Good Life Project - How to Bring More Grace Into Your Life | Julia Baird
Episode Date: November 25, 2024Can grace truly change everything? In this thought-provoking conversation, Julia Baird, author of Bright Shining: How Grace Changes Everything, shares how cultivating awe, wonder, and the capacity for... grace has sustained her through battles with cancer and life's darkest moments. From profound acts of forgiveness to the untold generosity of blood donors, Baird explores how opening your heart to grace can light an "invincible summer" within - even when the world feels brutally dark. An uplifting listen for anyone seeking light amidst suffering.You can find Julia at: Instagram | Episode TranscriptIf you LOVED this episode yo’ll also love the conversations we had with with Dacher Keltner about awe.Check out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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or it's not something beautiful and lovely.
It makes us strong.
It makes us strong.
And it's not just bungee jumping in the Grand Canyon
or big dramatic African safaris or deep-sea diving,
although you can find it in all of those things.
You can see it in your own potting beds.
You can see it in the park down the street if you're watching,
like I am at the moment.
There's a little tree hollow where these little lorikeet parrots
have just had little babies.
I'm watching them every day.
And you can see it in the extraordinary decency of a neighbor.
It's in ultimately expanding.
It connects you to other people.
And it is the very best of who we are.
So have you ever been so deeply moved by witnessing an act of grace or moral beauty that it viscerally shook you?
I remember one night in New York at the height of the pandemic when the city felt like kind of the scariest place on earth.
Every evening at 7 p.m., my window and millions of other windows would fly open and a thunderous roar would erupt across the streets as New Yorkers cheered and banged pots
and screamed their thanks for the healthcare workers risking everything for us. Just the sound
of that collective gratitude would bring me to tears. And in moments of shared awe and elevation,
I was reminded how grace cuts through hatred and suffering and fear, restoring our belief in
humanity's highest potential.
So have you ever felt that undeniable physical uplift and psychological uplift in the face of someone's simple decency or profound mercy or an act of a complete stranger, maybe even you?
If so, you know the power of grace. Wouldn't it be nice if we could access that feeling,
that state more or less on demand in everyday life?
My guest today is Julia Baird, award-winning journalist, bestselling author, and host of
the Not Stupid podcast.
Julia has spent years studying and writing about one of life's most profound, yet often
overlooked experiences, the mysterious force called grace.
In her latest book, Bright Shining, How Grace Changes Everything,
she takes us on this intimate exploration of grace through powerful narratives
and fascinating research from the world of science, philosophy, and spirituality.
And Julia's personal journey through cancer, grief, and immense challenges,
it also gives her a unique lens into our shared human capacity for forgiveness,
dignity, and what she
calls moral elevation. So whether recounting her travels to witness bioluminescent life in the
ocean depths, or sharing incredible stories of people forgiving the unforgivable, Julia really
illuminates the paths that can lead us into a more grace-filled life and relationship with the world.
You may just feel that shiver of awe and elevation
as we dive into the mysterious, the beautiful, and perhaps most ordinary part of being human,
grace. So excited to share this conversation with you. I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good Life
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On the inside of your left forearm, you have a tattoo with three French words, which translates roughly to an invincible summer,
which is actually part of a line from a 1954 work from Camus, Return to
Tipasa. The full line is, in the middle of winter, I found there was in me an invincible summer.
What does this mean to you? I'm so impressed by this question. You've really done your research
because I don't think I've ever written about having that tattoo. It means to me that even in the most
difficult times of my life, even in the most horrendous, bleak, kind of muddy, just dark zones,
I have been constantly surprised to find that within me there is something that still hungers
for light and for goodness and for awe and for all the good stuff of life,
all the best parts of being human.
And that drive in itself has lit me up and that drive in itself has created a summer
for me in my winters.
So I wanted to have it tattooed.
And I mean, the whole, I've got a little, oh, wait a minute.
So I've got this funny elbow.
Can you see?
Oh yeah, there we go.
I wanted to have it there as well, because anyone who's spent a lot of time in and out of hospitals
knows that that is where you get punctured and bruised and cannulas going in and out. The end
of surgeries, it's often quite, it's a very like contested zone. And I wanted to remind myself of
that anytime I was going in and out of hospital, that I had that to hold on to.
Yeah. And for you going in and out of hospital wasn't just the sort of occasional annual update or physical.
There is a very substantial winter for you when you reference that.
Yeah, that's true.
So about 10 years ago, I was diagnosed with a, they thought it was ovarian cancer, but it's a very kind of rare abdominal cancer.
And the treatment for it is really quite brutal.
They will, you know, like just go in and remove organs and pour hot chemo inside you into
your abdomen and then stitch you back up and kind of good luck.
And it takes ages to come back to be able to walk and like eat and function again um
so i've had that like four times now so yeah it led to fairly intense moments of reckoning for me
but how amazing that you can now look down just glance down at the inside of your left arm
and see both the memory of of all that. That is where so much of this happened.
And then also that line is just the constant reminder. I also love that that's actually the
closing line of a longer stanza in that particular work. The opening line is,
there is merely bad luck in not being loved. There's misfortune in not loving. That line is
actually a line that stayed with me for a long time. Bad luck in not being loved. There's misfortune in not loving. That line is actually a line that stayed
with me for a long time. Bad luck in not being loved and misfortune in not loving. Yeah, that's
true. Yeah. And I feel like so many of us are experiencing some version of that in the world
these days. Yeah, right. And why do you think that stayed with you? I feel like so often we feel like
the experience of loving and being loved is something that we're constantly trying to wrangle, to lock down, to have some sense of control over.
