Good Life Project - Elaine Aron, PhD | Highly Sensitive People
Episode Date: July 12, 2021If you’re ever heard the term, “highly sensitive person,” or even been called highly sensitive and maybe even recoiled a bit when that happen, you’ll be deeply moved by the work of today’s g...uest, Dr. Elaine Aron. She first identified high sensitivity as a distinct character trait more than 25 years ago, introducing the term “Highly Sensitive Person” to describe someone who is easily overwhelmed by strong sensory input, subtleties in environment and other people’s moods, and deeply feels pressures and overstimulation. Since its publication in 1995, her preeminent book on the subject, The Highly Sensitive Person, has gone on to become an international bestseller translated into 30 languages. She is also the author of The Highly Sensitive Parent, and many others. Credited for first recognizing high sensitivity as an innate trait and pioneering the study of HSPs since 1990, she has established the Foundation for the Study of Highly Sensitive Persons and has published numerous scientific articles on sensitivity in the leading journals in her field.Turns out, today’s conversation, was also personal, because in many ways, I am a highly sensitive person. But, I also discovered so much more about the way I move through the world, how this trait relates to introversion and extroversion - very surprising - and how you can be both highly sensitive, while also being high-sensation, which I’d never heard before. You can find Elaine at:Website : https://hsperson.com/If you LOVED this episode:You’ll also love the conversations we had with Susan Cain, the author of Quiet, about the power of introverts : https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/susan-cain-introverts-power-and-the-quiet-revolution/id647826736?i=1000380458433-------------Have you discovered your Sparketype yet? Take the Sparketype Assessment™ now. IT’S FREE (https://sparketype.com/) and takes about 7-minutes to complete. At a minimum, it’ll open your eyes in a big way. It also just might change your life.If you enjoyed the show, please share it with a friend. Thank you to our super cool brand partners. If you like the show, please support them - they help make the podcast possible. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, so if you've ever heard the term highly sensitive person, or maybe even been called
highly sensitive, maybe even recoiled just a bit when that happened, you'll be deeply
moved by the work of today's guest, Dr. Elaine Aron.
She first identified high sensitivity as a distinct character trait
more than 25 years ago, introducing the term highly sensitive person to describe someone who
is easily overwhelmed by strong sensory input, subtleties in environment and other people's moods
and deeply feels pressures and overstimulation, but also processes the world very differently.
Since its publication in 1995, her preeminent
book on the subject, The Highly Sensitive Person, has gone on to become an international bestseller
translated into 30 languages. She's also the author of The Highly Sensitive Parent and many
others. Really credited for first recognizing high sensitivity as an innate trait and pioneering the
study of highly sensitive people
since 1990.
She's established the foundation for the study
of highly sensitive persons,
maintains the website and online research, hsperson.com,
and has published numerous scientific articles
on sensitivity in the leading journals in her field.
And it turns out today's conversation was also personal because in many
ways I have discovered I am a highly sensitive person, but I also discovered so much more about
the way I moved through the world, how this trait reveals itself in life, its relationship to
introversion and extroversion, which was really surprising to me, and how you can be both highly
sensitive while also being what she describes as high sensation, which I'd never heard before, but explained so much about the way I interact
with the world.
And maybe it'll help you too.
So excited to share this conversation with you.
I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good Life Project. The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch,
getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X.
Available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone XS or later required,
charge time and actual results will vary.
Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were gonna be fun.
January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're going to die.
Don't shoot him, we need him.
Y'all need a pilot.
Flight risk.
So, you know, it's funny.
I was first exposed to your work probably the way a lot of people was, which is Susan Cain is actually
an old friend of mine. So when she wrote the book Quiet, I sort of had an inroad into your work.
And both her book and your work, I just kept reading more and thinking to myself,
I'm seeing so much of myself in all of this work. And it is so explanatory and forgiving
on so many different levels.
So I've been actually looking forward to having this conversation for a number of years now.
Good, good.
And then recently, I don't know how I missed this,
that you've actually been collaborating with your husband for, I guess, decades now in really related work.
I stumbled upon his work, I think, when a lot of people saw the piece in Modern Love in
the New York Times a number of years back. Yes, the 36 questions. That just went crazy,
just viral. And people wanted to get a copyright and write books and everything. And we said, no,
let the people have it. And I've got over sitting over here, I'm about to send it to
somebody in Israel. We've got the Hebrew version.
I mean, it's everywhere.
There was somebody made this thing in San Francisco up on top of a mountain with a trunk
with all the 36 questions and two chairs there.
It was like a performance art thing, sort of.
I mean, there's been a musical made of them.
There's a beautiful Amnesty
International, I think it is, of people of different cultures, a refugee and a person
in that country connecting with tears in their eyes. I mean, it's a beautiful thing. It's a
beautiful thing. And I just have to say, before we even get into the whole definition thing,
my husband is not highly sensitive in the sense of the inherited
trait that I'm talking about, but he is so sensitive and kind. And so I like to be sure
that people understand that I'm not talking about that sensitive people are always wonderful,
or that if you're not highly sensitive, you're a jerk. It's anything but that.
Yeah. And I love the notion that you've both been, you have your own work, you have your own
focuses, but you come together and been collaborating for so long. It, it reminds me a
lot. You know, we, we had, I'm sure, you know, Julie and John Gottman on the podcast a little
while back. Yes. Yes. They're wonderful. And they have, they have what seems like a similar
relationship.
She's very clinically focused, but then really explores the research side.
John came from a much more experimental focus, and together they create magic.
Yes, I remember going to a conference that he was at when he first started his research conference on close relationships, when the field was just
beginning as a research field. He's a sweet man. It's similar. And it doesn't mean that the
relationship is always wonderful, but I think it means you have the tools. And, you know, we made
a movie, Sensitive, The Untold Story. And then we also made a movie called Sensitive and in Love,
which is a feature length story.
And then I'm saying we because Will Harper is the director, but I've been always very involved.
And then there's one called Sensitive Lovers that Art and I did.
It's a silly title.
Sometimes I haven't agreed with the PR decisions, but it's us talking about certain scenes in
that film.
And of course, it's someone highly sensitive and someone who's not.
And of course, him with all of his research expertise.
And I'm a clinical psychologist.
I retired from practice recently, but I have that expertise.
And I always say that if it hadn't been for my husband, all this wouldn't have happened because I figured out the trait.
