Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - How to Start (Restart, or Upgrade) Your Meditation Practice: A Master Class | Jon Kabat-Zinn
Episode Date: January 8, 2024Kabat-Zinn on the nitty gritty practicalities of starting a practice, being fully present with no agenda, and letting go of “the story of me.”Jon Kabat-Zinn, PhD, is professor of medicine... emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. Back in the 1970s, he came up with something called Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, or MBSR, which is a secular way of teaching Buddhist meditation. He’s written many books, including Full Catastrophe Living; Wherever You Go, There You Are; and Coming to Our Senses. His latest book is called Mindfulness Meditation for Pain Relief.In this episode we talk about:The nitty gritty practicalities of starting a practiceHow he’s learned to be more relaxed about his practice—including advocating for meditating in bed How to practice being fully present with no agenda How investigating your motivations—something most people don’t do— can help you be more mindful How to practice letting go of “the story of me”Related Episodes:Tripping Out with a Legend: Jon Kabat-Zinn on Pain vs. Suffering, Rethinking Your Anxiety, and the Buddha's Teaching in a Single SentenceJon Kabat-Zinn | Meditation as a Love AffairJon Kabat-Zinn, Creator of Mindfulness-Based Stress ReductionSign 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/jon-kabat-zinn-2024See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This is the 10% happier podcast. I'm Dan Harris.
Hello, my fellow suffering beings, how we doing? If in this new year you are looking to
start or restart
your meditation habit, or if you're already meditating, but you want to up your game,
we have recruited a true ranger for you, a legend. Perhaps more than any other single person,
John Kabatzen is responsible for the explosion of interest in meditation over the last decade
or two. He invented something called mindfulness-based
stress reduction, which took meditation out of a Buddhist context and made it secular and
replicable. In other words, he invented a repeatable eight-week protocol, which allowed scientists
to begin studying what happens when regular people learn how to meditate. And that is in large
measure why we now have all of the scientific
evidence that strongly suggests that short daily doses of meditation can confer a long list
of tantalizing health benefits. John has written many books, including full catastrophe living,
wherever you go, there you are, which was first published 30 years ago, and his latest mindfulness
meditation for pain relief. We cover, among many things the nitty gritty practicalities of starting a practice, how
he's learned to be more relaxed about his own practice, including advocating for meditating
in bed, how to practice being fully present with no agenda, how investigating your motivations,
something most people don't actually do, can help you be be more mindful and how to practice letting go of
the story of me.
This is the third episode in our New Year's series, The Non-negotiables, where we ask smart people what their must-have
practices and life principles are. If you missed it last week, we spoke to Esther Peral and Bill Haider. This week,
it's John Kabat-Zinn, then Pema Chodron, then Ryan Stevenson.
Enjoy this one. I find that talking to great meditation teachers gives me a kind of contact high.
I suspect you may find the same. But first time for a little segment, we call BSP,
blatant self-promotion. Over on the 10% happier meditation app, the free meditation
challenge is live right now. It's called the imperfect meditation
challenge hosted by my friend and colleague Matthew Hepburn and featuring some great teachers,
Carlisle and Don Maricio, also friends and former guests on this show. It lasts for 14
days. It's free. Any idea is to help you disentangle from the shame and perfectionism that can
derail the meditation. You can join now, download the 10% happier app today,
wherever you get your apps.
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John Capitzin, welcome back to the show. My pleasure to be here.
Happy to have you. Happy new year.
Thank you. Thank you. So it is a new year. And we are, as you know, doing this special series
that we're calling the non-negotiables. And so I'm curious for you, do you have a non-negotiable
practice or philosophy or a precept that you're putting into place every day or daily-ish?
philosophy or a precept that you're putting into place every day or daily-ish? I would say so, but I don't think of it as non-negotiable because that gives me
the sense inwardly that I'm fighting with myself or negotiating with myself
or trying to set it up so I will succeed in a certain way and I don't relate
to the practice that way. So in terms of my own life and practice, as we've said in earlier conversations, I see
the formal engagement with meditation as a kind of love affair, and something that is so common, sensical and fundamental to living lifefully and not missing one's moments and the richness
of the opportunity to be alive. For decades, it hasn't been a kind of burden or some kind of
discipline or yes, I get up in the morning at this particular time and I sit no matter what
or yes, I get up in the morning at this particular time, and I sit no matter what on my question,
which was still a love affair,
but getting older, I sort of somehow moved into a space
where it's much less rigid in a certain kind of way,
but in a certain way, more disciplined,
but as a kind of effortless discipline, it's like love.
And if the meditation practice isn't life itself, at least in all waking moments, then I don't
think there's much point in keeping your rear end on the cushion for extended periods of time,
unless it translates off the cushion. So in that sense, my meditation
practice is really living life as if it mattered moment by moment, by moment, and trying
to, in some sense, show up, or even giving up the trying, but simply living one's way
into the present moment and realizing that whatever is unfolding is the curriculum at that
moment.
And that is true, of course, even on the cushion,
because, you know, there's no telling what's gonna come up
once you park your body in one way or another.
And I'm using the cushion metaphorically to include
all sorts of formal meditation practices,
including lying down meditations,
and even lying down meditations in bed, which is something
I never would have advocated my 20s, 30s or 40s. But in my late 70s, I don't think I've
gotten any less rigorous in my connection to the practice. But, you know, if any moment really
is a good moment, then you don't need to necessarily jump out of bed to wake up.
In fact, we always say we're waking up, you know, I woke up this morning, but is it really true?
So it might be actually instrumental to encourage oneself to lie in bed,
say in the corpse pose for a few minutes or 50 minutes or half an hour,
and ask yourself whether that's
really true.
And if not, then why not finish the job in a certain way with, you know, sort of formal
engagement in attending to the body and to awareness itself?
