Finding Mastery with Dr. Michael Gervais - How To Stay Calm Under Stress | Dan Harris
Episode Date: January 14, 2026What changes when anxiety shows up—and you stop trying to outrun it, and start learning how to work with it?Dan Harris—journalist, bestselling author, and host of 10% Happier—returns to... Finding Mastery to explore practical ways to work with anxiety. Dan unpacks how meditation, compassionate self-talk, and exposure built his capacity after a panic attack on live TV—and why curiosity is a powerful antidote to fear.Dan and Dr. Mike go beyond optimization into the human side: rebuilding from collapse, confronting panic (on planes, elevators, and big stages), and the daily reps that make composure more accessible. This is a grounded look at attention, identity, and training your inner life—without hacks or magical thinking.What you’ll learnHow to use meditation as “bicep curls for the brain”Why self-talk (especially in third person) regulates panic in real timeThe key to working at your edge without traumatizing yourselfHow to turn exposure into confidence and capacityWhy curiosity beats cynicism for mental performanceAt its heart, this episode is a reminder: mastery isn’t a shortcut; it’s alignment between awareness, training, and what matters most._____________________________________________________________Links & ResourcesSubscribe to our Youtube Channel for more conversations at the intersection of high performance, leadership, and wellbeing: https://www.youtube.com/c/FindingMasteryGet exclusive discounts and support our amazing sponsors! Go to: https://findingmastery.com/sponsors/Subscribe to the Finding Mastery newsletter for weekly high performance insights: https://www.findingmastery.com/newsletter Download Dr. Mike's Morning Mindset Routine: findingmastery.com/morningmindset Follow on YouTube, Instagram, LinkedIn, and XDan Harris on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TenPercentHappierSee 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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Probably the thing I'm best known for in my 21 years at ABC News was having a panic attack on Good Morning America.
But it's too early to prescribe statins slowly for cancer production.
I wasn't high when I was on the air, but the doctor explained that my ambient drug use made me more likely to panic.
When anxiety shows up, do you try to outrun it or do you try to learn how to work with it?
I had spent a lot of time in war zones after 9-11 and gotten depressed and then done this really dumb thing of self-medicating with cocaine and other recreational drugs.
that moment sent me on this weird, windy thing where I ultimately ended up finding meditation.
Welcome back or welcome to the Finding Mastery podcast, where we dive into the minds of the world's
greatest thinkers and doers. I am your host, Dr. Michael Jervais, by trade and training a high-performance
psychologist. Now, the idea behind these conversations is simple. It's to sit with the
extraordinarily, to learn, to really learn how they work from the inside out. Today's conversation
is with Dan Harris. It's a journalist, best-selling author,
and host of the 10% Happier Podcast.
Many first met Dan after a panic attack on live television.
I was pretty unhappy.
I loved what I did, but I was really stressed and really frustrated.
And every time I got passed over for a job, which happened a lot,
I would spin out and take it out on the people in my life.
What followed was not a quick fix, but a serious commitment to understanding anxiety,
attention, and how the mind works.
Most of us are like drill sergeants with ourselves.
We actually need to move into a coach mentality.
So that's the self-love piece.
There's a whole body of research around something called micro-interactions.
So we can inject massive doses of happiness into our life by just paying attention to these little interactions we're having throughout the day that most of us sort of just ice out.
In this conversation, Dan and I explore what it looks like to live with anxiety.
We also dig into identity, meditation, self-talk, and a process to choose growth over avoidance again and again and again.
A lot of people try meditation and then notice how distractible they are and feel like they're failures.
You sit and try to focus on one thing at a time.
Then your brain comes in and starts like planning a homicide or whatever it is.
And you notice that, start again.
Notice it start again.
Notice it start again.
And what happens over time is you build this muscle of self-awareness that allows you to see the contents of your consciousness without being owned by it.
So with that, let's jump into this week's conversation with Dan Harris.
Dan, I always look forward to spending time.
you. And so thank you for coming back and sharing, you know, the adventure you've been on since we last
spoke. But for folks that the one folk or two folk that might not know, you know, kind of where
you come from and how you and I became friends at this thing, can you, can you just share an overview,
a flyover of the kind of major points of your life and what got you here? I mean, I think that the story
that most people associate with me, if they know who I am at all, is that I used to be at ABC News
as an anchor correspondent,
kind of globe-trotting newsman.
And probably the thing I'm best known for
in my 21 years at ABC News
was having a panic attack on Good Morning America,
which if you Google panic attack on TV,
it's the number one result.
You know, like 20 million views is like a,
it's what will be on my tombstone.
And that panic attack actually turned out to be,
well, first of all, was awful in the moment.
And even worse in the aftermath,
because I went to a psychiatrist afterwards,
tried to figure out what had gone wrong.
He asked me a bunch of questions.
One of them was, do you do drugs?
And I had to admit, yes, I do.
I had, as a backstory,
I had spent a lot of time in war zones after 9-11
and gotten depressed
and then done this really dumb thing
of self-medicating with cocaine
and other recreational drugs.
I wasn't high when I was on the air,
but the doctor explained that my ambient drug use
made me more likely to panic.
So that was all terrible.
However, that moment sent me on this weird, windy thing where I ultimately ended up finding
meditation.
And it was incredibly helpful for me.
And so I wrote a book about that called 10% Happier that came out in 2014, so quite a while
ago.
And that ended up swallowing my life.
And I started a podcast and meditation app.
And I was trying to do two things for a while, be a newsman and be Mr.
happiness. And then four years ago, I retired from ABC News and this is what I do full time.
With your practice, did you start off strong, like, oh, there's a thing here. Let me, let me dive into
meditating because I feel something. Or was it more intellectual for you? Like, I hear people
talking about it. Uh, I'll try it a little bit. Like, where did you start? I got turned on to
Eckhart Tolley. He's a huge bestselling self-help guru. One of my colleagues at ABC
ABC News recommended I read the book because she thought it would be a good story because he was getting really big at the time. This was in like 2008. The power of now. Power of now, a new earth. Oprah Winfrey was, you know, pushing his stuff. And so I did not go into that thinking, oh, I'm going to read something here that would be useful for me. I thought, oh, maybe it's weird enough for a TV story. He's an interesting guy. He's kind of like an elfin, German man. And he's like the spiritual equivalent of like watching a Yule log. He's he, he, he, he, he, he, he,
is kind of compelling in his, his blandness.
You know, he's very soft-spoken.
But in reading his book, he delivered what I know now to be not an original thesis,
but it was new to me, which is that we all have this voice in our heads,
this inner narrator who chases us out of bed in the morning and is yammering at us all day
long and has us constantly wanting stuff, not wanting stuff, judging people, judging
ourselves, comparing ourselves to other people.
and Tolly's argument, which the Buddha made 2,600 years earlier, but Toley's argument is that
when you're unaware of this nonstop nattering, it owns you. You just act out all of your neurotic
obsessions as if they're like in the words of my meditation teacher Joseph Goldstein as if
they're tiny dictators. And so that was an electrifying thing for me. I then went and interviewed
Tolly. A friend of mine has described Tolly as correct, but not useful.
So like he very incisively diagnoses the human condition, in my opinion, but doesn't, in my opinion, give you a lot to do about it.
So I read Toley, was frustrated, and then my wife gave me a book by a guy named Dr. Mark Epstein, who is a psychiatrist, who's written a bunch of books about the overlap between psychology and Buddhism.
And that is what made me think, oh, okay, there is something to do about it.