But he's the researcher who said, well, let's research this.
So that meant creating a measure.
And I interviewed people, created the items, and we gave it to lots of people and refined it down to something that had some validity and reliability statistically.
Right now, we're actually with some collaborators now revising that scale because it's 25 years old.
And I've learned a lot more since then. Everybody's learned a lot more. And
the research now is there's over 100 studies just using that scale. And lots of people are
researching it in other ways, but mostly myself
and Michael Pluess, who's in the UK, and he's just building an empire around, he calls it
environmental sensitivity, but he uses the same measure, our measure. Environmental sensitivity
is a nice name. It used to mean here like chemical sensitivity, smells and stuff, but I think it's a nice name.
Yeah, it's interesting because I feel like language really matters in this context.
It really does. And this term has been called shyness, which it's not, and it's been called inhibitedness, which that was Jerome Kagan at Harvard, but he thought he was doing something
neutral, but would
you rather have an uninhibited child or an inhibited child?
I mean, it has a connotation.
Sensitive has its own connotations, which is a problem, although I find it interesting
that it has both a positive and negative connotation, whereas most words, we have two adjectives
that are persistent and stubborn, so a positive and a negative,
or impulsive and spontaneous. But sensitive is like, is it good or is it bad? Or can it be
nothing but neutral, but just a trait? And that's the way I like to think of it, simply a trait.
It's a survival strategy that developed in many species, at least 100 species.
So it's not just human.
And I like, in terms of language, to say, I didn't discover a new trait.
It's just we didn't have the right words for it.
And even introversion, since 30% of sensitive people are extroverts, that leaves kind of
those extroverted sensitive people in limbo.
Because if we equate introversion with
something close to sensitivity, then they're, what are they? Well, we know they're highly sensitive.
Yeah, that all makes a lot of sense. Let's talk about what we actually mean when we're talking
about, when we use this phrase, highly sensitive person or environmentally sensitive. But for our
conversation, why don't we just stick to highly sensitive person? Yes. What are we actually talking about? I know that, I guess it was in 96,
and this is what you were referencing. You came out with the first sort of assessment.
And it seems like over the years, that has distilled down to these four key aspects.
Right. Would that be the best way to sort of step into understanding?
I think so. I might elaborate a little bit on them,
but I think when we finish the new scale, we hope those four factors will be there.
When you do a factor analysis, it's kind of like throwing all the balls up in the air and hoping
they land where you want them to, all the items. So to me, the key part of the trait is the one
that I didn't include in the first scale because I I didn't realize it, because it's so under the hood. And that's the depth of processing.
Sensitive people reflect before they act. That tends to be so that shows itself as thinking a
lot about the meaning of life, having trouble making decisions, just seeing the consequences
of their actions. So they tend to be more
conscientious, more perfectionism because they have a clear vision of what they want. They've
really thought it through. And then if they can't get that, they're frustrated. So there's a lot of
ways that it's there. And yet, like when temperament is assessed in children, you can't
see very easily depth of processing in a child.
You see being afraid or being eager or being difficult or whatever.
But depth of processing, we have kind of found a way to measure it in children, but it took
understanding it in adults first.
And so that's been a good approach to it.
And we know, again, everything I'm going to say, we have research on.
We know that the brain processes things in a, quote, deeper way if you're highly sensitive.
And then the next one, O, is the only negative part about the trait.
That's being easily overstimulated.
And so sensitive people need more downtime to recover from a highly stimulating day.
They get more physiologically aroused, and this has
consequences for performance because, for instance, if you've rehearsed something over and over and
then you go to perform it in front of an audience, the stimulation from the audience makes you
perform less well. So everyone works best at their optimal level of arousal, and sensitive people
are aroused, you know, their optimal level is lower than
the average person. So for some people, they're only at their best when they're performing,
but for sensitive people, it's often they're not at their best unless they've done a lot of
preparation. Like when I did my dissertation defense, I went to the room where I was going
to do it the day before and I had had a small audience, and then I imagined three terrible
things going wrong. I said, let's assume three things will go wrong, and then during the defense,
I said, oh, there's number one. Somebody forgot to turn on the recorder, and there's number two.
So an overstimulation doesn't have to be a big problem, but I'll go on and come back to that a little bit.
So then the next one is E for emotional responsiveness and also empathy,
because emotional responsiveness in a social situation is empathy. But the emotional
responsiveness I feel is key to the depth of processing because we don't process anything
unless we care about it. That's why we have people take tests,
because maybe they won't study if they don't have to perform eventually.
And that's how we remember a phone number.
We do it if we really need to remember it.
We process it until we've got it in our brains.
So it's our emotional responsiveness that pushes the depth of processing.
And also, processing something deeply may bring up emotions as well.
I call it emotional leadership because sensitive people often feel things before other people
do.
Like maybe they'll cry first or they'll get afraid first or they'll get angry first.
And generally, that's what everybody ought to be feeling, but they haven't figured it
out yet.
Not always, but that's often true. And then the last one is sensitive to subtlety. So there's
being bothered by things that are very intense and then really picking up on things that are
very subtle. And that would be like sense and beautiful things to look at or subtle cues that
you can get from people that other people don't
notice. So we seem very intuitive or very aware of what's going on sometimes because of noticing
subtleties. So those are the four. And then I'll just add another one that is key, DS,
differential susceptibility, which is Michael Pluess' big contribution. In my research, I wanted to show that sensitive people
were not more neurotic than other people. It depended upon their childhood. So I sort of
showed that vulnerability, that they're more depressed, more anxious, more shy if they've
had a difficult childhood. But I didn't think to look on the other end. And it turns out that
sensitive people in a good environment, good childhood or positive environment where they work or whatever, they do better than other
people physically, emotionally, socially. They kind of are high performers. So that's one of
the little things about whether someone's sensitive or not is whether they've had really
a good supportive environment in their lives.
I might say that like Michael Pluess, he's been doing this research for a long time,
but he wasn't sure whether he was highly sensitive.
And we finally, he said definitely, and he realized that because he's a white male, Swiss, with a PhD and a wonderful childhood that just, there wasn't much, he just, you know,
he sailed ahead on his sensitivity without it being any kind of an obstacle. And we don't see
the high functioning sensitive people very much because they're functioning so well, people just
admire them for all of their accomplishments. And what we do notice are the people who are anxious or depressed and talk about their sensitivity, or we realize they're sensitive from other cues. And then
that's kind of the stereotype that comes along with the trait. But it should be that way because
actually it turns out in the research that sensitive people pick up more on positive
stimuli than other people, a lot more.
