Good Life Project - Year-End Reflection Part 3 | Our Connection Bucket
Episode Date: December 21, 2023In this illuminating episode, we dive deep into the power of human connection for a fulfilling life. Jonathan shares insights from decades of research showing our most important relationships are key ...to wellbeing. We explore how to take stock of your Connection bucket and nurture the few deep bonds that matter most. Learn simple but profound practices to be more present with loved ones, keep your bucket full in tough times, and cultivate chosen family.If you want to feel more connected, this episode will inspire you to take small steps that ripple into big changes. Strengthening your core relationships could be the best investment you make next year!If you’re open to it, record your own responses and email them to support@goodlifeproject.com. We may include your reflections in an episode. I'm excited to share this powerful process over the coming weeks to help us all step into the new year with intention.Take The Good Life Bucket Quiz to discover your levels.View the 1-page Worksheet.Find all of the Year-End Reflection episodes on this Spotify playlist.Episode TranscriptCheck out our offerings & partners: My New Book SparkedMy New Podcast SPARKED. To submit your “moment & question” for consideration to be on the show go to sparketype.com/submit. Visit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
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So here's my question. How connected or disconnected have you felt to yourself,
to your friends, to your family, your loved ones, to people who really matter to you
over the course of this year, right? This has been a very challenging year on the connection front
for so many. Coming out of the last three years, I think so many of us just figured we drop back into our relationships with the same level of depth and zest and joy.
But for many, reconnecting has actually been a real struggle and for a wide variety of
reasons from technology to the state of the world and really just all the things that
are swirling around us and the fact that we are still emerging from a season of
profound disruption and trying to figure out how to be with each other again. Which is why in part
three of our special month-long year-end reflection series, we're tapping into the wisdom of the good
life buckets to better understand how this last year has impacted us in three critical areas,
vitality, connection, and contribution.
And today, we're going to do a deep dive into your connection bucket.
Now, if you missed our opening episode in this special bonus year-end reflection series,
or last week's part two on the vitality bucket,
you'll definitely want to cue those up to listen to as well.
Because I share the basic model of the good life buckets and why
they're so powerful in helping us both understand how the key areas of our lives are doing and also
giving us the information needed to really look ahead and make whatever changes or shifts we want
to in order to come back to life in all areas of life in the year to come. And then last week,
we went deep into the topic of vitality
or your vitality bucket, what it is and is not. And I shared a powerful journaling exercise to
tap as a year-end reflection and planning tool. And you can find links to those first two year-end
reflection episodes in the show notes. Today in part three of our year-end reflections years,
we're diving into your connection bucket,
asking what it can tell us about this last year, about the state of your relationships.
Some of this stuff is going to be maybe fairly obvious, but there's probably a bunch that you
haven't thought about too. And then we'll explore what I call the five clarifying questions that
I'll invite you to ask yourself and journal on. And then I'll
share my own personal assessment for my connection bucket this year, how I'm feeling about the state
of my own relationships and what I'm planning to do about it in the year to come. So excited to
share this third installment of our year-end reflection series on the connection bucket.
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 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 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 going to be fun. January 24th. Tell me how to fly this thing we call the connection bucket, right? Again, remember the three different
buckets we have, vitality, connection, contribution. The idea is these are three core areas of life.
When they're all filled or pretty close to full, then life gets really good. When they all start
to dwindle or even one starts to dwindle, we start to struggle and we're not often entirely sure why.
So honing in on the three different buckets and the levels can be super helpful in helping us
process the year we've just been through and understand why it felt the way that it felt,
but also plan for the year to come. So let's talk about that connection bucket.
When we talk about the connection bucket, what we're really talking about here is the depth and quality of our most important relationships.
Now, this is fascinating.
I have had the great, great honor and privilege over more than a decade now of sitting down
with some of the most accomplished, smartest researchers, leaders of industry, of science, of art, of relationships, of all these
different things in Good Life Project over the period that we've been doing this. And one of
the more recent conversations that I had actually happened with a guy named Robert Waldinger. Now,
he was the curator or one of the most recent curators for one of the longest run
studies on human flourishing in history.
The study went about 80 years and it tracked a group of people across different seasons
of their life.