It's called meditation.
I, as a child of two ex-hippies who dragged me to, you know, health food stores and camping trips and, you know, made me listen to like free to be you and me and all that shit.
I was not really down with the whole meditation thing at first, but then I saw that there was all this science.
And my parents are also scientists.
My wife is a scientist.
I'm not good at math.
So I became a guy who wore makeup and talked to television cameras.
But I was like, all right, this is, there's some science here.
So that's when I gave it a try.
I remember the moment exactly where I was.
I was at a, my wife and I were with some friends at a share house.
Like we rented a house that we all shared at the beach.
And I was reading a book by John Cabot-Zinn.
I was in the process of reading lots of books.
And I was at the pool and I was reading this book.
And I was like, you know what, I'm just going to do it.
So I didn't want anybody to know.
So I went into the bedroom, closed the door, turned off the lights, sat on the floor and did five minutes of trying to focus on my breath.
and then every time I got distracted, I started again and again and again.
And I realized, you know, this is really difficult and I see exactly the value.
You're not trying to achieve a special state.
You're just trying to, it's like a bicep curl for your brain.
You're trying to focus on one thing, your breath usually, but it doesn't have to be your breath.
And then every time you get distracted, you start again.
A lot of people think, a lot of people try meditation and then notice how distractible they are
and feel like they're failures.
But I had read enough to know, actually,
no, the whole point is to get distracted, start again,
get distracted start again,
because that is how you deal with what Eckhart Tolly
was pointing out, which is that you have this crazy voice in your head,
it's giving you shitty ideas all the time.
What's the antidote?
Awareness, seeing it clearly, aka mindfulness.
And so how do you develop that?
You sit and try to focus on one thing at a time,
then your brain comes in and starts like planning a homicide
or whatever it is.
And you notice that, start again, notice it start again, notice it start again.
And what happens over time is you build this muscle innate in all of us, but atrophied through
disuse of self-awareness, again, aka mindfulness, that allows you to see the contents of your
consciousness without being owned by it. And so I knew really quickly in that sharehouse and
am against it that I, yeah, there's something here.
Something here. Yeah, I had a similar experience.
it is the art of starting over a thousand times.
Yeah.
You know, within maybe a handful of minutes.
And the way that you start over or the way that you refocus is equally as important.
Because I can refocus this way.
Let's say I'm focusing on my exhale.
And then the homicide thought comes in and I say, what is wrong with me?
God, get back to the breath.
Okay, now I'm starting over with a critical mind, a judgmental kind of chipping away.
at myself, right?
Or I can notice that it might wander and I say,
well, that's interesting.
Okay, come on back.
You know, like, and it's more of a eloquent return back
to the present moment, to the breath, if you will.
Can I tweak that just a little bit?
Yeah.
Because sometimes we really can't help
the massive blast of self-directed opprobrium or whatever.
That is sometimes it's just so quick
that you really can't control it.
Which the negative critical.
Yeah.
Oh, my God, I can't believe my.
that you spent the last five minutes, you know,
planning some expletive bill speech
you're going to give to somebody.
The move there is just to note that.
You can have a little note in your mind of, oh, judgment.
So everything can be co-opted.
That's right.
And so what I don't want people to feel bad about is,
oh, I'm kicking my own ass in meditation.
That means I'm doing it wrong.
No, no, no.
All you have to do is be mindful of the kicking of your own ass.
Yeah.
And then you're back on safe ground.
Everything can be included.
That's good. Yeah, it's really clean.
If knowing what you know now, because you've been practicing here for, I don't know, 10, 15 years.
Less than you. I started in like 09.
Oh, nine. So knowing what you know now, if you could go back and kind of whisper to yourself the moment before you had the panic attack on air, what would you whisper to yourself?
Right before the panic attack?
Right before. Knowing what you know now.
It's interesting. I don't know that for that specifically, I would recommend.
and meditation or mindfulness.
I still struggle with panic disorder.
And, you know, being mindful, having, you know, calming the nervous system through
consistent meditation is really helpful.
But in the moment right before I'm going to freak out, actually self-talk is the most
useful thing for me.
And as you know, there's a ton of science around self-talk.
You can call this self-love even, but self-love has really negative connotations for
most semi-sceptical people. But the ability, another way to describe this is self-compassion,
which is a robust field of scientific study, as you know. There's just a ton of evidence,
both out of the self-compassion world and from Ethan Cross at the University of Michigan,
who's looked at our inner chatter, that if you talk to yourself the way you would talk to a good
friend or a mentee or a kid, it has really powerful psychological and physiological benefits. And so I've
gotten, I'm really into that. I think it works really well with mindfulness because you can use
the mindfulness to notice, oh, I'm starting to become dysregulated. And then you layer on top of that.
You can put my, you put your hand on your chest, which is a little cheesy. You may not want to
have anybody see you do it. But, uh, like me last night on a plane, I, I struggle on planes.
All right. You know, I'm, I can, I can tell I'm feeling a little off hand on the chest, bro. By the way,
it does actually supercharge it if you refer to yourself in the third.
person. It's a cool finding. So Ethan introduced that. Yes. Yeah. It's good finding. Dude or bro or
use your own name. Mike. Dan. Yes. Yeah. This may be uncomfortable. You are not going to die.
You know, this is your brain overreacting to stimuli that are actually not dangerous. As opposed to
okay, I'm not going to die. When you talk to yourself in third person, Dan, you're not going to die.
Yes. Yes. And it's like because it really for me, it channels that same energy of how I talk to
my kid, you know? It's like, well, Alexander or bro or stinky, whatever I call him.
We call each other lots of names. I've been joking recently that his rap name is Lil Dumm.
So Lil Dum, you're good. I know you don't want to go to school today because whatever,
you got in a fight with Luke, but it's fine. Your teacher's there to intervene. Any wisdom I would impart,
I could then impart to myself. Does this track for you? Does you use any of those stuff?
100% thank you for us.
Self-talk is one of the great tools, you know,
to be able to work with one's own self.
And if you're, first and foremost,
if you're not aware of your inner dialogue,
it's really hard to be good at it.
So that's why mindfulness is foundational.
There's three practices for awareness.
Mindfulness, journaling, and conversations with people of wisdom.
Those are the three that I know that increase my awareness
of what fill in the blank is.
But then you need some skills.
and self-talk can be a skill.
I still want to know what you would whisper to yourself.
Giddy up.
That's cool.
Okay, so let's do it this way.
Let's think about it as a slide.
Okay.
Think about a water slide.
Okay.
And so sometimes you get to top of a water slide,
and you're looking around from the platform.
You're like,
ah, here we go.
This could be fun.
And you jump in and you kind of go for the ride,
and it's exactly what it's intended.
That kind of threshold of excitement, fear, you know, fun.
Okay.
Sometimes you get to the platform and you say, oh boy, I don't think I really want this.
So if you're at the platform and you don't know which way it's going to go yet, okay, let's do that self-talk.
And then when you sit on that platform and you're kind of holding the bar above you,
I think most people have been on a water slide, right?
And you're holding the thing above you, the water's ripping down.
And you know that you're not in a good spot.
That's a different frame.
And then when you're in the throes of the thing, your feet are spilling all over the place
and you're kind of feeling upside down
in disaster.
So there's three distinct moments
of self-talk.
So upstream,
ready for the rapids,
and in the complete throws.
I would say,
I think about this a lot
with airplanes
and with anything I'm afraid of,
I would say a couple of things.
One, you're going to be fine.
