Good Life Project - The 4 Noble Truths of Love | Susan Piver [Best Of]
Episode Date: February 13, 2020Susan Piver is the New York Times best-selling author of 9 books, a speaker, and founder of the largest virtual mindfulness community in the world, The Open Heart Project. She has been featured o...n Oprah, TODAY, CNN, speaks around the world and leads teachings and retreats on Buddhism, meditation, relationships and the essential practices for a life well-lived. In her most recent book, The Four Noble Truths of Love, and today's Best Of episode, she offers a powerful set of tools to reimagine and better navigate long-term, loving relationships in a way that respects each person's individual truth, while making space for a living, evolving container for love.Also, here's a special Valentine's Day Bonus PDF from Susan.You can find Susan Piver at: Website | Facebook | Instagram-------------Have you discovered your Sparketype yet? Take the Sparketype Assessment™ now. IT’S FREE (https://sparketype.com/) and takes about 7-minutes to complete. At a minimum, it’ll open your eyes in a big way. It also just might change your life.If you enjoyed the show, please share it with a friend. Thank you to our super cool brand partners. If you like the show, please support them - they help make the podcast possible. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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My guest in today's Best Of featured episode is a dear friend, Susan Piver.
So Susan is a New York Times bestselling author of, I don't know, nine or 10 books, a teacher,
founder of the largest virtual mindfulness meditation community in the world, The Open
Heart Project.
She's been featured on Oprah, Today, CNN, speaks around the world, leads teachings and retreats on Buddhism, meditation, relationships,
love, and the essential practices of a life well-lived. She's also just a giant-hearted,
big-brained close friend. Her most recent book, The Four Noble Truths of Love, is incredible.
And in it, she offers a powerful set of tools to reimagine and better navigate long-term
loving relationships in a way that respects each person's individual truth while also
making space for living and evolving and really becoming who you need to be in the context
of this bigger relationship.
In this timely and timeless episode, Susan shares the eye-opening revelation that brought
her to the four noble truths of love, then walks us through each one
of those four truths and shows how to tap them to love more openly and forgivingly, dynamically,
enduringly. Among the countless wisdom bombs she drops are the ideas that discomfort is not the
problem, thinking it should be comfortable is, and also this idea that things actually never stabilize and that's okay. She's also created a
really fabulous additional PDF specifically about the four noble truths of love around Valentine's
Day for everybody, whether you're in a relationship, not in a relationship, looking to figure out how
to be and give and receive more love yourself. It's a really powerful and free download
that we will link to in the show notes.
So be sure to check the show notes
so you can download this really powerful gift
from her as a PDF.
Super excited to share this conversation with you.
I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good Life Project. The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch,
getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X.
Available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone Xs are later required.
Charge time and actual results will vary.
Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were gonna be fun.
On January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing. Mark Wahlberg. You know what the difference between me and you is? You're gonna die. It's funny because we're friends for a long time now, but you have been on the show once before in the past. And I was realizing that it was actually a long time ago now.
It was when we were filming.
Must be five years ago, yeah.
And I was like, how could we not have actually had taped a more recent conversation?
Because there's so much awesomeness that you have to share. taking you from the wilds of Austin, Texas, bartending through hip hop music, mogul through
Buddhist meditation, you know, like amazingness. We will throw a link to that awesome story in
the show notes. This has a bit of a different focus today. You have one of the things that
I've always loved about our conversations and about the stuff that you create is you
tow this really interesting line between deep wisdom, deep ancient traditional wisdom, and practical on the ground. Okay, so
how does this work if you don't want to live in a monastery? And how is this going to actually
help me? Is that intentional for you? Is that translation part of what you feel your work is?
Well, I kind of want to say yes, because it would make me sound really smart.
Well, yes, it is.
Absolutely.
It's been my plan all along.
But no, it's, you know, I've been a Buddhist for a long time.
And one of the things that I just love about being a Buddhist practitioner, not that anyone has to become a Buddhist.
And the thing that surprised me is how practical it is. It's not just like, how do you transcend to another realm to become like a godlike human being, which obviously you don't need.
It's how do you live your life on planet Earth as a human being with a completely open heart, a totally sharp mind, and a great and vast willingness to be of benefit to others.
I mean, who doesn't want that?
Yeah, I want that.
Me too.
So you've written, what book is this, seven?
It's like nine.
Nine?
Yeah, if you count the three I edited, but otherwise it's six.
So you've written a lot of books and touched on a lot of different areas of life. And you have a book now which focuses on love. And you've spent
years sort of thinking about this and deconstructing it. I know we've talked about like bits and pieces
and snippets of this over the years. Why this conversation and why now? Yeah. Well, as a
longtime Buddhist practitioner and a longtime wife, I will have been a Buddhist for like 22 years and a wife for like 20 years, basically, as of right now.
But as a longtime Buddhist practitioner, where there are millions of teachings on wisdom and loving kindness and how to be a good person, I just noticed in many people, including myself, it all sort of falls apart when you go home and look into
the eyes of the person you're in a relationship with. Like, we're Buddhist except for right now.
Exactly. Except for when you drop all your crap all over the floor, then I'm really, you know,
it's weird how your big mind sort of devolves into little petty pissy fits. And, you know, why is that? Why is it actually the hardest
to love the person that you love is a question that I've always been interested in. And also,
I wanted to be happy in my own relationship. I want to be a good partner and I want to be happy
in my own relationship. So, but, you know, we go through phases, you probably have no idea what this is like,
where we just don't like each other. Where it's like, who are you again? And why am I sitting
here talking to you? Because everything you do irritates me and nothing you say makes any sense.
It's like suddenly you find yourself in this place where you're very distant from each other.
And one time, Duncan, my husband, and I were in one of those places for a long time, like months.
I mean, I think I wrote in the book, we fought about everything.
And once we even fought about what time it was.
Yeah, I remember reading that.
I'm like, how do you do that?
How low do you have to go to make that a point of contention?
So I was really upset and I didn't know what to do.
