Habits and Hustle - Episode 551: Dr. Laurie Santos: How Modern Life Hijacks Your Happiness And Why Going Analog Fixes It

Episode Date: May 5, 2026

Have you noticed how the more we're connected by the internet and have all these gadgets, the lonelier we get? The things we thought would bring us together are actually making us more isolated than e...ver. That is the conversation I had with Dr. Laurie Santos. She is a Yale professor, an expert on happiness, and the woman behind Psychology and the Good Life, the most popular class Yale has ever offered. She also hosts her own hit podcast, The Happiness Lab, focused on the science of feeling good.  In this episode, Dr. Laurie breaks down why English-speaking countries are quietly getting unhappier, why manifesting the reward actually makes you less likely to chase it, and why the expert on gratitude herself doesn't love gratitude journaling. She explains the neuroscience of wanting versus liking, why self-care has quietly become self-indulgence, and the mindset shifts that matter more than any routine, supplement, or practice on the internet. She also gets into why doomscrolling is stealing more from you than your time, the two parts of happiness you actually need both of, and the simple habits the research supports when every trendy protocol around you does not. If you have been doing everything you are supposed to do and still feel off, this episode might confirm something you’ve known about yourself and your happiness for a long time.  What's Discussed: (01:30) How Dr. Laurie ended up at Yale teaching the most popular class in the school's history. (04:15) Why happiness is a skill you practice, not a personality trait you are born with. (07:40) The two kinds of happiness most people confuse and why you need both. (11:05) Why money past a certain number stops making you any happier. (14:30) The science behind why paraplegics and lottery winners end up at the same happiness baseline. (18:20) Why comparison is the single biggest thief of happiness in modern life. (22:10) Why the silver medalist looks more miserable than the bronze medalist. (26:45) Why non-English speakers are happier according to studies. (31:20) The dopamine trap of social media and why you crave what you don't even like. (35:50) Why your phone is the Nutrasweet of real connection. (40:15) Why boredom is the skill modern kids are losing and why it matters. (44:30) The shock study that reveals how uncomfortable we have become with our own thoughts. (49:10) Why the gratitude expert herself doesn't vibe with gratitude journaling. (52:40) Dr. Laurie's alternative to gratitude that actually sticks. (57:05) Why self-compassion beats self-criticism for every single goal you have. (1:01:30) Why self-care is not a bubble bath and what it actually looks like. (1:06:15) The research that shows manifestation is making you less likely to get what you want. (1:10:40) The WOOP framework and why it is the version of manifesting that actually works. (1:15:20) Why work-life balance is the wrong goal and what to aim for instead. (1:19:45) What Dr. Laurie tells her students to do in just ten minutes a day to feel happier. Thank You to Our Sponsors!AirDoctor: Head to AirDoctorPro.com and use promo code HUSTLE to get up to $300 OFF today! AirDoctor comes with a 30-day money back guarantee, plus a 3-year warranty (an $84 value) FREE! Kion: Visit getkion.com/habits or 20% OFF Momentous: Ready to try supplements that actually do what they claim? Head to livemomentous.com and use code JEN for 35% OFF your first subscription.  Therasage: Visit Therasage.com and use code JEN to get 15% OFF your order. Your skin deserves this level of care. Magic Mind: Head over to www.magicmind.com/jen and use code JEN at checkout. Prolon: Prolon is offering listeners 30% OFF sitewide plus a $40 bonus gift when you subscribe to their 5-Day Program! Just visit https://prolonlife.com/JENNIFERCOHEN and use the code JENNIFERCOHEN to claim your discount and your bonus gift. Rho Nutrition: Go to RhoNutrition.com and try Rho's Liposomal Glutathione. Use code JEN20 for 20% OFF sitewide. Manna Vitality: Try it now by using the code Jennifer20 at mannavitality.com.  Find more from Jen Cohen:  Website: www.jennifercohen.comInstagram: @therealjencohenBooks: www.jennifercohen.com/books Speaking: www.jennifercohen.com/speaking-engagements Find more from Dr. Laurie Santos: Website:www.drlauriesantos.com/Instagram: @lauriesantosofficial Facebook: Dr. Laurie Santos YouTube: @DrLaurieSantosTiktok: @drlauriesantosThreads: @lauriesantosofficialX: @lauriesantos Podcast: The Happiness Lab

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:01 Hi guys, it's Tony Robbins. You're listening to Habits and Hustle. Crush it. All right, you guys, welcome to Habits and Hustle. We have a very good guest today. This is one that I really feel we all need badly right now. Her name is Dr. Lori Santos. She is an expert in the science of happiness. And what's extremely impressive is she has the most sought after, most popular class of all time at Yale University. And it's called Psychology. and the good life, correct? That's right, yeah. Wow. I've been like waiting for you to be on this show. So thank you for being here. Yay, I'm glad I finally worked out.