And it measured so many different aspects of their life from their physical well-being
to their work, to their relationships, and it measured
all sorts of medical things about them. It measured the relationship qualities. It taught
not just to them, but to those around them. And the idea was to try and figure out what are the
fundamental contributors to a life well-lived? And yes, there are all the different things that
we talk about here, but Waldinger brought to the surface one super critical thing, which is he said,
in all the different metrics that they looked at over a period of multiple generations.
And by the way, this study was focused on a fairly narrow group of people, but it has been replicated
with broader demographics more recently, and the results are largely the same. But when he was
asked, is there anything that really stands out as determinative? And when
I talked to him about it, he basically said, yeah, it's about the state of our relationships.
It is your connection bucket is maybe the single most important one, because a lot of other stuff
might not be going right and you may not have control over, but the depth and quality of our relationships is a huge determinant of the quality
of our lives. How full or empty your connection bucket is, is critically important in this
context. So when we talk about the connection bucket, then what are those relationships that
we're talking about? What is the connectedness that really matters in our ability to fill our connection buckets
or understand what goes into it and what might be affecting it, both positive and negative?
One of the things that comes to mind first is friends.
Friends are critically important.
There's so much research on this now that when we feel like we don't have
any friends, and by the way, there's an epidemic of loneliness and isolation that is only getting
worse these days where people say they actually don't have a single close friend. There's a
profound effect on our ability to feel like we're living good lives. And that also has a ripple on
effect on our health, our wellbeing, our state of
mind and body, and even our ability to work in the way that we want to work. Friends can make
a huge difference. Thing is, we don't need a lot of friends. This isn't about shallow and wide here.
What the research also shows is that this is not a volume game. We're talking about one or two, three people who
you just feel genuinely close to, who know you really well and are there for you when you need
them and you feel the same way about them, right? We don't need a crew or a squad or a group or
a ton of different people. We just need a small number where we can go deep and we feel like
they've got us and we've
got them.
And we also think about expanding beyond friends.
We think about family, or I like to actually say family and chosen family.
The reason is for some of us, when we think about our family, whether it's biological
or adopted, whatever is the case for you, we have mixed feelings about
them. Some folks think about their family and they actually don't feel super connected to them
at all. They know them or support them in any meaningful way. Whereas others think about their
family and they feel like they're the closest people to them ever. They make their lives so
much better. Now, we have differing abilities to control that.
But what we do have is the ability to control and to bring together what I would call chosen
family.
We're seeing that happen a lot more.
And those are people who rise above the level of what we would call friends and actually
feel like this is the family that we would bring together if we had the ability to choose who
it was going to be and travel with them as a family for life.
And I'm seeing more and more people actually be really intentional about bringing together
chosen family and knowing that this is a group of people.
This is my, they look at them as my family.
And I love this because it gives us agency and says, whether you love and
feel everything that you want to feel from the family who you came up with or not, that we all
still have this ability to bring together, to cultivate our own sense of chosen family, no
matter where we travel. So friends and family and chosen family. Other things that go into the connection bucket are community. And very often, community is the driver of the feeling of belonging. Belonging is such a critical physiological and psychological need. It is one of the core needs for human flourishing. And it's the sense that we are known and we know others and that we have shared values,
shared history, shared interest, shared lens, and that we can show up in a group of people
or a community and we don't have to do anything or change anything about ourselves to, quote,
fit in, we simply can show up as we are, who we are,
all of ourselves and know that we will be welcomed, celebrated and embraced. And that is in my mind,
what really creates that sense of belonging that often happens in community with others,
like minded others. So this is another really critical thing that goes into filling that connection bucket.
So we've talked about friends, family, chosen family, community, and the sense of belonging
that can come with it.
What about this thing called love?
So love, of course, can happen across friends and family, chosen family, and all these different
categories.
But what about that particular type of love that often is known as romantic love? So is this a need
to have in order to actually be able to fill your connection bucket? Or is it a nice to have?
And what increasingly I'm seeing in the literature is that of course, it's amazing when you have that
in your life, when you have
that person, like your person, and there's a sense of deep and profound connection and romantic love,
which oftentimes over time evolves into friendship love, companionate love, and attachment love.
