important piece
because you first come into it,
you think this is about what's objectively true or real.
And for me, as I've gotten older in my life,
I think I'm still interested in that question.
I think more and more it's impossible
to answer that question.
What I can answer is what is actually
subjectively healthy for me.
And when I choose to believe in a more interactive reality
filled with mystery and wonder in which I'm like,
I'm playing inside it, my life is vastly more pleasurable.
It's more, I have more capacity to help others
than if I believe in a universe where I,
I can't know anyone else.
Everything is just a kind of a rigid billiard ball structure
or whatever it is.
Like that's just having lived in a world like that,
it doesn't feel, it doesn't feel as full of possibility
to me.
So I think that there is this basic freedom
that we're allowed, which is to choose,
and William James used to talk about this,
he called it the will to believe.
We're allowed to choose what we believe.
And our beliefs have a profound effect on our happiness.
And it's something that everyone needs to look at
in their life.
And it's something I really,
when I was in a more sciency frame,
I would have rejected outright and it's being like, who cares what you believe?
What matters is what's true.
But now more and more, I mean, the belief that the tools of science can show you exactly
this to be true is itself a belief, you know?
So I think having a stance of humility and then being interested in what your relationship
is with the world is very, very important.
I saw Benjamin Franklin quote today. He said, the older I get, the less I trust my own judgment.
Seb, can you talk a little bit about how you've been applying
the trust life mantra in your own life recently?
Yeah, so I'm pretty open about my cancer stuff.
In the past few years, I've had really tough diagnosis and treatment and
it was getting better but now it's starting to turn. So my you know the kind
of tests and scans are showing that I'm much worse off right now than I was six
months ago. It's not the worst it's ever been but it's going in the wrong
direction. So I've had to really work with this and not immediately go into the fear and control,
which is how fear shows up a lot for me, is sort of that like speedy amphetamine control
energy of like, okay, now I need to like plan everything and control everything and do all the things to boost my immune system
or research all the weird sounding diagnoses and mutations of my genetic codes of cancer.
And that's not helpful.
Maybe it was helpful in the past and I don't regret that because it helped me sort of manage
where I was, But now I'm
in a very different place where I do need to lean into this trusting of life and trusting
how things are and acknowledging the multitude of realities of my life. Yes, there's cancer,
there's challenges in my body from the treatments I've had. And I work with those, you know, whether it's pain or fatigue or immune suppression,
but I also have a lot of amazing things going on.
And I really want to not drain my attention away from those
by worry and obsessive thinking and planning.
So it's really finding that measure
of not rejecting the feelings or the realities of
what's here and what's coming, but also not having that take over all of these other aspects
of life that are also here and true.
I hear a combination of techniques there and I could be, you'll correct me if I'm wrong
here, but there's a nice little mantra from Joseph Goldstein, the great meditation teacher
who says a thing you can say to yourself when you're in the grips of something hard is,
it's okay.
By which he does not mean everything's okay, but it's okay to feel this thing right now.
So I hear a combination of that plus just gratitude for the good stuff that is also there.
Yeah.
Yeah, and a lot of surrender.
Like I've really been working with surrender because
I've understood to understand more deeply how fear shows up as control for me. It's
one of the ways it's the main way it shows up for me that surrendering and kind of lessening
that grip of control. So I put my trust in my oncologist who's a wonderful person and
a great oncologist to do what she does instead
of trying to be on top of that data and information and consult with her and ask her questions
and know what's happening.
But I can take care of myself in the ways that are best for me to take care of myself.
So my practice, taking care of myself in terms of my actual body and energy and making sure
I get enough sleep and I'm eating well and I, you know, working out with my trainer or
whatever it is I need to do and spending time with my friends and feeling supported and
feeling love and experiencing joy.
So for me, it's, it's understanding myself too.
So the it's okay.
And the gratitude are really important
but it's also knowing my patterns
and being able to work with them in ways
that support me in the best way possible.
So it's okay gratitude plus like a good owner's manual
on your own mind, body system.
Because somebody else's response to fear might be collapse.