Nothing that we tried worked.
And one day I was literally sitting at my desk crying, thinking, I don't even know how to begin fixing this.
And it sounded like also the way you described sort of like that window, that it wasn't where you could point to something and say, oh, this is what it's about.
This is what it's about.
It's almost like it's this non-specific, sustained thing.
That is so right.
That is so right.
There's like, everything's fine.
Everything's fine.
Everything's fine.
There's these little slights, little slights,
you know, you blow by that one, you put that one under the rug, you forget about this one,
you explain that one away, because they're explainable, awayable, they're small.
You know, you didn't look at me, or, you know, I asked you how you were, but you didn't ask me how
I was. I mean, these teeny tiny things that don't mean anything, a crew, and then suddenly shit like breaks loose and it just blows up.
And then because it's so weird, you just struggle to find some, well, it's because you did this or I did that.
But at least for me, I don't think that there is such an explanation. There's more like the weird irritation of trying to be close to on 21 years this year, actually. Congratulations.
Yeah, it's really interesting how everything changes and everything evolves. And we're going to get a lot more into that. So you get to a point where you're just kind of like, what?
Exactly. What? Exactly. I'm thinking, literally, I don't know where to even start
because I've tried everything.
And then I heard myself say, I hesitate to say I heard a voice because there was nobody there but me, but something inside me said, begin at the beginning.
At the beginning are four noble truths.
I kid you know. And I'd never
thought that they had anything to do with relationships. Life is suffering. Grasping
creates suffering. It's possible to stop suffering. There's an eightfold path for doing so,
right view, right intention, and so on. Didn't think it had anything to do with my love life. But then in this moment, it's like those
teachings kindly reformed themselves in my mind to apply to my relationship. So I wrote them down.
I mean, it's so interesting, right? Because you're practicing for years, you're deep into study,
you've gone on retreats for months at a time. This is like, okay, so I have all this deep wisdom from some of the most incredibly
accomplished and skilled and studied teachers in the world. And in theory, this applies to
every aspect of my life. And yet until this moment where there was a complete breakdown,
it didn't come to you that, oh, maybe like the most fundamental teachings of this entire
tradition apply to this one particular area as well. That is exactly right. That's so perfectly
said. Yeah, I never thought to do it, but maybe these four truths, which if they're true, they're
always true, could also be true here.
It just never occurred to me. I think probably because most of the teachings,
whether teachers are modern or ancient, are from monastics, people that did not live in apartments
and have to take the subway and go to the grocery store. They had a different kind of life. So for
whatever reason, I just thought, well, they don't know what I'm going through.
But incorrect.
They did know what I was going through.
And the teachings are profoundly illuminating.
And P.S., not just to me, but also to my partner, who is not a Buddhist, not a meditator,
not into any of that.
But it was useful for both of us.
That's what really gave me a lot of heart.
Yeah, I love that.
I know you kind of went through really quickly the Four Noble Truths.
Talk to me about each one of them a little bit more just before, because I know those became the foundation for then what you then developed, sort of like the next iteration of that specifically as it applies to this domain of love.
But tell me more about just the basics of these four noble truths.
Sure, happily.
So when the Buddha attained enlightenment
more than 2,500 years ago,
and he went back to his practicing posse,
not sure what they called themselves,
and he was apparently enlightened, they could tell.
They said, what did you learn?
What did you see?
He said, I saw four things.
Number one, life is suffering, which is really easy to interpret as life sucks or life is awful.
But upon great investigation, I conclude that that is not what he meant.
He meant that everything changes.
There's nothing to hold on to. And everything we do to create stability or ground with this relationship or that home or noble truth is the cause of suffering, which is called
grasping, which basically means not wanting the first noble truth to be true or pretending that
it isn't. Well, okay, maybe that's true for you, but I am going to construct this fortress for
myself that is inviolate and so forth. So you hold on to what you think will make you happy and
try to push away the things that you think won't. And that's called grasping. And that is actually
the cause of suffering, not the suffering itself, not the loss, not the dissolution,
painful though it may be, the real cause is holding on. The third noble truth is called the cessation of suffering, which means, oh, you can stop.
Now you know the cause, you also know the cure. Stop grasping. Of course, much easier said than
done, but just mathematically, that's the answer to how you stop suffering. And then the fourth
noble truth is called the eightfold path, which is how you actually do that. How do you stop grasping?
And I don't know if I can say them all, but right intention, right view, right speech, right livelihood, right action, right effort, right mindfulness, right wisdom.
All those rights have a vast canon of knowledge around them, and you could study one for your whole life.
And if you do those eight things, just like the Buddha, you got the same
trick bag. You too could attain liberation from suffering. So it's the whole path right there.
Yeah. I mean, it's so interesting because when I was first exposed to the Four Noble Truths
and the first one, immediately my sort of like Western mind translated as you,
you know, so eloquently said life sucks. And I'm like, no, my life
doesn't suck. There's great things in it. This can't be true because I don't see life as suffering.
And it really, it took me a long time. It took me a lot of conversations, a number of conversations
with you to understand how to translate that in a way which landed true to me.
What did you come up with?
It's really almost the exact same thing.
For me, it was about, you know, it's almost like the only thing that I'm certain about is that the future is uncertain.
And the more I try and make it certain, it means that I'm devoting substantial amount of my energy and intention to something I can never have, which to me can only lead to futility, which is a form of suffering.
And futility at the mildest level and just sheer angst and anguish and sorrow and suffering and pain on the deepest level. And when I kind of looked at it
that way and said, oh, okay, I get that. Because like you said, life is persistent change. If you
try and live as if everything that you're doing is to try and make that not so, how can that not
be suffering? That's a perfect description. Exactly. Exactly. It's a
crazy ride in all cases, but it's a crazy ride with meaning and joy if you can let go to any
degree of imagining that you are permanent. The other thing that I really struggled with, with these basic truths
wrapped around the same concept is the idea, the second truth of the notion of grasping
as essentially the cause of suffering. Because when, sure, when I think about material things,
I don't need to have that. I don't need to lock it down. But when I start to think about,
and this is where we get into relationships and love, right? When I start to think about the people who are closest
to me, my family, my sister, my parents, my wife, my daughter, the notion of not grasping onto those
relationships is almost inconceivable to me.
