Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - Karamo: How to Actually Do Self-Love (January, 2021)
Episode Date: December 22, 2021With the approach of the new year (and perhaps New Year’s resolutions) we’ve decided to replay a very popular episode, featuring one of the most prominent proselytizers for self-love, Kar...amo from Queer Eye.Karamo was the first openly gay black man on reality TV when he appeared on MTV's The Real World Philadelphia back in 2004. When he left TV and found out he was a dad, he got custody of his son, adopted his son's half-brother and worked for a decade as a social worker before returning to the media world. He's now the culture expert on the blockbuster Netflix reboot of Queer Eye. Karamo also hosts his own podcast and is the author of a memoir, as well as a children's book, which he co-wrote with his son. In today’s conversation, we talk about why, for Karamo, learning to love himself started with learning to love his first name; how he overcame negative messages inside his abusive childhood home; why men struggle so much with the concept of self-love; and the areas in his own life where he struggles the most to practice what he preaches. Click here to give a gift subscription of the Ten Percent Happier app. Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/karamo-repostSee 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.
Hey, hey, I am keenly aware that self love may sound to some of you more than a little
cliched or maybe even more than a little impossible.
But trust me, it is neither.
It is not about becoming self-obsessed or becoming so blissed out that you become a passive potato,
self-love, or you might use the word self-compassion, is real and nuanced work, and it is backed up by science.
It's also a bit of a paradox.
One of the best ways to make lasting change is to first accept yourself and be cool with yourself.
So as we approach the new year, a time when many of us are gearing up to make resolutions,
we are going to replay today one of the most popular episodes of the last few years.
My guest is one of the most prominent proselytizers for self-love.
He's somebody who knows what it is to struggle and to mess up and to come out on the other side with self-love. He's somebody who knows what it is to struggle and to mess up and to come out on the
other side with self-love. And he spent the last several years telling his story and helping other
people directly as well. Karamo was the first out gay black man on reality TV when he appeared on
MTV's The Real World Philadelphia back in 2004. But then he left TV and found out he was a dad.
He got custody of his son, adopted his son's half-brother, and worked for a decade as a social worker
before returning to the media world.
He's now the culture expert on the blockbuster Netflix reboot of Queer Eye,
which is a great show.
I had not been watching it, but a lot of the younger staffers at 10% happier
encouraged me to watch it, and it's actually pretty amazing.
Karamo also hosts his own podcast, and is the author of a memoir as well as a children's
book, which he co-wrote with his son. In this conversation, we talk about why for Karamo
learning to love himself started with learning to love his name. We talk about his learning to overcome negative messages
that were embedded in his abusive childhood home about whether self-love is selfish, why men
seem to struggle so much with the concept of self-love, and the areas in Karamo's own life where
he still struggles to practice what he preaches. One item of business, if you're still looking for a holiday gift,
you can avoid the supply chain woes and send your loved ones
mindfulness this year with a subscription to the 10% happier app.
We're offering gift subscriptions at a discount through the end of this month.
No shipping required, your gift will be delivered directly
to your email inbox.
Get a gift subscription by visiting 10% dot com slash gift.
That's 10%. One word all spelled out dot com slash gift.
Okay, we'll get started with Karamo right after this.
Before we jump into today's show, many of us want to live healthier lives,
but keep bumping our heads up against the same obstacles over
and over again. But what if there was a different way to relate to this gap between what you want to do and what you
actually do? What if you could find intrinsic motivation for habit change that will make you happier instead of
sending you into a shame spiral? Learn how to form healthy habits without kicking your own ass unnecessarily by taking our
healthy habits course over on the 10% happier app.
It's taught by the Stanford psychologist Kelli McGonicle and the great meditation teacher, Alexis Santos,
to access the course.
Just download the 10% happier app wherever you get your apps or by visiting 10% calm.
All one word spelled out.
Okay. On with the show.
Hey, y'all. It's your girl, Kiki Palmer.
I'm an actress, singer and entrepreneur on myall, it's your girl, Kiki Palmer. I'm an actress, singer, and entrepreneur.