I've made a habit in recent years of when I wake up in the morning, I get up and go to
the bathroom because I'm not my late 70s, but I'm in my early 50s and that seems imperative
when I wake up and go into the bathroom that is, and then I get back into bed and just
meditate for whatever length of time feels right and then go about my day.
But I'm curious if somebody's listening to this, it's early in the year and they've got it in their head that they want to start a meditation practice.
When you sit to meditate, what are you actually doing?
What is your practice?
What does it entail?
What does it involve?
There are a lot of different ways to approach that question.
And if people are brand new to the practice, you do need
certain kind of handholds or kind of structural indicators so that you don't just throw up
your hands and despair and say, well, this is like not doing anything for me. If you actually
approached it in a paradoxical way that nobody's saying this should do anything for you,
that we do this for reasons that are much larger than the kind of instrumental desire to
and then fill in the blank be a better person, be more relaxed, be more compassionate, be more mindful, be more whatever you want, but to actually reframe it as to just be or to fall awake.
Then the way to describe it is that you're not trying to do anything at all. You're simply simply opening to the actuality of the momentary experience of that particular moment and recognizing it.
And sometimes I'll use the language of being the knowing that your awareness is,
so it's not, you're not trying to get relaxed.
You're not trying to wipe thoughts from your mind or have a deep,
warm, compassionate feeling in your chest
or anything like that, or feeling like I'm cultivating relaxation and then that's going
to translate through the rest of my day in some way.
Those are all kind of what I would call instrumental practices and I'm not knocking them by any
stretch of the imagination.
But if you're asking me about how I practice,
I try to sit in a posture
that embodies wakefulness and dignity.
And I am a very strong proponent of sitting on the floor,
if it's possible for your body.
And if it's not to worry about it,
you could do the whole thing in bed
or standing on your head or any
yoga posture or on a chair, straight back chair rather than a big fluffy armchair that
you disappear into. But the most important thing is the interior posture, which includes
the attitude of why would I wake up early and I'm a big advocate of starting
the day this way, just like we're starting the year with various intentions? It says
sometimes like to say, you know, even the greatest musicians say violinists in a symphony
orchestra or whatever, with the greatest strativarius, violins or whatever instruments and
playing the greatest music with the greatest conductors and the greatest orchestras, they still all tune their instrument before they play the program. They tune their instruments,
first their own instrument, and then they tune to each other. And if you think about taking your seed
as a kind of tuning your instrument, then it's sort of almost common-sensical that to do it first
thing in the morning would
be really good before you take it down the road and play it in various conditions at
work or even making breakfast or getting the kids off the school or whatever it is.
Because the instrument is best, is most functional when it is tuned. And when it's not tuned, the problem is that you can very easily fall into domains of
thought and emotion that actually screen your ability to be fully present with whatever's
happening.
And of course, your children will be the first ones to tell you that you're not fully
present because they have fantastic presence detectors.
Actually, all human beings are incredibly, highly tuned presence detectors for other people.
I work with a lot with doctors and I kind of remind them that they've probably also had
the experience of going to a physician for their own health care, and
then knowing that the doctor is not, is somewhat distracted and is not giving them their full
attention. We register that almost instantly, and we feel it at the level of the body and
at the level of the heart and the sense of harm or rejection from something like that.
So that's a muscle we can exercise.
We can practice being fully present with no agenda,
not to get more relaxed or to be a sort of clearer person
or a less emotionally reactive person.
All those things can happen from the meditation practice,
but to just revel in being alive and marvel, I would say, revel and marvel at the
actuality of being alive in that moment with no agenda, not to get to some better place,
with no agenda other than to be fully awake. And then take what comes as part of the curriculum
of that moment without saying, well, I'd have a better meditation
if it weren't for the pain in my back or the thought in my mind or the emotion in my
heart.
But to realize, no, those are just thoughts.
And the real practice is simply being present and seeing what happens.
And it turns out that if you cultivate that and integrate it into your life in that kind of way,
it does over days, weeks, months, and decades actually change.
And in some sense, I would say transform how you live and how you are in relationship to other people
and to virtually everything else inwardly and outwardly.
And it all comes from, you know,
to come back to your original sort of question here.
It all comes from basically taking your seat
as a love affair with the present moment
and not introducing a whole lot of instrumental things
that should come out of your sacrificing a half an hour with your ass on
the cushion, for instance, if you think that it's a sacrifice rather than a sacrament.
I think for many of us, we attempt to meditate and we notice how wild the mind is,
and then a voice in our head tells us a whole story about how we are uniquely distractable.
We probably have undiagnosed ADHD.
I don't know, by the way, I need to move along and I forgot to send that email and I'm out.
I'm over. It's over. I'm done. Right.
Do you at this point in your meditation career need to start your practice with tuning up the muscle of attention in your mind
by focusing, say, on the breath, and then
every time you get distracted, you start again and again.
And again, do you do that before you move into the love affair with the present moment?
Yes, a lot of the time I do.
I mean, you know, when I sit down in the morning at first,
I bring full awareness to the body sitting.
And I sit in a posture that, as I said,
for me, in body's wakefulness and dignity.
And that means, of course, I've been practicing yoga
for almost 60 years and martial arts for decades and so forth.
So I have a particular kind of relationship with my body that knows, so to speak, when
it's, say, the resting on its ligaments, but is erect and dignified, but not forcing
anything.
So the idea is, for a beginner, it would be not falling forward, not falling backwards,
not listing from side to side, and also with a kind of forward-facing, lordotic curve in this
vine. If you're sitting on a Zafu in the Zabaton, that is helped by not sitting on the sort of center
of the Zafu, but on the forward part of it, and that naturally tilts the pelvis forward,
my knees go to the floor, to the Zabatan,
but depending on your body configuration,
your knees may not.