Two, it's really important
that you face your fears
because you want your kid
to see you doing that.
I have a child who has plenty of anxiety
and he needs
a father who is modeling a consistent facing of fears.
The third thing is, listen to yourself.
If you're really on tilt right now,
sometimes actually the most courageous thing to do is take a break,
re-attack it tomorrow.
Cool.
So the two things that you're doing is you're being,
I'll work in reverse order, three things.
There's an agility to your approach.
The middle is purpose mindset.
So you're anchoring to something bigger than you.
Yes.
And the first is you're backing yourself.
Yes.
So, you know, there's some efficacy.
Self-efficacy is the first thing you're doing,
which is that felt sense of like, yeah, I make things happen.
I feel pretty powerful.
Like, I can do things.
So if you can anchor into that type of self-talk, it's cool.
And then make it bigger than you.
It's cool.
And all of the requisite skills to be agile in this topsy-turvy kind of wild world that we're in.
That's a really nice formula.
So are these exactly the skills you would present to a client?
Yeah.
if I'm working with an athlete or an executive that is like wanting to take a step in their
abilities to execute in high stress conditions or be a little bit more home with themselves
in high stress conditions, the three theories that we just worked from self-efficacy purpose
and psychological agility would be definitely at the foundation. And each one of those
has a set of protocols. So self-efficacy, Albert Bendor, was the kind of the original theorist
on self-efficacy.
He said, look, he said there was five ways
to increase efficacy.
Now, if you do a search, there's only four.
So I'm sure what happened to the fifth one.
But there's very specific ways
to enhance your sense of feeling efficacious.
And that word is like feeling powerful in your own self.
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How do you with your clients work with the subtle thing around agility?
Because agility could be misused as a cop-out.
It's a cool question.
You understand the nuance here, don't you?
Because facing down your...
Only because I've done it.
Like wrestling with your dragon, you know, or like saying,
I'm going to fight this dragon tomorrow or I'm going to get to know this dragon tomorrow.
Okay, so psychological agility, it for me pins on.
or rests on emotional agility,
not to confuse the two,
but there's an ability to work with your emotions
allows you to be more agile
in navigating the world.
So there is an emotional intelligence
that I'm pointing to for the agility piece.
The other thing, though, is
if you think about stress inoculation
and you think about systematic desensitization
or flooding, those are all words
maybe that needs some explaining,
but the idea that,
the very simple idea is that when you,
when you face down something
and you stand
toe to toe with it
and you don't retreat,
your body becomes more familiar
with that stress
and then is less fearful of it.
And at the moment
that you stand toe to toe with something
either in your imagination
or in physical life
and then you retreat,
you strengthen the response
of retreating from the stress.
So I would use that one sparingly.
Right?
Yes.
Like, there's a place to say, excuse me, I need to, like, I need to go to the bathroom.
Or I need to tie my shoes or I need to pull yourself from the throes of a thing that is clever.
But on your own terms, when you decide that you want to tackle this thing, tackle it, and do not retreat.
Okay, so let me, I'll give you a real life example and you just tell me what you think.
So I...
Hold on.
You're good at interview.
I see why you had a lot of it.
long career at ABC. Well done, mate. Yeah, that's really good. And it also points to like,
you know, you are a true learner, right? Like, that's probably the genius that you rest on,
is that you're curious and you want to understand. Yeah. Right. So curiosity is probably the
crown jewel in yourself. Maybe. But what I can't do is, unlike you, I am not a mental health
professional. I can't. When people ask me for advice, I always have to say, I'll give you advice,
But, you know, it's like you're talking to a guy who slept at a holiday in last night.
Like, I don't really know.
I didn't, you know, I've done hundreds of interviews.
But the fact that you know that actually creates a felt sense of safety.
I think so.
I think so.
That's right.
But, you know, legally, like, I really can't treat patients.
And so I don't.
I'm not even particularly interested in that.
But that's, I think, a major difference between the two of us.
My only real training is as a journalist, as opposed to as a caregiver, which is really within your wheelhouse.
Anyway, getting back to the specific situation.
So I have, as I mentioned earlier, I have panic disorder.
It's not just a panic attack I had on TV.
I think that was a seminal event in that it, like, once the brain, as you nodded toward this,
once the brain gets good at panic, it gets really good at it.
So not only do I sometimes worry about public speaking, but,
for that, I take a beta blocker, which is really helpful. And so I don't shy away from it. I take a beta blocker, which is a non-narcotic medication that you need a prescription for, but it doesn't like alter your mind. It just, it puts a cap on how quickly your heart can beat. So it's kind of like a physiological. You can be as nervous as you can manage to be, but the body can't go into mutiny mode. And so that's really helpful. But for elevators and airplanes, I really struggle. And a beta blocker is not going to.
cut it. During the pandemic,
I had a bunch of stressful things going on.
It was a fucking pandemic, A, B, I wasn't on.
I had moved out of the city. I used to live in New York City.
Now we live in the suburbs.
My wife insists that I call it the country,
because she doesn't like the connotation of the suburbs.
Suburbian.
I'm suburban douche.
And so we live in the suburbs, so I wasn't on elevators as much.
And everybody was grounded, so I wasn't on planes that much.
Oh, you were out of practice.
I was out of practice.
and I was going through a very difficult separation with my co-founders
at a meditation app that I had started back in 2015.
I didn't know that you had that separation.
Yeah, I didn't know that.
It was brutal.
It was really hard.
I still associate you with it and you're not with that.
Not with it.
We don't need to name it.
No, you can name it.
The app used to be called 10% happier.
It's now called happier.
So anyway, in the middle, in 2021, or maybe 2022,
as all of this shit's going down, it's a pandemic.
I'm starting to get back on elevators and airplanes.
I have this like deeply wired propensity for panic.
I started freaking out on planes and elevators and bad.
I did a classic no-no.
I was on my way out to LA to give a speech
and the panic hit.
I hadn't felt panic like that in a long time.
And I got off.
And, you know, I can defend the decision.
As by myself, I didn't have anybody to calm me down.
but that just set me on a spiral.
And so I've really been working.
I've been doing a lot of exposure therapy.
I have a great therapist, Paul Green.
Shout out to Paul Green.
And he and I will take planes together, unmedicated, little planes.
Like, not like Cessna's, but small commuter planes from the White Plains Airport to Washington, D.C., you know, 70 cedars.
And it is, I'm a guy who spent huge chunks of my life in war zones.
I've never been more terrified than doing these flights unmedicated.
And so I did like four of those, and I was able to do it, but it was still really hard.
And now I'm kind of on my own.
And so like I flew yesterday.
I was on my own.
So I take a really small dose of clonopin, which can really ease your nervous system.
And it's interesting.
It's a small enough dose that I still feel nervous.
but it's just like gives me a little bit of comfort and I can manage it.
Shallow pool instead of the deep pool.
Yes.
And so then I'm flying back Sunday and I'm thinking I'm going to break the pill in half
and take even less.
And then I have a bunch of flights coming up, some of them on small planes, some of them
on big planes.
Most I'm by myself, but I have one with my son and I'm taking the one with my son.
It's on a big plane.
I can go unmedicated.
And so this is the way I'm thinking about it.
It's like I'm just trying to be careful because the avoidance problem is real.
But the other problem is you actually push too hard when you're not ready and you traumatize yourself.
So anyway, this is the way I'm thinking about it.
I'm curious what you think.
Yeah.
First of all, badass.
Awesome.
Like you're working.