On my new podcast, Baby This is Kiki Palmer.
I'm asking friends, family, and experts the questions that are in my head.
Like, it's only fans only bad.
Where did memes come from?
And where's Tom from, MySpace?
Listen to Baby This is Kiki Palmer on Amazon Music
or wherever you get your podcast.
Haramma, thank you for coming up.
I'm excited to be here with you. And thank you for all the work that you're doing in this space.
Like you said, that can be cheesy sometimes, but it's very necessary.
I am fully in agreement.
And I want to say that I've been watching a lot of you on TV recently
and enjoying it thoroughly.
It's an incredible show and you do a great job.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
It's quite the blessing.
You work in this, I've been in this industry now for about six years though.
Back in the day, I did something on reality television, after college.
I don't really count that as part of the career because it took me 12 years of doing nothing to come back and you only dream of being able to be on something
that's going to make an impact that people are going to love.
And so I'm just like pinching myself every single morning.
Well, that's gratitude.
Another potentially cheesy subject, which maybe we'll touch on today. I talk about this all the time on my show, which is that it's, you know, a lot of the clichés
are annoying because they're cliché, but also they're true.
And there is a real service in sort of diving in and talking about them in a way that makes
them accessible.
So let's talk about self-love.
Why is self-love so important to you? I'll just point out that in episode
one of season five, you are wearing a t-shirt that says be kind to yourself. So why is this
so important to you? Well, for me, it really stems from the fact that being black, gay,
born to immigrant parents and living in Texas, You hear a lot of people saying a lot of negative things to you consistently.
I don't remember a part of my childhood where I ever felt fully accepted or ever felt
like people ever fully wanted me around.
There was always spaces I walked into where either overtly people would tell me that whatever
part of my identity was in that room they didn't like
or I would feel it as I walked into a new friend's home and the parents would watch me as I
played in the room or watch me as I went to the restroom as if something was going to be stolen
or as if I walk into a room and someone fives I'm gay and then they start, you know, asking me,
well, have you been to church? So your parents not taking to your church or little things to let me know
that they have a problem with me. And when you live that type of existence, you start to find yourself
really in a very down and depressed state very often. There's many times I would not like myself,
I wish that was someone else, even not to my name.
For the majority of my high school years
in middle school, I didn't go by Kouramo
because I was tired of people, you know,
teachers saying, Kukamu, Kakaka, oh my gosh.
And then the Kakakani of Laster from the kid,
and then the teachers never, even after a full school year
Still never being able to get my name right. You start to be like oh just call me KK. Call me KB
I started making up all these nicknames all of this was part of the journey
I had to go to to find love of myself and
It was so important for me to find that love because once I found the love of every single piece
of my identity, once I found that self-love
of who I was and who I continuously was growing to be,
is when I started to be more confident,
is when I started to be able to say to people,
hey, I know that you might be on your own journey
of trying to understand all of my identities,
which is fine for you, but just know
as you're on your journey, it is not going to affect me loving myself on my journey.
It's not going to affect me being kind to myself. It's not going to affect me
from still knowing that I deserve a happy and good life just as you deserve one
as well. And so that's why self love is such an important thing to me because
it's something I didn't have at first that I had to
truly work to get. It takes a lot of courage what you're describing and just to go deeper on that,
I understand that lack of acceptance was there in your own home with your dad who was, if I've
got it right, quite abusive. Yeah, my father was physically abusive to my mother.
He wasn't physically abusive to me as a child, but he was emotionally abusive.
But there was both conscious and unconscious emotional and mental abuse that was happening
in my home.
And I say this because I think people need to understand that when people are in your home,
especially sometimes if we get older,
we don't realize how we could be hurting
another person next generation.
So yes, there was things that my father was consciously
saying to me, but there was even things that he would be
doing that he didn't realize.
For instance, my father is of Jamaican descent.
He's also a Rastafarian.
Rastafarians are very beautiful people, very time people.
But my father had his own demons
he was struggling with as he was starting his journey to become a Rossopharian.
One of those journeys is that he couldn't reconcile his relationship with his religion with
his relationship with his son.