And the first part of it kind of acknowledges the fact that, you know what, you have some level of agency and control over you.
And even there, kind of-ish.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right?
But the rest of the world, the people around you, circumstances,
you really don't. And at the end of the day, you don't want to as much as you think you do,
but you do have agency over giving yourself to others, to causes, to ideas, to people,
to pets, to the environment, whatever it is. And that's where, because you have agency there,
the misfortune is in not actually exercising that agency. And I feel like that's where, because you have agency there, the misfortune is in not actually exercising that
agency. And I feel like that's been a really interesting, powerful reminder to me. I'm
curious how it lands with you. I agree with that. I mean, it reminds me instantly of the whole,
just the tenet of stoicism that you can't determine your circumstances, but you can
determine how you respond to them. And I think that's really what I've learned. And in a way, I have drawn from
this, it's called the Stockdale Paradox, which from a, Stockdale was a prisoner in Vietnam and
was tortured in the Hanoi prison, you know, where John McCain had been as well. And he wrote
afterwards, and he was in the Air Force, so it was shot down. And he wrote afterwards about what it
was that sustained him during that time. And he was very brutally treated. And he said, the Air Force, so it was shot down. And he wrote afterwards about what it was that sustained him during that time.
And he was very brutally treated.
And he said, in a way, it was like a stubborn kind of optimism in the sense that he said
the people who were simply optimistic were the ones that didn't last.
We'll be out by Easter.
And then they weren't out.
We'll be out by Thanksgiving.
And they weren't.
Or Christmas.
And they weren't.
And then the ones that were like, I'm fully aware of the circumstances
I'm in.
I'm not going to deny it.
I'm not going to get out of it with like there's some elements
of like the positivity movement that I think great on some people
because it's like just be cheerful and just look on the bright side.
The old tactic positivity, yeah.
Yeah, like where you are can sometimes can be completely suck.
You've lost, you know, a dear partner has died or you've got
a terrible diagnosis, but you can still hold on to the idea that somehow you will prevail and that in the
prevailing, you can point yourself to the good things. And I think that's what I've been writing
about for the last few years is like how in these times I've just been so surprised about the things
that have given me strength, not just have been nice to tinkering, not that
are just optional extras, but these things are pillars of strength like awe and wonder and grace
being a form of awe. Yeah. I know you, I think it was last year, maybe it was actually a re-airing
of a special that you did on hunting awe. Yes. And I think I remember part of that was sort of
looking for a phosphorescent underwater life and things like that,
which I don't know if you've read Matt Haig's new book,
The Life Impossible.
I haven't yet, no.
You would enjoy it.
There's a reference to that experience of yours, not to you,
but to that I think, and also the notion of awe and joy and grace.
I found it really moving.
Oh, he was, because my last book was called
phosphorescence on or wonder and the things that sustain you when the world goes dark which is why
i became so it was a metaphor for me about finding light in the dark but i actually became obsessed
with finding bioluminescence in the natural world especially in the ocean but yeah he he read that
book and he was very kind about it so So I'm a fan of his work.
Interesting.
You may have inspired something in him.
We will see.
I can't claim anything, obviously.
As you shared, a lot of the writing that you've been doing recently is really focused around,
it's not sort of like this toxic positivity and like, oh, look at the right side of everything,
the silver lining.
But it's this notion of, can we find grace no matter what's going on around us?
So I think an opening curiosity for me is, and this is the entire focus of your new book, silver lining, but it's this notion of, can we find grace no matter what's going on around us?
So I think an opening curiosity for me is, and this is the entire focus of your new book,
how do you define grace in this modern world that we live in? And also, why do you think it seems or feels so elusive to us today? I think in part, the reason it's elusive, seems elusive today is because of the nature of
politics today and the politics that is playing on fears and anxieties. And because of the nature
of algorithms, are people literally making money from us being outraged and anxious and afraid?
So we see it in our communities. You'll see it from the local firefighter or from a paramedic or a nurse
or people working with those with disabilities or in aged care homes. It is all around us,
in blood donors, people that every couple of weeks will go and have someone stick a needle
in their arm and pull out their very blood, not because they know a person that needs it,
not because they can direct it going to someone they really like.
It could go to a complete jerk, you know, someone that they disapprove of on a number of levels,
but they do it because there's a human need for it. And I think fundamentally,
grace is about that. It's not about considering the recipient as someone who's worthy, but you're
doing it because of the importance of giving people the benefit of the doubt,
of allowing people to see people's humanity, of mercy, not merit, of ways of breaking a cycle,
which is just about vengeance and retribution. It's about stepping back and seeing the entire
context in which a person is operated and what might have led them to that point, which has harmed you or which has hurt you.
It is sometimes forgiving the unforgivable, loving the unlovable.
I think the idea that it just goes beyond the eye for an eye or the fact that someone
merits or someone deserves something.
We know grace when we see it.
For many people, grace is a touch of the divine.
For other people, it is the very best of humanity, which somehow transcends the everyday, but
is often contained in the everyday.
You know, Marilynne Robinson called it, you know, like a reservoir of goodness, kind of
beyond the everyday, which is, you know, the way that we can treat each other.
You do hear grace spoken about sometimes. I heard it.
I jumped out of my seat when I heard both Barack Obama and Michelle Obama use that word at the Democrat National Convention. And I think they were trying to refer to the idea of caring for
your neighbors, of respecting the fact that people can disagree with you. We have to accept that we
can disagree with people. Sometimes people can have really good values, good intentions, and end up at different points politically, or even the
same values as you and end up at different points completely. So I think those kinds of understandings
would kind of unknot some of the heavily tangled ways we have of speaking to each other now,
which could be very destructive, very detrimental, and very negative.