Yeah. Right.
And that's okay too, but then what do you need to do
to make sure that that doesn't become the default
and start to affect you negatively?
Listening to you talk, I did a little bit
of the typical making it about myself for a second.
You don't become an anchorman
because you lack that propensity.
I've made some oblique references to my professional stress
over the last couple
of years. And I think about it like, it's interesting, I have a similar feeling about
the last two years as I think I'm hearing coming through in your comments, which is
the last two years have sucked on a number of levels and they've been two of the best
years of my life. I don't think they've been great because of the shitty stuff, more that
all the practices I've learned
over the last 14, 15 years
just are having compounding effects.
And so that is, I think,
more true than the shittiness of the situation.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, you see the fruits of your practice
in a much deeper way when you fertilize that tree well
with a bunch of shit.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yes.
The greatest title for a Dharma book ever is, I forget the name, is Ajahn something.
Who ordered this truckload of dung?
Ajahn Brahm.
Ajahn Brahm, okay.
Great, great book title.
Coming up, we're going to take your questions.
We've got some great voicemails from listeners,
ones about work-life balance.
We've got one about obsessive thinking.
I might have called that one in with a ventriloquist.
And we've also got one about a great question,
meditation practice versus napping.
Keep it here, much more meditation party coming up.
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Okay, welcome back to the meditation party. We're going to take your voicemails now. We love
these voicemails, by the way. We've put a number and an email that you can send us.
Voicemail questions and the number and the email are in the show notes. Hit us up. All right.
The first call is from Sana and it's about work-life balance. Take a listen.
So I really love periods of my life where my softness flourishes,
where I can be present, move more slowly,
have more mindfulness, feel my feelings.
Often this is during very small snippets of my life
where I feel like I can cocoon.
I can build a bubble around myself and my family
to truly just enjoy and be. Then the remaining 95% of my life feels tough. Family crises,
constant planning to do, especially when you wear the hat of planning for your nuclear
or your extended family or you're in any sort of caregiving role.
Workstress of managing and planning their juggling commitments of being present and
obligated to family and friends.
Just saying it makes me exhausted.
So how do you balance that too?
How do you live a life more in flow? But how do you code switch between that and like the intensity of being on and being in
planning, orchestrating, doing mode for both work and motherhood and family responsibilities
while wanting to be in soft mode in flow with yourself, grateful, open-hearted, inquisitive, curious.
I would love to know how to marry those two together better.
I mean, I think there's an easy answer that, you know, suck it up, put your coat of armor
on and, you know, life is meant to suck.
Bear down.
Bear down harder.
What's the real answer, Jeffrey?
I don't know if there's a real answer.
I really
appreciated the question though and the place from which it was delivered. She had a very
awesome manner. But this is my life. So I mean, I think for me, the way I can only just speak
personally, the big, big picture for me is that I have to just accept that there are times when I'm
going to be completely run over by my life. And often those are very long periods. And I'm not going to have the space and perspective
to be at my best and responding perfectly.
And I'm not going to feel at ease.
And actually, when I come to that recognition,
I'll recommend a book here,
because this kind of helped me get there.
It's a popular psychology book about acceptance
and commitment therapy called The Happiness Trap
by like an Australian writer.
Acceptance and commitment therapy is basically
like repurposed mindfulness.
But the happiness trap is if you think that
when you're unhappy, you shouldn't be unhappy
because you need to be happy, that's the trap.
You're now living in a world where there has to be
the condition of happiness for things to be okay. So just accepting that there are going to be hard
times when you're not happy and then times when you are happy is part of the outlook.
But what's really interesting in that book that really helped me that I hadn't really
thought about before was the commitment piece. And the commitment piece is basically saying
at any moment, there's an opportunity to move
towards your values or move away from your values.
And so in moments of extreme challenge where you're just getting run over by life, what
I found was in a lot of, I had a background narration by this shouldn't be happening,
this shouldn't be happening.
I want to be happier.
I, this, these things shouldn't be happening or this stuff with my kids shouldn't be happening.