Yeah, you're working.
And that's what psychology, let's call it, what our parents thought about psychology, what they missed.
That you go talk to somebody and you sit on a couch and it's a comfy couch and it's a comfy couch.
and it's maybe a poorly lit room,
and you need to talk about your parents,
all the mistakes they made or whatever, right?
Like, or you complain,
or somebody's going to give you advice and fix you,
which is all not right.
And what you're pointing to is psychological skills training.
Yes.
And that is the,
just like you do physical skills training
to have a strong cardiovascular system
or increased muscularity,
that you do psychological skills training
so you can be more free
in your own body.
Your training.
Badass.
That's exactly how it works.
And I think what most people miss in elite sport,
because we see them on Sunday in the NFL,
and we watch them, and we say, wow.
And then we say, man, must be nice born that way.
No.
You know, like, that's not how this.
Yes, there is a probably good match
between genetic coding and the environment that they're in.
But on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
and Saturday, they are working right at the edge of their capacity, because that's where you grow,
in front of their coaches that decide if they're going to get playtime or not, in front of their
teammates who's trying to take their job. So they're right at the edge nearly every day where they
could drop a ball, make a ball, in a situation that they're not necessarily good at because they're
practicing things that they're not good at to get better, right? And the consequences are larger
than we recognize.
Most of us never get to our edge
on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday, and certainly not on a Sunday
in front of handfuls of millions of people.
So what you're doing is getting up on your edge.
First and foremost, I say badass.
That's exactly, keep going.
And at some point, you can become a professional patient, too,
which would be a problem.
Okay, so I unpack that.
What do you mean?
The professional patient
is somebody who likes, who's really good at being a patient.
Okay, I'm not suggesting you're there yet.
But there is a pathway for you to extinguish,
not just manage, but extinguish the fear.
That's a whole different kind of apple to swallow here.
Okay, I want to jump in on that for a second,
because there's hope here.
Well, there's hope, but I also, for sure there's hope.
What I'm a thousand percent confident in is that there's hope,
for messy marginal improvement.
Where I wonder is around the extinguishing.
I think it's possible that I'm going to live with this the rest of my life
and that I will just have to continue to dance with it.
I don't know that that's being a professional patient.
I think that's, you please point out where I'm being delusional here.
I'm not envisioning a lifelong having Paul Green move into my house
and do exposure therapy with me every day.
It's more that this is such a powerful thing for me
that I almost feel worse if the goal is extinguishing
because it feels so far away.
I'd rather have this story of,
hey, it's possible.
I never extinguish it,
but I'm just going to have to dance with it
for the rest of my life.
I think that that's a cool safety valve.
I understand that.
And I think what I hear,
I really understand it.
Okay.
And also what I hear is like
it feels unreasonable in my mind
to think that this could go away,
no matter how much training I do.
And I would say that there might be some room
to expand that thought for you.
And not to like at any point in your training arc
to feel like,
that's a, what am I doing?
Why am I getting my hopes up for that?
So if you lower the hope, which is like,
no, I can do this, I can train and I can be,
I don't know, 40% uncomfortable in flights.
And that's cool.
I can do that.
I can bring a change of clothes.
So when I get off the plane, you know, I know that I'm kind of sweaty during the plane,
and that's okay.
I thought you were to say in case I shit my pants.
You can go there too.
Yeah.
So I think that both can be true.
I don't hear a professional patient.
I'm kind of placing that out there that there is a way to extinguish fear.
And you playing with that idea would be cool.
And just working it out, you know, with your psychiatrist or psychologist.
I'm not sure it's training.
Is it Paul?
Paul is a psychologist.
Yeah, work out with Paul like,
this might be in sloppy here or is there a thing here?
You know, like that would be cool to work out.
And I would also say that the harder somebody trains,
the more likely or the quicker you can get results.
But training hard alone doesn't necessarily get you the results.
There's this appreciation for recovery.
There's this appreciation for consolidation of information from the training.
You know, so, yeah, I think you're going to win both ways.
Totally.
And I don't know your brain chemistry,
but you're going to win both ways
because you're training at your edge
and you're going to be X percent better at it.
And if you invite this idea that one day,
I might just fully extinguish this loop
that I find myself in.
And I can extinguish that thing completely.
That is the work that we did,
I did with Felix Baumgartner for Red Bull Stratos.
Oh, yeah, the guy who went up into the edge of space.
Yeah.
And he was terrified to be in the space.
suit. And so he, we called it claustrophobia, you know, because that's, it was a panic attack
claustrophobia's experience. And he couldn't just manage that fear because the consequences were
too dire. If he got, if he was just managing that plus managing all the other things, he needed to do.
So we needed to extinguish that fear. So there's a model there of somebody that, you know, was able to do
it. And it doesn't mean that everyone can. Yeah, I'm sort of middle path on this. Like,
that's cool. I'm open to the idea that.
extinguishing could happen. And I know it can happen for some people. And if I cling too tightly to that
idea for myself, it actually doesn't help my nervous system. So having the notion that it's just a thing
that I work with forever, I'm also open to that. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. But I think you're
going to win either way. Yes. You know, and so I would play both games. I'd be like, where's the
threshold that I can manage well and feel cool with this? And then how much more work or what kind of work
what I do differently once I'm to that threshold for extinguishing.
Yes.
You know, so it's a stepwise approach.
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My head's going in a slightly different direction now.
When you talk about working at your edge, I don't know that I've thought a lot about that concept,
but as you said it, I was just kind of interpolating back through my life.
And I think not only in this area of panic, but I think most of my life,
especially in my professional life,
but also as I'm talking,
many years of my personal life,
I'm pretty consistently working at my edge.
I believe that.
And I don't even know it was a deliberate strategy.
I just, maybe it's, I don't like boredom.
So I'm just curious for you, what does it look like?
Well, let's do a model first and then answer it.
So to the edge with intelligent recovery following.
Then I replenish so I can go back to that edge again.
Right.
So what we're talking about,
is really working yourself up with acute stress
and then intelligently recovering from that.
And what most of us do is we have acute stress moments, experiences,
and then hold on to it.
We drop maybe like 3% from that acute stressor,
and then we talk about it and ruminate about it
and, you know, kind of relive it.
And so we go from acute stress to moderate stress
instead of acute stress recovery from that.
So we don't empty our cup, if you use that kind of metaphor,
and we're holding up at the full cup
for an extended period of times, weeks, months.
And then what happens from acute stress unmanaged
to moderate stress unmanaged leads to chronic stress,
unmanaged leads to early death.
So if we can, instead of like this spike of acute stress
that's holding on for top volume
and then this slide to early death as an arc,
if you think about an X, Y, axis,
that if we went big spike, big recovery.
So it's this act, it looks,
like a seismograph. Yes. And that is what I want my day to look like. Interesting. So let's say
Monday, I want as many acute stressors as I can have and then recover from them as quickly as I can
throughout the day. And then a big recovery process with the eight hours of sleep, you know,
and the mobility work that I do and the good conversations I have with loved ones. And so those
are all recovery mechanisms. So I want great stressors to keep me on my growth arc and then in
really intelligent recovery process.
What are the stressors?
For me, that was the question you asked.
So for me, I'll do some physical,
so I'll do some heart rate stuff to get me up there.
And, you know, that's no more complicated than,
let's say you're doing some sort of squat or something.
You could put the weight down,
or you could do one more rep or two more reps.
So there's a little bit of a stressor to think in the most concrete way.
That would be probably 10% of how I do stress.