No, I mean, that lands in a really powerful way. I often hear the phrase,
giving grace, as if this is something, it's almost like an offering, a gift, a blessing,
something that you're giving to someone else. But at the same time, what I hear you describing,
and this has been my experience, I think, as well, is that grace is also a state. It's a feeling
within you. When you feel like you are experiencing grace, I think, as well, is that grace is also a state. It's a feeling within you.
When you feel like you are experiencing grace, I'm curious, what are you feeling?
It's a lift. Yeah. There's studies that have been done on this, on the physical impacts of people
witnessing an act of moral beauty, of great decency or courage or ability or generosity. I mean, sometimes you
can see it when you're watching the Paralympics or when you're watching people overcome incredible
hurdles. But when you see that, there's a couple of observations. The first is it's infectious.
It makes people more likely to do that and behave in ways themselves, to try to act to alleviate other people's suffering. The other finding is that it's around the idea of moral elevation.
So you watch it and you see something good happen to something else that they're not,
again, that they're not necessarily deserving.
And once you see that act of goodness, it can affect your heart rate.
It can, as can forgiveness and your contentment, your capacity for your
level of happiness and satisfaction with your relationships.
People say to me, and there's also the ineffable.
There's also, I don't know what that word is.
I've spent a lot of time trying to put my finger on mysterious ideas.
When you say something, it's like that.
It's just, it lifts you up.
And in a way that's hard to describe. When I first started writing about awe, I was like,
what is that feeling I get when I'm ocean swimming and the edge of a very vast ocean?
What is that feeling when you're walking through a forest or mountains where you are,
or when you're sitting on a hill and looking up at a canopy of stars. There's something beyond.
And that's what you get with grace.
Or across, Dr. Keltner from the University of California, Berkeley, did a study on, it
was 2,600 people across 26 countries.
They got them to keep diaries of their awe moments and tried to find out what the most
common experience of awe was.
And I really genuinely would have bet my house on it being nature.
And obviously that was a really strong theme.
But the number one thing people said was seeing one of those acts in another person.
We experience awe, that sense of being stopped in our tracks.
And actually comforted.
I find it very comforting to know there's people like this in the world.
And that people love like this and are selfless like this and it kind of makes it worth going on.
No, I love that and such a fan of Docker's work as well.
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It's interesting you referenced, you know, we are, we have this human drive to try and quantify,
to try and define, to try and make tangible the intangible. You referenced this in a really kind of like interesting way that I had never heard before, but maybe this is, maybe I've been living with my head in the sand for
years early in the book with this conversation around an experiment that was done to try and
determine the weight of the soul, to literally quantify the weight of the soul. Take me there.
Okay. So I love the idea of this experiment. It was more than a century ago. It was 1907 and it was a Boston doctor and his name was Duncan McDougall
and he wanted to work out did human beings have a soul
and could you actually measure it?
So he tried to measure people at the point of dying.
Like he went to nursing homes and aged care places
and would put someone on the scale just before they died
and just after, a very difficult thing to actually pull off and one person actually someone on the scale just before they died and just after, a very
difficult thing to actually pull off.
And one person actually died on the scales.
He then determined in his first kind of batch of reporting that there was a difference,
that the body was 21.3 grams lighter after the person had died.
So he decided that was the weight of a soul.
Now, even at the time, the other physicians and medical researchers were horrified
by the inexactness and the, I think, sloppy method by which this man had claimed this.
It was argued about in the New York Times. And that number is held on in the popular imagination. You'll hear
him, there's been films, 21 grams. I kind of like his imagination and his audacity. I think it's
more of an imaginative enterprise than a scientific one. He did then do it with dogs, by the way,
and he found no difference. And that was another scandal because that means dogs don't go to heaven,
which we all know is not true. So, yeah, I love that experiment.
It is fascinating, honey. We're just trying to look at everything around us and say, how can I lock this down? How can I measure it? In the conversation around grace, though, I'm curious why you felt like this was an interesting piece of the conversation. I mean, I'd always been fascinated by that experiment. And because I wanted to write, actually, I was writing about nurses and I was writing,
and I've watched nurses, I've been in medical environments so much, and you see, you know,
blood and gore and pain and distress and people with dementia struggling. You see people come in
with, you know, ice problems, all kinds of addictions.
I've just watched this for years.
I've watched nurses be assaulted and be called all kinds of names, and I've watched their
care, their tender, relentless care for people they don't know and may never see again, or
will likely never see again, for complete strangers.
And the idea that you treat a person in front of you,
not just like as a lump of flesh, but as a soul.
If you don't like the word soul, then just like a deeply human person
with their own needs and desires.
And there was something that happened during the pandemic.
You know, the pandemic was a time when we all stopped briefly
and applauded people who all the time put their own lives on the risks,
who face, you know, like deadly infections and are often poorly paid and are keeping us alive.
And I thought that was great, the sound of applause around the world.
And I kind of would like it to continue at like six o'clock every night if we could just applaud the people who are staffing our hospitals and care homes.
But there was one example that really, really struck me,
and it was in Brazil at a time when it was really raging
out of control, COVID, and the medical system was overwhelmed,
the hospitals were overwhelmed.
And I don't know if you remember how many nurses were actually
quite traumatised by the fact that people were coming there and
really, really ill and some of them dying and they couldn't have their loved ones with them.