But when instead I could say, you know what, this is happening and this challenge is building
my resources to be with future challenges or there's a strength capacity training here
that I can kind of feel or I can kind of do this thing where I flip it around and right
in this moment when everything's falling apart, I can kind of see that this is actually moving
me towards in the direction of just like gleeful flowing with it no matter what and dancing
with it or whatever.
Like, so at any moment you have this opportunity to kind of just, just say, how can I experience
this differently?
I can't get away from the fact that this is extremely challenging, but is there a way
I can make this so it's moving me towards my values? Or maybe your value is social justice.
I can see more clearly this privation
or this hard thing happening in the world or this injustice
and that's moving me towards being able to speak out
more strongly about it towards the future.
Do you see what I mean?
And since I've been implementing this
because I don't have the time to sort of lubricate my life
with the formal practice, I just do not have that.
What I'm doing is more like moment to moment applying this,
except that, yep, this is unhappiness, that's okay.
How can I make this something that's moving me
in a direction that I want to move in?
And that makes all the difference.
I love that.
We've never done an episode on ACT acceptance
and commitment therapy.
It's a thing I've mentioned in my presence quite a bit.
So maybe we should get that happiness trap person
on the show.
As you were speaking, it reminds me
of something that's helpful for me,
which we actually talked about in the last episode,
briefly, the last episode that posted back in February
that we'll put a link in the show notes
if you want to check it out,
which is setting intentions,
which used a funny term when we were discussing it.
You said initially you were just blanket annoyed by the notion of setting intentions, which used a funny term when we were discussing it, you said initially
you were just blanket annoyed by the notion
of setting intentions.
And I had the same, I mean, this is a recurring theme.
I was dismissive when I first heard of intention setting
because it just struck me as like classic New Age pablum.
But actually it's like Babe Ruth pointing out
of the ballpark and saying, I'm gonna hit this home run.
It's everything. And it's just setting the direction. Ruth pointing out of the ballpark and saying, I'm going to hit this home run.
And it's just setting the direction.
And I think for somebody like Sana,
whose voicemail we just listened to,
or anybody else who's busy, whether you have kids or not,
and you find yourself in these moments of stress
or overwhelm, if you've set an intention first thing
in the morning, and hopefully I found it very helpful
to set it before anything I do, if I can remember it, right?
Before I meditate, before I exercise,
before I go to bed, when I wake up,
I would like to get better at setting it before
even small things, brushing my teeth, whatever.
And my intention is, I dedicate the benefit
of whatever I'm doing now to all beings, right?
That is, as I like to say, the view is so much better
when you pull your head out of your ass.
And that is the head out of ass removal mechanism for me
on the regular.
And to me, that sounds like commitment.
Yeah, absolutely.
I totally agree.
And I'm just thinking that there's another piece too.
I think a lot about those transitions
when something is really hard
and the next hard thing is coming
I think about what can I do in the moment to have more softness around this just the word that she used or more
Smoothness like and it's kind of an equanimity practice. Can I it's like you're a DJ
You're trying to put two songs together and then one is really slow and one is really fast
You know, it's not gonna be well
But nevertheless you do eat the best you can to kind of match the beats together so you can kind of smoothly go through it.
And for me, it's like, how can I suddenly decide to enjoy this moment in my body?
How can I make my body feel more fluid or more sexy or more open or more supple in some
way?
And just having that kind of intention can actually turn, transform really challenging
moments and really challenging periods into something very different. And so I think the play part of that, like playing with
implementing in-the-moment practices, that's definitely part of how I survive.
I don't know if you could get any sexier, that would be dangerous.
I'm worried. I'm curious, Dan, how is your intention setting going and how
do you remind yourself to do that?
I mean, it's a little bit, that's why I got a tattoo, F-T-B-O-A-B for the benefit of all
beings, way more earnest than I generally am in my life.
There were so many people that brought me in this direction.
Spring Washam is a teacher that, she's a meditation teacher, she wanted me to get it tattooed on my chest and I don't have that kind of courage.
