Good Life Project - Finding Your True Calling Through Life's Darkest Moments | Parker J. Palmer
Episode Date: October 17, 2025Parker Palmer shares how three seasons of profound depression led him to a surprising discovery about authentic living and finding your true calling.Through intimate stories of his journey from academ...ic to activist to spiritual teacher, Palmer reveals why embracing our shadows and letting go of who we "should be" opens the door to who we truly are. His gentle wisdom offers hope and practical guidance for anyone questioning their path, facing inner darkness, or seeking to live with greater purpose and meaning.You can find Parker at: Website | Facebook | Episode TranscriptIf you LOVED this episode, you’ll also love the conversations we had with Sharon Salzberg about mindfulness, lovingkindness, and inner resilience.Check out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount CodesCheck out our offerings & partners: Beam Dream Powder: Visit https://shopbeam.com/GOODLIFE and use code GOODLIFE to get our exclusive discount of up to 40% off. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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It is profoundly therapeutic to be able to stand up in your world, whatever that world may be, private, public, whatever, and say, I am all of the above.
This is who I am.
I am my darkness and I am my light.
And that became part of my ongoing healing.
So what happens when a legendary spiritual teacher and God finds himself in such a deep depression he can barely leave his bedroom?
When the person others look to for wisdom about life's meaning spends months hiding behind
closed blinds with blankets over the windows because he can't bear to see the light.
And what if the path back to that light, and eventually defining your true calling requires
letting go of everything you thought you, quote, should be?
These are some of the powerful questions at the heart of today's conversation.
As we head into this next season wondering what might happen if we created space for our lives to show
us what they truly yearn to be. This exploration feels particularly timely. My guest today is Parker Palmer,
a writer, speaker, and activist focused on education, community, leadership, spirituality, and
social change. He's the founder and senior partner emeritus of the Center for Courage and Renewal,
holds a PhD from UC Berkeley and has authored several influential books, influential in particular
to me. Through really three profound seasons of depression, Parker discovered something surprising,
that embracing our shadows can become a powerful catalyst for authentic living and meaningful
work. And he shares how leaving academia for activism and then spending 11 unexpected years
in a Quaker learning community led him to a deeper understanding of what it means to truly listen to
your life. And what unfolds is a profound exploration of finding purpose not in spite of our
struggles, but through them. We explore why real growth often requires letting go of who we think
we should be, how to discern truth from the inside out rather than the outside in, and what
becomes possible when we stop trying to hide our darkness from the world? Parker's, just
beautiful, gentle wisdom, offers a radical reframe for anyone questioning their path or seeking
to live more authentically. So excited to share this best of conversation with you. I'm Jonathan
Fields, and this is Good Life Project.
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I know part of your, the origin story has you coming out of Berkeley, the PhD in 69, thinking that
you were about to step into one particular path, but emerging from school at a time where the
world was oddly experiencing a lot of similar things to today, and everything changed for you
sort of in the blink of an eye. I'd love to know more about that moment. Yeah, it did. Well,
as we all know, the 60s were a time when, at least for folks like me, our heroes had been
assassinated. Important social movements were on the rise. A terrible, terrible unjust war was
waging and the racial reckoning in this country, which goes on forever from the get-go was
going on big time as well. The cities were burning. And I felt deeply called to use what I had
learned about sociology and social change, not in the classroom, but on the streets of the
city. And so I went to Washington, D.C. and became a community organizer, working with a couple of other
people to establish what we called the Institute for Public Life. And I spent five years doing that
work, which was a huge education for me. I had grown up in a very homogeneous, white, affluent
suburb of Chicago. And I had ever so much to learn about justice across racial, economic, and
many other lines, especially in terms of race, the five years I spent organizing in D.C.
Fighting redlining and blockbusting and all of the things that lead to horrible quality of
life for so many people, segregated living for everyone, economic decline, residential
deterioration, fighting all these things and learning so much about how often
And our talk doesn't match our walk.
So that was huge.
And I burned out at the end of five years, basically.
I don't want to carry the story on forever at 82.
I think I could.
But I burned out.
I was a pretty thin-skinned guy.
My skin was getting a little thicker, but organizing took a toll on me.
I thought I just needed a sabbatical for a year.
I went to a Quaker adult living learning community called Pendle Hill.
near Philadelphia, and ended up spending not just a sabbatical year there, but 11 years.
I was hired as Dean of Studies, so in charge of an adult study program that had to do with
the inner life and its outward reach in non-violent social change.
And more important than what we were studying was what we were living.
It was a life of kind of radical equality, including in terms of.
salary. Everybody got the same base salary, no matter how many degrees you had or what position
you had. And that was a huge learning for me. I mean, I'm white. I'm privileged. I'm male. And so
you never completely grind away a sense of entitlement, I think, when that's how you're built in
this society. But a lot of it got ground away during my 11 years at Pendle Hill, as I realized
distinctions in terms of power, position, income, and all the external markers of status
really mess us up as individuals and as communities. So that too was huge learning. And to cut to
the chase, after 11 years there and five years of community organizing, I had taken up writing
as a kind of, you know, midnight vocation and was able to start working independently
around 1985 as a writer and traveling teacher and activist in the fields that I cared most about.