So a kid in a good environment is just soaking up any little nice thing from the teacher or the
parent. So that's my extra two letters, differential susceptibility.
Yeah, I love that. It's fascinating to me also. I had this strange vision pop into my mind when you added that, which is, I almost looked at the first four as the, like the four letters of, you know, like a genome. And then this addition is almost like the epigenetics that either turns it on or turns it off or modulates it.
That's exactly what people are thinking about is epigenetics., precisely. Yeah. The first one that you mentioned,
depth of processing, is fascinating to me also. I've seen you make an interesting distinction.
I think it's related to this between calling and craft in the way that this sometimes shows up.
Yes. You can look at the work that you're doing as drudgery, craft, or calling. And of course,
drudgery is where you're just waiting for the hours to pass. But people sometimes do drudgery
their whole lives because of the perks, you know, like get vacations and pay and all that.
Craft is when you're really good at something, which gives a certain satisfaction. For many
people, craft becomes drudgery once they've
mastered the difficulties of it. And then calling is just the thing that really,
just as we can go on and on about what that means, like Joseph Campbell talking about that.
And so following your bliss, that idea. So sensitive people in particular seem to be
really miserable if they're not able to do their calling.
I think drudgery just doesn't work for them, and that's because of that depth of processing.
Seeing the consequences of your life, the meaning of your life, all the way out to the end.
I just had a conversation with someone today who had no clue about what I was talking about in terms of meaning.
She's just kind of letting things go. And I thought that was really fascinating. She didn't want to have to
make a difficult decision about that. And she's enjoying her life. And she's not highly sensitive.
Yeah. I mean, there's something to that, right? On the one hand, if you have this trait, I feel like it gives you
access to a certain depth of consideration, insight, wisdom, existential exploration that
may make for a richer experience of life. And on the other hand, that very same thing can potentially
lead you to a certain amount of struggle that those who are not wired the same way won't necessarily have simply because of that difference. Right, right. I imagine there's a lot
of midlife crises more among sensitive people who suddenly saying, well, I mean, that can happen to
anybody, but feeling, well, what am I really, am I really accomplishing what I want? I've done what I could and I've mastered my craft, but is this
my calling? And I think it's important that many people can do their calling and not be making
their living that way. There's lots of artists and musicians who have a day job and still are
pursuing their calling, but it's pretty important. I want to be careful,
and it's important to me that we not portray sensitive people as better than others. We need
both types. And human beings have a terrible time with seeing two groups as equals. We just have an
in-group, out-group instinct. We know this because if you,
the social psychologists, and watching my husband do social psychology, and he does a lot of
inter-group studies too, if you have people count off in a circle, one, two, one, two, one, two,
and the ones go to one end of the room, the twos go to the other, almost immediately, if you give
them an implicit measure, they feel their group's better and they haven't done anything. And this goes back to the
research on chimpanzees, where we know that they fight the other group and it's a part of our
survival instincts, but it really makes it hard for us to treat differences as equals and to see, not just to value differences, but really to be sure that we can hold them as equals.
And that's an effort.
And I tell sensitive people that we need to be the pioneers in being able to do that.
But because they have felt inferior for a long time, there's a natural tendency to swing to me that,
like you said, there are benefits and there are challenges. The same as with if you're not highly
sensitive, what would make it so that somebody would tend to default towards this sense of
there's something wrong or there's something that has to be fixed or I'm less than?
There's lots of reasons for that. Let me just throw in just to make the mix even more messy,
is there equal numbers of men and women? But it's especially hard for men, as you can imagine,
to... I was just talking to somebody the other day, I can't remember, but it was just about
how important it was not to seem sensitive when you're in school, not to seem weak, not to seem feminine.
It's just so important.
So I think the root cause of that is that being a minority, somebody's going to either
put you up or put you down just for being different.
We don't know, again, how to deal with difference except to decide that it's better or worse.
I think it's more of a
problem in some cultures than others. I think North American cultures, North, South America,
Australia, New Zealand, I say they're the immigrant cultures because immigrants kind of
self-selected for toughness and value toughness for dominating their new environment. Most parents had no idea. I mean, no one had a term
for their child sensitivity until 25 years ago, but even sometimes it was valued, but most of the
time parents are afraid of having a child that's different. I coined this term because it certainly
applied to raising my sensitive son.
If you want to have an exceptional child, you have to be willing to have an exceptional child,
which means they're not going to be like other children. And that's so painful for parents because they suffer and they struggle. And especially with sensitivity, they just feel
everything so deeply and everything is new, so it's overstimulating. So parents didn't understand what the trait was.
Teachers didn't.
Pediatricians didn't.
And so the labels just fell left and right.
I like to tell the story of my nephew and my son.
I was present.
Both of them highly sensitive, happened to be present.
My nephew also.
First day of preschool.
And they're standing at the back of the room watching the other children play and amazed. They'd never seen so many children, so many toys.
And the teacher walks up and says, what's the matter? Are you shy? Are you afraid?
And there goes this label onto this child. And of course, you don't want to be shy or afraid.
So you plunge in and ignore your feelings and manage.
But inside you feel there's something, some imposter thing,
or that you're covering up something.
And I think very often people don't even know what it is that they're covering up until they hear the term.
And then they say, oh, that explains what I'm fighting all my life,
my feeling there's something different about
me.
And so, yeah, it's a strong issue.
And we do see the self-esteem problem even in people with otherwise good childhoods.
And it's easy to kind of fix.
You start reframing.
You start thinking back to the times when your self-esteem was really blasted.
And almost always it has to do with your sensitivity.
Yeah, that resonates with me.
Mayday, mayday.
We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were going to be fun.
On January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're going to die.
Don't shoot him, we need him.
Y'all need a pilot
Flight Risk
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here
It has the biggest display ever
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever
Making it even more comfortable on your wrist
Whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping
And it's the fastest charging Apple Watch
Getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X, available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone XS or later required, charge time and actual results will vary. I've noticed also that numerous times you have described it as not a tendency, not a preference,
not a style, but a trait, which has a very specific connotation. I'm curious about that.