Starting point is 00:00:40 I mean, yes, me too. I don't even know where to begin. I know I was telling you earlier that I have like a whole plethora of questions that I write and then I never end up asking the questions. But what I really love about you, and I was saying this a little bit earlier, is that everything that you actually talk about is not just, you know, just opinion or just, you know, randomness. everything is very science-backed.
Starting point is 00:01:03 So for people who are listening and you're like, oh, whatever, it's horrific, no, it's not. Everything is very science-backed. And there are strategies, actually, for being happy. It's not just something that's sometimes innate. Yeah. So would you say that being happy is a skill? Definitely.
Starting point is 00:01:21 I think it's a skill and it's something that you have to practice, right? I mean, it makes sense, you know, as a fitness influencer, so you know this, right? It's like you can know what you need to do, but unless you actually get out to the gym, and do that stuff, nothing is going to change. Absolutely. And this is exactly the way our mental health works, right? There are things that we know we need to do to feel a little bit better. But unless you actually get out and you practice that and you build your skills up, you're not
Starting point is 00:01:44 going to end up feeling any better. So do you think that, I mean, in your, you know, not think, but in your research and all your findings, I've always, I always thought that we all have a baseline for happiness, right? And then we can like, maybe like, we can kind of like tweak it a little bit up and down. But what's your belief in that? Yeah. Well, what some of the studies show is that there is part of our happiness that seems to be kind of built in. This is what researchers call it being heritable, right? Some of the differences we see across people out there in the world in terms of how happy they are, they're just based on like something about their biology, right? Okay. And we know this because if you look at identical twins, their happiness levels tend to be a little bit more similar than
Starting point is 00:02:25 regular siblings who aren't perfectly genetically related. Right. But if you look at how much happiness is heritable, it's kind of a small amount. So it's about the same amount of, like, genetic basis as you might see for, like, religiosity. Like, are you religious or not? Or risk taking. How much of a risk do you want? So there's, like, some basis to, like, the fact that it's built in, but not as much as you might think. It's much less than, for example, like, weight, right? Which we know is something that you can change around with, like, how much you're working out and stuff like that, right? Well, wait a second, because, I mean, so for an example, okay, like, you know, Noah, who I'm married to, he's naturally, extremely happy, no matter what.