And they just found it was so heartbreaking to watch. And there were these two nurses in Sao
Paulo, Brazil, who decided, they talked about it on their lunch break, about how could they do
something about this? And they got these rubber gloves and filled them with warm water.
So they tied one on the bottom here and one on the top there
and kind of knotted it together.
So it was like a warm hand over the patients.
And they noticed when they did that there was immediate improvement
in the patient's vital signs, you know, their
blood perfusion and various things. And they replicated it elsewhere and at other hospitals
and the same thing happened again. And that to me, that was just a rubber glove filled with water.
But it was an act of love, actually, from a stranger to show you love. And when I contacted
them, I managed to track those nurses down and they were like, we realized that that person was someone's mother, niece, daughter, friend,
and they were loving him in that moment. And then how fascinating that that showed up and
there was a physical response to it. People's health improved when they had that warm hand on their own, just a warm glove on their own.
So that to me is part of the idea of the soul.
You're looking at a person and you are not just trying to bring them back to life,
but you are showing them the kind of care and the kind of love
that you would want someone that you loved,
who was desperate or afraid or stuck somewhere
to be shown. I wonder if in a way the experience of grace is being able to close the gap between
how you're living your life and sort of like a more authentic expression of that soul,
self, whatever it is that you believe is deepest inside of you. It's interesting. I was in New York
in 2020 before we headed out to the mountains and during the absolute worst part of things when New
York was the scariest place on the planet to be. And I was one of those people where at seven
o'clock every night, the windows flew open across the entire city and everyone was screaming and
banging pots. I recorded a bunch of evenings of that. I can't listen to that
recording now without just absolutely weeping. It's not the sound. It brings me back to this
reminder that even in the absolute most terrifying moments of our lives, people who lived in a city
generally didn't talk to each other. You didn't look at each other and like walking down the
street. New York is not a city where you're like, Hey, how you doing? When you're walking down the street, you live your own lives.
And yet in this scariest of moments, somehow millions of people came together, not just
to celebrate the fact that we're all here doing this together, but also that there are
people who are also being out there in service of us right now.
And so powerful, you know, and that to me is, that's grace also, you know and that to me is that's grace also you know like the reminder of that
feeling is like oh yes oh right right right right that's what it's about i've got goosebumps in you
talking about that and goosebumps by the way is one way in which scientists measure grace it's
just the beauty in that and it's the recognition of all of those people and everything, as you're saying, that they were serving us at that time,
but also the commonality, the whole bunch of people coming together
to applaud for all of our differences.
Like even singing in a choir can be kind of an amazing experience of awe,
again, because we're so used to being discordant,
to come together and be in harmony
is because like a profoundly moving experience. Yeah. So agree. And we'll be right back after a
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code goodlife. You've used the word awe a lot and almost interchangeably with grace. What's your
sense of how they relate to each other? Well, so if we think of awe as being something that
stops you in your tracks and makes you think about the world, makes you realize we're part of something much bigger,
makes you aware of kind of beauty and marvels. Experiencing more regularly is something that
research shows makes you calmer, more content, more altruistic, more kind of conscious of being
inhabitants of the earth. And I have just been again and again in my
kind of darker moments, being reminded of how important it is to pursue and wonder as part of
that as a way that's not an optional extra. Like, you know, you might see some beautiful things when
you go on holidays, that's really great. Or, you know, when you go on a walk in the morning,
you might catch the sunrise or the sunset at night but a way of
building this deliberately into your life is like so psychologically soothing and important that I
have clung on to it like a life raft when I've been you know not sure if I should what reason
there is to go on or if I can handle the pain anymore and it's like you know Rachel Carson
who wrote The Silent Spring, she said the work
that she was most proud of was an essay she wrote in 1956, which was about how to teach
kids how to wonder.
And she talks about going around the woods with her nephew, Roger, who was then four
years old and, you know, shining lights into rock pools at night and instilling that sense
of wonder.
And there's just a phrase in this thing.
She says if she could be a godmother, if she could whisper into the fairy godmother of
all the children in the world, she would say, please instill in them a sense of wonder that's
so indestructible that it will last against their whole lives and against, you know,
sterile preoccupations so that we will not become alienated from the sources of our strength. And that phrase has never left me because I then realized
that awe is not something beautiful and lovely.
It makes us strong.
It makes us strong.
And it's not just like bungee jumping in the Grand Canyon,
not that anyone does that, but if they did,
or big dramatic African safaris or deep sea diving,
although you can find it in all of those things.
You can see it by watching in your own potting beds.
You could see it in the park down the street if you're watching,
like I am at the moment.
There's a little tree hollow where these little lorikeet parrots
have just had little babies.
I'm watching them every day.
And you can see it in the extraordinary decency of a neighbor. And that's what I see them having in common. It's in ultimately expanding. Ultimately, it connects you to other people. And it is the very best of who we are.
Do you have a sense for grace being something that exists within you or between you and others?
I think it's probably both.
I think we witness it when someone is acting that way towards another person who might not merit it.
And then I think you carry away the results of it.
And I think sometimes you might not necessarily even call it that. Like, I don't even want to have a limited prescribed definition. I know where I've of it. And I think sometimes you might not necessarily even call it that.
Like, I don't even want to have a limited prescribed definition. I know where I've found
it. I know where I've seen it after meditating on it for a couple of years, but I really want
to start conversations about where other people see it. And I was just really struck by, like,
it's such a big thing to experience grace, to see it. And we don't really talk about it enough.
Like, what does it look like? What happens to you when you kind of come across it? How do we
get our kids to not just be good and kind, but we really be the decent person who doesn't need
to go in there and break up a fight, who doesn't need to forgive someone who's, you know, done
whatever to them, but will, and then can actually transform a whole culture and
a whole group of people.