But romantic love is the thing that tends to be idealized as the pinnacle of a sense of just hyper
connectedness.
Like if you really want to fill your connection bucket, you've got to have that person.
And what the data shows is that's actually not true.
Is it nice to have that in the mix?
Of course, it's fantastic when you have that.
But is it a must have?
Can you actually fill your connection bucket and feel really good and connected to others
on all the ways that make a difference, but not have that romantic relationship?
The answer is yes, you actually can.
It is a beautiful thing to add to it, but it's also, it doesn't limit your ability to
fill your connection bucket if you don't have that.
So you don't have to feel left out or feel like you're not able to get the level of connection bucket filling that you want to have just because
that might not be a part of your life at this moment in time. Now, another thing that we think
about when we think about connection is your sense of connection to yourself. So many of us are
actually not at home in our own skin, either because we know ourselves
and we're not comfortable with that, or because we really don't know ourselves. We've never actually
done the work to say, who am I? What matters to me? What are my values, my beliefs? What are my
passions and my interests? We feel disconnected from our sense of self, from our sense of identity.
Maybe we were never connected to it, or maybe something happened in life that drew us away
from it.
Many times, adult parents or caregivers report feeling this sense of, well, I felt deeply
connected to myself, but as I've shifted roles and I'm more focused on more of my energies
going towards being there for others, I'm feeling increasingly disconnected from that
sense of self. And that can really have an effect. So it's not just about your sense of connection
to others, but also our sense of connection to ourselves that can make a difference or an ability
to fill our connection buckets. Now, we've also been talking largely about other human beings here,
but it doesn't just have to be that.
Other ways to add to your connection bucket are a sense of connectedness to animals.
Many people feel more connected to pets or animals around them that are in their care
than they do to other human beings in their immediate families. And that's actually okay. Connection, deep sense of connection and love
and affection towards animals. That's great. It's another way to fill your connection bucket.
Some folks get a really powerful sense of connection from the environment around them,
especially from nature. I know I'm in Boulder, Colorado. I'm a hiker. I love being
out in nature on a regular basis. And I feel like a sense of deep and profound connection when I am
immersed in nature and natural environments. That can be in the mountains, in the forest,
on the trails. It can also be on the beach or near water. Both of those have a really similar
effect in me. It's not just about filling my vitality bucket and improving my state of mind, which it does.
There's a sense of connectedness, connectedness to the land, to energy around me, to nature
that really changes me in a meaningful way.
And that also leads us to a bigger, more profound sense.
If it isn't within your experience or your beliefs, a sense of connectedness to source
or God or the Akashic field or the universe, however you may describe or name or define
that sense of being connected to and a part of something bigger than yourself.
That if it is a part of your experience can be another powerful way to help fill your
buckets.
So these are all the different types of things
that I think about when I'm looking at
what goes into filling your connection bucket.
And as we did last week, after the break,
I will return and we're gonna revisit
the five clarifying questions
and how to use them to get a beat
on where your connection bucket has been,
how to process what's contributed to that and do a little bit of planning.
And I'm going to share my own answer to the five clarifying questions when it comes to my connection bucket.
I'll see you back here in just a moment.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here. It has the biggest display ever. I'll see you back 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 we're going to dive into the five clarifying questions.
Now, if you've been listening along, if you tuned into last week's episode where we talked
about the vitality bucket, I introduced these five questions, but I'll introduce them to you again, along with a journaling exercise that we're going to use as
a urine reflection when it comes to your connection bucket. The five clarifying questions are,
when you think about your connection bucket, and you can either do this broadly as your connection
bucket in general, or pick any or all of the different contributors that I just talked about.
And these contributors are all listed in a PDF one sheet that you can download.
You'll find a link just right there in the show notes that has all three buckets, the different elements that contribute to each and the five clarifying questions to each
one of them.