The other 90,
I'm kind of ballparking here,
is emotional where I'm getting to the edge of saying something
that is difficult to say
or listening to something that's difficult to listen to.
And so it's a vulnerability meets holding the space for it.
And that all, most of that for me is relational.
And that's where it happens.
So I need to stay in that space long enough.
And then the other, I shouldn't do that as 90.
Let's call that like 60 or something.
And the other percentage is when I'm doing something
where if I do make mistakes, there's some consequence to it.
You know, like public speaking or there's probably some consequence in this,
but we have the controls to, you know, edit things that are completely out of whack.
But there's some things where there's real consequences to myself and others.
And so does that help?
Yeah.
No, I was just curious.
Yeah.
Curiosity.
And you know what I'm curious about is like,
if you didn't change your trajectory from the moment of that,
panic attack and invest in sorting that out and you just white knuckled, grinded, and stayed your path
and didn't go the dual path of mindfulness, even a second career arc, you know, through mindfulness.
What do you think that cost would have been for you?
I think about this a lot, but like what's the counterfactual, you know, the sliding doors,
you know, if I had just stayed in news and not gotten interested in any of this stuff,
I don't think it would be great.
It's possible with all of my energy and intensity that I could have climbed to the top of the news business, whatever that looks like.
You know, some of the people in my vintage are now at the top of the pyramid.
So I'm thinking about like Jake Kapper and David Muir and Anderson Cooper and I were all kind of in the same litter, if you want to put it in puppy speak.
And so those guys really made it.
I actually never in the news business,
I was kind of like always right at that second tier.
I was the anchor of Nightline, which is a great job.
I was the anchor of the weekend edition of GMA,
Good Morning America, which is awesome.
But I was never like the weekday guy.
And I got to do reporting all over the world.
And, you know, one of the coins of that realm is our do-win Emmys.
And I won some Emmys and all that other stuff that kind of mattered a lot to me in the time.
But I was doing all of that, you know, from 2010 on when I started writing the book, and the book came out in 2014.
I was doing all of that while I had a very robust side hustle.
And in the years before that, when I had no side hustle and I was just focused on the news, I was pretty unhappy.
You know, I loved what I did and I felt like it was really important.
And so I wasn't thoroughgoingly unhappy.
But I was really stressed and really frustrated.
And every time I got passed over for a job, which happened to lie.
I would spin out and take it out on the people in my life.
And so I think if I hadn't found this stuff,
I would have gone probably hardcore down that route of trying to advance in the news
industry, which even at its best, it would have been a hard place for me to advance because
there's so few slots at the very top.
But it's not at its best.
The economic underpinnings of the industry are being decimated.
The ratings are, you know, when I had that panic attack in 2004 on GMA, there were more
than five million people watching. Now, on a regular day at GMA, it's somewhere between two and three
million people. And it's going down quickly. And I say this with no disrespect or Schadenfreude or
anything like that. I still think what they're doing at ABC News and the other networks is really important.
And a lot of my best friends work in the industry. But it's really hard time. So like you're competing for
limited slots in a sandcastle that is being attacked by waves. And so I think I, in the stress of
that situation with my pre-existing predilections for overwork and irritability, it could have gotten
pretty gnarly. How gnarly?
I don't think, you know, front page in the newspaper, you know, she have somebody in the kidney
gnarly, but just like not as happy a life as I really could have had and not, you know,
what would have been like for my kid? That's why my wife.
That's what I think about.
Would I have been abusive?
No.
But would I've been absent and unpredictable?
Yeah.
Consumed with self.
Consumed with self.
And then also like, you know, prone to outbursts.
Again, not like volcanic outbursts, but scary.
You know, even my team now, I think a lot about my grandfather.
I had a grandfather, Robert Johnson.
It was scary, scary guy.
Lots of things in his life.
He had been thwarted.
and he was a middle manager at the yellow pages.
Remember the yellow pages?
Yeah, those big, like, Bible, thick compendiums
of phone numbers that we used to have.
So my grandfather, who's a really smart guy,
but really, he could be pretty gnarly.
I remember him once when he got his first VCR,
bringing me and my little brother in to show it to us
and he said, if you touch it, I'll break your arm.
Oh, that kind of shit.
Yeah.
And my mother describes him as, like, really funny sometimes.
but then he would have these little napkin wars
as they would play at dinner
they would ball up the napkins
and throw at each other
but if he hit him in the face
he'd slap you in the face.
It would just turn like that
and like that dude's blood
is coursing through my veins
and that's a real aspect of my personality
I have to work on
and even like within the last five or six years
I remember somebody on my team
one of my producers
at my little meditation company right
so not the news
saying you just have a scary face
to you?
Yeah, which, you know, I love the fact that she felt comfortable enough to say that.
My wife has made the same observation.
Like, I just have this, like, my face can get like stony and hard to read.
And usually it has nothing to do with my irritation to anybody in my orbit.
It's just that I'm thinking about something else.
And so there's vestiges of Robert Johnson in me now.
I just think it would be uncontrolled if I didn't have all of these measures to control it.
Tools.
Tools, yes, absolutely.
I want to say in defense of Robert Johnson, the way I'm describing him now is something of a caricature.
He, all the things I said are true.
But actually, in his 80s, he lived until he's 90, but at 80, somebody got him a computer.
Somebody got a computer for his wife, actually.
His wife didn't want to use it.
So Robert got really involved in the, this is the early days of, like, social media.
So it got on Twitter, and he was really funny on Twitter, and he was very active in emailing all of his grandchildren.
And I went through recently read all of his old emails and they were really loving.
So people can change and also it's never fair to completely caricatures.
Yeah, that's cool.
That's a good nuance.
Back to the news folks for just a minute.
Like I love the Sandcastle analogy.
And the people that you mentioned were your peers or contemporaries,
like they are taking big voices in kind of the narrative of our country.
Given the context of what's happening with Jimmy Kimmel right now and Sunday,
and the entire landscape.
Can you share your thoughts on how you're understanding this?
Well, with the caveat that I'm not on the inside,
I would say that I didn't love what he said,
just because it seemed factually inaccurate.
Like, I think by the time he said it,
we knew that the guy who murdered Charlie Kirk
was not a Trumpist.
So it just seemed like factually questionable
and maybe not the wisest thing.
And yet, free speech is a thing, you know,
like I would die for Jimmy's right
to say some stupid shit on a show.
And by the way, like, everybody on the right
has been carping about free speech for a long time
with pretty good reason, you know?
I think there is a bit of a monoculture
in American media where it's very far to the left.
And so I think some of the,
complaints about that and the left-leaning tendencies of the media and the disproportionate use of
what you might call censorship on folks from the right. Yeah, I think there's something to that.
But what we saw here appeared to be the state leveraging its power on a private company, Disney,
or I guess it's a public company because it's publicly traded, but it's not a government company.
you know, in these seemingly sort of economically laden threats from Brendan Carr at the FCC,
all of that, that's worrisome to me.
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I want to take a second here to tell you about a morning routine that I've been using for years.
For me, it's a great way to switch on my mind, to ready myself.
to take on the day. So before I check my phone, my emails, market updates, or text threads,
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Sometimes I think, you know, as an outsider now observing the news, one of the little phrases that comes into my head a lot is everybody sucks.
It's like everybody on all sides of this, of everything, of the issues, it's so hard to find a reasonable voice.