So that's the story, and I'm sticking to it.
I'd love to touch down into a couple of moments along that story.
You're five years into doing the community organizing.
DC. And as you shared, that is a type of work where there's a level of toughness and thick-skinnedness
that not everybody has or not everybody has built, especially earlier in life. And then you make
this decision, not to walk away from a lot of your beliefs and values and doing work,
but to really profoundly change the way that you're doing it. In moments like that, I'm always
curious how you know that it's time to do this. Because I imagine this wasn't something that just
you woke up one day and said, no, I'm going to make this change.
You know, I would imagine this is something that was brewing over time, but there's,
I'm always curious, what was the inciting incident where a decision gets made that really
changes the course of things?
Yes, and I'm not sure I can name an incident, but I can certainly name a process.
I think most change, personal and social change, begins to happen when the pain gets too deep,
not to recognize it, not to acknowledge it.
And that was certainly happening to me and thus to my wife and to some extent to our three kids as my work in D.C. went on because whoever you're with intimately and closely and you care about and love is suffering from your suffering.
And so I think the most important kind of set of triggering incidents was active imagination saying what would it be like to live in a radically different setting.
And for me, the question was fairly precise.
As a community organizer, I'm trying to lead people towards something, namely community,
that I've never really experienced myself in any depth at any scale.
So what would it be like for our family to move to an intentional community of some sort
where we could actually have a year of deep immersion in a –
truly communal life. And of course, at the time, late 60s, on end of the 70s, a lot of
communal experiments were going on around the country. So we went down to Quinaeia partners in
America's Georgia, which was the root system of habitat for humanity. And we spent a week there.
A guy named William Irwin Thompson had set up a community called Lindisfarne. We spent a week there.
We did this with three, four, five places that were then available on the American landscape.
And when we went to Pendle Hill, we just felt like this is where we belong.
And that was partly because there was work there for my wife as well, who was a potter.
And they had a crafts program that she very quickly ended up teaching.
And after I became dean.
So, you know, I think one of the sayings that's always meant a lot to me, I'm not quite sure where I first heard it, is you don't think your way into a new kind of living, you live your way into a new kind of thinking.
And on an experimental basis, using active imagination, and then actually getting out and walking into situations of that sword, we began living our way into a new kind of thinking.
and I will forever be glad that we did, even though family and friends and former academic colleagues thought I was nuts,
could not understand what I was doing.
And, you know, at that level, you pay a bit of a price too, but when someone would press me,
why are you doing this crazy, you know, upstream thing?
I would say, well, I can barely articulate it to myself, so I'm sure I can't.
articulate it to you. But I can say this. It's very, very clear to me that I can't not do this.
So it was a kind of via negativa to that what turned out to be life transforming decision,
which was really an extension of my decision when I left Berkeley not to go into the field
that I thought I was getting trained for. So I had a little, I'd practice, you know,
I'd exercise those muscles some. And what's the,
interesting about, I can't not do it, is where does that come from? And I think it took me
some years to realize that underneath all of that, I was aware in a way that I didn't even want
a name, I think, for a while, that if I didn't do this thing to which I felt deeply called,
which seemed, in the words of that old shaker song, to be the place just right for my soul,
If I didn't do it, I'd pay a sole price for it.
I'd lose some chunk of my soul.
And I'll never regret having done it,
even though there were many, many, many passages of doubt, anxiety,
financial anxiety, among others,
I was making very little money.
And yet, I felt compelled to stay the course.
And I'm very grateful that I did.
One of those things that you can see better in retrospect,
than you can at the time.
Like so much of life, right?
Yeah.
And by the way, you're talking to the son of a potter.
Great.
My mother, for all of my earlier years in life,
was the basement of her house was this pottery studio with, you know,
like three electric wheels, a massive kickwheel with a 300-pound concrete slab,
and then, like, next door, a massive walk-in, you know,
like gas-fired kiln that would take 24 hours to a...
Oh, wonderful.
So it's that resonant.
That devotion to something to creation is something that has been around my life from the earliest days and has affected me in so many different ways.
Yeah, and to have that sort of furnace of creation going on in your own basement, it's like being present at the birth of the cosmos.
It was pretty magical indeed.
You know, it's interesting.
It occurs to me.
The process that you're describing has got to be so resonant to what so many people,
these days are experiencing you know we're hearing this phrase the great resignation thrown around
all over the place and that phrase that you use that the thing that you can't not do it it seems like
that happens almost like in there are two things that it relates to one is the choice to leave the thing
that you're currently doing and then the other is to walk into something new and it sounds like
you were very clear that the thing that you couldn't not do was leave this thing like that was the
right choice. But you didn't have clarity around exactly what you were stepping into at that
moment. So you ran a series of experiments, which again, I see so many parallels to what so many
people are moving through in this moment of time. Yeah, well, thank you for mirroring that back,
Jonathan, because that's an important image to me. I remember when I ran across Gandhi's
autobiography, which he titled my experiments with truth. And I thought, yes, of course,
truth is pretty complicated stuff. You get to it slowly and you take one step forward and two
steps back about truth on most levels, but most especially the truth of your own life,
your own gifts, your own vocation, why you're here, meaning, human meaning itself. And so
it's a series of experiments that you conduct in hopes of getting there and, well, in hopes of
getting there eventually. And you do that fully aware that in science, some experiments fail.