And that battle within him caused him to do unconscious things of like dancing to music
that was particularly homophobic.
I mean, there was a song that was popular in the 90s that people have heard about from an artist named
Busy Bontan who has since denounced the song and apologized. The lyrics were literally
boomed by by in a Batsy Boy's head and Batsy Boy is the pat what or um... jimicin dialect
um... and boxy wise mean homosexual and so it was boom boom which is shoot shoot
a gay man and the head and this was put under a very catchy beat and jimicins and
Caribbean people worldwide and some americans would be dancing to this
as well as my father was in this household and saying consciously negative things to me,
he was also putting this song on at family gatherings
and having family members who I did feel accepted
and loved by dancing to this song
because they did not understand that it was hurting me.
And so I had to kind of get to the place
of being able to help him understand.
These are your conscious emotional behaviors and these are your unconscious emotional behaviors that are abusing.
And you need to be aware of them for everyone to have a chance to grow and so it was hard because you're getting it from all direction consciously and unconsciously and that will continuously chip away at yourself a steam in yourself love.
yourself a steam in yourself a love, but I have to continuously find the ability to look in that area and practice staying good things to myself, to go myself a steam back up and
find itself love.
Well, he took me just where I wanted to go because I think a lot of people will have the
question, how do I do this?
We've acknowledged that it can sound a little sappy, although it is really, really important
and you've made that case very well, But how to actually operationalize this advice?
Yeah, no, I'm totally with that because I have those same questions. And also I used to
hate what people talked about yourself with steam growing up because it always sounded
like this very like floaty thing in the air, self-esteem, like you can't really touch it.
You know what's there? You know, and I always had a problem with it. And as I got older, I realized that self-esteem is nothing but the words we practice
saying to ourselves. And you know, I challenge most people who are listening right now to think
about when you wake up in the morning and you're getting ready for work. The minute we step in front
of that mirror or we start getting dressed, the first thing we start doing is being like, oh, this doesn't fit anymore.
Ugh, look at my hair, it doesn't look good.
Ugh, my nose, ugh, I want, ugh, you make these clear indications to yourself in the mirror
of the things you don't like about yourself.
And what you're doing in that moment is all you're doing is practicing the opposite of
self-love.
You're practicing the opposite of a healthy self-esteem.
You're practicing, saying negative things to yourself.
And so I realize immediately that in the morning time,
all I had to do was start practicing,
saying one positive thing about myself in that mirror.
And it sounds so again, like, flighty, you know, whatever.
And, but it works.
As I'd walk into the room and I would say I want to say something negative about myself
I would immediately stop and say okay find something on your body or find something on your face or find something about who you are
That you could say is politics and I'm talking about this start-up with early on immediately. I'm like I like my eyebrows
I mean that sounds crazy, but I'd look in the mirror
I'd be like oh this eyebrow cute today like it's
sitting right. And it was just enough for me to hold on to just enough.
So that I can say, you know what?
Okay, tomorrow I can find something else.
And then what would happen in that day where I would get negative narratives or negative
comments being thrown at me from the outside world.
Every time that would happen, I'd be like, well, you know what?
You might have said that, but at least my eyebrows are cute. And I would say that to myself. And I'd be
practicing sort of a barrier to the negative things that would come out to me. And it's only
because I had established in the morning time what it was that I loved about myself that day.
And every day, it got stronger. I added one more thing, added one more thing, until the
point where I found myself just being able to say, you know what, I added one more thing onto the point where I found myself
just being able to say, you know what,
I don't care what you say because I love this,
I love me, I still find myself wanting to improve things,
but now I don't let that improvement shackle me,
I don't let that improvement bring me down.
I practice daily saying the things I love about myself,
knowing that even as I'm on a path to change
or grow in ways that I want to, not
because other people want me to, I can still love myself.
Much more of my conversation with Karamo right after this.
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There's a lot of great stuff in there. I just want to sort of emphasize a bunch of it,
and then I have a question. You can have a desire to work on yourself that doesn't come from aggression,
but in fact comes from affection.
That is doable.
And there is evidence here.