Starting point is 00:03:07 Like, his baseline is exceptionally high. He'd always say to me that he trains himself to be happy and very positive, right? And I'm, I always like poo-pooed it for like many, many, many, many years. And then I realized that over time, the people I speak to who are that way, like, actually do what you say. Like, they're practicing the skill. of being happy. So can we talk about how do you practice being, like in a real way? Yeah. I mean, and please try to do me a favor and stay away from, like, you know, having gratitude. Like that's like that word gratitude is overplayed in my mind. Yes, I understand having gratitude is the, you know,
Starting point is 00:03:49 gateway drug to like a panacea of great things. With that being said, what could we do in real time, practical actual things, strategies to train our brains and ourselves to be happy. Yeah. Well, one of the big behavioral changes we can make to feel happier is just to engage in a little bit of social connection. If you looked at pretty much like every study of happy people, it suggests that happy people are more social. And interestingly, that's true for introverts and for extroverts. If you look at the benefits of social connection for introverts, they're just as high as for extroverts, which many people don't expect. But it's what the research really shows. And so I think that's just an easy one, right? Like, make time to call a friend, like connect with somebody. Get off your, you know, scrolling on your screen and really connect in real time. That's a big one. Another big one that we know matters a lot is something that I bet you'll relate with, which is like just doing nice things for your body can make you feel happier. So moving your body just a little bit. Not like running three ultramarathons, but just like getting moving. Just like, literally there's one study that shows like a half hour of pretty intense cardio can be as effective as taking
Starting point is 00:04:56 a prescription of anti-depression medication for just like feeling better. And another study I love shows how long that lasting effect from moving your body can be. So you do a half hour of cardio, you know, say 9 a.m. on Monday. How long does that little boost last? Yeah. It actually lasts for over 20, almost 24 hours that you get that kind of hit. And so just remembering that our brain is connected to our body and that like our mental health, our physical health matters for our mental health can be really important.
Starting point is 00:05:22 By the way, I think I talk about that exact thing, probably. at nauseam like 20 times a day because I will not do anything until I do cardio, not strength training actually cardio because cardio sets like it primes my brain for my mood and my happiness. If I don't do it, I feel myself dipping with like depression or not like not hardcore clinical depression. But I'm not as on point. I'm not my memory is not as good. My productivity is not as good. my general mood. Like I will not, honestly, you don't want to be around me if I don't get my cardio. Because I'm now, I'm at the place where I've now primed myself, like I said, to do it. So then it's kind of like, what do you call it? Like it's a habit stack. Yeah. Right. Before I do everything else I need to do,
Starting point is 00:06:12 that's, that's the non-negotiable. Right. Because it's going to make you feel better. And this is something that I talk about with some of my students. I had one student who, you know, said that she had a complicated relationship to like fitness and exercise. It was really bound in like body stuff and whatever. And she said, you know, hearing these studies about the connection with happiness was really important because it had like all these issues and it was all fraught. But when I realized like, oh, I'm just going to feel better if I do this. This is like this gift to myself. Somehow that really unlocked for her the ability to turn it into a habit and just sort of make it more of a daily practice. Is there any science based around how long you actually have to do for how much cardio you need to do
Starting point is 00:06:49 to boost your, I guess, your serotonin and your overall happiness muscle? Yeah. How long? What intensity? What is the research about that? Yeah, it probably varies a lot based on your body, right? Like what you're going to have to do is different than why my 50-old body is going to have to do to get things moving. Really, what you need to do is you need to feel like your heart's pumping.
Starting point is 00:07:12 The standard studies often use like a half hour of cardio and they don't define it. They call it kind of, you know, medium intensity, but they don't. 30 minutes. Yeah, 30 minutes. Okay. As I said, it's not, sometimes we can get in our headger that's like, it only counts if it's like an ultramarathon. It only counts if it's something really intense.
Starting point is 00:07:29 But for the mood effects, it can be pretty sure. And it's true. I think at 24 hours is exactly the amount of time. You need it again. You're like, dude, when's this is coming back? Yep. 100%. Because by the next day, if I'm not doing that again, I'm like,
Starting point is 00:07:41 uh-oh, I'm in trouble. Yeah. That's why it's become like, it has to be a daily habit. Yeah. So that's the first thing. So exercise is number one. Social connection. exercise. Another big one that's kind of surprising is what researchers these days are calling
Starting point is 00:07:54 time affluence, which is this idea that you feel wealthy in time. It's the opposite of what so many of us experience, which is what's called time famine, where we're literally starving for time. And there's a sense in which time famine works a lot like bodily famine, where you're feeling yucky and kind of triaging and kind of very stressed. Like just not having any time makes you feel like that too. And so there's a lot of research suggesting that we should find ways to feel a little bit more wealthy in time, whether that's taking stuff off your actual plate. Another strategy I love is use some money to get back time, you know, buy the pre-shop to veggies, you know, like spend a little extra to get back time. Those things really matter.