And you will have failed experiments as well. But what a scientist knows and what I think we need to
learn in life is that you learn really more from a failed experiment than you do from one that
succeeds. Because a failed experiment eliminates a set of variables pretty decisively. That is not who I am.
That is not what I'm meant to do.
And you proceed with learning step by step.
Yeah, I remember reading a book by Eric Reeves called Lean Startup a number of years ago
about sort of applying a Kaysen approach to starting up businesses.
And the thing that stayed with me is very similar to what you were just sharing,
which is if you step into this next season of choices, not with the expectation of succeeding
by having whatever the experiment you're running be a quote capital as success, but rather
the primary metric is learning, then no matter what happens, you've won, because you've
gotten more data coming out of that, even if you've closed down a path that you thought
might be interesting.
Yeah, I think that's absolutely key.
And again, I'm glad you noted that a lot of people are struggling with, well, you know,
what about this pandemic?
What about walking away from my job?
What about all the deaths?
What about the suffering?
What about all the racial injustice?
What about the pathological politics?
And we all want to solve, cure all of those things.
It's not within our reach individually, certainly,
although I think it is collectively, if we have a will for it.
But the one thing we can do is adopt that learning modality
and keep saying, what am I learning here?
Not only about who I am, but about who I am.
what the world is like and how the two can most fruitfully intersect.
A very small example, because it's just very personal about such a learning,
those learnings often come from the shadow side of our experience.
And I think that's important to note.
And you fall into your own shadow.
And if you can recognize it, which means learn about it, you can go somewhere with it.
And what happened to me, Jonathan, was I had worked in a series of larger and smaller organizations, institutions, including Pendle Hill, which was not only a commune, but it was an educational organization as well with a board and a director and the whole nine yards.
And I started coming to a realization somewhere toward the end of my time at Pendle Hill, which was my mid-40s was the end point.
I'd come to a realization that my hobby was constantly getting conflicted with whoever number one in power was.
And as Dean of Studies or any of the other positions I'd had, I wasn't number one in power.
It was either shared or I was a subsidiary.
I was down the organizational chart.
And I had this moment of revelation when I really took a serious look at that shadow
that always had me expending energy on being embattled with the lead person.
And the moment of revelation was, Parker, you could spend the rest of your life using that energy
toward no good end and for no good reason.
Or you could do the obvious, which is to get out on your own,
where you are your own boss.
You call the shots.
You have no one to blame but yourself when you make bad decisions.
And use that energy in some form of creative endeavor.
And that was one of the things that took me from Pendle Hill
into an independent career where I've been for the last nearly 40 years
as a writer, traveling teacher, and activist.
And that's, I think, an important piece to note.
I'm sure that people who are engaging in the great resignation, which I applaud,
I mean, I think it's one of the things that needs to happen to shake up
are highly dysfunctional institutions in this society, including workplaces.
But I think one of the things that will happen inevitably is they will fall into their own shadow.
most of us do.
Most of us step right into that pothole because we don't even know it's there.
And so then the task is, okay, what's to be learned here?
And what does it, in a sense, dictate about my next steps in life?
Because if you learn something like I did on your shadow side,
you'd be foolish to continue to put yourself in a position where that can be your hobby.
for the rest of your life.
Yeah, it's so interesting, right?
Because I wonder if sometimes we focus so much on what am I being pulled too
when there's really interesting data on the other side.
Not that you would completely discount what you're being pulled towards,
but I think we spend so much time just wanting to pretend the other side doesn't exist
because it's their struggle.
There is, you know, discovery doesn't often come easily there,
and yet there's so much value in spending, not living there, but visiting and exploring and
examining that space as well.
Yeah, absolutely.
I sometimes think, Jonathan, that we have tropisms like plants, and that means that we're
attracted towards certain things and we're repelled by other things.
And it starts happening very early in life.
You can watch a little kid closely and find that same tropism at work, which actually has
some interesting predictors for the future.
life of that human being who doesn't come here in a totally malleable shape, but sort of has
a character already, a shape already. And those things are really, really worth of paying attention
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I think we're talking around a little bit the notion of calling,
which is something that you've written about quite a lot and spoken and thought about,
which is interesting a lot of different ways also.
Because I think a lot of people ask the question,
like, how do I find this thing that dwells?
within me, so that I might devote more of myself to it. And very often we go looking for it
outside of ourselves. And it sounds like you were really strongly influenced by more of the
Quaker philosophy that this thing may be influenced what lies outside of you, but it's much
more indwelling. And that's where you go searching. Yeah, I do believe in the notion of calling.
And by that, as you know, I don't mean any loud and clear external voice from the top of the
heavenly vault, it seems to me that it more often comes from within. For me, it's always come
from within. And it's always come in interaction with the world around me. I'm a big believer in
what I've come to call life on the Mobius strip. And I'm sure that many of the folks who
listen to this program know what a Mobius strip is. You can Google it if you don't, M-O-B-I-U-S.
but it's this really, really interesting three-dimensional object.
It lives in three-dimensional space, which has only one side.