A few days ago, we posted an episode
from a psychologist named Chris Germer.
He's one of the leading experts in what's known
as self-compassion.
And he talks a lot about replacing the negative dialogue,
sort of counter-programming
against the habitual negative dialogue you have with a more positive dialogue.
Yep. However, that does lead me to a question for you, which is, you're quite a bit younger than
I am, but there used to be an SNL character played by the now, I guess, let's call them controversial.
Some people believe he's disgraced, although there's been pushback against that
senator from Minnesota, Al Franken, Democrat.
He used to be a comedian and he would play a character
on SNL who would look himself in the mirror.
I think his name was Stuart Smalley
and he would look himself in the mirror and say something like,
you're good, you're something and God got it, people like you.
And so how do you, this sort of looking in the mirror and saying and finding something
positive and affirming that about yourself?
How do you protect that from becoming just sort of being conceited or just self-puffery
or sort of empty praise?
I think one of the things for me is it's about, I remind myself that I'm keeping the compassion up
and I'm keeping the ego down.
Keeping the compassion up, keeping the ego down.
And that's part of my daily reminders.
There's a couple of things that I remind myself daily.
One of the beauties of a smartphone
is that you can set reminders for yourself.
And I have little alarms that go off that say,
like meditate now, find time for yourself,
you know, love yourself right now, do little things,
and I have one of them is saying,
keep the compassion up, ego down,
which that is a reminder to me that what I'm doing right now
is the act of being compassionate to myself.
I'm loving myself in a way that's not to harm anyone else
because I now have this ego or this grand austerity.
It's about me trying to say, I'm gonna hug me,
I'm gonna give myself a little bit of a hug right now,
but it's not about me saying, I'm better than someone else
because I'm now falling in love with my eyebrows,
I fall in love with whatever.
And I think that's the key is remembering,
this is just for you to feel protected,
to feel safe, to feel love,
is not for you to then repeat the behavior you experience
and start to make someone else feel bad.
So keep the compassion up, ego down.
And I think when you can say that to yourself,
it's a quick little reminder of,
yeah, I'm in the mirror right now,
but this is for me to help me
and not to start to want to hurt anyone else.
I like that.
Compassion up, compassion toward myself up, ego down.
This isn't about building myself up at somebody else's expense.
It's about, as we said before, counteracting some of the negative storylines that we
were either telling ourselves or other people are telling us.
I've said many, many times, perhaps to the point of being annoying that self-love
can come off as cheesy. Do you think there's something about men in our culture that really blocks
us from embracing this approach? Yeah, what blocks us is society. The BS of society has fed us,
and that's the problem with it. I mean, we literally live in a society where we are not allowed to be holistic.
You know, when men are fully authentic and are their whole selves, all of a sudden it's like,
no, no, no, no, no, no, I feel uncomfortable with you, you know, showing emotions.
It makes you somehow less of a man.
And we hear this narrative being pushed to us as boys
from early on.
And one of the things that I love about my show,
Queer Eye, is that we break down that
and let men see immediately that their vulnerability
is their strength, their vulnerability is sexy.
I have a story that I told before that,
it was the first time I really realized
how horrible our society grooms men when it comes
to sharing what they're going through.
We all know as children, you know, a baby cries
whether it's a little girl or a little boy,
you run to them, you support them, you help them.
And then somewhere as the children get older,
we say, okay girls, you can still continue on this journey
to be smart, strong and vulnerable, boys, journey to be smart, strong, and vulnerable.
Boy, you can be smart and strong, but you can't be vulnerable.
And I was on the football team, and I was running down the field, and I hurt my leg.
Later found out that it was broken.
And I remember my coach screaming at me.
Brown, get up, run it off, Brown, get up.
And I'm like, he's like, Brown, you better not crowd my field, Brown, get up.
And he's just like screaming at me. And I'm like, he's like, brown, you better not cry on my field, brown get up. He's just like screaming at me.
And I'm sitting there like,
in pain, I mean, I'm a 14 year old child at this point,
a 14 year old child.
And instead of letting me know that what I'm feeling is okay,
I need a heal, like let's get you off, you know, the field.