And also Richie Davidson, who's an eminent neuroscientist at the University of Wisconsin, and he talks about how he's very systematic of doing this intention before anything he does all day long.
And he and I were speaking late 2023 and that's what kind of put this intention setting thing on steroids for me.
And actually, we were talking late 22, and then six months later, I got the tattoo,
and I've just been trying to up my game for a while. And it's a little bit of faith, you know,
I don't know that I'm giving this a lot of time, because it's cutting against, for me, a lot of wiring for selfishness.
And by selfishness, I mean that in a kind of, in a broad way.
It's not just that I'm not going to give you my five bucks if you ask for it.
It's like a self-centeredness, a reversion to what's often called in neuroscience circles,
the default mode of thinking about myself or ruminating or worrying and
having a broader view, which is so helpful to me and everybody else around me.
And of course, that's essentially the same thing on some deep level.
And do you, do you feel like it is, you know, I'm going back to the cosmology stuff, but
do you feel like it is then having impact when you set that intention or is it mostly for you to rewire?
I'm not there yet. I'm open to it, but it's not what's going through my head. It's more like
It's not in the neighborhood of petitionary prayer for me. It's more like yes
I wish all beings could be free from suffering and that's genuine wish
But I'm not sure that my wish is connected to any specific outcome and I'm cool with that.
The only outcome that I do have some attachment to is like can it make me more fluid and sexy
like Jeff?
But don't you also like, I mean, the intention of your work and you know, that you want your
work to benefit others.
Yes.
I've gotten my head many times about the selfish motivations for my work and I try to remember
that in my tattoo, FTBOABA, stands for all beings and I'm definitely part of that no
matter how down on myself I might get.
And so that's an interesting dynamic tension too, like wanting to profit in a broad sense
from what I'm doing and also really keeping my eye
on the prize, which is genuinely being a benefit.
And so I get that wrong all the time,
but it is something I play with.
Should we do another voicemail here?
We've got a call that came in from Glenn,
who is asking about something that hits home for me,
obsessive thinking or overthinking. Take it away, Glenn.
Hi, my name is Glenn and my question for Dan and the team is,
I'm sure that all of you have gone through where your mind constantly keeps turning different questions.
I think, Dan, you brought it up before,
where maybe after the 14th or 15th time
that your brain could stop thinking on a situation.
I'm probably at 25 to 30 times,
either thinking of things I did,
or mainly trying to decide on different situations with my job or family.
Just interested in how you guys, if you've dealt with that issue of constant turnover
of situations in your mind and have been able to solve that or at least make progress towards
that. Thank you.
Never. I was just thinking, poor bastard. I mean, who deals with that?
You know, it's funny. The first thing that came to me listening to Glenn is this practice that
I don't remember the name of this scholar. He's a Buddhist studies scholar, but an American,
white American who studies Khmer Buddhist practices. So these are Theravadan practices
that come from Cambodia that grew out of the Khmer Rouge and the atrocities that happened
there. So Cambodian Buddhism was sort of shifted by that period.
And this practice developed called stirring and stilling, where these really intense,
and you can find them online, maybe we can link to them, these really intense, almost
singing but in this very deep, soulful, moving, profound chance around suffering and the core teachings of Buddhism.
And they were meant to actually stir the emotion and stir the sentiments of these teachings.
And then you stilled into practice.
And I remember when I first learned about that years ago,
I was so fascinated by that concept
and realized that I could use stirring in various ways
to help me then sit.
So a lot of times when things are just really,
just the rumination is really strong
or the emotion is really strong,
I'll dance and then I'll sit, or I'll jump on I'll dance and then I'll sit or I'll jump on my
trampoline and then I'll sit.
And it's made such a huge difference for me rather than just trying to go to the cushion
or for me to the mat, because I do a lot of lying down.
There's this way in which I honor that energy and I allow it to come and then I can more
easily kind of be with it in a more spacious way.
And there's something energetic about that that is very powerful.
And there's a vocalization part of it that's part of it too.
So I do tend to like play music and sing and dance and then sit.