And I think the infectious, contagious nature of it is really important.
But to your question, so when I think about, so I spent quite a bit of time with people
who'd gone through restorative justice programs.
So the person who caused harm with the person the harm was caused to, and there's a whole
bunch of provisos around that.
The person who caused harm has to have some kind of contrition and remorse.
It's really all about serving the needs of the victim
who often doesn't feel served by the justice system.
And there was one woman who, when she was 24 years old,
she got a phone call in the middle of the night from her father
saying that her brother had been killed by his best friend,
just shot in the chest.
She was mortified. There was a court case. That guy went off to jail. No reason was ever given for the shooting. It just happened one night after they were drinking at a pub.
And she became consumed by that. She was eaten up by hate for that guy, for desire for revenge.
Over a 10-year period, she had a lot of health problems.
She started sleepwalking.
She couldn't sleep properly.
At other times, she got diabetes.
Her father had a series of bad health problems.
It was really kind of corrosive.
And she told me that she would be looking at a sunset and thinking about ways she could
murder this guy.
And she eventually went to sit down opposite him 10 years after it had happened. And she was able
to say, this is what you did to me and my health. This is what you did to my father and his health.
This is what you did to my brother's son, who was just a toddler when he lost his dad. And she said
that when she was doing
it, suddenly part of the way through it, she kind of lifted up and looked around unconsciously
because she felt like something had been lifted from her. And she said to me that what she felt
like she was doing was wrapping up everything he did to her and her brother and just putting it in
a suitcase and leaving it at his feet. And it was now his. And she was terrified that she wouldn't be able to love anymore,
and especially her grandchildren,
because to her now love was associated with loss.
And she told me that after that,
she doesn't know what exactly happened,
but that changed her life.
And then she now is able to really love and dote on her grandkids.
And so that's an example of something happening between people,
but her walking away and holding onto it herself.
The whole experience of restorative justice, I think I'm deeply fascinated by that as well.
And it was sort of morphed and taken on different names and different approaches,
at least in the US these days. But it does feel like it is a blend of between others and then
within us. And it almost feels like the experience
the interactive experience that generates is like the match that lights the fire of grace within us
you know it's almost like all loads the bow which is the big inhale like
and then grace is grace releases it grace is the oh that's good i like that and so you can see how there's that relationship
there like the dynamic and how it almost stopping and then the giving right and how it almost has
to involve other people but then it has to land within you and somehow release something yeah
it's interesting you referenced also you know so much of this is about both experiencing things
out in the world but but also even witnessing.
And even as you mentioned earlier, the notion of blood donors, which you write about in
the book, which is these are people who are showing up.
They, at least legally in this country, you can't know who this is going to.
And yet you show up and you give something that is within your body to someone else.
And there's no rational basis to do this.
Like you're not getting paid for it.
You're not getting compensated for your time.
Nobody's giving you like $20 for every pint that you get.
Like a milkshake or a coffee.
Right, exactly.
But, you know, it says something that there is something within us.
There's like something that says I want to in some way do something good
and in a way where I have no idea who the good is going to land on.
But I just want to be a link in that chain.
Yeah, and it's one of the examples.
That's right.
That in itself, exactly as you've described it, is quite miraculous.
And I spoke to some blood donor researchers who were like,
we actually don't know.
One of the mysteries for us is why people do it.
Because, you know, you go and ask, you have to travel somewhere.
Again, the needle, you get asked really intrusive questions.
And yet, like thousands upon thousands of people around the world doing it.
And many more than that.
And without knowing where it ends up, I think the introverts,
I've often found that's a really good way that they want to give.
They want to volunteer or give back to the community, but knocking on doors or being
part of something public is harder, so they're happier to do that. But I've been the recipient
of blood donations myself many times now, often due to blood loss in surgery. I remember the
first time I got it, and I had a nurse whispering in my ear all the time. It was so strange,
actually. She started whispering about writing and my purpose and how important this was, I had a nurse whispering in my ear all the time. It was so strange, actually.
She started whispering about writing and my purpose and how important this was.
And I don't know, it was this kind of really intense moment.
And then I had been so depleted and so exhausted.
And then I kind of came to, it was like a shot to the chest.
You know, I remember how much stronger I felt afterwards.
And the thought that someone else's blood, their blood was running
through my veins is such a wild thing. And I really like to honor those people who spend
decades upon decades. I met super donors who do it, have done it every two weeks for 50 years,
who plan their holidays around it, who make sure that wherever they're going to be every two weeks,
they'll donate. And I think that is a beautiful and often unsung gesture.
Yeah, it says something about us, I think, just as a species also.
There is some wiring.
Maybe it gets short-circuited by expectations or just culture, society, whatever it is,
but there's something deep within us that wants to be a part of that sort of chain of
generosity.
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will vary. One of the other things that you explore I thought was really interesting in the context of Grace was kind of the notion of risk and impermanence.
And to tee it up, you bring back that myth that we all heard as a kid, you know, like the Icarus story.
But you invite us to kind of rethink what that really means.
I really love this poem by Jack Gilbert is his name.
And it was about, it's kind of retelling the idea of Icarus.
Also from the perspective of relationship.
And he says in it, we forget that before Icarus fell, he flew.
Before Icarus fell, he was just coming to the end of his triumph.
And I thought about that in the perspective of relationships.