It was like, get up, run it off,
you got this, you can do this and it's sort of affirmation in this negative, you know,
this counter-vonerable way of like, oh yeah, I'm being supportive because I'm telling you
you can run it off, but instead of like what I actually needed in that moment, what someone
to say, it's okay to let these tears fall down your eyes. I share this story because at
the same moment, the girls' track team also practiced at the same time and they were running around.
And this young girl, also 14, maybe 15, was running around the hurdles and she hit her hurdle.
And she had scraped her knee and she fell down. And it's not a comparison of pain.
It's she hurt herself. That same coach ran over to her and was holding her. And was like, are you okay?
Help pick her up.
You know, with the track coach,
all the other girls on the team,
we're all around them.
And I'm sitting on the stage,
it's like, you dirty son of a, you know, like,
like, how dare you like, I'm over here,
like literally find out two hours later, it's broken.
And you run to her rescue,
but you don't run to my rescue.
And I think that's part of what we do as a culture to young men.
We tell them again, you can be smart, you can be strong,
but vulnerability is out the door.
And we start to then pick those habits up as we get older.
You know, we start to be like, you start to see these narratives
pushed in television and movies.
And you know of like oh
He cried too much. Oh something must be wrong with him
Don't you know you don't want that guy you want the guy that's stoic and quiet and not gonna share that gonna
You know be seen not heard and that does such harm to a man's ability to
Discuss what he's going through so that he can find self love, find confidence.
When we're all queer, we talk to guys,
I can't tell you how many of them say,
I don't like myself, went in a private conversation with me.
It's like they constantly are like,
I have so much self esteem issues.
They're like, I hate my body, I hate my hair,
I hate everything, and I'm like,
have you told anybody this?
And they're like, I can't tell anybody this.
You're lucky I'm even telling you this.
And it just goes to show that we have been shut off.
And we need to open ourselves back up
because it's doing us to this service
because we're better men, we're better fathers,
we're better brothers,
when we are able to show up and say, you know what?
I can be strong and smart for you right now,
but also I can be vulnerable for you right now.
Hardy plus one to all of that.
We've just been talking about the sort of stereotypical male
blocks when it comes to self love or self compassion
or self acceptance.
I think there's, and again, these are gross generalizations
so all in that, but I think the stereotypical female
issue I've heard with this is that it somehow
would be selfish or self-indulgent
to practice self-love.
Have you heard this beef and what do you say when you hear it?
That is self-indulgent to practice self-love?
Yeah, selfish, you know what,
I should be focusing on my kids,
I should be focusing on other people in need,
I don't wanna focus on myself.
Yeah, I think that it's a horrible way to think.
I think that part of this is part of the way
our society has groomed us is like,
you should always be doing something.
You should always be constantly moving and acting.
And if you're not, there's something wrong with you.
Again, I think a lot of this could be changed.
You know, like if we could just really figure out how to like revamp
our educational system, because I think about the things
that we were able to do in first grade in kindergarten,
third grade, where it was like you had creativity time,
you had time where you took naps, where you could like sit quiet.
And then all of a sudden you got to, you know,
middle school and high school and it was like,
bell ring, go, go, go, why are you not more activities?
Why are you not here?
And you start to feel this sort of guilt of like,
why am I not doing enough?
And that guilt would then make you feel like,
okay, well, I don't have time for me
because I should be doing more for others.
I should be doing more altogether.
And I think that we need to really look at that
and say, why are we grooming a generation
to feel as if they can't slow down?
Like they can't take a breath.
Like they can't take a moment to focus on them.
This is for me in my opinion,
why so many people find themselves in careers
or relationships that they don't want to be in.
Because instead of slowing down and saying,
is this really making me happy?
Is this really okay?
Is this really what I want?
Do I feel alive in this moment?
Is this beating my soul?
We just feel like, okay, I'm gonna keep going through.
I'm just gonna keep going on.
I'm already in it, so I'm just gonna keep going on.
And I think that's such an unhealthy way to live.