Yes, it really means that it's innate. That's, to me, the most important part of it. Sometimes
when people try to explain temperament, they talk about it as
an innate style because it shows up in everything you do. Like in my book, The Highly Sensitive
Person in Love, I did the first scientific survey of temperament and sexuality. I wanted to find out
whether sensitive people were different in their sexuality, their preferences, their comfort
zone, their behaviors. And there were definite differences because it goes everywhere with you,
whether it's school or work or parenting, that's temperament and you can't get rid of it.
You certainly can modify your life and modify your behavior so that you get only advantages from it.
We expect that from highly sensitive people.
Come on, you can do this.
Yeah.
I mean, understanding this, I think, is also so helpful because when you realize that this
is a part of you, it's not something that is even really capable of being changed.
As a general rule, we hate to acknowledge that
because the great vision is that all parts of us
can change and evolve and grow.
That's right.
And yet it's not true.
A lot of it can, but I can't practice my way
into a different color eyes
or I can't practice my way into certain,
there are certain things that are simply innate about us.
And I think sometimes we cause more suffering than benefit
by trying to make that not so
and trying to change what's not changeable.
That's right.
And that piles onto whatever you may already be feeling
as a highly sensitive person.
Right, and then I couldn't change myself
and then I must be really rotten.
And that happens in therapy
where therapists try to get sensitive people to change in certain ways. And then whose fault is it? It's not the therapist's
fault, of course. It's also a problem in relationships because, of course, we often
feel, well, if you really love me, you'd change, but people can't change their temperaments.
So that's a piece that you get when you get your partner. Yeah. When you think about the way that it often shows up, oftentimes all we can really see is
behavior, but the work that you've done over the years also says, well, it's not just the way that
we interact with the world. It is the brains, like the way that your brain function is measurably different.
Very measurably different. And that's important. I think one of the things,
we have sort of a five to thrive thing for sensitive people. And the first one is believing
your trait is real. So it's important to have that research and to be able to say the brains
function differently, that somehow we right away are interested in that. I'll give you one example that I just love this study,
but it's a little hard to explain. It's known that people from a collectivist culture,
like Asian cultures, and the United States was what they were comparing, individualistic cultures,
actually perceive things differently.
Like if you give them a task to pay attention to context or to pay attention to a single aspect,
people from a collectivist culture pay attention easily to the context and not as well to the
single aspect. And these are like boxes with lines in them. And so we know that, and we know that
what happens in the brain is your brain shows
more activation on the task that is more difficult for you. So we have a kind of a habit, Art was
doing this study at Stanford, and we always throw in, if we can, the highly sensitive person scale,
and we say, listen, if you want a publication, we promise you there will be an individual difference.
And psychology is not very interested in individual
differences because all of science and medicine has been the same way. We want to know in general
how people operate. We want laws of nature kind of things. We don't want exceptions. So it turns
out that sensitive people doing that same task from both cultures, their brains were not working harder on the one that did not belong
to their culture. It was as if they could see the correct answer without having their culture
affect it. Now, we don't know how this applies in real life, but it's got to have implications.
It's just that ability to see past those things. And I imagine it, I remember having people write their experiences
as highly sensitive parents. And this highly sensitive father was in Asia with a new baby,
and he had one of these baby carriers. And at that time, I don't know where he was. He was in
a fairly sophisticated city in China, I think.
So people were not carrying babies around on their bodies.
And he didn't let it bother him that people stared at him and pointed at him.
But then he found in about six months later, a lot of people were carrying their babies around on them.
The men, not just the women. So it's a kind of leadership, again, that you can
not be carried along by your collective experience as much. We don't know how this actually applies
because our sensitive people are sensitive to being stared at and feeling embarrassed. So
that might alter their behavior when it comes down to being a conformist or not.
Yeah.
On the one hand, it's almost like you're receiving more information or different information.
I don't want to say more.
And that's part of the problem of overstimulation is you're receiving more information.
But on the other hand, you may be more sensitive to how you're perceived and the way that you
respond to or process that information.
So, it might not be on the surface observable by others
that this is all going on sort of beneath the surface, underneath the hood.
It's a very invisible trait. And on the HSB scale, there's 27 items and there are people
who answer no to every item. And then there's people who answer yes to every item. And we all
live in the same world. And that's pretty astounding when you think of people saying, you know, of course, we're
not surprised that they don't mind violent movies or they're not affected by caffeine.
But to say you're not conscientious and you're not affected by other people's feelings, I
mean, we just all live in the same world.
Yeah.
I mean, it's interesting when you look at the items on the scale and I realize this is all being revisited now.
Before we came on air, you actually asked me if I was a highly sensitive person.
And I said my answer was something like partially.
Just through this conversation, the more I really think it through, I think actually that partially was not an entirely
honest answer. I think entirely is probably more the true answer. But what's fascinating to me is
that even in conversation with you, there was clearly something in me that was hesitant to
just own it. And I'm somebody who's grown up in an environment where I wasn't punished for being
that way. I was, you know, I grew up in
a place where my, you know, like in a very craft oriented, you know, like raised by a lot of women
around me, raised by a lot of people who are in touch with emotions, not that there's necessarily
that parallel, but raised by people who were openly sensitive, raised by people who were
open to the artistic, the nuanced, the empathic side of life. And even so, and I feel
like I'm pretty comfortable being that way in the world myself. And even so, there was something
in me that when you asked me that question, I didn't just immediately own it. I'm wondering
about that, actually. Yeah, that's a good thing to wonder about. I'll add one other thing that
always get interviewers on this one. There is a trait called high sensation seeking, which is
almost unrelated. That is, you'd be surprised that a highly sensitive person could be a high
sensation seeker, and yet many of them are. And that doesn't mean that they're extroverts,
because there's high sensation
seekers who climb mountains by themselves, you know, to get away from people. But I think it's
an ideal thing for an interviewer because you're curious, you want to talk to new people all the
time, and then the sensitivity makes it possible to be a good interviewer and to know what
your audience would want to hear.
So I think it's a very common combination in people who do the kind of work you do.
It's interesting you bring that up.
I hadn't been aware of that, but that's actually me as well.
I will go out for a hike somewhere and I'll push myself physically, emotionally. I will want to be in the most vivid experience I can.
And I very often love being there alone.
It's fun to share it with other people, but there are certain things that I love to do
simply because I love the experience of being in solitude and intensity simultaneously.