And it may cause a whole range of different kinds of unpleasant
sensations to sit in a posture that you're not used to over some period of time.
I started this practice when I was 21 years old, so my body was really flexible already
because of just being young.
But if you really want to sit in this kind of way, most people, over say a year or two, can shape the body.
So that it does that.
It's like getting your body into shape
for any particular kind of, you know,
sport or performance or anything else.
Yeah, at first, you can't run 20 feet.
And then, you know, sooner or later,
you can run 20 minutes.
And then sooner or later, if you keep practicing,
you run 20 miles.
But it all starts with the willingness to just be where you are.
So sitting on a chair is absolutely fine if it's tortured to be on the floor.
The important thing is what we sometimes call mind sitting, not body sitting.
Body posture is very important, but it's really the kind of platform for opening to and learning how to take
up residency in awareness. And that's really the invitation, as I see it, of mindfulness meditation,
is to take up residency in awareness. And then it doesn't matter what the objects of attention are.
It could be the breath sensations in the body body and the sense of the body as a whole
sitting and breathing in and erect and dignified posture with the vertebrae, you know, sort of
aligning themselves in that natural way from the pelvis right up through the top of the head.
But it can also be in any other posture where you bring full awareness to the body. And as you know, I mean,
the first foundation of mindfulness in the classical Buddhist teaching is mindfulness of the body.
And the breath is an extremely important part of it. So yeah, when I take my seat,
I greet the breath and the body. I'm kind of not with words, but it's kind of welcome the infinite mystery of
the fact that I get one more breath, you know. It's always this moment. So like we know when he
cares about the last breath or the next breath, it's only this breath that's important. And if you
were drowning or underwater, that's the only thing you would care about is this breath.
Yet we take it so much for granted. So it's very helpful for people at the beginning of the meditation practice.
I'm assuming beginning of what might be intentionally thought of as a lifetime of meditation going forward in both formal and informal ways to really befriend the breath
sensations in the body.
But keeping in mind that it's never the object of attention that's most important, whether
it's the breath in the belly or the breath at the nostrils or anything else that you
want to attend to, it's the attending, that is what's most important.
And that is the function of awareness, is to just be present with whatever is arising,
what we sometimes call a Christian-Merti, called, choiceless awareness.
And there are various names for it, and the different Buddhist traditions, Shekantasa and Soto Zen, you know, tradition and Zopchen, the great natural perfection
and the Vajrayana tradition. And these were all in some sense they do a first approximation
different doors into the same room. And so for beginners again, beginning at the beginning of the
year or beginning again, because it's always beginning again. It's like this breath is gone, then now it's this breath and that's gone.
And so it's always right here, right now, that it's not trying to get anywhere else, as
I said, it's about being where you actually are and opening to it.
And you're not trying to get awareness because everybody has it.
It's like our default mode is awareness. We're all born with it.
And so what's the problem? Well, the problem is access to it because we're so distracted and lost in thought and emotions and, you know, sort of the story of me.
Going on constantly in the mind.
in the mind is story of me meditating now, the story of my new year 2024 and whatever it is,
that prevents access to establishing ourselves in awareness as our kind of home base. Like this is where we live, in awareness, and then everything else is like held in awareness.
And an interesting thing about awareness, if you either stop and think about it or investigate
it in the laboratory of formal meditation, is that if you try to find the center of your
awareness, they don't think you're going to find it.
It's like it's almost like it doesn't make any sense.
The question itself doesn't make any sense.
If you try to find the outer edge or the circumference or the periphery of your awareness, I don't think you'll find that either.
Of course, people shouldn't take my word for it, but try for yourself.
But what is that most like in the realm of human experience?
What is that like when there's a kind of domain where there's no center, no periphery?
The only thing I know, of course, I'm trained
as a scientist, so I might know this and other people might not think about it quite that way.
But the only thing that I know that's characteristic of that is space, space itself.
The boundless spaciousness of the universe where they're literally, it's expanding
not from one point outward, but from all points all the time.
So there's no center to the universe.
Nor is there any circumference to it, and it's really hard for the conceptual mind to grok that.
And we don't have to go into all these questions about dark energy and dark matter
and the amazing evolution of the universe. And we can't go into it
because it's so much fun to think that your body, aside from the hydrogen, which came out of the
big bang, virtually all the atoms in your body came out of the nucleus of stars and the heavier ones
like the iron that's in our hemoglobin and the calcium that's in our bones,
even stars aren't hot enough.
So the stars had to explode and supernova to create that kind of heat to make iron and
calcium atoms.
And then lo and behold, they show up in us.
And so Carl Sagan commented on it decades ago that we really are the stuff of stars or star dust or
however you want to put it. But my point is that when you take your seat in the morning,
you are a totally miraculous appearance in the universe. And it's impermanent. You're not
you for all that long compared to a star which has like a lifetime of tens of billions of years, maybe even more for some stars.
Yeah, we get a very, very short human lifespan and the real question and why one would
might meditate for life, not for like two or three months and then you're on to something else,
is to not miss the beauty of it in the only moments we have, and they are numbered.
But they were also an infinite number to a first approximation.
So that's where the love affair comes in.
Like, yeah, let's see what this constellation of atoms that's created, the body and the
natural world that we inhabit on planet Earth and that we're dispoiling. Let's see what this could do if it really woke up to its true
nature.
And that's not to like become something else at some future
moment when we get really good at meditating.
It's like there's no improving on this moment.
You're already whole, WHOLE, no matter what you think is
wrong with you, you're perfect, including all the imperfections.
And when you sit in that kind of a way, it has an effect on how your days can unfold, and
how much trouble you're going to make, good trouble versus bad trouble, or how much you're
going to contribute to optimizing well-being in the world, your own and other people and the planets, and minimizing
harm, a lot of it unintentional, but totally unconscious. So there's a lot riding on it in a certain
way. It's not just like one more thing to have a little less stress in your life or to be a little
bit of a better person, is to realize you are already a better person, so there's no becoming some sort of fictitious, perfect self, but more like understanding the nature
of what we think of as self or myself and realizing that the narratives we tell ourselves
are pathetic.