And then I think there's something else that we do
in those moments where we look at other people and we see what they're doing and that stops us from doing what we need to do for ourselves and I say to people all the time comparison is a thief of joy.
Comparison is a thief of joy because when you start to compare yourself to what other people are doing you still your own joy you still your own self love.
And I look at you know when as a parent myself, I used to look at other
parents and be like, how are they getting through work, cooking, daycare, you know,
homework, activities, because I used to come home and I just sit in my car before
I'd walk in the house to go help my kids with homework and do food. And I'd be like,
I don't know if I could walk in there. Obviously, I always did walk in there because I found
the courage of myself. But there was time when I was like, if I could walk in there. Obviously, I always did walk in there because I found the courage in myself,
but there was time when I was like,
I can't walk in there, I can't do this.
And part of that came from me comparing myself
to other people and saying,
look at what they're doing and I'm not doing this.
And so when you compare yourself
to what other people are doing,
what they're, how their relationships are going,
it makes you feel like you need to do more
or you're not doing enough.
Again, both of those things are gonna affect yourself the same and the way you're loving
yourself and loving the capabilities that you have.
And so for me, I slowed myself down and say, I'm going to remove myself from comparing
some myself to other people.
So I can love what I have.
I can love what I'm doing and know that, again, if I need to get better, that's fine.
It doesn't mean that I have to take away from the love I have for myself.
And also, how do you communicate that to your kids of like,
hold on. Dad needs time for himself.
And it's okay for me to express this and then take the time.
I've heard that you've said that actually getting kids hammered home to you,
the importance of self love and self care.
Oh my gosh. Yeah.
You know, when you have children in front of you mirroring your behavior,
you know, you think you're doing something good. And then all of a sudden, you see them pick up your behavior and you're like, Oh, hold on. You know,
I remember for me, I used to be very quick tempered, like very quick tempered.
And I remember the first time I saw my kid snap at someone similar to me of like, no, no, no, I'm not hearing this. I'm walking out the road. And I remember the first time I saw my kid snap at someone similar to me.
I was like, no, no, I'm not hearing this. I'm walking out the road.
And I was like, oh, no, no, no, you come back.
And he was like, that's what you do. And I was like, oh, you know.
And so you start to see what other people, but then also in the sense of self-love and compassion for yourself.
I started to see that he would beat himself up because he wasn't doing enough.
It's what inspired my children's book, I am perfectly designed, is because my son came home
one day and was like, I wish I was somebody else.
And as a parent, you never want to hear that.
And I was like, oh, what is going on here?
And he was like, I don't think I look good enough.
I don't think that I'm smart enough.
I don't think that I'm doing enough because look at my friends, look at what their lives are,
and I gave him the mantra,
you are perfectly designed as a reminder that you are.
And that's what we wrote the book as.
And it was something that it reflected to me
of like, what am I putting out?
And what am I, first of all, what am I doing to myself?
And then what am I putting out that would make my son
wanna come home and say, I wish I was someone else and
That was a tough reflection, but you know, I'm glad for it
Much more of my conversation with Karamo right after this
I'm curious what's your growth edge now. What's the hardest place for you to love yourself,
even as you proselytize on behalf of self-love?
I would tell you, it's based on intentions and actions and where those two things meet.
We live in a cancel culture, which I don't believe in. I believe instead of a cancel culture,
we should be living in a council culture.
Instead of we tell people to go away, you're wrong, we should bring them in and try to educate them.
And so as someone who's now in the public eye and who try desperately to help and do things,
I find myself in these positions where especially when I reach out to people who have opposite views in me,
or have hurt some
part of the communities that I identify with.
And when I try to support them, I'll talk with them and try to change the culture from within.
You get attacked.
And then when you get attacked for trying to do good, it does affect your self-esteem.
You can find yourself feeling really depressed and down because you know your intention and you know what your
actions are, but those are not in lining up with what the outside world sees or what the outside
world thinks you should do. And when you're in the public eye and you hear you're a horrible person
for trying to work with people who are different in hopes of creating change, I think that's the part
now in my life where I'm trying to find a balance of
being true to myself,
respecting what other people feel,
understanding why they feel that way,
but still remembering my intention and knowing like, okay,
this might not pay off in the immediate future,
but like when you change policy, when you change things,
it works later, and that sort of helps me
to rebuild my self-love around the things that I'm doing in hopes
for others, if that makes any sense.