I know.
I totally understand what you're saying.
And people mistake, I believe, grasping for caring or loving.
It means I shouldn't love you so much.
It means I shouldn't need you.
I shouldn't appreciate you.
I shouldn't be so attached. That means I shouldn't need you. I shouldn't appreciate you. I shouldn't be so
attached. That makes me really mad because often when people have said to me, you shouldn't be so
attached, what they really mean is you shouldn't care about something I don't give a crap about.
And I don't like that. So anyway, one of the things that helped me get my mind around grasping, because me too, I love so many things and people and my life and things I feel very attached to.
What helped me is to recognize that attachment itself, non-attachment itself is an attachment.
You can be attached to non-attachment itself is an attachment. You can be attached to non-attachment.
It may sound elliptical.
Very meta.
Exactly.
But non-attachment doesn't mean holding back, and it doesn't mean converting all phenomena into an equal tone,
where you have this very narrow range of where pain doesn't hurt you and pleasure doesn't make you too happy. It doesn't mean that at all. It means the opposite, actually.
Non-attachment means not attached to keeping things the way they were or preventing them
from becoming what they will, rather to dive into what you are experiencing fully without attachment to hope or fear, which is a very
powerful capacity should one ever be able to do that. So when you feel joy, you just completely
feel it without being attached to what does it mean or where will it end. And when you feel,
you know, utter death-defying grief, you don't fault yourself for caring so much. You just feel it
completely. And it itself begins to dissolve. And when it does, you don't try to stop it.
So the non-attachment means just going on the ride completely as a total human being
without holding back. It's the opposite of constantly chill.
Man, how come these things are the noble truths? Why is something so true so hard to live?
I don't know, but I will put right next to that question, why is something that is so ordinary, like being born and dying, the only two things we actually have in common and that are completely ordinary, why is it always a complete outrageous miracle whenever they happen? can't get your minds around it. Someone was just born. It's impossible to conceive. Someone just dies.
It's impossible to conceive.
But there are certain aspects of existence
that are like beyond conventional comprehension.
They're in the realm of magic
or non-conventional or beyond thought.
And those, it's very hard for us to grasp
with our conventional minds.
But in our hearts or in our minds or in our deepest wisdom, whatever you want to call it,
we know, we know these things are true.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here. It has the biggest display ever. It's also the thinnest
Apple Watch ever, making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch,
getting you eight hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X.
Available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations,
iPhone XS or later required,
charge time and actual results will vary.
Mayday, mayday.
We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were going to be fun.
On January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're going to die.
Don't shoot him, we need him.
Y'all need a pilot.
Flight risk.
So you go from this place of... Thank you for that overview of the four noble truths, by the way. Flight risk. somebody give me an answer. You go back to the beginning, the four noble truths come to you.
But you take that and then create this additional overlay so that they become, it feels like much more relevant to the context of relationships.
Yeah. It really helped me to look at them this way. So Four Noble Truths have a kind of sequencing. There's a truth,
the cause of the truth, the cessation of the suffering connected to the truth, and how to do
it. The truth, the cause, the cure, and how. So when I took those into my marriage, what they looked like was the truth.
Relationships are uncomfortable.
Period.
You know, if you, of course, we were just talking about the ordinary irritation of just living with someone.
You've been in a relationship for 20 plus years.
You're like, why are you doing that thing again that you said you would never do?
Why are we having this argument again?
There's just this discomfort, this everyday and beyond everyday discomfort.
But if you haven't even ever met the person, like you're going on a blind date,
there's already discomfort. What if they don't like me? What if they do like me? And so on and so forth. So in every phase of relationship, there's discomfort.
That's the truth.
That's the first truth.
Relationships are uncomfortable.
Really?
Relationships are uncomfortable?
Well.
There's something that you wrote about this, about this phase, about this first noble truth
that when I read it, I was just like, oh, wow.
With your permission, I'll read a couple of lines. Here's what I read. Very few individuals are naturally convinced of their
inherent worthiness. In fact, in Buddhist thought, to possess such conviction is considered a
corollary of full enlightenment. It's more likely that we are
caught in cycles of self-denigration and self-aggrandizement, both of which are forms
of aggression. We are so hard on ourselves, so unremittingly unkind in the way we consider
ourselves. The opposite, insisting that we are in fact awesome, is simply the flip side
of that thought pattern.
I was like, huh.
And what popped into my head when I read that is we bring so much to the way that we interact
with other people.
And it's that old saying, if of like, this is, you know, it's that old saying, if we, if we treated ourselves the way we treat some other people, or if we treat other people
the way we treat ourselves, sometimes you would have disastrous relationships just all the time,
all day, every day. But then you add to this, and this is where I kind of really like my heart went,
wow. Reading again from you.
When it comes to love, this unkindness to self begins to mix with the relationship.
As you become emotionally intertwined, the energetic space between you begins to close up.
As it tightens, your ability to see your partner as separate from your own mind stream diminishes.
The closer you get, the less able you are to actually
see each other. What happens at this point is that because you cannot discern who is who,
you begin to treat your beloved the way you treat your own mind. The kindness or unkindness you
extend towards them is a reflection of the way you treat yourself. Generosity of
spirit, so powerful in the early stages of a relationship, begins to contract. Tell me more
about this because I think so many people will sort of like hear that and be like, oh.
Well, thank you so much for reading it. It made me feel so happy to hear you read it. It gave me great delight.
Thank you so much.
So, and I would love to hear what it evoked in you.
It's always been kind of curious, why does it become harder to love this other person
the longer we know each other?
And this is not my, I did not make this up.
This is a teaching of the bodhisattva path, the awakened being path.