I think you're making me, when you're describing this, you're making me understand more clearly
how I respond in those situations.
Because I'm a hyper over thinker over a ruminator in the Dan camp and I traditionally, early
on in my life, I just didn't have a way to turn it off.
I understand where Glenn's coming from.
I just would go around and around.
And then you do develop capacity through mindfulness
to kind of watch or observe it.
And so much of it happens under the radar.
You don't even realize it's happening.
So being able to notice it can make a difference
to begin to kind of pop out.
And sometimes you can just watch it and let it play out.
But often, that's not enough.
And it's to pick up Sabine's point.
It's like there's a certain momentum of energy
already there.
And in order to really meet that, you need to meet that with action.
Whether the action is external, like you move your body, you dance, you jump around, what
I often do is I have a kind of ritual when that's happening.
My ritual is with the I Ching.
I've talked about the I Ching in the past here.
You say what it is.
Yeah, the I Ching is an ancient Chinese divination system.
Some people talk about it as the first computer.
And it's basically a set of almost like little mini fortunes that you get.
You get one of 64 sort of little pithy wise kind of framings of ways to kind of reframe
a situation.
They're all just blanket wise anyway, because they kind of are steeped in kind of Taoings of ways to kind of reframe a situation. They're all just blanket wise anyway,
because they kind of are steeped in kind of
Taoist philosophy and I find them quite appropriate
to the situation, but even if it wasn't that there was
an appropriateness, there's always something there
that you can take away from it.
And just the act of doing that,
it just completely stops the rumination on it.
I'm like, okay, cool, I don't need to know anything else
than that, that kind of gives me the framing I need.
Because I also know the whole question
of getting it right or wrong is an illusion.
There is no getting it right or wrong.
There's only what's happening in this moment.
Like you just make a decision and then something happens
and then you're in a new moment
and there are a new set of choices in front of you
that you couldn't have anticipated even one moment back.
So part of it is that I recognize I'm not going to get to the answer through the rumination
most of the time.
I'm not saying it doesn't happen on occasion.
Most of them it's just going around and around.
So I just to stop the going around around I decide I know the answer.
It's this and then that action stops the energy and then I can go on to the next thing and
live my life.
And I use it all the time and I have zero kind of rumination stuff really anymore around.
There's nothing I can't stop that.
It isn't to say I don't have still deep preoccupations that I wonder and worry at, of course, but
that surface quality of like just being totally obsessed by it is, it gets shifted.
And it doesn't have to be an I Ching.
It could be a tarot thing or it could be a sudden shouting something out.
I mean, I'm just having some kind of ritual, some kind of thing that you do
to express the energy of it, to feel like there's a sense of finality,
and then to be able to move on is the move.
I'll throw some other possible tactics out, because, I mean,
everybody's going to have different things that work for them.
Along those lines, Jenny Taits is a clinical psychologist from the West Coast
who was recently on the show and she recommends that when you're having repetitive thoughts,
sing them out loud.
Oh, I love it.
And it can get you to not take them so seriously. A couple of more mindfulness-y things from
Joseph Goldstein. One is just to use a little mantra in your head of up and out. Just let it go up and out.
And the other is, and I think Glenn made a reference to this,
is this useful?
Just, you know, is this useful?
Do we need to be on, as Glenn said, number 25 of my run-throughs
of all the horrible things that might happen because of X or Y?
So, yeah, try any or all of those, Glenn and others.
Let's do one last voicemail. This is from Adriana. It has to do with napping.
Hi, it's Adriana from Washington, DC. Around two or three in the afternoon, I start feeling like
a nap would be nice. But then I tell myself a meditation session would be more productive. Sometimes
I sort of combine the two. Am I ruining my meditation practice? Do I have to choose?
What a failure. I mean, geez, I can't believe we even played that voicemail. What do you
think, Seb?
Well, I'm thinking about that quote that's attributed to the Dalai Lama.
I don't know if he ever really said it,
but he said that sleep is the best meditation.
