Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - Meditation: Simple, But Not Easy | Twenty Percent Happier with Matthew Hepburn
Episode Date: November 12, 2021Check out this sneak peak into an episode of our new podcast Twenty Percent Happier, available exclusively in the Ten Percent Happier app. About Matthew Hepburn:Matthew Hepburn is a stra...ight shooting, clear thinking, and dedicated meditation teacher. His personal practice caught fire over the course of several extended meditation retreats and volunteering to teach buddhist meditation in prisons in his early twenties. Now he shares his love of contemplative practice with people on intensive silent retreats, through dedicated daily life practice as a core teacher at Cambridge Insight Meditation Center, and as the Editor of Mobile Content for Ten Percent Happier.See 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.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
Hey, hey, today we've got something very exciting.
It's a sneak peek from our new podcast, which is called 20% happier.
20% happier is my colleague Matthew Hepburn's latest plot to one-up me.
Matthew is a meditation teacher and coach.
And he's been a driving force behind the meditation content on the 10% happier app.
And you may know him, actually, if you're a subscriber from his hit meditation, soothe anxiety to sleep.
Here on the 10% happier podcast, as you know,
we featured long-form conversations
with deep Dharma teachers and mental health experts
about the various ways you can do life better.
But many of you have been asking for a deeper dive
into how to strengthen your meditation practice.
And that is where Matthew's new show comes in.
In each episode of 20% happier,
Matthew goes one-on-one with an everyday rank-and-file
meditator as they seek to overcome a challenge
in either their life for their meditation practice.
And today's clip you're gonna hear Matthew talking to Leslie,
who during the pandemic really committed
to her meditation practice.
She took virtual courses, listened to talks, read a lot of books, but even with all of that, Leslie is still feeling a
little lost and confused when it comes to making her practice her own and figuring out what actually
works for her. To listen to the entire episode of 20% App Year or all the episodes, you can
download the 10% Happier App wherever you get your apps, then open it up, tap on the podcasts, tab at the bottom of the screen, and you'll see it right there.
Here we go now with our little sneak peek.
What's happening for you in the areas that you're integrating this all into your life
or that you're exploring in your meditation practice on the cushion?
I think, you know, I was taking all these online courses and they're all talking about compassion
and the compassion trainings.
Love and kindness, meta, lojong, we're doing Tonglin.
And I'm struggling a bit in those areas, so I've been able to sort of see how meditation
works for me.
And then when it starts to become about extending
that out to other people,
it feels like it gets a little complicated
in terms of keeping that in authentic compassion practice
where you're really feeling
as opposed to it becoming an intellectual exercise
that can become quite discombobulated.
So for me, I'll be listening and they're talking about the part where you're feeling
or you're calling something for your own life or you're focusing on gratitude and you're
generating these good feelings.
And then we'll come the part where they say something like, and now think of somebody
you love.
And I love a lot of people.
So I can get very caught up in the choosing. And I'm like,
oh my goodness, my son, my son did not come immediately to my mind. I mean, I love him
the most, but I can't meditate on my son every single time. Okay, who's second best? All right,
my husband, my, no, I'm just kidding. I was, do I love who else is in my circle? Or like
my mother, you know, do I want to think about my mother? And my mother and
my partner bring up, you know, different kinds of love, different feelings of love. And I'll start to
notice a lot about like, oh, the love I have for my partner and the love I have for my mother or the
love I have for my sister or my really good friend. I just saw yesterday and we had a wonderful time.
They all generate these different kinds of feelings and I can get really caught up in
analyzing that as opposed to just picking somebody for the purpose of moving on in the practice.
So I think that's where I'm struggling a little bit in really feeling loving, like I think I get it, but I don't always feel like I feel it.
Yes.
I don't always feel like I'm feeling the genuine, authentic, compassionate feelings that
are supposed to move me through the practice.
I get really caught up in the middle part.
These particular practices are really nuanced and rich.
I think, you know, maybe a big part of the reason is that we're social beings, humans are,
and this is a practice that brings in to our meditative life all the richness and nuance
and complexity of our relationships.
Yeah.
And so it can be really easy when we just open the door to all of that stuff to completely lose
the thread of the simpler instructions and intentions of the meditation and really just dive into exploring a
reflection on these relationships.
One of the reasons that I have found that, I'll say for myself, I'll be curious to ask some things from you about this, but for me
the quality of mind and heart that is developed through meditation. The headspace I get into, the heart
space that I get into, is a precious one. And it's not always that I'm carrying that around
in my everyday life as I'm checking off the to-do list or whatever. And so, when I have the opportunity
to really be embodying that kind of attitude and way of being reflecting on my relationships feels actually really rich.
It feels like an opportunity actually to reflect on them from this place.
And so it's very seductive to just kind of go into it and be like, oh, where's the,
you know, sticking point with this person and, you know, this happened.
I feel complex about that and and the whole
meditative attitude is like, oh, okay, and I care about this and their space and time to reflect
on it. And so it's real easy for me to indulge if I'm not careful. Absolutely, absolutely. And
then, you know, that's, so that's just the personal part because then when they start to now imagine
strangers, I live in a city
I can imagine a lot of different strangers and starting to wonder about their lives and
feeling the guilt of perhaps not noticing or reflecting on them earlier.
It feels like there's so many paths of seduction right and every week it feels like there's
a new situation that's being brought to my attention that I wasn't aware of that can just really take you down into a road of introspection and trying to understand it.
So I don't know to think of them as off ramps. I don't know if thinking about those things
more intellectually is me trying to get off of the road of the feeling. I don't know if that's a distraction.
I don't know if it's an avoidance tactic.
I just, I start to wonder about those pieces.
But even though it feels really important
to think about all of those things.
Yes, yes.
And that's one of the keys.
It's one of the reasons why we do it.
Because there's a part of us that's like,
it's really important to reflect in these ways.
And the mind's not really going to listen to you,
if you say, oh, just put that aside,
like that's not important, because it is.
It is.
And so the mind doesn't want to let go,
but we don't have to come from a kind of psychoanalytic frame
of analyzing why? Is it in avoidance? Is it just a distraction? Is it this? Is it that? The important thing about the outcome is that when we do end up developing this pattern where the mind is going into these more intellectual,
ruminative, kind of narrative thought trains as opposed to sticking with the simplicity of the practice.
It's like we're trying to build a little fire and, you know, it gets drafty and we're not
keeping close care of it so that the heat can build and it can grow. And so we
want to be able to steady and develop in the simplicity of the practice so that
the whole thing can grow and flourish more. So this practice really grows
through some simplicity, which is really interesting because there's kind of a lot going on.
You're bringing people to mind, various categories of people and all kinds of things, and so it's not
easy to balance that kind of instruction with just keeping it simple. But I'm very hopeful. I think there's a lot of things for us to do
that will help start to build it for you.
Excellent.
Thank you, Matthew.
Again, that was a sneak peak of the new 20%
happier podcast available exclusively
over on the 10% happier app download the app today
then tap on the podcasts tab to find out what happens next.
We'll see you back here on Monday
for a brand new episode,
fascinating dude, professor named David Dosteno, who's been embarking on a very interesting little
quest that he calls Religio Prospecting, where he goes back and looks at the evidence that shows
benefits for many religious practices and rituals, benefits that can be conferred upon all of us,
whether we're believers or not.
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