They're beautiful compared to the true nature of our being on any level or scale you want
to think about.
And that's actually something that's in some sense, not just a personal act of, yeah, I'd
meditate and I do yoga and I eat well and stuff like that for my own personal health.
But it's actually because you're one cell in the body, politic of the planet in a certain way and a humanity.
This is also in a certain way important
for the well-being of the world,
this world, our world going forward.
And I take that very seriously too.
So when I sit in the morning,
I don't think about it in those terms,
but the world is different because I've taken my seat
and you've taken your seat and you've taken
your seat and millions of other people are doing this. That wasn't so much the case. It was more
less isolated and monasteries on mountain tops in Korea and China and all sorts of places in Asia,
but not so much globally. And now, something is happening where mindfulness with however you want to understand it,
and compassion practices, which are not really separate from mindfulness or heartfulness,
are moving into the mainstream of society globally. And I would argue that none too soon, because,
you know, if we don't wake up to our true nature as compassionate, wakeful beings, we're
liable to dispoil the planet in ways that will be irreversible for even our children,
never mind our grandchildren and future generations and also other species.
So the stakes are actually quite high, not that you want to think about any of that when
you take your seat in the morning. Coming up, John Kabatzen, Zyrazin on the nitty-gritty questions of how to start a meditation
practice, and he makes a geopolitical case arguing that building moments of awareness
can transform the world.
Quick reminder, you can join the free 14-day imperfect meditation challenge over on the
10% happier app right now.
It features amazing teachers like Carl I, Don Ricio and Matthew Heppern.
You will discover how embracing imperfection can help you improve your relationship with
meditation.
It's live.
Go check it out.
Let me just get back to something I asked about before. I'm just thinking about this mythical person that I've invented that you and I are both
speaking to in some ways of who's either trying to start a meditation practice or restart
one and who might keep bumping up against this story.
You referenced the fact that we tell ourselves pitiful stories, a very common story among
meditators, especially at the beginning. I know know you hear this all the time, is, I
can't do this.
My mind's too busy.
I can't clear my mind.
I keep getting distracted.
How do you talk to people who have that concern?
Well, it's a misunderstanding of the root instructions.
The idea is not to clear your mind.
The part of you that knows that your mind is unclear or agitated or turbulent,
investigate that part because that part is called awareness.
It's not turbulent or unclear.
We just haven't been taught this in school that we sort of selectively pay attention,
but we don't really know how to attend to our attending.
So, we don't know how to bring awareness to the full dimensionality of awareness itself.
And so, this is kind of new in our culture, and actually, I think it's new in Asian cultures as well, because a lot of the
ancient practices within the kind of more religious context really didn't have to do so much
with liberation as they had to do with other more cultural aspects of Buddhism, say, or
something like that. And there were very few people who were actually doing the deep
you know work that Dalgad was doing and that you know sort of the great
meditators in the various traditions we're doing. And it's funny to even use the word doing in that
case because it's really a being, it's not a doing at all. And, you know, so I don't know what else to say about it, except that it's a radical shift
to actually let go of the domain of doing all together intentionally during periods of formal meditation practice and just drop into being. And what I mean really say that
is being awake or aware. And then learning how to inhabit that is if it was an apartment or a mansion
just a kind of beach or the world where you're simply at home. And there's no curriculum for what's supposed to happen.
It's like you're not improving on yourself. You're understanding that even the word that we use,
when we use the word self, is kind of a construct that has no essential validity in
during validity. So whether it's in your name or your age or whatever
it is, the stories that we generate around the personal pronouns, especially I and me and mine,
very often are so limited and limiting that once we create them, then we are imprisoned by them
and to recognize that when again,
coming back to the formal meditation practice,
when you take your seat in the morning
and just let that stuff play out without believing it
or getting sucked into it,
or seeing that, yeah, you can get sucked into it over
and over and over again, but then the discipline is,
sooner or later, you can notice your sucked into it. and over and over again, but then the discipline is, sooner or later, you're gonna notice your sucked into it.
That's the awareness.
And then you're back.
And so more and more, what happens over time,
it's not that your thinking mind is ever gonna shut down
or you're ever gonna be like totally free of emotions,
but they will not necessarily control you in the same way as they before.
Or if they do, you'll catch it more quickly and write yourself a restraining order or
simply wake up and move in a direction that, again, as I said, optimizes clarity and kindness
and well-being not just for yourself, but for whoever you might be blaming for.
You make me so angry.
I mean, how many people say that?
All of a sudden, you make me so angry.
That's giving somebody else an enormous amount of power over you, and you take virtually
no responsibility for the fact that, hey, wait a minute, I took the bait.
I took it personally.
I believed that I was being thwarted in some way, and I can't stand.
You can feel the energy of what I'm saying, even as I'm saying it.
And that's like, that's all, like, technically called the puncher there.
There are kind of proliferations of thoughts and emotion in the mind that have no substance,
whatsoever, like dreams.
And what we're learning is how to wake up and be embodied and not lost in
thought or emotions, emotional reactivity to such an extent that we dream our way into our grave
without having really ever woken up and maybe even seeing who we're married to with clarity
or who our children or or are grandchildren
because we're seeing our thoughts and narratives and emotional memories and stuff like that
about them rather than in this moment, fresh.
You know, in a certain way, we imprison not just ourselves, but each other in our concepts
about who everybody is.
So it really is about a certain kind of freedom
that's available not after 30 or 40 or 50 years
of heavy duty meditation training
and monasteries or whatever.
But right here, right now, today, today in this moment,
and it turns out this moment's every moment
because it's always this moment.