It's a form that mathematicians can crank the numbers for
in which what seems to be inside the Mobius strip comes around and merges seamlessly
into what seems to be the outside of the Mobius strip,
which then comes around and merges seamlessly in what seems to be the inside.
So you have to keep saying what seems to be because the truth of the Mobius strip is that there is no inner and outer.
There's only these two joined surfaces constantly co-creating each other.
And when I first saw that physically represented by holding a Mobius strip, I thought, well, life is like that too.
That we're constantly standing at the intersection of what's going on inside us and what's going on outside us.
And two things are happening.
We are making choices about what from inside of us we're going to put out there.
And in that process, we're co-creating the world in some small measure.
And the world is constantly throwing stuff back at us in response to what we put out there.
And in that measure, the world is constantly co-creating us.
So I think the message is be cautious, be careful, be thoughtful about,
those moments of exchange between the inner and the outer.
And somewhere in that mix is the discovery of vocation.
Again, it's experimental.
You put certain parts of yourself out there and you start to feel, okay, I'm good.
This is really me.
This feels authentic.
It may not be easy, but it feels real and it's life sustaining.
You put other stuff out there and say, oops, that wasn't what I wanted or expected.
and I think maybe I'm running crosswise to my own nature here.
And so the Quaker principles that I learned in depth
during my 11 years at Pendle Hill,
this Quaker living learning community,
those principles very much support this notion
because two things are important to Quakers.
One is that we each have an inner teacher,
an inner light, some kind of indwelling guidance
that is ultimately our best teacher in life.
But it's also true that we have other voices within us, ego, greed, fear, all kinds of voices.
All of us are, I think, complex cities inside, and there's a lot of cacophony that calls for our attention.
And so we need community.
We need that external engagement to help us.
sort and sift, which of the voices that we hear from within is real and true and trustworthy.
And it takes time because sometimes the voice of fear is so compelling, or sometimes the voice
of ego is so compelling. But sorting and sifting in a community that knows how to listen,
that knows how to ask you honest, open questions that does not attempt to save, fix, advise,
correct you, but simply lets you work it out in dialogue with other people. That was one of the
huge insights that came to me at Pendle Hill. And a lot of my life worked for the last 40 years
has been translating that kind of approach to life into things like the nonprofit that I founded
called the Center for Courage and Renewal, taking it on the road, as it were, because most people
aren't going to be able to end up living the life, someone in intentional community.
But there are ways to replicate critical elements of that with ourselves, our families,
our friends, our colleagues, with trustworthy circles of folks.
I mean, it's so powerful when you bring in the notion of the community,
but also in the context of not asking the question, you know, like not posing this thing
and saying, like, here's what I'm thinking about.
What do you think?
And then expecting back some sort of answer or advice,
but rather just having a community that sort of understands the construct of listening
deeply and reflecting back intelligent questions that might allow you to keep the exploration
inside.
I think a lot of people would look at community and say, you know, so effectively you're
using them because now you get all sorts of different points of you, but you're talking
about something very different.
here. Right. Which I think is an important distinction. Right. Exactly so. Thank you for
pinpointing that. I mean, isn't it a blow to the soul when you share, let's say, a very deep grief
with someone and they say, oh, I know exactly how you feel. And here's what you should do
because this worked for me or this worked for my uncle or there's a great book on the subject
or a diet that would really help.
Those are the things that make us feel unseen and unheard,
which are the great wounds of a lot of humankind or among the great wounds of a lot of
humankind.
Nobody can get inside of me and know exactly how I feel or exactly what I ought to do
or anywhere near what I ought to do.
Even if they have what technically turns out to be the right answer,
That answer means Zippo until it arises within me and becomes operative, embodied in my own life.
And so a lot of the stuff that I work with, and they work with at the Center for Courage and Renewal,
the circles that we sponsor around the globe, have to do with teaching people the skill, the art of honest, open questions,
so that they can evoke a sort of deeper and deeper truth in the person who has the grief
or who's struggling with the decision or the problem, whatever it may be,
rather than saving, fixing, advising, or correcting them,
you know, straighten them out in one way or another.
Turns out that asking honest, open questions is a very high art.
Most of us are trained to ask questions that are really little speaking.
teaches in disguise. Like, have you ever thought about seeing a therapist? That's not an honest open question. But there are all kinds of ways to help people understand what an honest open question really is. And the phrase that I love on this comes from a feminist theologian named Nell Morton years ago. She said, our task in this time is to help hear other people into deeper,
and deeper speech.
And I love that very much.
I'll often tell a group that I'm working with,
we have a strange conceit in Western culture
that just because we've said something,
we understand what we just said.
And that's a real conceit.
And I'm raising my hand like I'm a part of that conceit.
Like every day of my life.
Me too, man.
It's a hard habit to overcome.
Um, yeah, it's so powerful. And, you know, I think one of the, one of the assumptions that underlies sort of like this conversation too is that somebody is ready and willing to step into a place of examination, that they're at a moment in their lives where they're willing to look and for truth, um, not for validation. And so often it seems like we only come to those moments after enough suffering has pushed us there.
I think that's really, really true.
At least it has been, for me, various forms of suffering across the 82 years,
and of course that would be the case.
But it's an amazing moment of turning toward vulnerability,
toward, as you say, a search for truth rather than anything else,
like self-justification or self-affirmation.