And we often say if a relationship didn't last, then
it was failed or doomed, or it's always this kind of negativity around it. And ultimately, sure,
some relationships can have unpleasant ends and some can come to a natural end. But then why are
we always focusing on the end instead of these beautiful few years that you can have before that?
And I wrote about a former partner of mine who died in a plane crash
and coming to terms with that grief because it had happened
about a year and a half after we broke up.
And a sense of he was such a joyful and positive person
and I hated obviously the way he died.
He had so much more of his life to live.
But I wanted to also in that grief and remembering him, to remember that we flew and how important that is to
honor kind of previous relationships and not always see them as failures. Sometimes relationships go
for finite periods of time and that's kind of okay. So yeah, it was the poem that really got
me thinking about how we sometimes
frame relationships or how often we frame it it's just purely negative it also it's a reframe on to
a certain extent the just the notion of our willingness to take risks and you know willingness
to be bold and also sometimes how we're punished for those to be like realistic and practical and
this is another thing that you actually sort of like point out, especially like depending on who you are,
like what gender you identify as,
what culture you're growing up in,
you know,
and that this can sometimes,
this can sometimes either enable or limit our ability to step into space and
to be bold and to be risky and to state our minds and to actually like do the
things we want to do in the world versus saying,
no,
that's not appropriate.
And I wonder if that stifling within certain, whether it's a family culture, local culture,
political culture, whatever it may be, limits our access to experience everything we've been
talking about, to experience awe, to experience grace. Like when we're not allowed to show up
in that way and risk revealing ourselves, risk bringing ourselves to the world,
does that also limit our capacity
to experience awe and grace? I think there's probably really something in there about being
open to being able to make mistakes. If we allow other people to try things and make mistakes,
like genuine mistakes. If someone, I don't know, does something cruel and vicious deliberately and
then says it was a mistake, well, we know it's not.
But there are a lot of people who do actually make mistakes
in public life especially, say and do the wrong thing,
and we need to be able to properly assess which ones of those matter.
Otherwise, if they all matter, then we lose our capacity
to judge fully, I think.
And that's the idea of being the man or the woman in the arena,
right? The person that is in there absolutely having a crack at it. And we often forget
just the virtue of trying. So I think that we always have to be cautious around a censorious
culture developing around which everyone always has to be perfect. I mean, I'm always tearing my
hair out about it a bit because I'm also a biographer. I spent years writing a biography of Queen Victoria. So to spend that
amount of time really thinking about a person and who were they and how do we assess them? How do
you assess a life? She could be completely cruel to a kid and beautifully generous to a household
aide all in the one day. She could be capricious,
she could be funny, she could be selfish, she could reflect the attitudes of her time,
but also be progressive on some, but be really strange on the others. So you're constantly
needing to look at a whole person before you completely dismiss them and write them off,
because you've got to understand how strange attitudes form and what happens to them over a lifetime. Do people change? What makes people change? I don't know. Do you
know what I mean? I could talk about this for such a long time because I'm so interested in history,
but not enough history informs our current debates when we think about who we want as a leader.
Some of our greatest leaders have been deeply flawed. So what do we accept and what don't we?
And do we ask for leaders who have a real fundamental goodness and decency to them? Is that what we want? Because I think that a lot of people really do and we need to work out how to kind years back now, I had the chance to sit down with Daniel Kahneman, who sadly has now passed.
And he was telling me a story of how he was a Jewish kid growing up in Matziagopi, Paris.
And he was five or six years old, walking home from his place a couple blocks or from a friend to, and it was after dark.
He wasn't supposed to be out.
When he was supposed to be out, he was supposed to be wearing a sweater with a star on it, but he turned it inside out. And he's walking down the street and he turns a corner and he sees coming in his same direction, an SS officer. And he's six years old, but he kind of knows what this
means. But he's kind of trying to just stay calm, breathe and get home. He walks kind of toe to toe
with the officer who looks down at him, bends down, scoops him up, shows him a picture of his
son, like pass him on his head and just like gives him a smile and says like, you know, like go on
your way.
And he credits that moment and credits that moment to a certain extent with his just instant
understanding of the complexity of people that led to this astonishing, like Nobel winning
career in psychology and just human behavior.
But it is so interesting. We'd love
to simplify people. So this is another thing you write about under this. So like,
like fascinating word, sonder, right? You know, this understanding that everyone's life is so
complex. And yet we really don't enjoy allowing space for that until, unless and until we're
kind of forced to. Yeah. And I think it's really, it's very dangerous.
It's very narrowing.
And it means that if we're savaging everyone who appears in public
without really discretion for anything they've ever done,
I mean, I'm not talking about like corruption and so on here,
then we are creating a climate in which the only people
who can really prosper in public life are full-blown narcissists
who don't care and don't need to be accountable
and are immune to that kind of criticism.
I haven't seen the figures in the States,
but I know that there's a lot of people turning away from public life
and leaving their jobs because of threats, because of violence,
because of, you know, I hosted a TV show for a long time and there were a lot of people,
especially people of colour, especially women, First Nations people that were really loath to
come on because the level of abuse they would get simply for popping their heads up. And then
there goes to the question of how people are judged for what they do. And as you've said before,
that's exacerbated if you're all of those things as well.
And if we look at female politicians, which I've done a lot of academic research on, the
question isn't whether or not they've done something wrong.
It's a question is how harshly they're judged for it and what the consequences are deemed
to be.
So that's a long winded way of answering your question about, I think that's right.
It also touches us into the notion of the relationship between grace and forgiveness.
And we're not saying, especially with what you were talking about, I don't think either of us
is arguing that there shouldn't be accountability for certain behavior. Of course there should be.