So there's something about that that's, I don't know, I just
have the sense that more and more people are finding their way to it because of a certain kind of
emptiness associated with living on autopilot, even if it's a very successful
narrative that you wind up. Yeah, everybody else thinks you're terrific and you have all these titles, you have all this prestige and money or whatever it is, but you're a little bit distant from yourself.
That's not a good feeling. So it's almost like a win-win situation to balance all the doing with
being and know who's doing all the doing and that's the love of air.
Does this make any sense to you, Dan, as I talk like this? It is, it's made.
I don't want to have to sound like pie in the sky.
It's now something that's like I engage in a certain kind of way without all this talk
every single day and not just for the hour that we were half hour 45 minutes or however long
it is that I'm sitting and that's to say nothing of the yoga mindful yoga which is like a huge part of my life and just the
different door into the same room of awareness.
I mean, I'm a big advocate of practicing mindful yoga, especially over the decades as the
body ages.
But those formal practices are only the beginning.
Life is the real meditation practice.
So every moment is really the curriculum, so to speak.
The cliche is when you're washing dishes, washing the dishes, or when you're making love,
or you're even there for it.
But it's true for everything when you're hugging your child, you know, whatever it is, can
you drop underneath your narrative about it all and be with the actual apprehending of
it beyond all description, beyond words in a certain way.
That's where Thoreau's quote about going to Walden comes in, you know, where he said some place in Walden, which is all about, it's a kind of rhapsody about mindfulness.
He said, I went to the woods because I wish to live deliberately, to front only the
essential facts of life and see if I could not learn what they had to teach and not when
I came to die, you know, that moment right before you die when you're really wake up,
discover that I hadn't lived. That's the challenge. So, and I like to say, you know, again,
coming back to yoga and the corp's pose, which is said to be the most difficult of all the yoga
poses, why is it called the corp's pose? It's not like a accident, well, we just like had to call it something, you know. It's called the corpse, because the invitation is to actually die to the figments of your imagination
that are constantly creating narrative and instead wake up to being in the body in this moment.
So you're dying to the past and memory and narrative and that way, and to the future and worrying and anticipation
and planning and all that stuff, not that it's all fine, but if it squeezes the present moment,
then you're never alive and if you inhabit the present moment, as far as I know, that's the only
way to transform the world because it's the only way to transform the future. Because if you show
up in this moment fully and not caught in the story of me or the story of us, whatever it is,
then the next moment is going to be different because you were present in this one. And that is
like a virus. It's like COVID. It's like a meme that is infectious. And if you ever encounter somebody who is really present,
we have a very fine game detector for that.
We know it immediately with somebody's more present than we are.
And it's deeply, deeply attractive because they don't have a self-ing agenda.
So it's not all about me.
And in all of a sudden, you feel seen in a certain way
that you don't, if whoever's seeing you is seeing you
through the lens of either their story or your story
or how much you could help me or how much I could help you
or whatever that is.
I mean, all of that is fine on the instrumental level.
But what we're really talking about is this, what is sometimes called the non-instrumental level where there's no
place to go when you practice. There's no place to go. There's nothing to do. You know, and there's
no special state that there is no mind, one mindful state. There are just gazillions of different states and awareness can hold
all of them, but it's not any of them. And it's a mystery. No, no, no, no, scientists,
no, how we generate sentience out of billions of neurons in the brain and gazillions of
trillions of synaptic connections, which are changing all the time. And all of a sudden,
like you get sentience, and now we're worried about that with general AI because you know the
thought is like by the fifth or sixth iteration of these machines training
themselves for the next generation maybe they'll become sentient and you know I
mean serious people think about that and I don't know what the odds are around that, but maybe human beings need to wake up to being sentient in our fullness before
the machines get the upper hand, so to speak, because we've been asleep at the wheel.
This is a lot of fun for me.
I enjoy listening to you talk.
And yeah, I mean, I I spend my days
interviewing great meditation teachers and there are at least two common
denominators that I've noticed. One is they tend not to take themselves very
seriously. The great ones. I think you would qualify in my mind. You probably
wouldn't refer to yourself as great, but I will. And the second is, there's a kind
of contact high that I as a listener get when I'm talking to somebody who's done a lot
of meditation or.
Right. Yeah, well, I think there's something to be explored in that because what is a
contact high except, again, now I'm sort of riffing on my own experience, not yours so much, but a sense of like
recognition of something important that's kind of below the surface of ordinary awareness and all
of a sudden you see like, oh that person kind of embodies it, you know, that's a projection of
course because you don't really know that person, even if the Dalai Lama or whoever, you know,
put on a pedestal,
it's a human, real human being.
But people have done a lot of work on themselves
in the kind of way that we're talking about.
I agree there, you know,
without idealizing anybody or reifying
some kind of perfect wisdom or anything like that,
because we're still mortal human beings
and totally fallible, that there is this sort of like that, because we're still mortal human beings and totally fallible,
that there is this sort of sense that at least they're not so self-centered that nothing
else really matters.
It's just the universe according to me.
And the movie is, you know, the story of me, starring me, you know, the greatest thing
to ever hit reality or the planet. And I think that's
the opposite of compassion and the sort of recognition that for all the narratives around
the personal pronouns, selflessness, the recognition of how profoundly spacious we are, because as we said, if awareness is boundless,
then you don't need to worry about who you are, because you're the entire universe, and you can embrace
the other and simply be in a way that doesn't have to do with optimizing anything from a me, because
optimizing anything from a me because there's no self-centered ambition or attachment to something happening.
And I feel like if we all related to each other with that kind of deep appreciation for
the intrinsic beauty of being alive, then we could cover ourselves differently. I mean, really, cover ourselves in our own life,
even how we use the 24 hours,
you know, and getting up in the morning to meditate.