Yeah, we all need to practice self-care.
but we don't want to bandage over those places that are really bleeding in us.
Those deserve examination.
And what I love about the whole theme of self-examination and vulnerability to it,
you don't have to revert to any of the formal, spiritual, or let alone religious traditions, to go there.
The great tradition of secular humanism, which I've always regarded as a form of spirituality, gets kicked off
by a guy named Socrates, who says, the unexamined life is not worth living.
And right there is the nub of what we're talking about here.
People have also flipped that in an interesting way.
The unlived life is not worth examining.
And I'm not sure it's not worth examining, but it pretends not to get examined if you're not
really living it.
But the motive to go to self-examination is present in every tradition that has ever
supported anything vaguely related to what it means to be human.
And that takes us right back, I think, to life on the Mobius strip, where that self-examination
then yields maybe something new flowing out into the world.
And we discover, oh, now I feel more like myself.
Now I feel more real and more authentic.
I'm going to stick with this and then see what the world feeds back to me and then make
good decisions about how to internalize it.
What is it that I just don't really need or want to listen to?
What is it that may critique me or interrogate me in some helpful ways that the world is coming back with?
It's a really fascinating process that becomes a project called living your life or, to coin a phrase, living a good life.
You know, in that process of examination, there's so much power.
and as you mentioned, you know, it involves your own discernment. It involves your own experience. It involves other people who are sort of like hold you in a certain context. I wonder sometimes when we're in that process of self-examination, if we look at certain things and they're not easily measurable or quantifiable, we dismiss their importance in the weighting of their value. And we say, well, if I can't quite figure out, if I can't place an
number on this in terms of how it factors into this. We ignore it when so much of the data
that really is valuable to us is often, at least in my experience, I'm curious what your
experience is, really difficult to quantify. Right. No, absolutely. I mean, the image that comes
to mind when we talk about that particular shadow side, and I think it is a shadow side,
because the urge to quantify is somehow a bogus impulse towards absolute certainty and security,
which is not a good basis on which to live one's life.
You'll never get there except through, you know, paralyzing ideologies or other traps of the mind, heart, spirit, and even body.
The image that comes to mind is it would be like walking into a,
magnificent forest with a shoebox and saying I'm going to come out of this place with a report on
the forest, but I'm only going to report on whatever fits in the shoebox. So you'd come out
with a few acorns and come out with some leaves and maybe some pretty wildflowers and a few
stones and it would fill up pretty soon. And that would be it. You'd miss the giant redwoods.
You'd miss the suffing of the wind and the trees. You'd miss the sky and the clearing that just
opens into infinity when you get there out of the thick, thick woods, you'd miss so much.
And that sort of narrow understanding of empiricism applied, you know, a double problem
because it then gets applied to the wrong things is a real problem for a lot of people.
And if, you know, the drive for certainty is huge, isn't it?
And it's deeply paralyzing of the human experiment.
I cannot think of, and I'll just use this, a value judgment, but I'll use it.
I cannot think of any form of pathological religion or pathological politics
that isn't driven by this need for certainty.
And this kind of conclusion that people quickly reach,
especially when certain kinds of leaders persuade them of it, that, okay, now I haven't nailed
everybody else is wrong, and I can get on with my life with a sense of safety and security
that ends up distorting everything.
Yeah.
And I mean, doesn't that also speak to how pervasive and how deep the yearning is to just lock
as much of our lives down as possible?
you know like not realizing a it's actually not possible no matter what anyone else tells you
but also i mean there's life is is in the lockdownable nooks and crannies you know that that's
where the magic happens are the places where you don't actually know what's about to happen next
exactly you know and we i think unwittingly you know close the door to those just because we
feel like for a hot minute it'll let us breathe a little bit more easily absolutely i think
You know, the everyday word for the locked down life is death.
And you don't have to extend that image too far to see a lot of that happen in our world.
Yeah.
I mean, that Mobia strip that you speak of, you know, on one scale we're talking about our own lives.
But really, it's not just intrapersonal.
It's interpersonal also.
I mean, I think couldn't you look at indeed all of society as living on that Mobia strip?
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah.
And you bring to mind, Jonathan, when you opened up that idea, you bring to mind the fact, I think, that one of the reasons some people have a lot of problem with embracing diversity for the life-giving reality that it is, is that it makes certainty harder.
And you start looking at life through other people's eyes, the eyes of people of another gender or sexual orientation or religion or race.
And suddenly you see some things like, oh, well, okay, that makes at least a little sense.
Do I have to now bring that into my worldview?
No, because it just complicates things all over again.
And I've spent the last 40 years simplifying.
So I don't want to go there.
I don't want to have that experience.
I don't want to have that conversation.
And again, that's a pass toward death.
You know, one of the ruminations that is so I know you're an outdoor guy as well as an indoor guy,
me too, big time.
And one of the ruminations that I find so engaging has to do with comparing what's going on in a homogenized society
or homogenized segments of our society with what goes on in a restored prairie,
which can help us see how that virgin prairie looked and operated.
I live in the Midwest, I live in Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin,
and the state I live in and the states around us are just filled with agribusiness,
where you get maybe one or two species of plants per thousands and thousands and hundreds of thousands of acres.
beans and corn, you know, soybeans and corn.