So you don't have to memorize any of this, but you can ask these five clarifying questions
either generally in the context of your connection bucket, or you can ask these five clarifying questions either generally in the
context of your connection bucket, or you can literally go to each single contributor and do
it in the context of that. It takes a little more work, a little more effort, but you'll also get
more value and clarity and understanding by doing that. The five clarifying questions are, when you
think about your connection bucket, what level is it at now? Rank it from one to 10. Where has it been over the last year? Think about a high, low, and average. What have been the main
contributors to this level, both within and outside of your control? Are you content with
both the average levels for the year and where it is right now? And what, if anything, might you
think about changing as you prepare to plan for the year to come? Now, when I shared my sort of journaling response to this in our last year-end reflection episode,
I just picked a single quality from the vitality bucket. But for the sort of like demonstration
purposes this time, I'll just talk to you about the connection bucket in general. So I'll answer
these five clarifying questions in the context of my connection bucket more broadly and how it's been affected over the course of this year.
So we start out with those five clarifying questions. When I think about my connection
bucket, what level is it at now? Rank it from one to 10. And if I think about this at this
particular moment in time, I would probably say that my connection bucket is at about, I'm going to actually go pretty
strong here and say it's at about a nine.
It's feeling really good right now.
It's feeling very full.
My connection bucket feels like it is bubbling over.
And that brings us to the second clarifying question, which is where has my connection bucket
been over the last year? And I think about if I reflect over the last 12 months or so, like the
high, the low and the average, well, I think the high would probably be pretty close to where it
is right now, to be honest with you. I think there's always probably a room to feel more
connected. So I'm always hesitant to say it's a 10, maybe it's like eight and a half or nine. I think the low
though was probably somewhere more around a five for me. And am I happy about that? No.
But if I'm being really honest and I think back about what's happened throughout the course of this year, what have been the different factors that have allowed me or stopped me from connecting, then yeah, if I'm being really honest, there were probably moments where I felt relatively disconnected and it was down around a five.
And if I think about what the average has been, though, for the whole year.
Mayday, mayday.
We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were gonna be fun.
January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're gonna die.
Don't shoot him, we need him!
Y'all need a pilot?
Flight risk.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch,
getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X.
Available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone XS or later required,
charge time and actual results will vary.
I'd say that's probably about a 7.5.
So solid, but definitely room for improvement.
Now, that brings me to the third clarifying question.
And that is, when I think about my connection bucket,
what had been the main contributors to the level, both within and outside of my control?
And I think about a few things here, both on the plus side and on the minus side. On the plus side,
what has allowed it to feel like, well, I'm sitting at about an eight and a half or nine
right now. I'm feeling really good about it. And for much of the year, it's been really good. And I feel like a lot of that has been a renewed intentionality around doing things
that would make me feel more connected both to myself and to those who I really care deeply
about. So I think coming out of the last three years where there's a much stronger sense of
isolation, both physical, like physical space, it was difficult to be around people,
but also psychologically and emotionally.
I realized the toll that that took on me.
And I wanted to make this year a year
where I really felt like the relationships in my life
that mattered most to me were being celebrated
and nourished and elevated.
And that led me to be more proactive, I believe,
in making sure that I was always
reaching out. So I don't want to say I made an actual shortlist of the folks who would be closest
to me and most important to me in all those different categories I described before, but I
kind of mentally did a run through. And what I would do on a weekly basis was I would check in
and ask myself, how in touch with, how connected do I feel
to these different people who I claim to hold dear in my life, to these different relationships?
It's my immediate family, my wife, my daughter, my parents, my sister. Then there's a small
handful of just very close friends, and then a broader community around me. And what I did was I got really intentional
about making sure that every single week
I was proactively doing things
to make sure that those relationships
that matter most were being nurtured.
Whether that was scheduling time for phone calls
or for Zooms, there are a handful of friends
where we've kind of gotten into the practice
of random, unscheduled, unplanned calls, which is really weird in this day and age where
everyone's like, oh, let's schedule a time to call. When I was a kid, nobody scheduled times
to call. We just hung out. We went to somebody's house. We just picked up the phone. Hey, can
somebody talk? We've gotten so rigid and so scheduled now that I feel like our ability to just connect spontaneously when we feel it
has kind of broken down a lot. So we have a small group of friends where we just randomly call each
other and we could be out hiking, we could be doing something else. And so often it is such
a surprise and a delight that I love doing that. And I love receiving that from those who are close to me.
And it made a real difference.
And also just being sure that on a weekly basis, the people I cared most about, I was
in touch with.