It's the kind of governing yourself.
And getting out of bed, that's even more challenging
than just practicing in bed.
It's not better, but there's something to be said about
actually getting out of bed and, you know,
sitting or lying down or doing whatever
one's formal practices are. And I've been thinking about this more and more because the word Dharma
which is the word that's used to describe the Buddha's teachings and the Buddha himself said that
mindfulness is the heart of the practice is the direct path to liberation.
So the word Dharma, with a capital D, is often used to describe the Buddha's teachings,
and they are manifold.
They're just like huge numbers of teachings over the 45 years or so that he taught.
But the word Dharma with a small day means lawfulness. It's kind of like
the Tao in Chinese. And so lawfulness is like if we are in tune with the profound Tao or Dharma
of the world, then non-harming becomes virtually axiomatic. And mindfulness will show you how much you may be drifting away from that,
because of othering, for instance, and you start harming people just in your thoughts.
You start diminishing or devaluating some people and taking sides with other people,
and creating a kind of a situation that is in some sense very human and in another
sense, and I think one that humanity has to really rise to, and learn how to govern
ourselves differently, to minimize war and killing and genocide and suffering, is to recognize
that we're all fundamentally the same,
underneath all the labels and the self-ing and stuff
like that.
And so there's something about that word, Dharma, both
as the teachings of liberation from the point of view
of meditative awareness, and how we govern ourselves
in our own lives, Buddhist take precept Buddhists take precepts, you know.
Monastics take hundreds of precepts,
but regular people when they practice
in a Buddhist tradition will often for a retreat,
say to a week retreat or so might take five precepts,
you know, one of which is, you know, not killing
or not harming or not by being intoxicants
and stuff like that, you know,
we need to govern ourselves in a way that's not just on retreat,
but for the entire arc of a human life.
And that now we need to develop new levels of governance in the world.
Again, to minimize harm and to maximize good without it being warped or shaped.
Like space is warped by gravity by like very large
Galactic masses, you know what we need is to jump to an entirely new level of being human on this planet and
Outlawing in terms of governance outlawing
certain kinds of
Behavior whether it's on the port of corporations or whether it's on the port of corporations, or whether it's on the part of
religious warriors, or whether it's on the part of any agency that would seek their own benefit
over the greater good of, let's say, the entire earth, not just humans. And of course, nobody knows
how to do that, and it sounds like utopic, but that may be
the curriculum of the moment, if we're going to actually move to some kind of new level
of being on this planet, given what I said about machine learning and next levels of artificial
general intelligence, and what is the purpose of humans anymore?
In this new world that we created, and with the suffering that we have created
as human beings, a lot of it totally gratuitous.
And, you know, so there's a political in some sense or a body-politic element to this
that I think has always been there.
I mean, we transform ourselves and we've already transformed the world into a certain way.
Coming up, John talks about getting interested in the question of life before death, not after death.
We zero in on the practicalities of how to start a meditation practice,
and we talk about investigating your motivations, which I believe most people don't actually do,
but can be very, very helpful.
I wonder if I could ask a few more practical questions about starting a meditation habit. Absolutely.
First of all, I wouldn't call it habit.
Okay.
Why not?
The word habit has a lot of downside to it because there's so many negative habits smoking is a habit.
Gambling is a habit. I don't want to turn meditation into a habit. What I think we want
is to offer it as a way with a capital W, actually, a way of being. Because we're being
anyway, we're going through our lives, we're going to die.
The question isn't an Oprah once asked me this.
I don't know if I've mentioned this to you in other podcasts, but I was once talking
with Oprah.
She was filming away and she had all the list of questions that she was going to ask.
And at a certain point, she just, you know, out of nowhere asked her next question, which
was, John, what do you think about life after death?
And I said to Oprah, I virtually no interest in the question of life after death.
I'm interested in the question of whether there's life before death.
And I was deadly serious, sorry, for the pun, serious about it, because what often passes for life is just kind of like
driven automaticity that disregards your own beauty, never mind the beauty of others and of nature,
and what this is about, coming back to the word habit, is really that it's a way of rebooting yourself. It's like starting over.
You know, it's just like cancel that, let it be what it was.
We're not denying any of what was in the past moment.
But this moment, this breath, new beginning, this out breath complete letting go.
And simply sometimes I'll use the word awareness thing, just being awareness with no agenda,
other than to wake up.
And this is the way to wake up is to just be awake, be aware.
We all have it already, as I said,
so it's not like we have to get good at this
or be good at just stringing moments together
in a kind of disciplined way.
And then yes, of course, it is transformative and healing
and in profound ways over time. But it's also about not having to get anywhere else in this moment
to be a better person, but actually recognize that you're already whole and already beautiful
and with the years, you know, you only get older, but it's never going to be better than in this moment.
So it's a perfect moment for practice. And then just let it spill out. So let's go with what you're suggesting.
And sort of zero in on all of the kind of needy-gritty questions or practice that maybe you want to review or ask.
Yeah. So instead of habit, let's say start a meditation practice.
Yeah, a formal meditation practice.
Yeah, is there a time of day, a length of practice,
a flavor of practice?
All of these nitty gritty questions that people have,
I know what my answers are generally,
but I'm curious how you answer it.
You mentioned meditating in the morning
is that the time that one really should do it?
Well, I don't know what other people's lives are, but MBSR, mindfulness-based stress
reduction, was designed to teach meditation to people who ordinarily would never cross paths
with it at all, but when they're referred by their doctors for one kind of medical condition
or another, a lot of it often associated with pain of one kind or another and suffering.
They actually engage in practice.
And people often ask me, well, why did you establish like 45 minutes a day,
six days a week, is the kind of core practice of MBSR?