And the consequence of that is the soil gets depleted.
You have to add chemicals to enrich it.
It gets thin.
It's subject to drought and to insects and to other forms of, you know, biological degradation.
But a restored prairie had something like 160, 180 species of plants on it.
And God knows how many species.
of creatures. And that gave it resilience. That gave it creativity. That gave it the capacity
to weather through this storm or that, because while some plants wouldn't make it in the drought,
others would. And on and on it goes, the parallel, I think, is very direct. We're coming apart
right now as a social system because we don't have the capacity to really embrace and
affirm, at least a lot of Americans don't have the capacity to embrace and affirm the
kind of diversity that would actually teach us how to be resilient, give us the resources
to be resilient, help see us through if we could learn from one another. Because there
are people whose life story, very different from mine, have known about resilience for 12
generations. This is not true in the life story I've lived, which is a story of quite privilege.
So I think the metaphors are rich. I think the connections are quite direct. And I think
what we're talking about is important stuff. Yeah, I mean, I think it really speaks to the moment
that we're in. And you hear some variation of the phrase, like striving for unity these days.
which is always
blended as interesting to me
because what's the assumption
underneath that is that
we are not all the same
in many substantial ways
is that unity is not the natural state
is that we have to fabricate this thing
rather than step back
and allow it to return to what it always was.
Right, right, that virgin prairie again
or that restored prairie
and create the conditions for it to flourish.
Absolutely.
In an earlier generation,
it was the melting pot.
you know, okay, all these different people can come, but we're going to melt everybody down
to, you know, come out in the same way. It's, again, I think, that fear of unpredictability
and that pathological desire for control that does us in every time. And, you know, if there's
one thing that you learn as you age, and if there's one thing that we all should be learning
right now. There's a lot that's not under our control. And it drives some people nuts because they
have not. Nobody's helped them develop the capacity to say, okay, that's true. There are some
things that I can't control. So what is it that I can control that will make the situation
tolerable not only for me, but for everybody? And maybe not only tolerable, but actually
improve the situation.
The agricultural metaphor
works again because that's how
a good farmer operates.
Does a lot of work
to plant a crop.
The hail storm
wipes it out in the spring,
but it's right back to work
and prepare for the next thing,
controlling what you can
while knowing there's no way to protect
against another hail storm.
You just, as John Lewis,
to say, keep on walking, keep on talking.
That's the way you build a better world.
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stories, and indie festivals popping up
places you'd never expect.
One minute, you're walking through an advanced tech hub.
The next?
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And yeah, both feel right.
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Stay curious.
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Plan your trip at staycurious.ca.ca.
It's funny.
There's a couple of years back we had someone in conversation on the podcast who had left this very successful career in the entertainment business in Hollywood and moved north with his wife and taking this piece of property that people said was unformable, completely arid, and over a period of seven or eight years turned it into this.
biodynamic farm, and it was a process of reintroducing over a period of years all of the
things, all of the animals, all of the plants, everything that would have just occurred naturally
in that space a couple of hundred years ago before we sort of got involved in the picture.
They simply restored to the way that it naturally was, where everything sort of worked
harmoniously together.
Beautiful.
And yeah, the metaphor is alive and well in a lot of different ways.
is we just very often, we choose a different path.
You know, I often wonder, what if we devoted the same energy
that we devote to certainty to instead skilling ourselves
in finding equanimity in the face of uncertainty?
What possibilities would that allow to flourish,
you know, if we literally invested differently in that way,
both as human beings and, you know, climate and everything around us?
Absolutely. And one of the reasons I'm loving this conversation, Jonathan, and you know this because you're helping us do it, is that it's been moving between the inside of the Mobius strip and the outside of the Mobius strip, even as we've talked.
And what you just said, I think, takes us back to the inside, because the question then becomes, who is helping young people especially develop those inner skill sets that will allow them to discern.
well as to when to embrace it and when to try to change it, when to accept it, but what not to
accept because it's unacceptable. Those are viable questions. Those are answerable questions.
But it's very rare to find in our spiritual communities, in our religious communities, and in our
educational system, that kind of attention paid to the inner lives of young people, where we're
equipping them with the very kinds of inner life skills that you just were touching on
and that I so deeply believe in. I'm pretty clear that I wouldn't be alive today if I hadn't
gotten some help along the way, both before the bad stuff hit and while the bad stuff was
hitting in developing inner tools for holding life's complexities.
And I know you referenced the bad stuff.
I'm sure there have been many things along the way.
But I know you've also spoken and written in a very open way about what I've heard
you talk about earlier in life as two fairly profound seasons of depression in your 40s.
And then again, in your mid-60s.
and I've also heard you describe at least the earlier ones as more situational than biochemical.
And I've been curious both what you mean by that, but also how you discern the difference between the two, especially when you're in it.
Yeah, well, that's a great question.
And I'm always glad to talk about it, Jonathan.
As you know, I've written and spoken a lot about it because when you've had an experience like that, not just once, but two, three times where for months on end,
you're wondering each time whether it's worth living another day, if you're fortunate
enough to come out of it, what you want to do more than anything is make meaning out
of it.