Yes. Yeah. High sensation seeking a sensitive person. I think sensitive people, I mean,
for myself on a hike, I enjoy going with my husband, which I usually do, but I really love
going alone because I experience it differently. For one thing, you have no responsibility about
whether the other person is enjoying themselves or going to stumble or anything like that,
but you just perceive things without interruption and distraction. Just perceive all the subtleties
and take it all in. And of course, can set your own pace and be as tough as you want to be, go as far as you want. No,
it's sensitive people do need solitude, I think. Downtime, when they can process, because when
you're on a hike, for instance, you can mull over a lot of things, not even fully conscious of doing
it, but you know how it is. It just kind of all turns over in your brain
and all of a sudden you have an idea sometimes that, oh, that's the solution to that, or that's
the question to ask, or that's the person to ask to interview. Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, that makes so much sense to me. It's really resonating. For a lot of years of my life,
I was a mountain biker and I would ride alone most of the time and I would ride very quickly
in trees and very windy technical trails because of the intensity of the experience.
Yes. Yeah. And so that's really important that we not exclude those highly sensitive people who are
seeking intensity. Some people say it's like one foot's on the gas and one foot's on the brake.
It's like, this is too much, but I want to do it.
And it's also, for me, I'm very easily bored. And that's just, I have to kind of squash that feeling when I'm with people and we're chit-chatting or whatever. But it's, you kind of think that
those things wouldn't bother a sensitive person in the sense,
well, if it's not interesting, I'll just kind of drop out of the conversation and chill. But no,
if I'm going to be with other people, I want it to be interesting.
Yeah, I hear that. You also made a really interesting distinction, which is that you can be highly sensitive, high sensation, and also be introverted.
But it's not necessarily, there is no thing that says all highly sensitive people or all
highly sensitive and high sensation people also tend strongly towards introversion, which
I think for a lot of people probably sounds a little counterintuitive.
Yeah, it's the whole extroversion or high sensation seeking or both. Yeah, it is very counterintuitive. If you go back to the crux of the trait is depth of processing. It's not being overstimulated. It's not about avoiding stimulation. It's about finding the best resources that others didn't
notice. I mean, that's the way it is for animals. It's like, and someone's done a computer simulation
of this, that if you have, imagine a patch of really good food or a patch of food, and depending
on how good it is and how sensitive the animals are, some will find that patch
and eat it and others will not notice it.
And not noticing is fine if there aren't any especially good patches of grass.
In fact, it's the easy way to get through life is assuming that there's not big differences
between now and next time. So picking up on subtleties, I like to use the example of a
horse race. If you're really good at watching horses, you can pick winners, not all the time,
but pretty well. But if you're paying attention to the color of the jockey's outfit and you decide
to bet on red the third time because they won twice. That's not a good idea to have been paying
attention to that. But the analogy I like best is that, because this is true of me, if you know a
shortcut, it's only a shortcut if nobody else knows it. So there can't be very many sensitive
people because then there'd be no advantage for anyone. If all the animals found the good patch
of grass, then the trait would
just disappear because it would have no advantages. And it sort of implies that we have to keep
getting more sensitive in order to enjoy that advantage. And people say, well, in this culture,
isn't it terrible to be highly sensitive? I say no, because even searching the internet for
something, my intuition, my observational skills or whatever,
I find what I need much faster.
I used to say that about being in bookstores.
I find the right book without having to look at every single book.
I don't know how I do it, but we take a long time observing sometimes, but other times
we know exactly what we want and we don't have to observe at all because we already
know.
We get the cue, oh, there's an opportunity, I'll go for it.
And that others like, you know, if you know exactly what a really perfect peach looks
like when you're shopping, you just take those peaches.
You don't have to think about it.
You don't have to learn about it.
But you know exactly the subtle signs.
Yeah, it's like the discernment engine becomes subtle and almost automated over
time. So you don't even realize that there's this process going on.
Whether you're in your running era, Pilates era, or yoga era, dive into Peloton workouts that work
with you. From meditating at your kid's game to mastering a strength program,
they've got everything you need to keep knocking down your goals.
No pressure to be who you're not.
Just workouts and classes
to strengthen who you are.
So no matter your era,
make it your best with Peloton.
Find your push.
Find your power.
Peloton.
Visit Peloton at onepeloton.ca.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch,
getting you eight hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series 10.
Available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone
XS or later required. Charge time and
actual results will vary.
Mayday, mayday.
We've been compromised. The pilot's
a hitman. I knew you were gonna be fun.
January 24th. Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg. You know what the
difference between me and you is? You're gonna die.
Don't shoot him, we need him! Y'all need a pilot? Flight Risk. I wonder if you've seen this show up.
As you were speaking, part of me was imagining a scenario where somebody is either in a conversation with other people or maybe in a meeting room with a team at work or some similar situation. And they're all looking for a solution, an innovative, a creative new idea, a new way
to solve a problem.
And if you are wired in this way, I wonder if there's ever this dynamic where you see
data that maybe others don't see, and you see a way that the pieces of the puzzle go
together in maybe a way that others don't see,
but you simultaneously understand and read a more nuanced social and power dynamic
in that room,
which then makes you less inclined to share it
even though you're seeing it.
Well, you've just exactly described something
that I have described many times.
And if you don't say something,
then you begin to feel odd. You know,
I mean, that you're not doing what the right thing is because you're not giving them the best
solution, or you're simply not part of the group because you know things that they don't know. And
do you think you're better than them? Do you think you're worse than them?
No, it's a complicated thing. And what I tell people, by the way, is go to single members of the group ahead of time and win them over to your perspective before
there's a group meeting. Because what's often happening is you're shaming someone by showing
them what's wrong with their idea or that they didn't think of it. So the group dynamics are
very precarious for sensitive people, or you give them little hints
and let them sort of sniff their way to the solution, but then often you don't get any
credit for it because they think they thought of it. The good leader is the person who takes
people where they were about to go anyway. And anything else, they're not going to go with you
because it's too far out. And then you get criticized and seen as annoying or stupid or
whatever. So it's very tricky. And that sort of brings up whether or not organizations can learn
to make better use of sensitive people. It's interesting, they're learning to make use of
people on the autistic spectrum, that they can have these really phenomenal abilities. The idea of understanding highly sensitive people,
one of the problems I've seen is that employees do not want to admit
to being highly sensitive.