Starting point is 00:08:32 I think there's such misconceptions around what makes people happy, right? Like, people think if I make more money, I'll be happy. If I actually lose the weight, I'll be happy. And you're the expert, and I'd like you to talk about it. What did you find or what do you think is the biggest misconception about what people are chasing to be happy that actually doesn't turn the happiness dial at all. Yeah, money is a real big one. Yeah, for sure. And you have to be careful about this, right?
Starting point is 00:08:58 If you're living below the poverty line, if you can't put food on the table, yes, getting more money is going to make you happier. But I'm guessing maybe a lot of the people who are watching right now, more money isn't going to make you as happy as you think. A very famous study that came out in about 2010 showed that the level of money that you need to get to, that if you get more money, you're not going to be happier as a real. around $75,000 and $2010, right? Right now, that'd be around $100,000. Right. What does that mean? That means if you have $100,000 right now in your salary and you're double or triple a salary, it's just not going to make that
Starting point is 00:09:30 much impact in your happiness. And so many of us don't believe that. So many of us think, if I could just get that raise or just get that promotion at work, I'll be happier. But it just doesn't make you as happy as you think. Is it because like anything in life, you get used to whatever you're doing? That's exactly right. Yeah. And this is one of the reasons that so many of these good circumstances, you know, changing, you know, losing the weight if you want to lose the way, getting more money, getting a promotion, getting the perfect relationship. Those things don't make us as happy as we think for as long as we think. And psychologists have this funny phrase for this idea of getting used to stuff they call it hedonic adaptation. You adapt to all these hedonic things in life. And hedonic adaptation is bad. It makes the bad, it makes the great things in life worse as time goes on. But it has this interesting good side, whereas he's Pheedonic adaptation also makes the bad things in life a little bit better as time goes on. So all these things that we think, oh my gosh, I couldn't deal with that. If that happened to me, I wouldn't be able to, you know, get through the day. Once they really happen, you wind up being stronger than you think. And you just kind of get used to it.
Starting point is 00:10:32 That's so interesting. I know I like read about, I've read this before and I've heard you speak about this many times about the, like the idea of someone who's a paraplegic and someone who wins a lottery. Yeah. I want you to kind of talk about that whole scenario because I find that fascinating. Yeah. And it really kind of like lands the plane on what we're talking about. Yeah, this is a very famous study that looked at our mispredictions about the things that make us happy. And so they asked regular people, hey, how happy would you be if you won Powerball and now you have
Starting point is 00:11:01 $100 billion? People think, oh, my gosh, I would be way happier? Or they ask, how happy would you be if suddenly, you know, you're walking down the street, you get hit by a car, bad car accident, now you're paraplegic. You can't walk. How much, how would that affect your happiness? and people say, oh my God, I'd be so miserable. But when you go out and you actually interview real people who've had these happen,
Starting point is 00:11:20 real lottery winners and real people who've had an accident, what you find is that it doesn't change their happiness as much as you think. I think the data for lottery winners six months out after winning the lottery is their happiness is no different from baseline. And the data for paraplegics is like, they might get a subtle dip in happiness, but it's not nearly what people predict. And that was a very famous study that happened like, you know, over two decades ago.