The bodhisattva being one who is here to be of benefit to others.
This is a classical Buddhist teaching.
And it also gives dimension to the cliche, which also happens to
be true, that in order to love someone else, you have to love yourself, which I always thought
meant, oh, I have to like myself, or I have to think I'm awesome, and my self-esteem has to be
perfect, and then I'll be able... But that's not what it means. It means that your self-esteem has to be perfect, and then I'll be able to. But that's not what it means.
It means that your self-talk and the way you actually think of yourself could be riddled with gentleness and acceptance and spaciousness,
as opposed to, I'm an awesome person, which is very constricting.
I'm an awesome person sometimes, and very constricting. I'm an awesome person sometimes,
and I'm also a crazy person other times, and a cruel person, and a beautiful person, and silly.
To make room for all of that, to hold that in a kind of gentle space with complete authenticity
and accuracy is what is meant, I think, by self-love. And that when you can do that for
yourself, bring this spaciousness and this courage and gentleness, then you can do it for someone else.
But until then, these weird neurotic, I guess you'd say, mind streams just mix and wreak havoc.
That's what it means to me. What did it mean to you?
You know, it's so interesting. Reading it, I had a couple months back, I had a conversation with
Tim Ferriss, literally like the week that he came out of a 10-day retreat. And for him,
this was not a good experience. I mean, it was good in many ways. He was very thankful that
Jack Kornfield was actually his mentor who was on retreat with him and helped him process a lot of
darkness that came up during it. And we left that conversation and Tim said to me, he's like,
you know, the one thing I you know, you've got to,
the one thing I've learned is you've got to love yourself
before you can love another person.
And for Tim, I was like, well, this is really different
because that's not the way he's normally had conversations
with me or other people.
And then when I read your words here,
and I've always heard this thing, you've got to love,
we've all heard, you know, we've seen the platitudes,
we've seen it all over Instagram and stuff like this.
You're like, love yourself before you can love anyone else.
I'm like, okay, sure.
I think this landed so powerfully for me because you, the way you laid it out, it's like, okay,
so you start as you and this other person.
And in the beginning, you've got your own, you know, you're basically, you're diminishing and
demeaning yourself. So many people have trouble with their own self-worth, as you say. So, and
you think to yourself, it's okay for me to take myself down, but this other person, I love, and
I'm going to hold them up, and they're awesome, and they're great, and all of a sudden, I'll be
gentle with them. And the visual of, as you get deeper into the relationship, the space between the two
of you closing and closing, closing, closing, until essentially there's no space anymore.
And whatever feelings you held just and applied to you, now without space between the two people
becomes the feeling that you apply to the relationship
and to that other person.
Well, if you're torturing yourself
and demeaning and diminishing yourself every day,
and now you've reached a depth of relationship,
a length of time where now you effectively,
there is no space between you,
and you start to feel that,
that starts to translate into them,
then how could that not be toxic?
And that's where it landed for me. I was like, for the first time, I was like, okay, I get,
with that description, I really better understood why doing that work yourself is so important to
your ability to truly see the kindness and generosity
and love in that other person. So I don't mean to be your fake therapist here, but let me ask you,
how did that make you feel? How did it make you feel when you saw that? How did it make you feel
towards yourself? How did it make you feel towards your wife?
It made me feel good. I'm not somebody that tends to have a lot of negative self-talk for me. Maybe it's that there have been times in my life where I have. I feel about myself. And so for me, it was a reason to continue to revisit
the idea as my relationship evolves over time. Because 21 years in now, five years from now,
10 years from now, we are going to grow individually. Or the nature of our relationship is going to grow.
The space will become lesser and lesser and lesser and lesser and lesser.
So as that space continues to shrink over the next five, 10, 20, 30, 40, God willing,
you know, it gave me a reason to keep revisiting the idea of how am I speaking to and treating myself in the context of my ability
to continue to cultivate a healthy, nourishing, loving relationship.
That's awesome. The way you talk to yourself could actually comprise a loving gesture to her,
which makes everything workable, useful, inspiring.
Because when I think, well, I just have to work on myself,
I just get kind of bored.
I find it claustrophobic and unpleasant.
But when I think, oh, I'm doing this for us,
for me that creates more space.
I feel more inspired to do the work. And P.S., as you were talking, I was thinking that one of the reasons this is so hard to do, I didn't write about this, but it's because the closer you get, and as you were talking, I was having the visual of just two people's lives mixing,
their energy mixing, their whatever, their lives becoming one, as it were. That's terrifying.
That's terrifying. For ordinary reasons, like you don't want to be overwhelmed, you don't want to
lose your independence and so on, but that's not the real reason. The real reason is because someday you're going to have to part. That is unthinkable. That is unthinkable. For some reason, all relationships will end.
Sorry, First Noble Truth, we got to come back to you. But the more you love and the more you open,
the more that truth becomes visceral, whether you think about it or not. And in my opinion, armchair
analyst here, that's one of the reasons why many relationships don't cease to progress,
is because it's easier to hold the arm's length, to think that, oh, you're not this enough,
or you're too that, as opposed to, I'm going to love you so fully and give my heart so completely, knowing that I'm going to make myself cry.
That someday this will end.
That's untenable.
So we throw all sorts of roadblocks in the way.
That's my working theory. To avoid the deeper pain of it ending by experiencing some form of ending now that's not quite as invested.
Exactly.
I'm going to break up with you before you break up with me.
That principle.
Yeah.
And just to be clear also, you're not saying that every relationship is going to end in separating or divorce, but you may, at some point, if you're together for your whole life, one of you is very likely going to die before the other. Yeah. I wrote a book about
heartbreak once and I used to give talks about it. And I would start by saying all relationships are
going to end. You're either going to break up or someone's going to change their mind. I mean,
you break up, someone's going to change their mind. Someone's going to fall out of love
or you're going to live a long, happy life together, and one of you is going to die, and that's the best-case scenario.
Sorry.
It's all good.
Under sort of like the umbrella of the first noble truth of love,
you also talk about this thing called the three poisons.