You know, that little twinge, I'm going to be seen as not quite as good,
and that's there.
We hope we can solve that in time.
This interview is a good, another little step.
And it's interesting, your hesitancy.
And if you have any more insights about that, that'd probably be really good to share.
Yeah, I'm probably going to take a little bit of time to think about that and to unpack
it, but just thinking about it in real time with you, I wonder if there's something in me that still feels a sense of social judgment, you know,
even though it's just me and you, you're the person who's literally been researching this for,
for, you know, like a tremendous amount of time. Um, and yet there are something that didn't just
want to show up entirely as that person. And I'm somebody who's
very tapped into that side of myself. I love the fact that I lead with that myself. I love the fact
that I hang out in the back of a room and read the social dynamics and I can almost feel the power
in the different corners and the nuance of the conversations and the nonverbal signals. I view
that as a genuine asset. I like that. And yet there was something about
the quote label that still gave me pause. Well, perhaps, I mean, and people have complained
about the term sensitive, perhaps it is the label that some of the men have been saying,
finely tuned nervous system. I didn't choose highly reflective or something because it didn't apply to animals
and I was thinking biologically, but certainly feel free to use any term you want.
Yeah, because I'm completely comfortable with the description of the trait.
Right.
So it's interesting, but I definitely am going to noodle on that a bit more because it did catch me.
You know, it occurs to me also that this has got to have been affected
in some really meaningful ways
by the last year and a half.
People have often asked me
how highly sensitive people would be faring
during the pandemic.
And I've always said,
I don't know because it's so much,
you know, that saying we all heard about,
it's not that we're all in the same boat, we're all in the same flood, you know, we're all in the
same ocean, but the weather's different for different people. And I think many sensitive
people have appreciated the pandemic in certain ways, being able to work from home. And if you're
an introvert, not as many social engagements, not as much
stimulation in general. But if you're living with someone who's difficult and you're at home with
them all the time, or you've got little children that you don't get any break from, or if you've
lost someone, the circumstances are so varied. So probably it's this differential susceptibility thing again.
In good environment, they're doing better than other people.
Poor ones, they're doing worse.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense to me.
I've had many conversations because I'm just a curious person.
And I think a lot of people around me have this similar trait. And it does seem like everybody's unique life circumstance, in addition to the environmental
circumstance that we're all simultaneously moving through, it's like these two layers
that play into how you respond as a highly sensitive person.
And also that other overlay of high sensation, which I really hadn't been focused on until you shared it.
I have to imagine now that I'm thinking about that, you know, if you are a high sensation person
and you have now had to spend a tremendous amount of time in a confined environment with a confined
way to interact, you know, like a constrained set of stimuli, that's got to play into it,
you know, in different ways as well. Yeah, we've certainly discovered some new trails that we hadn't been on before in Marin.
I was desperate for new places to hike, and that's the entertainment we had.
What I wonder about too is how much sensitive people took care of themselves because they saw
this is a good place where being
sensitive might mean a better survival strategy. You know, really paying attention to what you're
doing and the subtle signs of safety or danger. And I also wonder how, you know, the Spanish flu
in 1917-18 is amazing how people forgot about it. And of course, this one will
not be so easily forgotten because everybody will write a novel about it or something.
But the sense of it could happen again, maybe. I knew about this was going to happen because I
listened to science shows and read science stuff. And all the virologists were saying,
definitely there'll be a mutation that can spread through the air
and it'll be a disaster.
And so I wasn't too surprised.
I hate to tell you, but now the scientists are saying
that certain deadly fungi are going to get, that we don't
have any medicines for are out there.
And I don't like to say that very, very much to people, but we are, the closer we live
with other people and things travel around the globe, it's just another reality that
we face.
And I just think sensitive people are going to be conscious of this as a dramatic event that could happen again or something else like it sweeping around the globe in this way.
I imagine that sensitive people have been more aware of climate change earlier than other people were.
Those are interesting questions to research.
Yeah.
And especially if you're processing a lot,
and as you shared, more subtle stimuli, and those stimuli are related to the big existential
questions, can get a little bit scary, but at the same time, maybe real enough to inspire
concerted action in a way where you might not have acted before.
Well, that's where one little piece of my work in my mind is empowering sensitive people
to speak up.
Because I'm sure we're the ones who didn't like secondhand smoke.
I'm sure we've been speaking up about climate change.
So noticing these things gives the rest of humanity a real advantage if we can speak up and say what we see might be
coming. In positive ways, too, I've been wandering off of the subject of sensitivity to study the
subject of enlightenment and awakening. And this is just a huge thing going on in a small segment of society, but it's growing. Since about 1996, those who are sort of in the know have seen a lot more people suddenly, or after a long time of some practice, suddenly having this enormous change. I do not want to talk about it in terms of sensitive people being more likely,
even though I think they probably would be.
But I don't want to do that research because I don't want to foreclose other people,
you know, sort of say that it's less likely for them. I want everyone to go for that if that's their interest.
But it's a positive, potentially positive change in humanity, just as we're watching all this darkness, we also see some possibility for something.
And I say that as a scientist, not in a woo-woo, you know, well, I just channeled this somebody who said, don't worry, consciousness is changing.
I take it very seriously, my data
collection. So now I'm really curious about this. My experience with words like enlightenment and
awakening has generally been wrapped around Eastern philosophy, Buddhism. And in that context,
or in Hindu context, it normally references a state that in some way, shape, or form,
quote, removes you from a cycle of suffering.
So that there is, and also a certain amount of ego detachment.
But so now I'm really curious, how do you define, when you use the word enlightenment
or awakening, what are you actually talking about?
It's super complicated.
But I think we, in terms of personal experience, the importance of the ego reduces.
There's less thinking about oneself.
There's an increase in equanimity, which is the biggest change.
Just not reacting to small things or big things with the same amount of fear.
And there are stages to it too, but most people feel a greater
compassion, a greater caring about the world, so they don't remove themselves from all social
action or something like that. But they do perhaps choose carefully what they do, that it's not
an intense emotional reaction, I'm going to go out there and do such and such.
It's a long-term thinking about the best strategy and what's realistic and what's not,
and seeing it sometimes quite differently from a much bigger perspective.
And the interesting thing to me is that there's a sort of, you know, it was part of sort of monks and monasteries and people living in caves for so long.
And then all of a sudden, meditation became something that anybody could do.