There are reasonable voices on both sides, but they seem very reluctant to acknowledge that they're.
is anybody reasonable on the other side? And so it's all of this motivated reasoning. And
there's an expression I heard, conflict entrepreneurship, people out there making money off
of fomenting division in our country. And so what I am really interested in is when can you
get smart, well-intentioned people who disagree with each other having civil conversations?
I think one guy who's modeling that is Ezra Klein at the New York Times.
Caviot, he's a friend of mine.
But he had a great conversation on his show with Ben Shapiro, who was on the right, Ezra's on the left.
I know Ben a little bit because I had profiled him back when I was at ABC News.
And I disagree at times with things both of those guys say.
But at least they were talking to each other.
And so much of what we see in the media these days is people throwing red meat to their followers.
People looking to have their priors confirmed, their prejudices confirmed, instead of operating on the one thing that I think should be really powering our civic lives, which is the word that you keep using to describe me, which is curiosity.
Why not have, one of the great things about my journalistic training is it's just always a healthy second guessing.
Is that true?
Is that really true?
I know, I think I believe this.
But, you know, all the shit I just said, I don't agree with Jimmy Kimball what he actually said, but I do agree with his right to say it.
Huh, let me go back and check that too.
You know, our brains should be constant reconsideration machines.
This is like deep in the Dharma.
The Buddha is said to have said, I'm not a dogmatist.
I'm an analyst.
I see, I see so little of that.
And the Jimmy Kimball thing just seems like a great example of it on all sides.
Do you think that we're on this media censorship path that speaking the way that you want to speak has too great of a consequence, even not just being canceled, but being pulled from your ability to speak freely?
Evidenced by, I think, in the Pentagon folks have to, the media has to sign some stuff saying that they won't necessarily share what they see, not from a, not from a protection of secrets, but like a protection of narrative type.
of thing. And I don't, again, I'm, I'm watching from the outside. I was unaware of this thing you were
referencing at the Pentagon. I do worry about intimidation from the state. That's right. Let me just
say, though, I mean, this is where history is useful. This isn't the first time we've dealt with this.
You know, this was happening during the Red Scare, during World War II, during Vietnam, LBJ. People with power
have repeatedly, even in this democracy, attempted to use it to silence their critics. So nothing's new.
The question is, is it more intense, more concerted? Are the folks with power now more willing to disregard
the guardrails? That's my concern. You know, I try as somebody who's not in the news game anymore,
not to get carried away by every, like, jot and till in the in the news cycle. I'm really keeping my
eye on a number of things, but one thing in particular, and that's the rule of law. Are we going to
have a democracy? That's what I'm, that's what I'm keeping my eye on. Because all the culture war stuff and
all the taxes stuff, it matters, but none of it is going to matter if the foundation in which
all of this is built, which is our ability to work and live together peacefully and by a set of mutually
agree upon laws. If that goes away, you can't count on anything. Two-part question, what needs to
happen for you to feel better about that dilemma? And then to what can, what do you think folks can
do to move closer to ensuring democracy stands? No one individual, myself included, can wave
a wand and fix everything to their liking. The most power you have is that you are a node in an
interconnected society and we live in a, we are a species where emotions and behavior is contagious.
And so I think if you can model for your friends and family, an open-mindedness, a consistent,
relentless curiosity, a willingness to reconsider and to engage, to not rest on your prejudices
and your priors, that to me is a very Buddhist attitude about world events.
Specifically in the engagement piece, yeah, if you can engage with ideas,
that you do not like, that is going to make you stronger.
That is a kind of exposure therapy
or a psychological fitness that I highly recommend,
even better if you can talk to actual human beings
with whom you disagree and create a relationship.
I can't remember who said it.
I was a congressman whose name is evading me right now.
He's no longer with us.
It's hard to hate up close.
So we need more engagement with people with whom we disagree.
I don't think you and I've ever talked about this, but for 18 years, I ran, developed.
It was an idea I had when I was just out of undergraduate school was, it was called late-night sports,
and it was an idea to bring athletes in, not midnight basketball, but close.
And it was one center here in L.A.
And it was pretty intense of an environment, and I quickly learned.
And I was there every Saturday night, and the only price of it.
to admission was to listen to me for five minutes on sports psychology and how they could take
a lesson from sports psychology, practice it on the court in an intense competitive environment
across gang lines, and then help them translate how they could practice that later in their
week. It was awesome. High school to college-aged kids. It was an amazing training ground for me
and an incredible healing for me in a lot of ways that I learned so much and vice versa for the folks
that we're in the gym. And so one of the things we quickly, and I quickly learned, is like,
hey, if we shake hands before and after every game, I think we're not going to fight.
Yeah. And that one intervention, they were, to play in this gym, you had to shake each other's
hand, not just one person, and F that dude over there, I'm not shaking his hand. To play the game,
you had to shake all five people's hands. And then you'd see them, they do that. And the person
that they were having a beef with, they'd still do it because they wanted to play more than they
wanted to fight, and then they go adapt their team, and then it'd be like a great game.
Eye contact and a brief physical contact changed the trajectory of the propensity of violence
in that gym. So you're right on, and I think that's not new information to anybody, but then
practicing it is a whole different thing. It is. I think one of the things that makes all this
worse is that we are atomized and disconnected and as a culture where not only are we lonely,
are we lonely and disconnected and on our phones, but we are self-sorting geographically by ideology.
And so it's becoming harder and harder to actually come face to face with people with whom you disagree on political and cultural and social issues.
You know, the major pillars of society, which were all flawed, of course, but, you know, labor unions and religious organizations and civic organizations have lost their, have seen their memberships decline rapidly.
So there just aren't opportunities for many of us to get involved.
And yet, I believe I know this.
I could be wrong.
So somebody will fact check me and let me know on Twitter if I fuck this up.
But there's some evidence to suggest that exactly what you were doing, where you bring people
together who disagree, but get them to engage in a cooperative activity.
And it could be sports or it could be working in an animal shelter or it could be the local school board,
get them to work together in a non-hierarchical activity
where nobody's the boss
and nobody has to kiss up to anybody,
you're just having to cooperate,
which, by the way, is what we were designed for.
This is how we evolved.
Cooperation is how we got to the top of the food chain.
Put people in those situations,
all that shit around polarization and tribalism
can get vastly diminished.
I think you might be pointing to
what's called superordnicals.
And it's evidenced in jail
that if you got three fashions in jail,
you know, three different gangs,
if you will. None of them like each other, but two of them will come together and work together
to create a stronger bond to go fight the other one. Yeah. So the superordinate goal, it's like,
let's just say China in the U.S. or whatever, we'll come together if we got to go fight some aliens.
Yes. Right? So that's a super order. There's a bigger goal than the immediate goal of just
taking care of yourself. And so I think that that's what you might be pointing to, which is a pretty
well-established understanding, you know, in grade school, high school, colleges, and for us
adults, that somehow we've missed that piece. There's a really smart person on these issues, Amanda
Ripley, who's written about conflict and the difference between healthy conflict and toxic
conflict. And she was on my show, and I found her work to be really compelling. And the truth is,
we need conflict. We need healthy conflict. I heard it when you were talking before.
about how, yes, getting to your edge.
There's a friction in that.
Yeah.
Well, human beings, we need each other.
And, but we're not all going to get along all the time.
And we want to have different viewpoints in the room.
And so conflict is just, it can be really healthy.
But we have very few skills to navigate these situations well.
And so it can then get into a kind of toxic conflict.