It does, I mean, if people are saying on Twitter that you're a horrible person for doing
what you're doing, you may have a few nanoseconds where you believe them.
Yeah, a lot more than a few nanoseconds, a lot more.
And I think that's probably where I am now.
I'm a big believer that with my platform
and with the fact that I have such different identities
or beautiful identities,
or you know that, are different to other people,
I don't have the liberty to just walk away from spaces
that don't want me.
And it's my belief that I have to go into those spaces.
I have to talk to people who don't see the beauty and who I am.
It's I have to because if I don't, then what about the person behind me who doesn't have
the confidence, who doesn't have the platform that I have.
If I don't walk in a room and try to change something, change some heart, change some mind,
change some policy, then what happens to them?
And that's where my mode of always is,
but it's hard when you get canceled immediately
if you're doing that.
So that affects myself the same pretty much the most right now.
When you're feeling criticized or canceled
or you're lacking confidence, are there practices
or people that are really helpful for you?
Yeah, the first practice is to not to do what I normally used to do, which was self-destruct
in some way when I was younger, which drugs now it's like what a full piece of drink,
14 beers, and like just politely, you know, because you're sort of drowning yourself
in like these unhealthy behaviors.
So now it's really about like, it's about what I do now. And this
is actually speaking from recently, I write down the criticism, because I want to honor the criticism
I received. I want to respect it because I believe that you have to be empathetic when listening
to others so you can really understand what they're saying and what they're hearing. And then I write down equally on the other side, sort of like, what did I do in this moment
to actually make real change based on the criticism?
And so I sort of do this like a lining of like, okay, if my criticism is this and this
is what you're doing, and this is what I did, do those things align.
And when I do that, what it does is it helps me to evaluate my intentions and actions.
And that helps me to start to build up my self-esteem again of like, okay, you're not a bad person.
You are actually doing some good because the criticism is aligning with the direct action you've
already done to make things better. And then I talk to people, you know, it's part of that vulnerability.
If I have a small tribe that I have around me,
I have this little slogan that I say,
I need you to love me a little bit louder.
And it was really, that's their key to know
that I'm not feeling that good.
And even though I'm the strong one a lot of times,
I need you to like, love me a little bit louder.
I need you to tell me that I'm okay, that things will work out, that I, you know, and I think it's important because when you have
that, that tribe that you can trust on top of the self-work you're doing to remind yourself of like,
oh, what you have, those two combined really can just give you that little bit of fuel you need
to get through the next day and then you recharge again and get through that next day, and you keep going.
Well, yet again, you've brought me exactly where I wanted to go in terms of questions, because
we've spent much of this conversation talking about self-love as an internal thing, but
then you just now talked about it as a sort of interpersonal, you brought in the interpersonal
aspect. And it reminded me of a slogan I've heard from you,
service to others, I believe you've said,
is a kind of service to yourself.
Can you unpack that?
You know, when I see someone who didn't have,
or was denied something that was affecting
their self-love or self-esteem and I'm able to
use whatever I have to counter that and to give them back what they deserved or you know
get them into a space and seeing the joy on their face.
It just immediately fills me with joy.
I mean, I believe, you know, there's such thing as emotional contagion and I don't think
we talk about that enough of
like, you really do pass on your emotions to other people. And we all know it in the sort
of hoki sense of like, oh, someone's energy is not right. You know, we hear people saying
that. But when you really talk about in the sense of the actual what it is, emotional
contagion, you start to understand that your happy smile, your happy mood will directly
affect someone else's happy mood. It's the reason why if I started lasting right now after about a minute
and a half, two minutes, you're going to giggle. You're going to be like, it's the same reason
why if you're in a room or everyone's crying after a while, you start to feel the emotion,
you start to cry. I think when you could be of a service to someone else and you see the joy on their face,
and you see their mood change, inadvertently,
will change your own mood,
and you will start to feel their self-love,
start to rebuild your own self-love
because you're now on the same page.