Tell me about these.
Yeah, also classical Buddhist teaching.
These three poisons, and we each have our poison of choice,
although we all have all three poisons.
These are the things we do to throw roadblocks in our own way.
And they're called passion, sometimes also called grasping, aggression, and ignorance or numbness.
So these are three neurotic reactions we have to the things that upset us.
Rather than opening to them and experiencing them and letting them form us and responding to them and so on.
We have things that were like, the passion part is, I need this.
I must have it.
If I don't have it, I'll die.
Getting super attached in the neurotic way, not in the wonderful way,
to particular outcomes or to the prevention
of particular outcomes. So that's poison number one. And of course, in a relationship,
it's really easy to hang on the person's every word. Does this mean you like me? Oh,
this means it's over. This means it's great. So there's this intensity, this grasping of the
moment as proof that you're either going to leave me or you're going to continue to love me.
Nobody particularly cares for that, giving or receiving. The second poison aggression
is meeting the things that could hurt you with a sense of, I'm going to destroy that.
I'm just going to decimate it. I'm going to get it out of my way,
ixnay, whatever it takes. Aggression, I'm going to move against it. Okay. We just shutting down, turning off, turning away, avoidant.
This is my particular poison of choice, so I'm familiar with it.
Just not happening.
I'm going to do something else.
That's the opaque, difficult poison.
But we do all three of these things. And it would be very painful to
think, well, I got to stop doing those three things because there's no passion, aggression,
ignorance switch. So if anybody wants to work with the poisons, the best place, the only place
to start is by just noticing them, noticing when you employ them, noticing them when they are employed
against you, and just starting to learn their texture and their personality and get to know them
makes it much easier to work with them. Not that you asked me, but I thought I'd mentioned.
No, it's all advice on what to do is always helpful and appreciated too. And these are all
sort of, I guess the poisons, you could also
translate them as common and destructive reactions to having to face the first noble truth of love.
Exactly. They are common reactions to fear.
Okay. Second noble truth of love.
Mm-hmm. Thinking that relationships should be comfortable is what makes them uncomfortable.
So, of course, I hope everyone's relationship makes them happy and comfortable and so on,
and I want to be comfortable and happy and all that, but I don't think that that's necessarily
the job of deep, romantic, intimate love. However, when most of us say we're looking for love,
we don't normally mean that, according to my anecdotal observation.
We're looking for safety. We're looking for someone to make us feel that everything's okay,
or someone with whom we can sort of turn our back on certain trials and tribulations and make a cocoon.
And okay, those things are great. But if there's one thing I have learned about love and that I can say with great certainty about love is that it is not safe. There's no way to make it safe.
And the minute you try to make it safe, it ceases to be love and starts to look more like some sort of a transaction. I will do this and you will do that and so forth and every time you talk to me, or whatever crazy things, which you are not doing, by the way.
Whatever crazy things we will do.
I'm like looking down at my foot right now.
I looked at it too.
No jiggling here.
Then we would be fine.
Sure, okay, work on your problems, your foot jiggling, and your money problems.
Work on those things.
I hope you solve them all.
But thinking that when you do, everything will be cool.
That's where the problem comes in.
Because the weirdest thing that I ever learned about a relationship,
and I'm fixing to tell you what it is right now, this drove me crazy.
They never stabilize.
They never stabilize.
So I thought, well, we'll be in this relationship.
We'll get to know each other. We'll have these kinks. We'll work them out. And then at some point, it's going to be
fine. And at some point, it is fine until it is not. And I can't predict what weather fronts are
going to blow through this now close to 25-year relationship with someone I know really well and who knows me really well?
I still can't predict.
I could be really nice and kind and sweet and sort of get a blank stare.
I can be a complete ass and just see him looking at me with the eyes of love.
There's no telling.
It doesn't stabilize.
It never does because it's alive. So trying to
get it to stabilize, like let's make it perfect and then hold, actually is what creates the
discomfort. The discomfort's not the problem. Thinking it should be comfortable is. Does that
make sense? Yeah. Are you buying? Are you picking up what I'm putting down? I'm picking up what
you're putting down. must also honor their own need to grow as individuals
and remain healthy as individuals,
then unless there's some freakish level of similarity
in the timing and the nature of the way
that each individual grows,
where it is just for a really long time identical,
which I don't think happens,
it can't be always just lockdownable. So it makes
sense to me. And yet that's what we want. And I think it's not just in loving relationships,
it's in everything in life. But this just happens to land in the context of, okay, so
when will I just know that everything will be okay? You talk about something called romantic materialism.
Tell me more about this concept.
This is, from what I recall, it's kind of under the window of the second noble truth.
Yeah, yeah.
No, I appreciate you bringing it up.
I made it up, so I'm happy to have a chance.
I love made-up terms.
I do it all the time.
The Buddha did not say this.
But the great Tibetan meditation master, who you know I love, and I know that you also have great respect for, Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche, named something called the Three Lords of Materialism.
And these are three lords, three things we try to put our attention into with the aim of being safe and steady and making the Four Noble Truths not be true, and they're tricks.
The first lord is called the lord of form.
It's like, I'll be safe if I have this house and this amount of money and this degree and so on.
Okay.
The second lord is the lord of, I can't remember what it's called, but it's the emotional Lord.
It's the Lord that says, if you can only figure out why you are the way you are and why I am the way I am, we can solve our problems and be happy.
So the second Lord is saying, if you have the right theory, the right system, if you do the right studies, you can solve all these problems.
And you can solve a lot of problems. There's certain problems, aka the problem of being a
human being who lives and dies. You're not going to solve that one. The third Lord is called the
Lord of Spiritual Materialism, which is a very insidious Lord. And that's the Lord that says, well, if you're a meditator,
if you really perfect mindfulness, if you get your spiritual cred, like way up there,
you can be exempt from suffering and actually you'll be better than other people.