And what we are seeing culturally and on a macro level in this kind of.
and honestly throughout the world is the latter, is the unhealthy conflict. And it's, we're in a
tangle and it's hard to get out. You know, if for anybody listening, I would say, you know,
it's great if you can join a civic organization or a volunteer group where you can get out.
By the way, if you're lonely, it's also a great thing to do. But even if you're not going to do
that, I think going through the work of engaging with ideas that are difficult for you is good
civic hygiene. I also find personally, and I don't think there's, I don't know of any data on this,
but I actually find for me that listening to podcasts and reading writers, but with whom I disagree,
I find that it actually eases my nervous system because it is hard to hate up close. If I
listen to these folks, I understand that they have a logic. I may not share it. Sometimes I
actually do share it. But nobody gets up in the morning or very few people get up in the morning
and are like, I'm going to be a dick today. I'm the bad guy in this movie. Everybody gets up trying
to do what they think is the right thing. And I don't know, if I just can engage with all of this
on that level, it's not like a self-gaslighting where I convince myself that people are trying to
harm the country or doing the right thing. It just turns down the volume on the rage enough. Because
rage doesn't help. A certain amount of anger, like, does get you off the couch, for sure.
But it very quickly becomes counterproductive. How do you want to be engaging in these difficult
times from a position of blind rage, which burns you out really quickly and makes you do
dumb shit, or with, like, consistent values-based energy that burns clean, keeps you clear,
It keeps you motivated.
You know, another word for that would be love.
Like, I just, I strongly feel for myself that that's where I want to go.
You want to operate from that place?
I want to operate from that place.
Yeah.
And that involves curiosity.
That involves being very clear about my values and what I care about, which is to put it
in Buddhist terminology, to like reduce suffering for beings everywhere.
That's what I'm about.
And I'm pretty clear on it.
And so if I just tune into that instead of like getting.
wrapped up and I hate Trump and I can't believe he got away with that again. I'm like,
I just don't see how that helps. In athletics, we talk about knowing your ideal competitive mindset,
your ICM, and that becomes a bullseye before you go on the field. You know, that's what a whole
pre-game warm-up is really about is to switch on your ICM. Now, in the NFL, we play one game a week,
but you wouldn't want just Sunday to be the time that you're in your ICM, your ideal competitive mindset.
You want to find it on Wednesday and Thursday
because you're trying to compete to be your very best,
you know, as many times as you possibly can be.
And by the way, competition, being a great competitor
does not mean in my mind being better than somebody else.
It means competing to be your very best, right?
Interesting.
Which is an interpersonal navigation,
not a comparison to another's prowess.
So the ICM, one of the things that we do for ICM
is when we label it, which you just did,
your ICM, your ideal mindset,
take the C out of it for a moment, is love.
Yes.
Okay.
So now what do we do for athletes
to help them be in that state more often?
We train for it.
Okay, we label it.
We ask them to describe,
what does it feel like look like?
Then we back in a training mechanism
so that's more familiar to them,
more closer to the surface.
For you, that backing in would be meditation,
would be a practice, writing, conversations,
practicing in conversations.
So you got a whole set of things.
The thing that I want to just introduce is we actually start when you wake up with just a quick hit of imagery.
And we design a four-step process for folks, a morning mindset routine.
And one of the four steps is using your imagination to see yourself being exactly the person you want to be at a specific time or phase of the day.
Right.
And so it's super mechanical and simple, but it's using this powerful engine of your imagination to see your,
yourself being brilliant in a difficult, challenging moment.
Okay.
And then we do things.
So that's a morning kind of thing.
And then right before you are going to engage in anything, let's just say walking into a
training facility for an athlete or into a stadium, what do you do to get connected to that
state?
Maybe you tap something.
You tie your laces a certain way.
You do something to kind of get that activation going.
And that is a nearly invisible practice that alibi.
athletes across the board embrace that most of us do not put into practice. So I just want to kind
of share that. What does it look like for you? Like how do you, Mike, get into your I am? So for me,
I'll call it like an ideal performance mindset, if you will. And I have a trouble with the
performance piece because I'm not performative. It's more of an ideal being mindset for me. But that
sounds like a little complicated. So it starts with the morning mindset routine, which is four things.
One breath, one gratitude, one segment of gratitude, one segment of imagery.
And then I just pull my sheets off and take a moment to be where I am.
So now I'm practicing present.
Just start that again.
So you wake up in the morning and you have sheets are still on.
Okay.
And you have one breath.
At least one.
So I'm, I am sending a signal to my brain.
Hey, we don't need to get in the rapids yet.
We're cool.
So an exhale sends the signal to the brain.
We're good.
I like that.
Okay.
So maybe it's three breasts, maybe it's 10 breaths.
I don't know.
But I commit to one.
Dearest choice.
Yeah, dealer's choice with a great intentionality behind it.
And then I do a little bit of, and this is like 60 seconds to maybe three minutes of work while I'm still in bed.
And then I do some gratitude stuff where I'm just kind of lighting up the parts of my brain that are like, yeah, there's a lot of good here.
So today I was like, I'm really glad I have two eyes.
So I just, a classic like, you know, and I'm really, I'm really,
grateful that my wife is healthy next to me.
I think about that with my legs.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like, yeah.
Let's not take these fuckers for granted.
Yeah, right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So anyways, there's that.
It's not a check the box as you, it's a feeling.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's activating the felt sense.
Yeah.
And then I'm using a quick hit of imagination,
seeing myself the way I walk and feel and the thing behind my eyes and inside of like my
chest when I'm at my very best.
and I did it for us today.
Like, how do I want to be with you
when I see you for the first time?
And so there's just a quick hit of that imagination.
And then that kind of gives me a thing to work toward.
And then the last is just a moment to be present.
So that's a small example of four things I do in the morning.
And there's other things that I do as well throughout the day.
But that creates a foundation.
Okay, let's go back to you.
And let's go back to meditation for just a minute or mindfulness.
In this topsy, the turvy world that we're in,
What do you know now that you didn't know five years ago?
You know, call it midstream of your meditation, mindfulness practice.
What do you know now that you didn't know then?
I would say the major development of the latter half of my contemplative career has been
really starting to get interested in this incredibly fraught and widely misunderstood
word of love or concept of love because it's been abused.
as a word, you know, like, I'm a huge Beatles fan, but when I think about all you need is love,
like, you also need to go to the fucking dentist, you know, like, but then actually,
thinking about love in a broad sense, what, going to the dentist is part of love. It's you
loving yourself and taking care of yourself. And so then I started to think about love really
broadly understood as a whole set of skills from self-love. Again, not, self-love can easily veer into
selfishness or self-gratification or self-indulgence, but actually I think of it more as the self-talk
stuff, or at least inclusive of the self-talk stuff we're describing before, where you're
able to look clearly at your own, like a good coach. A good coach sees your flaws and just isn't a jerk
about it. So he or she or they will tell you what your flaws are, but they're not going to be like
a drill sergeant. Most of us are like drill sergeants with ourselves, but we actually need to move
into a coach mentality. So that's the self-love piece. But then there's a whole other set of skills.