And so I do believe in the interpersonal community base
of building up your self-esteem.
I mean, that statement I said about,
I need you to love me a little bit louder,
doesn't just apply to me saying it to other people.
I encourage other people to say it to me
because when people say that,
it's that active, please be in service to me right now
because I need you.
It's an ability to ask for help in a new way than thing.
I need help. It's a clearer way than saying, I need help. It's a
clearer way of saying, I need love right now. I actually need love right now. And I need
love through different supportive avenues. And I know you can provide that for me. And so, yeah,
it's important. And again, there's evidence here. Being of service can remind you of what is
great about yourself. It's rewarding in the brain as well.
There's just a lot here.
And it really points to something very, very deep,
which is that the line between ourselves and the world
is blurry and porous.
So let me stay with New Year's.
We're heading into a New Year.
This is time of year when people kind of make these resolutions
are gonna change something about myself,
maybe I'm gonna reinvent myself, whatever it is.
And I just wonder what your thoughts are of round self-love
as it pertains to new years and new years resolutions.
Well, you said at the beginning,
I really am not a fan of resolution.
And I think that sometimes this whole change myself
can become very self-destructive.
I believe that 100%.
I do believe we all have the ability to grow, to learn more, and through growth and learning
more, through being compassionate to ourselves, you inadvertently do find yourself becoming
a better version of yourself.
Quotum quote.
But I don't like this whole thing of like I'm going to change
this resolution is for me to change because then you start to get this place of like hating who
you are now as you are on that journey to where you want to be. You know like fitness ads for me
get on my nerves a lot of times because I'm like you're telling someone to hate the body they're in
right now. And the body I'm in right now I got to fall in love with it because it's here.
It's where I am.
It doesn't mean that it's where I'm going to always be.
But I have to fall in love with it now and appreciate where I am now so that as I am on
that journey of growth and change, I can appreciate everybody along that growth instead of getting
down on myself and saying, like, oh, you know oh, the body I have right now, I hate
because if you hate this body, you don't hate the body you have in two weeks as well.
And you're going to hate the body you have in four weeks as well.
And you're really going to hate your body if you take a break from doing the work that
you had set out to do.
And I think you start adding this element of self-hate, guilt, all these things that come
with when you can't love where you're at now.
And so I don't make a resolution.
You know, I make, I don't make any of those statements at all.
What I do is I say things like in this new year, I'm going to trust myself more.
I'm going to become more compassionate to myself.
You know, I say a lot of those type of things, but I don't make resolutions. And I don't put a marker on goal setting because I think goal setting is
a beautiful thing that you can do at any time of the year when you prepare, when you make
proper choices and when you know that you can ask for help. Resolution sometimes don't
have the clarity of goal. And so you end up finding yourself not following through
You end up finding yourself not doing what it takes not asking for help
So I would just recommend that people make more emotional goals for the new year versus
Telling yourself things like I hate where I am now, and I want to try to change it in 12 months
You know what I mean like one of the things, know, not to be labor this, but I tell people,
this is your journey. Designed how you want, walk it at the pace you want. Like don't feel
this pressure of like 12 months, things have to change. And if I get to that 12 month
marker and I haven't, then I'm a failure. Because all you're doing is heading yourself
up for not loving who you are and not loving your journey. Be more compassionate with yourself,
be kinder to yourself, and love yourself a little bit more as you're on that journey,
and things will work out.
Karamo, I love you on Quirai, and I love having you on this show. Thank you.
Thank you, my friend. Big fan of yours.
Thanks again to Karamo. Glad we got to rerun that. Thanks as well to the folks who work so hard to make this show. Samuel Johns, Gabrielle Zuckerman, DJ Kajmeer,
adjusting Davey, Kim Baikamumb, Maria Wertel, and Jen Poient. And also the good
folks over at Ultraviolet Audio who do our audio engineering. We'll see you all
on Friday for a bonus meditation
from Anushka Fernandipoli.
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