That makes me want to vomit. I don't like that one, probably because that's the one I'm most
likely to fall victim to. But the Lord of Spiritual Materialism says, mindfulness will save you.
It won't. It won't. It's an amazing tool, powerful. The Lord of Romantic Materialism,
that's the one I coined, says if you can only find the one
in quotation marks, you will be liberated from suffering. If you can only find the person who's
meant for you, maybe there's more than one, but just find one of them. If you can only make that
relationship, if you can only solve all your childhood wounds so that you will attract, quote unquote, the right person into your life.
Your problems will be solved.
That is materialistic view of relationships.
I think it's, again, just using the word transactional.
It's a transactional view.
So if you're sitting there making lists of the person you want to be in a relationship with, which great, it's good to have something clear in your head. And if you're
thinking, well, I attract, this makes me very mad actually, I keep attracting the same thing into
my life so that I can solve it. And until I do, I'll keep attracting bozos and losers. I really highly suggest ceasing to do that.
It's useful to explore your problems and figure out who you are and why you are. Great. Super
great. But to escape even the trials and tribulations of true love, which are vast
and powerful and wonderful and crazy-making, it will not help you. So just love is real, totally real. And you don't know when it's
going to arise. And there's nothing you can do to make it be there. These are certain things in our
world we can't game, Meaning we can't make them be
there when they're not, and we can't make them go away when they are. Love is one of them.
And there's a lot of AI scientists who are trying to figure this out right now with algorithms. I
mean, there are billion-dollar industries that are literally trying to figure out how to game this.
And the most accomplished researchers I know in the, quote, space of love,
will still tell you, nah. Yeah, we can tell you little pieces, but.
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The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were going to be fun.
January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
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Y'all need a pilot?
Flight risk.
The other thing that this sort of concept brought up for me is this kind of idea that in the beginning of a
relationship, we want the fire. We want the instability. We call that, you know, like passion.
We call that romance. We call that, we want the breathlessness, the, oh my gosh, do they, don't
they? And, and this is what gives it energy, what gives it fire, what gives it momentum. And then
over time we start to say, we want comfort, we want safety, we want stability.
But then if we get it, there's a yearning for that breathlessness, for that edge, for that fire that we've lost.
And so it's sort of like we keep telling ourselves that we want what we don't have and trying to make adjustments to get it rather than just saying,
this thing is hard, it is ever-changing,
and let me just be in it.
Yeah.
Well, that's a really good relationship strategy, by the way.
This thing is really hard, it keeps changing,
and let me just be in it.
That's like the best relationship advice possible.
Yeah, in our Western culture especially, maybe unless you're from France or
something, there's this idea that I want a love affair, and then I want the love affair to be a
relationship. And both of those are great things. I think that feeling of just falling madly in love
and being everything heightened and just transported. And I think that's
totally real. And I get upset when people say it's some weird illusion that you have to get past so
you can get into the weird housekeeping weeds of a real relationship. BS, BS, BS. That is a real
relationship too. It's great. It's a love affair. Love affairs, yes. But love affairs and relationships are two different
things. In our world, for whatever reason, we think that all our love affairs should somehow
turn into relationships, and all our relationships should remain love affairs. And the truth is,
that's very rare. They're two different animals. And, you know,
well, I won't get into too many details about my personal life, but, you know, I've had both.
And I've also had like love affairs that have been super hot, super amazing. And then I'm like,
but I don't really want to introduce you to my friends. Well, okay, that's a relationship part. It's really helpful, I think, to look at
those two things as different. And maybe if you're really lucky, you'll find one that could be both.
But in a long-term relationship, that falling in love only happens once. I mean, it keeps
deepening in this funny way, and then it disappears, and then it deepens, and then you remember it.
It's never with that intensity.
But one of the ways I think about it is in Buddhist thought, I think you've read some books about this, as I remember discussing with you.
In the Tibetan Buddhist world, there's six realms of existence.
The human realm, the jealous god realm, the god realm, the animal realm, the hungry ghost realm, the hell realm.
And in certain Buddhist schools of thought, those are real places.
I don't know.
I'm not sure I've ever been to them.
But I know that I visited them in my everyday life.
You know, I go to the animal realm every time I just like phone it in, just go to the hell realm of someone I love dies, so forth and so on. So in my opinion, the way I think of it is
love affairs happen in the God realm. You get like a free ticket to the God realm where
everything's amazing. Everything makes you happy, even the
things that make you sad, because everything's so meaningful. It's very powerful, totally real,
but we don't live there. We have to come back to the human realm where things are more
not quite as colorful. Okay, well, that's how it is. So, you know, in my relationship, and I will not probe you to ask you,
but I, yeah, that falling in love part was like, what planet is this? I'm very happy to be visiting
here. It's amazing. I felt like I woke up in a different world. It was truly extraordinary experience.
And now what I feel is that had sharp peaks, highs and lows that were very intense, and I happen to like that.
Now what I feel is more like an ambient quality of love. It's this, I look at him and I'm like, I adore him and he drives me crazy and I find him amazing and completely strange. And somehow what I feel for him
is not particularly the focal point of our relationship anymore.
Because our relationship has kind of become a container for love.
And that's where we live.
Sometimes it feels good, sometimes it really doesn't.
But every time we come back and sort of stretch to reconnect with each other,
that container is reinforced.
And so when I look around, I see, oh, love is everywhere.
Sometimes it's in my heart, sometimes it's not.
But it's a structure that we created.
It does not arise in a love affair.
It arises over time, you know, if you're lucky.
I don't know, does that sound resonant to you?
Yeah, no, that totally resonates with me.
Yeah, and I don't think there's a way to accelerate that either.
No, you're right.
I think it's just, it is time invested, time in presence. Third noble truth of love.
Third noble truth of love. Remember, in the Buddhist sense, it's the cure.
Meeting the discomfort together is love. That's the third noble truth. So normally we look,
so there's a problem.
I look at you, I go, this is your fault.
Or it's my fault.
I'm really sorry.
Let's dispel this discomfort by assigning blame.