You know, you would have to really know Adriana
and know the situation to know what the right,
not that there's a right answer,
but know how to work with this
because there are some people who fall asleep
every time they meditate, but they're not tired.
You know, they're not tired.
They're getting enough rest and it is some kind of conditioned habit avoidance usually
or some kind of aversion to the practice.
It doesn't sound like that's what's happening with Adriana.
She's probably just tired and needs a nap.
And so that is a perfectly valid thing to do to maybe take that time to lay
down and maybe start with a body scan and bring some mindfulness into the experience,
but take the nap. Also, most people in our culture are tired. Not me, because I sleep
really, really well and I sleep a lot. My friend actually wrote a song for me in my 20s called Sleepy Solace, proclaiming my
great talent at sleeping.
But a lot of us are under slept and so meditation does turn into nappings, finding that balance
so that the practice really becomes a place where you can learn and grow in that capacity
of mindfulness so that you can carry it grow in that capacity of mindfulness
so that you can carry it into the rest of your life.
And it just isn't nap time is a balance
that you have to strike, you know,
and you have to find it for yourself.
Yeah, well said.
I was just thinking of how much I love naps,
how much I miss naps.
I just don't get to nap now with the young kids
But you know, I think different times in your life
you need different things and sometimes the medicine you need is to give yourself that permission to have a nap and to if
Framing it as a meditation is way to help you have the nap then that's
and of course
Meditation is a lot more than that
So good to try to find a time to practice at some point when you are alert,
because you get a lot from that.
Yes, definitely pro-napping, also pro-meditation, and doesn't need to be a war.
Just a couple of other things that might be helpful.
One is, if you don't want to nap for whatever reason, and you do want to meditate,
walking meditation, much harder to fall asleep standing up or walking, although I have done it, but I find walking meditation can be great.
The other thing is I found, and this may be idiosyncratic on my end, is when I lie down
to meditate, I'm actually much less likely to fall asleep than when I sit and meditate.
So something about giving myself the permission to lie down often precludes the falling asleep,
but that may not be true for you.
Anyway, we think you're doing great.
All right, we're going to take another break.
We'll be right back with some recommendations from the larger culture.
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Alrighty, welcome back.
It's Meditation Party, the third and final segment.
I love these kinds of segments
where you hear recommendations.
I'm always looking for recommendations.
I like when my parasocial relationships blend into the curatorial. Jeffrey, what do you
got?
Okay, so I just finished this book that was fabulous. It's called The Saint of Bright
Doors by Sri Lankan writer Vajra Chandra Sekhara. And it's a fantasy book. I'm a big sci-fi fantasy junkie and I had read about it in the New York Times that the
reviewer gave it a glowing review and it is one of the strangest, most magical, challenging,
transporting books that I have read in ages. It's so unique, it's so steeped in a kind of mythical
South Asian view of the world, yet it's intensely modern.
And so it's about this character, Fedor,
the protagonist who in the first page,
as soon as he's born, his mother garrots his shadow
and strangles his shadow and he has no shadow.
And so he's in this sort of mythical magical space mother, garrots his shadow and strangles his shadow and he has no shadow.
And so he's in this sort of mythical, magical space where there are devil doctors and he
goes to the big city and ends up in these weird Kafkaesque scenarios and it's a lot
about administration and the mystery of these doors that appear in these walls and to know
that no one understands and there's a whole scientific cruise to sit and watch the door because when you look away,
you watch these things that are going to potentially become bright doors.
And as soon as you look away, then suddenly there's a new door there.
It's so wild, but it's like this overlay of the mythic and the modern.
And what I love about this book and just the larger, you know, genre fiction is changing.
It's been living in these kind of little ghettos with like the few experts and now it's just
like the, especially science fiction and fantasy, it's the amount of LGBTQ voices and people
of color and like there's so much energy and enrichment and invigoration happening and
I cannot get enough of it.
And it's happening across and everywhere, but it's really happening in the science fiction
and fantasy worlds.
And I just so appreciate this writer and there's like a name, another dozen writers I love
that are doing really interesting things in that space.
But I thought I'd throw that one out there.