Starting point is 00:11:43 But now this type of thing has been replicated in all these different contexts, getting a terminal illness diagnosis, finding out you have HIV, getting the perfect job promotion, right? Getting tenure if you're like a nerdy, you know, academic like me. All these cases people predict, oh my God, that great circumstance would make me feel amazing or that terrible circumstance. I'd just be unhappy forever. But in fact, we don't stay as happy for as long as we think. Our circumstances just don't affect us in the way we expect. Why is that? Like what happens in our brain? that I guess baselines everything or just kind of like cut it out, I guess just puts everything at an equilibrium. Yeah, it's funny. Our brains are really only noticed changes. They don't notice like the steady state over time and where we are. This is like a real treadmill effect. Sometimes it's often called the hedonic treadmill, right? So when you're exercising on a treadmill, you know, at first it's like, oh my gosh, this thing is moving. But then, you know, 10 minutes in, 20 minutes in, it's like, that's just the movement, right? Our brains just kind of get used to it. And so the same thing is true for our emotions in these hedonic states. At first, these things feel good,
Starting point is 00:12:49 but then you stop sort of noticing it. Part of it's that we just like don't notice the good and bad parts anymore. You know, take like if you experience all the luxuries in life, like you fly first class. First time you're a fly first class. You're like, oh my God, the seat's so big. This is great. I get the drink or whatever it is. But then that's just what you come to associate with flying. You just like expect that if you fly first class all the time. Right. You go back to coach. Oh my God, that's terrible. But just the regular thing that you, you experience in first class is no longer good. A few years ago for my students, it's outdated now because they don't know this song anymore. I used to play the DJ College song. All I do is win. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I would say psychologically, if all you did was win, that's bad because you wouldn't notice the wins anymore. You would notice the losses. They would feel terrible.
Starting point is 00:13:31 Right. But you never get any more extra pleasure out of winning all the time because that's just the status quo. It's true. And also, well, I want to just finish that one question, but I was going to say there's a whole thing, would you rather, like, lose $100, whatever, or not better and win the money or whatever that thing is, right? Isn't that also a personality thing, though, depending on, like, who you are? Yeah. And what I was going to say about that is, isn't it that, like, what, at what point in the average person, okay, like the, how long does that take to find its balance? Is it six months? You said three months? Is six months the amount for all these things to kind of, like, level out? Those were the ones that they used in the study, but these things can level out pretty fast.
Starting point is 00:14:14 You're saying six months, though, is mostly, but it can happen quicker. Sometimes it can happen really quickly, right? You know, out here in L.A. and I had the luxury of, like, flying first class out here, right? But the second time I fly, you know, JetBlue Mitt is really good, right? Yeah, that's great. Yeah, but the next time I'm in Mint, it's like, oh, I get the little packet, I get the, it's no longer as good. That wasn't six months. That was like my second iteration of it, right?
Starting point is 00:14:38 Isn't that crazy how fast it can happen then? That's exactly right. And I think that's the problem for the good things in life, because we want the good things to remain really good. It's a good thing for the bad things in life, right? Because we think, you know, the first time I experienced a breakup, you know, never, but the next time it's not as bad as you predict, you know. Did you ever see this episode?
Starting point is 00:14:58 Do you know, have you ever watched Frasier? Yes, yeah, yeah, old school, yeah. I love, it was like my favorite show of all time. And the reason why I'm bringing this up is have you, did you ever see the episode or have you ever heard of the episode when fraser and niles get this invitation or they didn't even get the invitation to this new spa and they had to steal the invitation from fraser's neighbor that was invited to this exclusive elitist spa and he was invited to go into the gold door right and so they they were like finagled their way they stole the invitation they went to the
Starting point is 00:15:33 spa and they pretended to be Frazier's neighbor to get into the gold door of the spa. So they go, they come out, it was like the best experience of their life. They had the best time. They were like going on and on. They were like just in heaven. And as they were walking out of the door, they saw that there was a platinum door. Right? And they're like, oh my God, how did we get stuck in this crap? Like for the for the for the for the for the for the for the the peon's, the gold door. And they were miserable because they saw that they. They were. And they actually didn't get to the pinnacle. And it goes on and on because then what happens is they like they finagled their way the next day to get into the platinum door. And then they're like,
Starting point is 00:16:13 oh, this is the panacea. This is where it's all about. And then as they leave, this is one better. They saw the diamond door. And it goes on and on and on. So I found that I, that whole episode really stuck with me because it's everything in life is so relative to where you're coming from. Totally. And like the fact that like we, we are now in a place, or I think we always were, because Fraser's what, like a 25-year-old show, we never appreciate where we are, or that's a mindset that like we need to change because then nothing's ever good enough. Yes. And there's just so many classic studies. My favorite is in the athletic domain. You watch Olympians on the stand, on the medal stand, right? Obviously the gold medalist person who got first place really happy.