That's not what we're saying. But at the same time, how do you do this dance of understanding
and acknowledging the complexity of individuals, of the human condition, of the fact that we all have, you know, we have the good wolf and the bad wolf inside of us, you know, the classic, you know, i would i would argue and i would imagine you would too that like in those
moments often grace leaves the building and we feel like zero access to it but like is there a
way that we invite it back and this kind of speaks to you know the example you were sharing earlier
the restorative justice example where 10 years later this this woman went back but what role
if any then does the experience of forgiveness play in all of this?
It's a very good question.
And I really struggled with forgiveness when writing this book.
Like I really, I read everything I could and I thought about it so much because I was
conflicted because I've grown up with the value of forgiveness and knowing how important
it is.
My mother was a very strong advocate.
She spoke about forgiveness a lot. I'm sure she forgave me for a bunch of things, you know, like, and I can see
how powerful that can be. But at the same time as a reporter, I spent a lot of time reporting on
domestic violence cases and sexual assault cases. And I have seen how forgiveness can be weaponized
even broadly, you know, more broadly culturally that like that you need to move on and you need
to, you know, forgive them. And it's need to move on and you need to, you know,
forgive them and it's just a guy being a guy or he just has a temper or what did you do to upset him?
And I think that there are different ways of thinking about forgiveness
because someone is a complete psychopath, for example,
then there's no, like, you just need to cut them off.
There's no sitting and repairing.
This is a person who just simply kind of wants to harm you.
And I think we do need to challenge a culture in which there've been many crimes that have long
just been tolerated and there's been a culture of impunity. So I think for people who go through
that, it's their own experience of self-preservation and then trying to work out what they want to do
with that anger. Some people talk about an unburdening or a severing or whatever.
But when forgiveness can happen, it can be a really miraculous thing, I think.
I spoke to a man called Chris Carrier. He's from Texas. I spoke to a man called Chris Carrier. He's
from Texas. When he was a kid, he was abducted as he was coming home from school and he got off his bus.
He was about eight or nine years old. And someone came up to him and said, I'm going to host a
birthday party for your dad. I work with him. Can you come and help me get decorations? And he led
this kid off, took him to his home, put a pick through him, and then took him out to the Everglades and
shot him and left him there for dead.
And meeting Chris now as an adult is an amazing thing because he just radiates this warmth
and generosity of spirit.
And he talks a lot about forgiveness because what happened was when he, like they could
never find that guy because he left him there for dead. Four days
later, people found him and he had cigarette burns along his little young body because people
were trying to work out if he was dead or alive. He couldn't pick this guy in a lineup because he
was wearing a baseball cap at the time and it partially shielded his face. So he grew up knowing
that this person was in his neighborhood with that fear. I mean, now his face is still scarred.
A couple of decades afterwards, Chris is now married.
He's got kids.
He gets a call from the detective running the case saying,
that guy that we thought might have done something to you,
he is in an aged care home now and he's confessed.
Would you like to accept that confession?
And he said, yes, I would.
And he went in and he said he walked into the nursing home and there was a little guy,
weighed nothing, kind of wizened, close to death, no family or friends.
And Chris had taken a friend in with him.
And the friend said, do you remember?
At first he was kind of denying it. And friend said, do you remember? At first he
was kind of denying it and he said, do you remember leaving a kid for dead in the Everglades? And he
said, yes, I did. And he said, what would you like to say to that person if he's standing here right
now as Chris is? And he said, I want to say, I'm sorry. And then just started to cry. And Chris
said, okay, I want you to know that I forgive you. And he visited him every kind of couple of days until his death,
which was only a couple of weeks later, bringing him his favorite treats,
smoked fish.
He brought him, he read to him.
I think maybe he prayed with him.
And he said to me that what he wanted to do was show his kids that there could
be another way to break cycles of violence and vengeance and
that it wasn't separate to justice. He's like, I wish that guy had gone to jail. He totally should
have gone to jail. That's not about letting him off the hook. That's about, I think, seeing an
old man frail towards the end of his life and saying, okay. And when you speak to Chris and
you see the kind of the generosity of his spirit and his openness, it makes you just want to be more like him. You can see this is someone that has relinquished what hatred can do that. You know, and I would imagine a lot of people are thinking the same thing, whether it's
you, whether it's someone you love, like when you're on like Chris's side of it.
Like I hear stories like that.
I'm like, and that is astonishing and gorgeous and.
Impossible.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I get it.
But I think that we hear a lot about retribution. We hear about people exacting revenge. I mean, like every second Hollywood movie is all about that. We don't hear about those stories. We don't balance the ledger with there possibly being another way, which Chris says was best for him and which a lot of people are interested in listening about. And I wonder if it's because it seems rare.
And again, I think some people, people make mistakes a bit when they talk about grace
in the sense that I've noticed people thinking it's very gendered, like this is just something
women are told to do to be polite and to be nice and, you know, the whole Hallmark card
thing.
Or that once you decide, oh, I want that in my life, I'm going to live that way, that
it's therefore complete and it's therefore easy as opposed to, you know what, I struggle to forgive, but I might
nudge my way towards that. I might try to work out where they come from. You know what, maybe I
won't forgive them, but I'm not going to try to kick them in the leg every time I walk past them.