I wrote it down.
I'm going to order that book.
What do you got, Selassie?
Sleepy Selassie?
I have a few things.
I took a clowning workshop a few weeks ago.
Oh, God.
And it might-
Her essay is great.
By the way, Sabine has a sub stack, Ancestor to Elements.
We should just name it because you write these great essays and your essay about clowning
is riveting.
Thank you.
It was seriously my most popular post, which is so bizarre.
Really? I can't believe I missed this,
but I'm also just, it's hysterical
that this is your recommendation.
So I have a coach, Chela Davison,
who's an amazing coach.
And two years ago, she recommended that I do clowning
because I wanted to work on my spontaneity.
I have a really hard time being silly or goofy.
Like I don't want to be embarrassed.
So I think I'm a pretty funny person, but it's all about wit.
So I had said, oh, I should try improv.
And she was like, no, too much language.
You should do clowning.
And when she said it, I knew I should do it, but I waited two years.
I signed up for Intro to Clowning All Day Workshop.
And I was the only new person.
Everyone there was either already a clown
in multiple senses of that word.
They had been taking clowning for six months or something.
So I was the only person who was brand new
and it was so revelatory.
Like it should be my new spiritual practice.
This clowning teacher might be my new guru.
It was so fun and horrifying at the same time.
I saw a lot of the same stuff I see
through meditation practice,
my judgment of other people, my performativity.
But the final exercise, which I didn't even anticipate
that I would have to do something
in front of the whole group,
I had to get across the room by getting people to laugh.
But you can't talk and you
just have to be funny.
And it's, it is the most naked feeling.
And what happened is at one point she interrupted me and said, what are you doing?
People are laughing.
You're not moving.
And I had been giving all of my attention to the people who weren't laughing.
This one guy, especially I like locked in on him.
He was not finding
me funny. And that's where I went. And when I finally debriefed with her, she said, go
where the love is. Why are you going where it's not? I was like, oh man, jeez. It was
deep, you know? It's like that is the story of my life.
Yeah.
So, what is the practice of clowning though?
Because you said, you know, improv is about, you know, witty repartee and being responsive
to other people, but clowning, you said to me, it's like something you do with your being.
What is the core thing there?
I still don't know.
I mean, the funniest guy was a novelist
who had wanted to get out of his head
and had been practicing for some years.
And all he did was just stand there
with this goofy smile on his face.
And he was the funniest person by far.
It was like he was transmitting humor.
Is there face paint involved?
Nothing, you're naked.
I mean, not literally, but you just have to, you know,
I don't even know what I did.
Like I did some movements, I guess.
I don't, you're so in the moment.
It's powerful.
Super embodied for sure.
Yeah.
So clowning everyone, try it.
Two more things.
One is the Barbra Streisand memoir on audio.
It's 48 hours and I'm not a fan or I didn't think I was.
And some friends recommended it or a few people had listened to it already.
It finished it and said, it's amazing.
It is amazing.
It can be tedious, but she is an incredible person.
And the way she reads it is, I felt like she must have dictated it, but she actually wrote
it by hand first.
And it's just the most entertaining.
There's lots of tea.
Like she gives, you know, a lot of opinions about people.
And it's fascinating.
It's really, really good.
Then the third thing, I think you talked about this
is the, We Are the World documentary.
Oh, so good.
Oh, I can't wait to see it.
I'm the only one who hasn't seen it.
It's Lionel Richie for president.
He's amazing.
He's amazing.
He is incredible. It's, yeah. And's amazing. He's amazing. He is incredible.
It's, yeah, and I don't know what was going on
with Bob Dylan, but I'm really glad
those black men helped him.
They actually were basically teaching him to clown.
It's true.
Just to give some background,
this is a documentary that's on Netflix.
I think it's called The Greatest Night in Pop,
and it's a behind the scenes of the We Are the World song,
the recording of that song and the making of the video.
And there's a crazy scene where Bob Dylan's basically
having a very contained panic attack,
where he's just shutting down.
He can't, because he can't sing like everybody else
in the room.