And I noticed that they started to be more in touch with me.
And I think there's a ripple effect.
When you start to get more proactive about filling your connection bucket, others start
to feel that and they start to become more proactive too and start reaching back out to you. And it creates a really beautiful upward
connection spiral. What about things that are not within my control then? Well, as I mentioned in
last week's year end reflection, I spent a solid chunk of the summer dealing with illness. And
that really took me out in a lot
of different ways. I didn't have the emotional or the physical bandwidth to really relate to
other people. So there was a window in the middle of the year where I felt more disconnected. And I
think that's where I reported more of a five out of 10 on my connection bucket. And I think a lot
of the reason actually had to do with the level of my vitality bucket
being really low because I was dealing with that and I was struggling and it just didn't leave me
the energetic or emotional bandwidth to be able to really deepen into and nourish my relationships.
I was thankful to have people who love me, who were there for me and checked in on me and
supported me. I just didn't have a lot of outward energy to give during that window of time. So I pulled back a bit and it was
definitely an interesting challenge for me and one that I've been reflecting on more and more
and also been reflecting on how grateful that I am that there were a number of folks who genuinely
were there for me and loved me and checked in on
me, even though they knew that I didn't really have the ability to spend a lot of energy
reciprocating. And I think that's something that you learn about really close family level friends
over time is that it's not a checklist type of thing. Nobody's keeping score here. We're just
here for each other. And that brings us to the fourth of those clarifying questions.
And that is, am I content with both the average levels for the year and where I am now?
And I think we'd have to answer that with a yes.
I'm really content with where it is right now.
I feel deeply connected to those I love and those around me.
I'm in regular touch with them. I'm much more intentional about my ability
to be in touch. And also more broadly, like those other things, I don't own a pet, but I am deeply
connected to a sense of nature. And I've invested a lot more in being much more committed to feeling
that sense of connection and a bigger sense that I am a part of something larger than myself,
a broader energy that is there and supports us. And that brings us to the fifth clarifying
question, which is, what, if anything, might I think about changing as I prepare to plan for
the year to come? So if I think about the current state of my connection bucket, that being pretty
topped off right now, would I change a lot? I don't think so. I
think I put a lot of practices into place over the course of this year that have made a real
difference, that have helped me raise the level of my connection bucket and also keep it fairly
high. What I would think about is, you know, for those moments where you don't see life
coming and they kind of knock you to your knees and they make it harder to connect, which
as I shared was a season of this year, at least, are there things or practices or tools or
mechanisms that I could put in place in advance so that if and when something like that happens
down the road, that I have these checks
that will bring me back and keep me checking in
and resource to support other people
and also make sure that the connections that I do have
are there for me as well.
And that's something that I don't have an answer to
right now, but it's spinning in my head.
And I will probably think more about and see
what I can brainstorm between now and the end of the year to set myself up even better to keep my
connection bucket topped off in the year to come. So that is the connection bucket. That is the five
clarifying questions. And that's how I would sort of like move through this journaling exercise at the five clarifying questions more broadly in the sense of the connection bucket. And as I mentioned,
you can either do this broadly for the connection bucket, or if you really have it in you, it'll
take more work and more effort, but you'll get a lot more specific detail. You can literally go
element by element in the connection bucket and ask the five clarifying questions about each one of them. You can look at family, friends, chosen family, animals,
self-connection, all these different things. Choose the one that feels best for you and also
choose the one that you feel like you can actually do. And if that means that you only have 10
minutes to do it more broadly for the connection bucket, do that.
It's much more useful and it'll give you some really valuable intel as you start to think
about closing the books on this year and setting up next year to live your best life possible.
So excited to be able to dive into that with you.
And I am excited to be back here with you for the final of our four year and reflection
episodes, episode four next week,
where we're going to dive into the contribution bucket together and think about this thing called
the work and also maybe redefine what we even mean when we use the word work and how we can
fill that bucket in the year to come. I'll see you all then. Take care. Tell me how to fly this thing. Mark Wahlberg. You know what the difference between me and you is? You're going to die. Don't shoot him.
We need him.
Y'all need a pilot.
Flight risk.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch,
getting you 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 are later required.
Charge time and actual results will vary.