I don't know. Do you know what I mean? There's different ways of shifting and moving back from
that. Do you have a sense for whether, what's spinning in my head is I'm wondering, you know, like,
if we have endured harm or grief, for that matter, if, and oftentimes those happen at
the same time, you know, like if you are oftentimes you experience harm, you're grieving the loss
of a state that, you know, like that used to be, that may never be recoverable. I wonder if in some way that unless and until we find a way to release the traumatic burden,
the internal, the psychological burden of that harm or that grief, and I'm not saying
forget about it or just like, I don't believe that, but move forward with it, but integrate it in a way that unless and until we can figure that out,
that we don't have full access to our ability to experience grace in the same way or in the same
depth anymore? Or do you think we can still carry that and still be able to step into all the other
parts of life and still fully embrace and experience grace.
Yeah. I think that I don't think you ever kind of reach a state where you've perfected any of that.
And therefore, I agree with you about not forgetting it. We are designed by evolution
to recognize when harm has occurred to us. If you put your hand on a boiling hot plate,
you'll know not to put it there again. We're meant to learn from harm caused to us and
hurt caused to us by people. But I do think this, as you've said, there's something very important
in making sure that that doesn't become a burden to you. So when we talk about Debbie McGraw leaving
the suitcase at the murderer's feet, leave it there. Make sure it's not something that you
carry around that becomes a heaviness or a weight or a hate, that you can separate yourself from what someone else has done to you.
It's like, I almost wonder if forgiveness is something that feels in some way accessible to
you in your heart. It's less about what the gift that you're giving to the other person,
it's more about being able to maybe crack the door open to grace in the experience,
in your own experience a little bit more than maybe you could while you're still carrying it.
I think that's true.
And if someone sees you acting in that way, they're possibly more likely to be doing that themselves.
You know, the witnessing part is a really big thing.
Can I just say something very, this is going to seem very obvious.
And since I've been trying to forgive
harder since writing this book, because I think it is really important. And obviously,
I've not written this saying I'm an avatar of grace. So the other day I was saying to my dad
something about, oh, this jerk, he can get stuffed. And dad's like, oh yeah, great. Put that in your
book. That's nice. It's like, bust it. Thanks, Dad.
And the one thing, and it sounds so simple, I know,
but the one thing I've found really helpful every time someone drives me crazy is to just consciously make sure I sit and think about them.
Where are they coming from?
Where is this coming from?
How do we get to the point when they're doing that?
I am very far
from someone like John Lewis, who spoke about, you know, the former congressman, civil rights leader,
who spoke about walking down those, the streets on his civil rights marches, and he would look at
the faces of people contorted with hate along the way. And he would look at them and say, what,
what happened to you? What, like, what you? You were a baby once. You were
someone's child. How do we get to this position of hate? And I have actually found that really
beneficial to just sit and go, okay, why is it they're responding in this way? And where is that
person actually at? Even if it doesn't get you to a point of like, you know, complete absolution, it nudges you to a place where you can let go of it a bit.
It becomes less about you and more about where they are.
And I do think it's also a practice.
I speak to a man called Danny Abdullah.
He had three of his young children and a niece killed.
They were out at night.
They just went out to get an ice cream.
And a driver came along
who was completely intoxicated and ran them over. And his grief was immense. His family's grief,
obviously, was immense. And he and his wife decided quite quickly, and people were quite
unnerved by how quickly and astonishingly they would publicly say they forgave this man.
And he said to me, it's not like you wake up, like it's not like you
say, I'm going to forgive them and then that's done. Like you will wake up with that rage and
that pain still, and you almost have to decide to live that way. And some days you'll be able
to do it and some days you won't. So I think if we see it as an impulse, as a reaching towards
a way that might be better and not like having to perfect it and be kind of like monk-like or, you know.
More like a practice than an action. It's like, yeah.
I think it is that too. I think we'll put ourselves off if we think, oh,
I could never be like that. I love holding my grudges. I love nursing them at night.
Was it Fran Lebowitz talks about how she loves to sleep alone with her grudges at night?
I love her.
She's so good.
It's like the former New Yorker in me is like, ah, it feels like home.
I know.
When I was in New York earlier this year, I was like, wow,
am I going to be like turning up like a vegan at a Texan barbecue
talking about relinquishing grudges and forgiveness here?
And my friends were like, we'll hold grudges for you.
Yeah, but I don't think, I mean, some days you'll have bad days.
You'll have people that will really drive you crazy.
But I think my overall point is if we talk and think and reflect
and meditate on other ways of being and ways in which we've seen,
witnessed, experienced behavior that really moves us
and really makes
us kind of want to be better or, you know, just benefited from it ourselves. Someone who gave us
the benefit of a doubt. Someone who gave us a second chance when we're a kid, when we're, you
know, a school teacher or a cop or like whoever. If we kind of talk more about what that means,
I think we'll all be better off for it. Yeah, so agree. It feels like a good place for us to come full circle as well. So in this container of Good Life Project, if I offer up
the phrase to live a good life, what comes up? Hunt or relish wonder and open your heart to grace.
Thank you. Thank you so much.
Hey, before you leave, if you love this episode,
say that you'll also love the conversation we had with Dr. Keltner about awe.
You'll find a link to Dr.'s 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,
Christopher Carter crafted our theme music,
and special thanks to Shelley Adele for her research on this episode. And of course, if you haven't already done so, Thank you. since you're still listening here, would you do me a personal favor, a seven second favor and share it,
maybe on social or by text or by email,
even just with one person.
Just copy the link from the app you're using
and tell those you know, those you love,
those you wanna help navigate this thing called life
a little better so we can all do it better together
with more ease and more joy.
Tell them to listen.
Then even invite them to talk about
what you've both discovered because when podcasts become conversations and conversations become action,
that's how we all come alive together. Until next time, I'm Jonathan Fields,
signing off for Good Life Project. Mayday, mayday.
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