And one of the ways you make meaning is making it available to other people because there's
an epidemic of depression going on, lots of people in it, lots of people living with
folks who are in it.
So when you're in depression, you don't know anything about the way out.
I've come to say, I didn't, originally my metaphor was, it's like just being lost in a very deep darkness.
But after a while, I realized, no, that's not quite right.
It's more like becoming the darkness.
If you're just lost in the dark, you're still making a distinction between you and the darkness of the place you are.
and you can grope around and look for a window or shade or light switch or something.
But if you've become the dark, you can't negotiate your situation that way.
You're it. You're in it.
And it's inelectable.
No way, no way out.
And at that time, you don't know, is this situational?
Is this genetic?
Is this biochemical?
So my hunches about that come from the particulars of my own situation, as they must, because
depressions are widely different, and even the experts, the psychiatrists with whom I've consulted,
don't know a lot about it.
And I think the sign of a good psychiatrist is that he or she will say that.
They won't pretend to have a panacea.
I examined my own family history.
I found some genetic depression there.
The situational elements had in part to do with what we were talking about earlier,
vocational decisions that I made, which have worked out for me wonderfully well,
but that was not at all clear at the time.
There were moments of sheer terror, passages of sheer terror.
And it's very hard to discern what's situational and what's biochemical, because if the situational depression leads you to radical insomnia, as I had, you just can't get sleep for days on end.
That creates chemical changes in your body, in your brain chemistry, at every level of your being.
And who's to say, what's the chicken and what's the egg, what's the cause, what's the effect?
nobody can say but to the best of my discernment and here here was me looking for something over which
I might get control which had to do with some of the decisions I was making in life here was me
saying well if it is genetic there may not be a lot I can do about that beyond medication which
I was on for nine months to a year year and a quarter during each of those three
I've been fortunate
I've been able to get off
I don't want to say fortunate
because some people are on them
for the rest of their lives and they should be
they need to be
whatever puts a floor
under you living your life
without falling through
but I needed
to take what was in my control
which wasn't the genetics
but it was the situations
and find a couple of things.
One was better ways to hold whatever I was in,
better ways of interrogating myself about whatever I was in,
better ways of seeking a path forward if the way seemed impassable,
and then more discernment about who I was and what the world was like
that would allow me to make a next vocational decision
that wouldn't take me right back to that kind of misery.
So I think the two in my 40s were very much vocation-related,
and I'm glad to talk about that,
because sometimes we tell a hero story
about making a countercultural decision,
and, wow, isn't that cool?
Well, not in my experience.
It's not all cool.
And there's a certain quality of resolve that I needed anyway to see it through.
In my 60s, I think it was more about aging and some unexamined fears about getting old and dying.
And also, here comes vocation again, knowing that I was on a collision course between aging and vocation.
I mean, my vocation for the better part of 40 years was flying around the country, peering in front of audiences, hosting retreats, workshops, giving lectures, you know, a lot of folks do that kind of thing.
That was my bag.
And it became increasingly clear as I got deeper into my 60s and then into my 70s that the old body and even the old mind wasn't going to be up for that for a whole lot longer.
So how do I sort that out?
And I actually use some of those Quaker processes to try to discern best answers to those questions
so that I wouldn't have to go back to the misery of having made a decision, let us say, in old age,
that was all about pretending I was still 55 when in fact I was 75.
And as you well know, in this culture that dis is age and valorizes youth, there are a lot of temptations for us to do that to ourselves.
Indeed.
You know, so much of this also, so this is during a broader season of your life, this period of four decades plus, where what you're flying around the world and speaking about and the books that you're writing about are deeply grounded in.
in a blend of social consciousness activism and also deep questioning on an existential level
and spirituality and you're sort of making your bones as somebody who has something to say
in this spiritual domain and I'm wondering when you inhabit that identity and maybe I'm assuming
that you did and then you find yourself in your own existential darkness does the temptation
to layer shame on top of this experience enter the equation?
Absolutely.
And I would say that especially about the depressions that I experienced in my 40s,
where, you know, to some extent, most of us, as we try to build a career,
are still doing a certain amount of masking about, you know, I'm just fine.
Don't worry about me.
I've got everything under control.
I know exactly what I'm doing, even though it looks crazy, as it did to many people
in my case.
And I didn't know exactly what I was doing.
And so the shame comes, and it took, you know, very precise forms, as you just suggested.
So I'm regarded by some as a spiritual leader, and now I want to take my own life.
How is that going to pan out in public?
And that terrified me for a long time, just to take one example of the kind of shame that we're capable of loading on ourselves.
But here's what, here's the short story about what happened.
I was able to survive by good luck, grace, privilege, tenacity.
I don't know what enabled me to survive.
As I have written, don't ask the question, why did so-and-so kill themselves.
I can tell you why they were exhausted.
They needed the rest.
Depression is first and foremost after it's isolating is exhausting.
The mystery is why some people come through and not only survive but thrive on the other side.
So I was able to survive, but then I started saying, how do I make meaning out of this?
Do I just tick that off as a nine-month bad movie in my life?
I can't because it has some sort of meaning.
What is the meaning?