Starting point is 00:16:59 Yeah. But what about there's so? silver medalist. Not only is he not happy. If you analyze facial expressions of the silver medalist, you'll see expressions like contempt or deep sadness, anger, right? Which is shocking, right? This is the person who's second best in the world. They're taking home a medal for their country. And they're miserable. Why? They're not looking at all the billions of people who didn't make it up there behind them. They're looking at the one person who beat them. But the reason I love that study is that study also looked at the other person on the metal stand. the bronze medalist, the person who came in third, and it turns out that that individual isn't showing contempt or sadness or anger. They're showing like true elation. In some studies, their facial
Starting point is 00:17:42 expressions are even happier than the gold medalist. Why? Well, their comparison point isn't the gold medalist. They're probably off by, I don't know, point two seconds or multiple people or whatever. Their comparison is like, oh my gosh, if I was just a little bit slower, a little bit worse, I'd be going home empty-handed. And so they're elated, right? And so this- The study, it just shows the power of comparison, right? We could be like, oh, my God, I didn't get in the platinum door, like, you know, everything's wrong. Or we could be like, I could have not been invited to the spa. I could have not had the money to come to a spa at all.
Starting point is 00:18:11 And so it's worth remembering that we have a tiny bit of control about which comparison points we use. But we need to remember that we need to execute that. You're right. Also a reframe on how we think of it. And that's what I wanted to really talk about. But I was going to just kind of add to what you just said. Like think about Ryan Lockie and Michael Phelps. a second, okay? If Michael Phelps never existed, Ryan Lockheedie would have been probably the best
Starting point is 00:18:36 swimmer of all time, right? He's won, what, 12 gold medals, 12 or maybe even more, okay? But because there was a Michael Phelps right there, often on the stand with him, being on the stand with him, he's looked like he's like a nothing, like, oh yeah, like, oh yeah, anybody can just win 12 medals, right? It's so, and so it's not just the person who's winning, it's also the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the Comparison is also from like the onlooker or the audience or the other people on the side, right? And you can think about how much that affects us right now, right? In a world of social media, right? It's so hard to achieve your fitness goals, your financial goals, whatever goals you have because you look on the internet and there's someone who's killing it much more than you.
Starting point is 00:19:22 So it's really hard to feel satisfied with wherever you get to because there's always a Michael Phelps out there who's going to be better than you. 100%. And that's really like the crux of all of this because we're living in a time when everything is digital now, social media. You know, I don't have to tell you this. Like loneliness, depression, anxiety. We're at like an all-time high. And every year I feel like it's getting worse. Is it not? Yeah. I mean, some of the statistics, especially for young people, suggest it's pretty bad. But is it just young people? It's a little bit everybody. The statistics for young people are the scariest and the worst. The United States, for example, is the worst in the world happening. The lowest happiness rating than we've ever seen in the annual world happiness report. Right. We've dropped out of the top 20 happiest countries for the first time since the World Happiness Report has been going on. What did we drop out of there? Just this past year, just in 2025, which is the last year that the survey was done.