And the answer was like, well, if I made it 50 minutes or 20 minutes, it
might not be long enough for people to get bored or for discomfort to sit in or for anxiety
or on-way to sit in. And of course, if those minds States don't have time to appear, you
won't have time to, you know, you won't have the opportunity to actually see how to be in
wiser relationship with them through the lens practice. So 45 minutes a day, six days a week was
like the foundation of MBSR and that was in 1979. Now it's like 44 years later and for the vast
majority of MBSR programs, they're still doing 45 minutes a day, six days a week.
So there are arguments for that. On the other hand, if you're not doing MBAs in a hospital with a really good teacher,
and you're just trying on your own, with an app or with guided meditations, or just on your own, with the no guidance,
time doesn't really matter what matters is the love, what matters is the intention.
And if your intention is not to get better or to improve on yourself or to become a great
meditator, but to simply drop into your life and live it in moments where you're not
filling it with doing, but just experiencing being, then time of day doesn't really matter how long you practice,
doesn't matter either. Play with it, experiment, be the kind of scientist of your own motivation.
And motivation is extremely important here. I mean, people who decide hearing this podcast or
some of your other guests or whatever, they may get motivated to practice.
How long that lasts, you know, of New Year's resolutions and everything, we know how long
that lasts.
So yeah, and that is holiness, the Dalai Lama is very, very powerful on this point.
Motivation is everything.
So you have to inquire in a certain way, what is my deep motivation for doing this?
Is it just self improvement or a little relaxation or a little less, what is my deep motivation for doing this? Is it just self-improvement or a little relaxation
or a little less, or anger management
or something like that?
Or is it that I have a feeling
that I'm actually missing some essential element
in my life that maybe I remember from when I was three
or four or five years old
and that somehow it got squashed
whether it was in school or not recognized by my parents or whatever and bullied or whatever it was in my social
engagements. And I kind of got on to a trajectory where some of me got left behind.
Robert Bligh talks about it in a very beautiful way, 30 years ago when Robert Bligh was doing his
stuff, the great poet Robert Bligh. You know, where he said, you know, we're all born with a sort of a bag that we have over our
left shoulder, he said. And over time, when you wanted to social situations where people shame you
or they blame you or one way or another, you feel bad about yourself, you take what you did
and you're real self and you stuff it into this bag. And by the time you're 30 years old,
the bag is like, you know, a mile long and getting caught in elevators when you get into the elevator.
And you're kind of like you've stuffed some of the most beautiful aspects of yourself because
you didn't realize that that beauty was not to be denied. And you tried to sort of make yourself socially acceptable or whatever
it is, which is never a good strategy for being yourself.
And so I think there's a way when you devote yourself, where come to the idea that you
want to live a more mindful life, live a more heartful life,
because the words mind and heart are the same word
in pretty much all Asian languages I'm told.
And so if you hear mindfulness
and you're not hearing compassion or heartfulness,
you're not really understanding what this is.
That's why I'd say it really is a love affair.
But not a love affair that self-centered,
you know, like me on the star,
but the exact opposite of inquiring
into how empty those personal pronouns are, that you don't know who you are. And that not knowing
is part of awareness and is beautiful, absolutely beautiful. So to start a meditation practice,
presumably the people who are listening to this may be something that you or I are saying
is resonating with them and saying, you know what, this is speaking to some aspect to
me that's like actually very old. It's been around as long as I can remember, but I've
never accorded it any time or energy. So let me kind of give it a certain kind of
nourishments with a formal time that I'm going to actually devote to this, whether it's
pleasant or unpleasant doesn't matter or neutral, whether I have a good meditation, in quotes,
or bad meditation, does no such thing.
As I was saying earlier, awareness is awareness, so awareness of good feelings find, awareness
of bad feelings equally fine, awareness of anger, awareness of murderous rage, whatever it is, it's all fine because
it's the awareness, that is what's most important.
And when you can bring awareness to rage or to feelings of self-loathing or anything
like that, you can do this powerful experiment or pain in the body. You ask yourself, is my awareness of this low thing or pain or whatever it is?
Actually, experiencing that and the answer will be no.
The awareness is just simply bigger.
And it can see all those thoughts and emotions as like waves on the surface of the ocean,
they come, they go, and we don't have to take them personally.
When we don't take them personally,
then we discover a totally new dimension
of our own humanity, and that can become
the place out of which we live and act
and operate and love.
Everybody will do it differently.
It's not like everybody will look like they belong
to some mindfulness cult.
No, there is no mindfulness cult.
I sincerely hope there's no mindfulness cult.
And not devotee to great teachers or anything like that.
The devotion needs to be to awareness itself.
It's completely impersonal.
And we can be incredibly grateful and express that gratitude for.
However, it was that we
encountered the practice and it started us on our own journey and I know
everybody who has ever meditated extensively in their lives actually
remembers the moment that they really knew this was not some gimmicky thing
that they were going to take up for a moment and then let pass.
They remember the moment when they knew, this is it for me.
This is it.
This is for life in a certain way.
And I love that.
And I've asked hundreds of people that, and nobody doesn't know when that moment happened
in a key voice, certain feelings and emotions and memories about what one's
apprehension was, what one saw and what one felt.
So again, that's another way of saying that my motivation for doing this myself to have
this conversation with you at the turning point in the year is that if this program and all your other guests can be instrumental in tilting things
in the direction of greater authenticity that we're living the lives that are ours to live,
rather than some fiction that we make up driven by either fear or insecurity or unexamined
ambition that's actually aggression expressing expressing itself in somewhere or other.
The world is instantly different because we're transforming what it means to be human or reclaiming,
I would say, what it means to be human in the form of you.
One last question for me, there are so many flavors you referenced this earlier.
There's so many flavors of meditation. You can meditate on the breath
You can do body scan. You can do it sitting up lying down
You can do loving kindness meditation compassion meditation sympathetic joy meditation open awareness
Zen meditation Tibetan Vajrayana Zogchen meditation
How do we even begin to figure out which style is for us?