And then along with it, I'm very familiar
with transcendental meditation because I've been doing that for 50 years. And Maharishi came and
said, oh, TM, meditation for householders, you can do it all the time. And when you learn it,
the last lesson, they talk about the higher states of consciousness.
I don't think many people pay any attention to that. But now there has been this burgeoning
and meditation of all sorts has come up, but they all tend to be a lot like TM and that don't make
an effort, don't strain, just come back to whatever you're doing. And then all of a sudden,
people are talking about awakening and enlightenment.
And I see it as kind of a modern technology and modern look at it. There's a man,
Jeffrey Martin, who's done all this research on it, interviewing a lot of people and then kind of honing down on the traits. Stephen Taylor wrote a book on it called The Leap.
There's a wonderful website called Buddha at the Gas Pump
where Rick Archer's interviewed over 600 people that are enlightened
or have something important to say on the subject.
And he says he can't keep up with it.
I mean, he used to be looking for people to interview,
and now they're begging, and he says he's not taking any more applications because there's so many. And so,
something is going on that's quite fascinating to me. And I woke up one day to the realization
that the word spirituality and the word sensitivity have the same problems, it's both good and bad. I was talking to a friend today and we
were saying, I think talking about your sexuality is easier in some circles than talking about your
spirituality. Like, don't go there. That would be really embarrassing.
Right. It's like you create an uncomfortable environment when you talk about spirituality
or sensitivity. Right. Which will it be, right?
So I guess it's my sensitivity that's honed in on this thing creeping into our world.
It's going to be big soon, I predict.
But people right now don't have much of a sense at all of what it means.
Yeah.
That's so fascinating that you're seeing that. What I've seen, and maybe
it's speaking to a similar phenomenon, is over the last decade, the pursuit of psychedelic molecules
as a way to touch into that state. And it's know, people want to tune out or get high or just like live a baked life.
They're looking for a particular state that is more expansive.
That's right.
In fact, Aldous Huxley, who wrote about the perennial philosophy, sort of bringing that term into, it goes back to the Middle Ages, but that whole, it's a kind of a description of mysticism.
That's a bad term. But anyway,
he turned to psychedelics because it seemed easier. And his Buddhist teacher, Hindu teacher
said, oh, you know, that'll make you enlightened for a few hours and then you'll be back to being
totally stupid. But yes, and there are people who do get these big, big visions. A friend of mine said, you know, I understand that I'll be like out a thousand miles looking
down on myself and I'll understand my whole life and I want that experience.
It'll make me more creative.
And I said, okay.
I kind of believe that there is neuroscience on this too, and there are fundamental brain changes, but I don't know whether they're permanent when you take psychedelics, perhaps sometimes, because there's this weird thing of people becoming enlightened just suddenly, overnight practically. That's pretty unusual. And there must be brain changes that happened for them too, but it's permanent.
Yeah, how fascinating. I mean,
obviously it's a near impossible task. Maybe we'll have to do another interview on this subject.
Right. We've strayed a little bit, haven't we? That's a whole rabbit hole we can start to go
down over there. It's definitely a whole rabbit hole. Definitely. Yeah. You know, I wanted to
kind of circle and touch on one other thing before we wrap our conversation, because, you know, a solid bit of your more recent work has been around
highly sensitive parents and parenting.
Oh, yeah.
And as a parent, and who I feel is highly sensitive, and maybe with a kid who's wired
similarly, I'm super curious about how this shows up with parents and how it shapes the way that we parent,
the way that we live, and also the way that we relate to partners in a parenting relationship.
Well, there's not very much research on it, but there is some. My husband and I did
surveys of sensitive and non-sensitive parents. So that's self-report. And from that, we found that they reported themselves to be
a set of questions that we ended up calling attuned creative parents. They also found
parenting, compared to other parents, they also found parenting more difficult than other parents.
And the third question, the third issue you brought up is that it did not cause their relationship with their
parenting partner to be any worse, which I thought was interesting because I think it's the ability
to see the big picture enough to know, well, right now my partner's being a jerk, but that's because
we're both so overstimulated and can't figure out what to do, that kind of thing. In the long run, this person is a good person.
So it's nice that it didn't go there for people, although I interviewed people too,
and there were certainly some people who got divorced
because the problem is for the sensitive parent is they're so highly stimulated.
And some mothers said that they didn't feel like raising their grown husband and
dealing with his distress at the same time as dealing with their child's distress. They just
threw him out of the house and said their relationship was much better, but those were
exceptions. But then there's two other studies that have been done, not so positive, because they rate parenting
on this sort of, you know, it's three styles of parenting. Authoritarian, which means shut up and
go to your room. Permissive, which means do whatever you want, I'm out of here. And authoritarian,
authoritative, which is setting boundaries, but listening, and then set the boundaries,
kind of. And authoritative is considered to be the best. And sensitive parents tended to be one or the other of the not good types. And you can imagine if you're overstimulated,
it's either go to your room and shut up, or I don't care what you do. I'm going to go lay down and rest.
It takes energy to do that authoritative kind.
And my bottom line in my book was that highly sensitive parents must have help.
They cannot parent full time.
They're better off going back to work and putting their child in child care if they
can afford, you know.
In the US, child care is expensive.
In Britain, it's expensive.
But like in Scandinavia,
you have that option of childcare at a very young age and doesn't matter about your income.
And I think ideally you're sharing with a partner, but you can't both have jobs. And you can't just
have one person working and the other person home all the time. It's just parenting is hard work. They're finally doing studies on parenting and burnout for everyone. But for a sensitive person, especially
parenting young children, especially more than one child, it's very difficult. My daughter-in-law
and her mother has a PhD in child development and daughter-in-law's a psychiatrist and they could afford this. They had a rule,
no one's alone, alone with a child at home. There should be at least a housekeeper in the house or somebody there because it's too hard with little children, little children. So
I'm very firm about that. And people say, well, I'd have to take out of my savings. And I say,
if that's savings for your child's college education, you better spend it now. Because
the child may not be doing so well by college age if you're losing it all the time.
Yeah. And that also brings up the conundrum in that if you don't have means, if you don't have
a certain amount of resources, of privilege,
of access, and you find yourself in this scenario, it's a tough place to be.