And once we assign the blame, we're like 90% on the way to solving the problem.
It's like, all right, now that we've cleared that up.
Okay, problem solved.
Let's have dinner.
What do you want?
Exactly.
Next fight. Exactly. It's so dinner. What do you want? Exactly. Next fight.
Exactly.
It's so hilarious.
How could you possibly eat that?
We have been there a billion times.
But if a great partner in my mind is not someone who will blame you or take blame,
but one who will sort of stop looking at you and turn, my visual is,
you turn and you put shoulder to shoulder and you look at the problem and you meet it together.
And you see, oh, now we really love each other. Or now I really love you, but you don't seem to
be that interested in me. Now we don't like each other. Now we seem to be in love again. Now we just want to be apart.
There's these incredible waves that roil and roll through the relationship on a daily basis,
a minute-to-minute basis, certainly a yearly basis.
And to ride that together, to me, that's the ultimate love.
We're on this ride together.
And I'm feeling this way about it, and you're feeling that way about it, and now it's beautiful, and now it's not.
To me, that's an incredibly loving partner.
That's a beautiful thing to do.
That's a companion.
Yeah.
Couldn't agree with you more. when you are in it long enough, you'll go through all the day-to-day things that we're talking about,
but you will also go through major things that happen from the outside in that you have no control over, major loss to health, to people that you love, to family and stuff like this.
And it's been my sense that your willingness to sort of like be in this thing together and respect and open.
And when those things happen from the outside in, the really big things that have the ability to either really tear apart or deepen, you know, like get you on the ride even more together.
That's when I think this commitment sort of like really shows its face, at least that's
been my experience. I dig your voodoo right now. And how lucky is a person to sort of stumble into
such a situation where there's someone who's like with you and who will continually deepen with you?
It's very, very fortunate and wonderful. And I would like to throw
down a caveat here that the kinds of things we're talking about, tolerating discomfort and meeting
discomfort together, does not include things like, oh, one of us is addicted to something. One of us
is abusive. One of us emotionally abusive. No, those things are not
included beyond the payout. Those don't come under the, oh, tolerate it. Exactly. Yeah.
In the context of the third noble truth of love, you also bring into the conversation the idea of
the four immeasurables. Again, pulled, you know, like classic teachings out of Buddhism. I actually
have them on my wedding band in Sanskrit right now. Oh, do you?
I do.
Oh.
And tell me about this concept and how it applies to the context of love and relationships.
Well, it's very heartening to realize that you possess in immeasurable quantity
the capacity to love. And in four sort of faces, the four faces of love, maybe you could call it,
the four immeasurables are Brahma, Vih faces of love, maybe you could call it.
The four measurables are Brahma, Viharas in Sanskrit, which means royal dwelling place.
So if you want to know like, where do I live in my inner world? Well, these are really good places to live. And you do live there and this is who you are no matter what. Although obviously
from time to time, it can get super clouded over. So the first is loving kindness are no matter what. Although obviously from time to time
it can get super cluttered over.
So the first is loving kindness or maitri,
metta in Sanskrit.
And that implies a kind of just general warmth,
which means you feel kindly disposed towards others,
which sometimes is really easy
and sometimes is really not.
But the underlying, the sort of formula for that warmth is to recognize your similarity to other
people. Everybody's trying to be happy, even though people do crazy, insane things in the
name of that, that you will never do in a million years. Their underlying motivation is the same.
So actually, oddly to me,
loving kindness doesn't mean you can't hate someone. Even though people get mad at me when
I say hate, but I'm a human being, sometimes I feel that. It doesn't mean you can't hate someone.
You can still have loving kindness for them in the following way, which is kind of funny to think
about. You can hate them, you don't have to forgive them. Let them off the hook. Loving kindness isn't like, aw, sweetie. It's not like a snuggle. It's much more fierce than that. It means, I hate you'm any different from you, that if I wasn't subject to your causes and conditions, that I wouldn't do the same thing.
And if you think, well, I hate this person because they, oh, let's say, make up lies to get their
way, you could ask yourself, have I ever done that? Of course, the answer is yes. So you find a little common ground that that's the provenance of loving kindness. The second brahmavihara is compassion, which means feeling someone else's pain in your own heart, which when you love someone you do. And when you're a Buddha, you feel it about everyone, theoretically. The third is sympathetic joy.
Mudita, I think that is in Sanskrit.
Nachas in Yiddish.
Nachas in Yiddish.
It's like you're driving the nachas machine all over town
when you got the sympathetic joy going.
That's really funny.
That means if compassion means feeling someone's pain in your heart,
it means you actually feel their happiness in your heart.
That's actually kind of hard to do.
You get jealous or, oh.
But sympathetic joy is, oh, you're happy, I'm happy.
And the fourth one has a little bit different tone, equanimity,
finding a kind of balance within it all.
So loving kindness, each of these measurables has what's called a near enemy and a
far enemy. And the near enemy of loving kindness is coldness, and the far enemy is grasping,
carrying too much, getting carried away. So equanimity is finding balance within these
very powerful emotional states. So the good news is they're immeasurable. You can't get rid of them.
You got them now.
And they're really useful in a relationship.
Bottomless wells.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Take us to the fourth.
Fourth noble truth is the path.
There's a way to work with it.
And it's not an eightfold path, although I do apply the eightfold path stages to relationships,
like what is right view and relationship and so on
but the three there's a threefold path that to me as a meditation teacher
mirrors actually the practice of meditation which has three particular qualities
which i will just mention briefly. The first is meditation is
precise. You're a meditator. I know you know this. You place attention on the object of your
meditation, which in most cases is the breath or could be a mantra or an image.
Sound of a car horn in the background.
Or kind of a car horn in the background. Exactly.
That's my New York City mantra.
Which is a beautiful thing.
I'm amazed it's the first time we've ever heard one.
So it's very one-pointed.
You place your attention
on the breath or the mantra,
whatever it is,
and if you stray into anything,
it's considered thinking,
so you come back.
Foom.