Not to mention the Vedic and transcendental meditation.
This is just as Richie Davidson, our mutual friend, likes to say the word meditation is kind
of like the word support.
Yeah.
Yeah.
My moniker of the moment is many doors, same room.
Mm-hmm.
Doesn't matter.
What door you enter.
You don't stand in the doorway and say, wow, this doorway is beautiful and all the other
doorways are like, you know, just can't compare to my doorway, you know, or my teacher,
or my tradition.
The problem isn't the doorway or the teacher or the tradition, but the my is a big problem.
That's self-identifying.
So to a first approximation, all the doorways,
of course, are different.
If you have a big hall and you got 20 doorways,
yeah, we all know every doorway is unique, right?
Because it's located where it is
and it's not where some of the doorway is.
So the view is different inwardly and outwardly.
But once you enter the room,
doesn't matter which door you came in.
And the room is the room of the human heart.
When it is willing to put the welcome mad out to itself, I don't know why it's just,
I know why it just popped into my mind that famous poem which I've probably recited for you
in other programs by Derek Walcott called
Love After Love because it's talking about just that when you will love again the stranger
who was yourself. Give wine, give bread, give back your heart to yourself to the stranger
who has loved you, all your life who you have ignored for another who knows you by heart.
And then he says,
take down the love letters from the bookshelf, the photographs, the desperate notes. So that's like
your whole story of me, your whole history, the take down the love letters, the photographs,
the desperate notes, the full catastrophe of the story of me. Peel your own image from the mirror
of me, peel your own image from the mirror, and then the last words of the poem, sit, feast on your life. So here's somebody who, you know, didn't do Buddhist meditation or any other
kind of meditation as far as I know, he got to it, however he got to it. And when he says sit, I don't think he actually means sit like, you know, is a monk or something
like that or not.
But just beyond any tradition, take your seat in your life, show up, be awake and aware,
and love again, the stranger who was yourself.
That means reclaim all your narratives and then be the knowing and the not knowing what
the whole thing is all about.
And when I say the knowing and the not knowing, that's what awareness is.
I mean, we need to be aware of how much we don't know, but think we do and have opinions
about. And so, yeah, it's important to be aware of
what it is that we know and feel in our values and our, you know, ethical foundation, which is absolutely
key to this practice of non-harming. But we also have to, just like every great scientist,
what we know can be profoundly blinding and oppressive because it, in some sense, creates
some kind of barricade to what is right over the horizon that we may not know yet.
And there were like an insight into the nature of things would produce a new view, like
all of a sudden, an aha moment.
I mean, scientists, you know, know this,
because, you know, this moment of discovery, whether you're the only person on the planet
that has realized this thing, whether you're Albert Einstein and, you know, general relativity
or special relativity or, you know, whoever, that that not knowing is really important. So awareness, mindfulness is both being the knowing,
it's an invitation to actually live in that space of knowing
and the knowing of not knowing.
And that's really pregnant, feconed with possibility
for insight and for, say, an appreciation of people you may not
have appreciated in the past or see how you write some people off or some things off or
you know, you get caught in, you know, sort of one thing or another with only partial
information about it.
And to find a way to live with integrity and then take stands,
become an activist, so to speak, of mindfulness, where you take stands,
but really deeply informs stands that might help contribute to the kind of governance I've
been pointing to where we create boundaries that make it less allowable to
cause harm in all the infinite number of ways we're so good at and actually make unbelievable
fortunes causing harm as much of corporate America does.
So minimizing the harm in whatever ways we can and maximizing benefit and well-being
and peace and health. You know, it's not a rocket science. It's something where the
Congress would benefit enormously from being more mindful and practicing together, sitting
together before making decisions, you know. Of course, there's a long way
before we can reach a point like that, but it's also true that things happen very
fast when they happen. 50 years ago, nobody would have predicted that millions and
millions of Americans would be meditating and that the NIH would be funding
millions and millions, scores of millions of dollars every year to fund meditation
research and mindfulness research in particular, that would have been considered the heart of insanity
and yet it's come to pass. And so I for one really want to stay in the kind of
in the kind of non-deluded, but really open-hearted kind of appreciation of possibility, and that everyone of us is in some sense an exponent of that.
Emily, they can say, I dwell in possibility of fairer house than prose.
And prose is that kind of the near thinking that carries you away from your meditation
practice.
And then possibility is the awareness that just opens to,
oh, that's the mind just doing itself.
And I don't have to get caught up in it.
And when you exercise that muscle over days, weeks, months, years, decades,
the right to your grave as far as I can see,
in a certain way you're contributing as best you can to not only your
own life, but the life of the world in ways that are non-trivial and going to be more and more
essential in the coming decades. John Kabatzen always a tremendous pleasure to talk to you and
thank you for your time. I really, really appreciate it. I love talking with you, Dan, and I love our connection over so many years and
may it be a benefit and a deep bow to you for everything that you're doing to
curate in some sense the kind of interface between this sort of ordinary world
and the world of possibility that, by the form of the soul, whatever you want to
call it, can offer to people.
And I just bow to you for the work that you do in a position you take in the world in that kind
of a way. It's like really beautiful. Thank you.
Thanks again to John Kabatzen. If you want to hear more of our New Year's non-negotiable
series, check out the links that we dropped into the show notes. And if you want to hear more of John Kabetzin,
we've dropped in some links from his previous appearances
on this show.
Thank you for listening, really appreciate it.
Go sign up for the newsletter,
but where we sum up the learnings from each episode,
you can find a link to that in the show notes.
Thank you most of all to everybody who works so hard
on this show.
10% Happier is Produced by Gabrielle Zuckerman, Justin Davy, Lauren Smith and Tara Anderson.
DJ Kashmir is our senior producer.
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