It is. And I have a ton of suggestions for people, ways to take brief timeouts and ways to settle
down, and also ways to look for help that you think there isn't any, but there are parenting groups
where people share and maybe you have to take in someone from your extended family that
you wouldn't maybe, but you need that for childcare or you have to make some compromises
sometimes to get that help.
But that's one of the problems is sensitive parents have this vision of perfect parenting and they're trying to do it. And sometimes they feel quite ashamed of needing
help and spending money on help because they see other parents not needing that. But it's one of
those things that comes with DOES. It's that big fat zero, that big fat O. And you see the depth
of process and the emotional attunement and the
sensitive to subtle needs of your child before they show any fever you know when they're sick,
that kind of thing. But all the gains are lost if you're overstimulated.
Yeah. I want to zoom the lens out for a moment and then we'll come full circle. And maybe bridging these two big ideas, highly sensitive people and our brief sojourn into
transcendence.
That state that I think so many of us aspire to, especially now, especially after the year
and a half, as you shared, one of the defining elements of that state is a sense of equanimity,
a sense of no
matter what comes my way, I'll be okay. The ability to acknowledge reality, but also let it
move through you rather than grasp, suffer, and collapse underneath the weight of it.
So if we bridge those two things for a highly sensitive person who would love to spend as much of their daily hours, their life, with as much of this experience of equanimity as possible, is there one, maybe not one, I can tell by your face, you're like, no, the answer is no, there's no one thing.
But how do we do that?
What is the most readily available bridge or set of practices?
I was laughing because I was going to sound like an advertisement because I do think it's hard to
even sound like an advertisement, but I do think that transcendental meditation is the most
efficient method. And it's kind of become a little passe. People are doing mindfulness and all this because you can learn that on the internet. You just click on mindfulness meditation and it's kind of become a little passe people are doing mindfulness and all this because
you can learn that on the internet you just click on mindfulness meditation and there's how to do
tm you have to go and learn but that's because well some of it is organizational and the problem
is is it's it's very effortless it goes straight for the transcendent, but it's not easy to learn to be effortless.
Like if you're focusing on your breath, that's easy to do. We all can do that. But being effortless
with a mantra, because it's not about focusing on the mantra at all. It's about transcending that
and going beyond that. There's a guy here in California who's pretty popular, Adyashanti, and he teaches a, there's
a few other people, I think it's a Zen meditation technique originally, which is actually just
letting everything be, but focusing on that pure awareness, that stuff that's behind,
because that is the most restful state of the nervous system, is to be beyond thoughts.
Now, it's, you're not going to get there easily, and that's one of the nervous system, is to be beyond thoughts. Now, you're not going to get
there easily, and that's one of the good things about TM instruction is they make it very clear
that there are no good meditations, because in a sense, if you're highly aroused and you can go
from 10 to 7, that's better than a meditation from 3 to 0 arousal, because you can get that
down when you're up there at 10, and you can get that down when you're up there at 10 and you can
get it down. And your meditation may be nothing but thoughts, but you still have settled the
nervous system. And all of that, all those kinds of details of meditation, it really helps to learn.
And I should say that the organization is really good now about if people don't have the money,
that they have various ways of helping people out. So I think it's the most efficient kind of downtime and that's 20 minutes
twice a day. But if you don't get it twice a day, you don't get in twice a day. But if it means
getting up 20 minutes early to meditate, fine. And with TM, if you fall asleep, that's fine too.
It's not like... It's up and straight. Yeah, you have to go quickly to a very quiet state.
And of course your mind's going to be racing,
but you have to settle it down some as quickly as possible in the time you have.
Yeah.
And once children are a little bit, that they can be left alone,
then you can train them that this is something that you're going to do
and they can have some
special treat during that time watching some video or something they don't get to watch usually
or you can meditate with them in the room if you can think of a way to keep them amused
i have a great parenting story i didn't have to parent very much alone with my child but there
was a while when my husband was going out and people just laugh
and laugh at this story. He told me, fill the kitchen with toys, close the door so that he
can't leave the kitchen and climb on top of the refrigerator. And I'd go up there, he would not
know I was there. He didn't notice. And I would sit up there and journal and meditate and rest.
So there's always the top of the refrigerator.
Right.
Meditation by any means necessary.
Right.
That's too funny.
Yeah, I have about a decade-long practice, not TM.
It's more of a breath center practice.
Right. a decade long practice, not TM. It's more of a breath center practice. But what I've learned
over the years is that there is a pause between the exhale and the inhale. And you can over time
teach yourself how to linger in it longer. And that pause for me is the stillest, most profound
experience of my day. And I savor it every morning when I had the chance to visit it.
That pure awareness, however you get to it, whatever form of meditation,
if you get to it and you understand that that's what you should savor,
then just think of that 24 hours a day.
That's enlightenment.
That's all it is.
And it gets like a light that gets brighter and brighter and brighter as time passes.
That sounds pretty good to me.
That's very simple.
That's all it is.
And that's every tradition.
That's all it is.
You know, it's the presence of God.
You can call it that, but it's God without any attributes.
It's just pure, pure divine presence.
So that's what everybody describes it in all the
traditions. And so now we have means to do it. And I do think it sometimes takes some retreats
and things like that added in because we build up stress and we have to have some longer breaks
from it, but it does happen. Yeah. And I'm glad about that. And it feels like
a good place for us to come full circle in our conversation today as well. So sitting here in
this container of Good Life Project, if I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up?
Oh, it's definitely find that pure awareness and live your life with it there in the background, close at hand,
right there at the same time. I have no doubt about that. Thank you.
Hey, before you leave, if you love this episode, safe bet you'll also love the conversation we had
with Susan Cain, the author of Quiet, about the power of introverts.
You'll find a link to Susan's episode in the show notes.
And even if you don't listen now, be sure to click and download so it's ready to play
when you're on the go.
And of course, if you haven't already done so, be sure to follow Good Life Project in
your favorite listening app so you'll never miss an episode.
And then share the Good life project love with friends because when ideas become conversations that lead to action that's when
real change takes hold see you next time Apple Watch Series 10
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever. It's also the thinnest Apple Watch Series X is here. It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch,
getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X.
Available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations
iphone 10s are later required charge time and actual results will vary
mayday mayday we've been compromised the pilot's a hitman i knew you were gonna be fun on january
24th tell me how to fly this thing mark walberg you know what the difference between me and you
you're gonna die don't shoot if we need them y'all need a pilot flight risk