And I began to realize, oh, the meaning of any suffering, if possible, is to put it at the service of other people,
to put it in support of other people, just as if you have gifts galore, hand them around to other people,
engage the community with whatever you've got.
The point I want to make is that it took me 10 years from the time of my first depression to the point.
where I could talk openly about it, and the reason for that was very simple.
Something in me knew I needed to wait until that horrible experience was so fully integrated
into my sense of who I was, that I could stand before a group and say without shame,
yes, I am my gifts and I am my potholes. I am my light, and I am my darkness.
I am the guy you see standing before you
who wants to join in community with you
and I'm also the guy who lived for months
in a bedroom with the shades pulled down
and blankets over the shades
because I couldn't stand light
and nor could I get outside
for risk of running into another person.
The world was full of knives.
That's how it felt.
And here I am in San Francisco
talking to 1,500 people.
But that's all me.
I am all of the above.
And what I started to learn, Jonathan,
is that it is profoundly therapeutic
to be able to stand up in your world,
whatever that world may be, private, public, whatever,
and say, I am all of the above.
This is who I am.
I am my darkness and I am my light
and that became part of my ongoing healing
and I never wanted to put this out
let's say in a retreat setting
let alone an audience setting in a way that was so
quivery and so filled with ambiguity
about myself
that people would start to think
are we going to have to take care of this guy
you know is he about to fall apart
I needed to wait to that point where I could do my work, which includes a certain form of leadership, as a teacher, a speaker, as a writer, whatever, without scaring other people off, while still inviting them into the reality of the human experience, which I know they share.
I've often told people after long conversations about what they're struggling with.
I've said, you know, I feel ready to say a word to you that has always meant a lot to me
when I've heard it from someone else after sharing my vulnerability.
And that word is, welcome to the human race.
Welcome to the human race.
That's what we're talking about here, the experience of being human, and there's no shame in it.
The shame, in the sense of it's a shame, is when people feel they have to do it.
tuck all of that away and pretend to be something or somebody they're not. And the last
word I'll say about that is that it has really come to me, especially as I've gotten deeper into
my 80s. While I can imagine a lot of painful ways to die, I can't imagine a sadder way to die
than with a sense that I had all these years on the face of the earth, but I never showed up
as my true self.
I always hit it away
because I was fearful
of what other people might think.
And therefore, I was also
playing my cards close to my vest
and not sharing my gifts.
I never showed up as my true self.
That just seems ultimately sad to me.
And I'm grateful that
a lot of drivers in my life
have taken me to a point where I think that, you know, I won't, I won't take my leave with any sense.
I did it perfectly. I'll take my leave with a sense, I hope, I think, that to the best of my lights,
cutting myself slack for my many faults and failures, I did the best I could.
and I showed up as who I really am, shadow and light.
And I think that will bring a certain sense of satisfaction.
You know, I was about to say that this feels like a good place for us to come full circle in our conversation.
And I generally end these conversations with a simple question, which is not necessarily a simple answer,
which is in this container of a good life project, if I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up.
But I'm getting the sense that you just answered that question.
Thank you. I think that's the best answer I can give, John.
Thank you so much for this conversation. It's so enjoyed it.
Thank you. I did too. It's been wonderful, and I wish you and your colleagues and your audience all the best.
Thank you so much.
Hey, before you leave, if you love this episode, say that you'll also love the conversation we had with Sharon Salzburg about mindfulness, loving kindness, and inner resilience.
You can find a length of an episode in the show notes.
This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers Lindsay Fox and me, Jonathan Fields.
Editing help by Alejandro Ramirez and Troy Young, Christopher Carter crafted our theme music.
And of course, if you haven't already done so, please go ahead and follow Good Life Project in your favorite listening app or on YouTube too.
If you found this conversation interesting or valuable and inspiring, chances are you did because you're still listening here.
Do me personal favor.
A seventh-second favor.
share it with just one person.
I mean, if you want to share it with more, that's awesome, too,
but just one person even.
Then invite them to talk with you about what you've both discovered,
to reconnect and explore ideas that really matter,
because that's how we all come alive together.
Until next time, I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project.
The Hulu original series, Murdoch,
Death in the Family dives into secrets, deception, murder, and the fall of a powerful dynasty.
Inspired by shocking actual events and drawing from the hit podcast, this series brings the drama to the screen like never before.
Starring Academy Award winner Patricia Arquette and Jason Clark.
Watch the Hulu original series, Murdoch, Death in the Family, now streaming only on Disney Plus.
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Need an escape from the city that actually feels like an escape?
Just an hour from the GTA, Waterloo Region offers something truly unexpected.
We're talking eerie corn mazes tucked behind farm gates,
hidden garden patios where the cocktails taste like stories,
and indie festivals popping up in places you'd never expect.
One minute, you're walking through an advanced tech hub.
The next?
A harvest ho-down with goats, alpacas, and a mechanical bull.
And yeah, both feel right.
Waterloo Region is where Old World Charm meets New School Energy.
Canada's largest Octoberfest celebration, interactive light festivals, craft cider sips, vintage shops, and maybe even a horse-drawn buggy cruising past your latte stop.
This fall, don't just go somewhere. Go somewhere unexpected. Stay curious. Explore Waterloo region. Plan your trip at staycurious.cairious.ca.ca.