Like, how are you with people with strangers? How are you with the person at the, with your
barista? How are you with the tradespeople who come through your house to work on things? And then there's
How good a friend are you? How is your what's often called social fitness? Are you keeping up your
relationships? How good a family member are you? What's up with your spouse? Often the spouse or your
romantic partner is the hardest person to apply all the personal growth work you do. You just made a
face that indicates you have some sympathy for what I'm saying. How are you with your kids? This is a whole
suite of skills, communication skills, which we haven't talked about, but is a discipline in and of
itself that I find very interesting back down to this level of strangers. There's a whole
body of research around something called micro interactions. So we can inject massive doses
of happiness into our life by just paying attention to these little interactions we're
having throughout the day that most of us sort of just ice out. So I've started to think a lot
about this. It's actually what my next book is going to be about. And I see it becomes more
and more, the value of it becomes more and more clear, the diceier, the social, political,
and climate situation is on the planet. Because at the root of all of this stuff is a lack of
love, a lack of willingness to deal forthrightly with our own suffering and the suffering around
us. And I'm pretty sure I as an individual can't fix all of it, but it still matters how I act.
given that we live in a world that is non-negotiably interdependent.
How I act, and I'm lucky, I mean, people put microphones in front of me.
So how I act actually does have some significance.
But even if that weren't the case, how I am, what am I a vector of in my family and in my
workplace and in my community?
Like, that shit really matters.
And we all have agency in this regard.
So, yeah, you can, if you want, spend a lot of time on the news, either celebrating or
bemoaning it.
I would argue do a little bit of that stay and engage citizen, but don't spend all of your energy there and instead start directing your energy to where you can make a change, which is in your actual orbit.
That's a huge focus for me that I really wasn't thinking much when I first got into mindfulness and I was really thinking of it in quite a clinical way.
You know, like, I'm going to boost myself awareness, so I'm not so yanked around by all my neuroses.
Yeah, that's cool.
but it was missing a lot of the warmth piece
that the Buddha was very insistent on.
Yeah, I think you're describing what I think about
a lot as a pebble in the pond.
And it's a bit of, when somebody is suffering and in pain,
it's about mostly for them healing the suffering and pain,
which is a self-focused approach,
as opposed to being in the ripple in the pond,
becoming as big of a pebble as you possibly can,
as heavy of a pebble,
so you create a bit more of a impact.
And that cuts both ways.
Like your grandfather,
pretty big pebble,
sent some ripples in one direction,
and maybe later in life,
set those,
you know,
those waves in a more benevolent way.
But what I hear you talking about
is like,
from me to them,
from me to we.
And that idea is so at home with,
where I think the self-help industry
has gone wrong.
Yes.
is that like me be better.
For what reason so that I can help others in the best way that I possibly can?
You know, that is the central tenet into all 11 world religions.
You know, it's a we thing.
It's not a me thing.
And so I hear the, let's call it the adulting in that art for you.
But I think the really cool thing is that this meet a wee thing is not a hair shirt,
you know, catastrophic altruism, self-sacrificing thing.
It is enlightened self-interest.
If you want to be happy, you will be useful.
Because that is the most sustainable source of happiness.
Meaning.
Meaning that if you have positive relationships and you're, I often ask people to do this
mental exercise, what is it like when you hold the door open for somebody?
That's nice.
Feels good.
infinitely scalable.
That's right.
Infinitely scalable.
And it's so how do you, is that selfish?
Is it selfless?
Well, at the end, that's a useless distinction because yeah, you are a self on one level,
but you're also like every thought you have is a manifestation of the living universe.
So where's the self anyway?
And this is again, back to the Buddha, like all of our striving and building up of our identity
and acquiring of stuff is, kind of.
kind of misguided because it's all in service of a thing that's an illusion anyway,
which is the self.
You know, on one level, the self is real.
You and I are sitting here and we're each, you know, we have a physical self.
We have a physical self.
But even this physical self, the atoms are switching out every seven years.
Yeah.
And it's, by the way, falling apart.
The wheels are coming up.
We are designed for planned obsolescence.
We are walking ossuaries, like one of my favorite ska bands from the 80s, the specials.
head of line, enjoy yourself, it's later than you think. You know, that that's the truth. So even this
physical self isn't really defensible in an abiding way. And certainly the mind isn't. It's constantly,
you know, in dialogue with the universe around it and never mind all of the causes and conditions
that created it back through our ancestors and through our parents and all of that stuff. And so,
yes, on one level you are you, but on a deeper level, it's more like a river, like that's flowing all the time. And you can use the word river as a designation, but it's really a flow. And so, given the fact that we are a process, not a solid unchanging entity, and we are in dialogue with a whole world of other processes that are not solid entities, the way to have the happiest possible flow.
and process is to have harmony in relationships with the whole. And that doesn't mean you can't
take firm action when you see injustice. It just means that that firm action doesn't have to be
motivated by hatred. And that's what I'm talking about when I was saying before the shit that
might have pissed people off about like you should be curious and engaging with ideas and people
with whom you disagree because it doesn't preclude you from doing the right thing as you see it,
but it can calm your nervous system
so that you can do whatever right thing
you've chosen on from a position of
some level of equanimity and peace.
You've done some work, Dan.
You've done some work, my friend.
Or I've stolen from all of my smart teachers.
Yes, and probably, but you've done some work.
Which is a quick, quick note.
The teacher that I'm closest with is this guy,
Joseph Goldstein.
He and I were joking one day about how, like,
my whole shtick is just taken from him.
And he was like, yeah, well, I did the same to my teachers.
And he said, we're part of a lineage of thieves.
That's cool.
Yeah.
Yeah, it gives some permission to appropriately.
So to, you know, respect where you've learned at the same time, know, reinventing
something with a small tea or big tea for truth is not the game.
No.
But it's trying to figure out how to say it in a way that feels like you can connect.
to it and maybe help somebody else connect to it.
You and I are not alone in this thing like,
do I have an original idea?
I'm not sure, you know, but I have a way that makes sense to me.
And I'm trying to kind of work from that place.
Yeah, I just do Dharma and add the word fuck a lot.
So where can folks find you now that you're not at 10% happier?
Yeah.
Oh, so I started this thing.
I was just, when I, when the divorce was fine life.
Divorce business.
Yes, and not, man.
I'm not getting divorced for my wife.
Although actually in the early days when this business divorce was happening,
my wife and I would use the shorthand of talking about the divorce and our son would occasionally be like,
wait a minute, are you?
So when the divorce was finalized, I launched, I just as an experiment launched a substack where if you subscribe,
I give guided meditations that come along with all of my podcast episodes and I also do a weekly
live guided meditation where you can meditate with me or with one of my,
teacher friends. And so it's really, it's kind of, I'm kind of thinking about like a next generation
meditation app. You know, I was in the meditation app game for a long time and they're kind of
static things. But what I think is missing and, and I think there's a human thirst for this,
especially as we get more and more saturated by technology, including now we're on the cusp of
something big and dizzying with AI. We need each other. And so I've been adding in like a real
community element, which I'm interested in.
It's exciting, and that's continuing to evolve, and I can't say it yet, but I think we
have a next stage that we're going to go into.
Yeah, I have my podcast, 10% happier.
I got a new book coming out in 18 months about love, which is a whole embarrassing story
that I can tell you another time.
Yeah, how about that?
Awesome to talk to you, man.
This is really fun.
I absolutely appreciate all the time that we get to spend together.
Thank you for sharing what you've come to learn and doing it in an honest way.
Thanks, brother. Appreciate you.
Next time on Finding Mastery, we're joined by Dr. Gabrielle Lyon,
physician, bestselling author, and a leading voice on muscle health and longevity.
Dr. Gabriel and Mike break down why muscle is the key to aging well,
how strength supports mental clarity and resilience,
and the simple shifts that can make a real difference over time.
Join us Wednesday, January 21st, at 9 a.m. Pacific
for this practical and empowering conversation.
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