Super precise.
One-pointed.
From that, oddly, something interesting happens.
You sit there being one-pointed, allowing yourself to be exactly as you are.
You like yourself, you don't like yourself, you're distracted, you're not distracted.
Doesn't matter.
Doesn't matter.
Because to meditate, you don't have to stop thinking.
Please, if you think that, stop thinking that.
You just sit there with yourself as you are.
You open.
And from this precision, the ability to open arises magically.
Meditation is famously associated with insight, sometimes called the practice of insight.
So from this one-pointedness, this openness of mind happens.
Insight arises.
It's quite expensive.
The third quality is called letting go.
Because you put your attention on the breath, you let yourself be as you are,
then you notice you're distracted.
That's awesome.
You just woke up.
The instruction is let go.
Letting go is very profound because then you let go and you're
in space for a moment till you come back to your object, breath or mantra. Letting go is the lesson
of being human. Letting go, letting go, letting go. So precise, open, letting go in a relationship.
What do these things mean? So the precision is the foundation
of meditation. The foundation of a relationship in my mind is very simple. It starts with
good manners. That may sound really cheesy. Yeah, because good manners are profound. It's not just
do I use this fork or not? It's am I actually thinking of you and what you are experiencing and how I might be kind
to you?
Am I noticing you?
Good manners are profound form of thoughtfulness.
And you actually think about the person.
It's radical.
If you don't have that, it's very hard to establish the foundation of a relationship.
So it's like the focused awareness in a very directed way.
Exactly. Without an agenda.
And also to be honest.
Like to say the truth when you know it and to say it skillfully, not blurtingly.
Those are the precise, that's the precise piece of this path.
Good manners, truth-telling.
The second quality, openness.
I'm laughing because I was quite taken aback when I realized how this came into play, which was to imagine that the person you're in a relationship with is of at least equal importance to yourself.
Shocking.
Oh, you're there. Yeah. I'm going to be open to you.
I'm going to be open to you. And the third step, and the book has more suggestions than this,
is letting go. I find this very interesting, personally, that as we were talking about romance ends just as sorry but intimacy has no end the letting go piece in a relationship is letting go constantly of how you
think it ought to have gone to be with what is in such a way that everything you encounter,
wonderful experiences, detrimental experiences, loss, boredom, confusion,
everything that you encounter together can actually be used to deepen intimacy,
which has no end and that you can commit to for a lifetime.
You can't commit to romance. You can't commit to romance.
You can't commit to any feeling, but you can commit to deepening intimacy. That made me very
happy when I realized that. I could do that, honestly. I can't honestly say, yeah, I'll always
love you, but I will always try to act lovingly towards you or see you or be with you or stay
near you as you go through what
you go through and we and I go through things that I can commit to. So that to me was very,
very hopeful. So precise, open, let go. This all emerged out of your own seeking
to try and understand which way was up in your own relationship and trying to figure out
how do I understand this? How do I navigate it?
How do I be in it or not be in it?
But how do I at least figure out how to be okay
with this person in this moment
and maybe in another, another, another, another?
And wow, when I go back to the beginning,
this whole idea kind of jumps out at you.
You start to apply it in the context
of your own relationship.
And like you said also, Duncan is not a Buddhist.
Were you actively and openly saying, okay, I am now sort of engaging in the Four Noble
Truths of Love and the relationship and sharing with him what you were doing and how you were
doing it and say, come do this with me?
Or was this just, huh, here's a bit of wisdom. Let me try it on for size in a relationship. And maybe he'll pick up on
what's happening and not. And if he wants to engage in any of these reciprocally, awesome.
And if not, that's fine too. How did this then turn around and unfold in the context of your
relationship? Yeah. I appreciate you asking that. There's actually a great benefit to being married to a non-practitioner, quote unquote, when you are
a practitioner of something, in my case, Buddhism. And the great value is that you cannot bullshit
them with Dharma notions. You cannot unload some Dharma stuff on them and think that it will mean anything.
You have to be those things.
So I didn't say, hey, baby, I've discovered the four noble truths of love.
Let me tell you what they are.
Instead, I started acting like discomfort was part of the deal.
And looking at it together was loving and meeting it together could deepen our intimacy, sort of doing those things. Luckily, he is, I'm not saying this to be humble,
he is much more loving naturally than I am. He's more relational. He's more naturally attuned to the dynamics of a relationship than I am.
So I didn't have to convince him of anything, but it was more the way I showed up.
And of course, the way you show up has much more impact on the way someone else shows up
than any charts and graphs that you can unroll about. This is my theory of relationships,
which is basically useless. It's useless, the theory. The practice is the only thing that
matters. So all I had to do, which is not a small thing, I'm not trying to minimize it.
All I had to do was just try to do these things and it changed things for us.
Yeah. And there's another lesson in there, which is that I know you're
asked this very often. I've been asked it very often too, which is I've discovered this amazing
body of knowledge or idea or practice. How do I quote, get my significant other to do it too,
and to see how important and transformational it is. And the answer is what you were just saying, which is you don't, you just live it. You just be it. And the quality of you living and being
in the context of a relationship will or will not affect that other person in a way where they want
to in some way stand in a similar energy or not. And that is all you can do.
And it is the best thing you can do. But I agree. I
hear that too. I want to be loving in this way. I want to think relationships shouldn't be
comfortable and so on. How do I get this other person to do that? Well, just as you're saying,
just show up and be that way. Yeah. I love the idea of the Four Noble Truths applied to the
context of love. And I'm actually really excited to start kind of dancing with them, exploring them, sharing them. So as we kind of come full circle together,
again, I can't believe it's been five years since we hung out and actually recorded a conversation.
And I don't even remember if back then in the early days of Good Life Project,
if I always ended with the same question that I do now, which is, if I offer the phrase to you, to live a good life,
what comes up? To live a good life is to be unafraid to be as brilliant and luminous and ridiculous and loving as you actually really are. No shame.
Thank you.
Thank you. I love talking to you.
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