They brought Bob Dylan who doesn't sing,
he just kind of declaims in a weird, like,
monotone almost song way.
And everybody else is like a diva, like a true diva.
And he's like shutting down.
And then Stevie Wonder and a few other guys
take him over in the corner and write a part for him,
which he ends up singing and it's actually not bad.
Yeah, it was beautiful to watch actually.
It was such a tender moment and everybody's in that room.
It's my entire childhood in that room.
It is incredible.
Although Madonna and Prince both skipped it.
I mean, I love Prince, but.
I'm just gonna say, I hope you listened to the B-side
of We Are the World, which would have featured
if you had noticed Northern Lights,
the Canadian We Are the World.
Oh really?
With Brian Adams and a whole bunch of, and Corey Hart,
and a whole bunch of Canadians here, Hart and a whole bunch of like Canadians
because they came out because Canada had to do the same thing.
It was actually on the B side of the We Are the World, but I don't think anybody could
listen to it.
That's so adorable.
Part of it was in French.
It was like a French, a couple French Canadians.
New song, new love.
Lover Boy.
It wasn't in, it was its own song, which was a good song by the way, I can't
remember what it was called, but Google it, Northern Lights.
There was a great Onion headline, Perky Canada has own government comma laws.
I love Canada, I do, I genuinely love Canada.
Alright, just a couple of recommendations for me, a couple of novels I read Canada, I do, I genuinely love Canada. All right, just a couple of recommendations from me.
A couple of novels I read recently,
Devil Makes Three, I'm in the middle of that right now.
It's Ben Fountain is the writer, it's set in Haiti,
it's unbelievably brilliant.
The Beasting, anybody read that?
No, I think it's probably gonna win the Pillager this year.
I wanna check that out, yeah.
It's very stressful, even though it's just
the life of an Irish family, but it's, I found it very stressful, but it's also very beautiful.
And then I saw a movie that is my pick for best movie of 2023,
American Fiction.
I haven't seen it yet.
It's incredible, really incredible.
It is a movie that has, it made me laugh,
and it was very moving, and it was very moving and it was very smart and it was kind of a trenchant
observation on American race issues and also
extraordinarily funny
Yes, highly recommend it. Have you guys seen poor things yet? I haven't that's the one I have not yet seen it's
Incredible. We'll have to talk with that if we do the next one we do here. It's awesome.
It's super funny.
And it's like someone described it as Barbie on steroids and it is that.
It's very sexy.
Yeah.
I know.
We come back to that word again.
It comes around.
Guys, thank you.
Thank you.
This was great.
Yeah, really fun.
Good to hang out.
I'll tell you the word that comes through my head when I listen to you guys talk, proud.
Proud of both of you as I listen to you talk, but proud to know you both.
So thank you for doing this.
Thank you, Dan.
And we're having a sleepover this weekend.
Seb and Jeff are staying at our house for the weekend.
So much more.
Woohoo!
Yeah, we'll talk about it.
Full party.
Speaking of tea, we'll be spilling some tea.
All right.
Thank you, everybody, for listening.
Thank you, guys. Appreciate it. All right. Thank you, everybody, for listening. Thank you, guys.
Appreciate it.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thanks again to Sab and Jeff.
Don't forget, we've got the live meditation party retreats coming up, one in May, one
in November, at the Omega Institute in Rhinebeck, New York.
You can buy tickets if you go into the show notes or if you just go to eomega.org
or if you just go to my website danharris.com.
Also now that I'm banging on about the show notes, if you go in there you'll find some
links to previous Meditation Party episodes which I highly recommend.
Before I go, I also want to thank everybody who worked so hard on this show.
Our producers are Lauren Smith and Tara Anderson. And we get additional production support from Colin Lester Fleming,
Isabelle Hibbard, Carolyn Keenan, and Wanbo Wu.
Marissa Schneiderman is our senior producer.
Kevin O'Connell is our director of audio and post-production.
DJ Cashmere is our managing producer.
And Nick Thorburn of the band Islands wrote our theme.
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