Starting point is 00:20:16 What number is the U.S. now? I forget. We're like 22 or 24, but like that's striking, right? This is a rich country with lots of resources, right? Wow. Yeah, so many people at all age levels are on. happy. And would you, would you say it was mostly social media? What are the other reasons that are kind of making it such so drastic? Like that's, that's, that's, that's really bad. Yeah, one of the things,
Starting point is 00:20:39 we're not a third world country. I know. Yeah. One of the things in the U.S. is that the U.S. is a very rich country, especially relative to other countries, but we're also a very unequally wealthy country. Right. And that, it turns out, can affect the happiness of everybody, even the people who are on the top, like relatively higher. It's, like, bad to be in an unequally wealthy country. I think that's one of the factors. I think in the U.S. right now, things feel pretty fraught politically, right? It just feels like everything's really tricky. But there is some evidence that the social media is particularly bad.
Starting point is 00:21:10 One of the curious findings in the last world happiness report was that all English-speaking countries have gone down. But if you look at non-English-speaking kind of parts of those same countries, so take Canada, you look at like Quebec-Coa, right? Montreal and they haven't dipped in happiness as much. So it's something about being English speaking. But that kind of points to social media, right? Because so many of these platforms are more, there's more of this content based in English. And so there's like, huh, you know, the UK, Australia, the English speaking parts of Canada and the U.S. are all dipping in happiness. But if you don't speak English, it's a little bit better.
Starting point is 00:21:45 And so. I'm Canadian. No. And that's interesting because Quebec, Quebec is a French-speaking part of, you know, Canada. So you're saying that the Quebec, Quebec-qua or Quebec part of Canada actually. is happier than the rest of Canada. Or at least they haven't gone down as much. They haven't gone down as much as the English speaking.
Starting point is 00:22:03 Well, you know what would be interesting? Now that Instagram has now turned on this whole translations piece, right? It might be that goes away. I wonder if that's going to go away. It's interesting, yeah. Because now if you're, it's available to like everybody. I mean, this is so, and yet like we're still, we're so addicted. We will, even though we know the numbers, we feel the just like, unhaping.
Starting point is 00:22:27 happiness and the loneliness. We're so addicted, we can't stop. It's so hard, right? Because the algorithms are really built to draw us in in so many ways, right? You know, the content is fast, it's really vibrant, there's no friction, we get a sense that we're interacting with people. The dopamine hit. Yeah, for sure. And I think also even the political stuff, the algorithms are built to make us feel outrage. And outrage is an emotion that really sucks us in. We want to read more. And so even though these posts and the algorithms are making us feel terrible, we're drawn to it even more. And also, isn't it kind of a false sense of social community, right?
Starting point is 00:23:04 Yeah. So if we're doing this, like we think, okay, these are people, if we're watching some of these, or our friends, or because it gives you just enough where you feel like, okay, I don't need to socialize or I don't need to kind of go up there and do all these other really, like, valuable strategies to be happy because, you know, like I can just do this for two seconds, even though it doesn't last. Yeah. Like how long does the dopamine hit from social media last in our brain before we need another one?
Starting point is 00:23:34 Yeah, I mean, I like to talk about it as the nutrisweet of like social connection. Yeah. Because it's like it feels like it's sort of sweet and you're enjoying it, but we don't get any of the like psychological nutrition from it in the same way. Right. Like empty calories. Yeah, exactly. It's really the kind of empty calories of connection and community, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:52 I think another way to think about it is just this idea that we're drawn to. to it. We really crave it, but we don't actually like it. This is like such a, so true. Such an interesting feature of the human brain is that there's what's called a dissociation. So there's a difference between the circuits that are there for wanting, the like craving and going after stuff. That's the dopamine system and the liking, which is like whether you actually enjoy stuff. So it can be all these things in life that we really like, but we don't have the craving for. Maybe this is different with you, but I have this for like hard exercise. Like whenever I have a heart, you know, like a really tough Pilates class. I mean, like, I adore it. I feel so good
Starting point is 00:24:28 afterwards. But my brain doesn't say, like, ooh, I want that. Let's schedule it right away. Not in the same way that I would for like a nice glass of wine or like a cupcake or something like that or social media, right? And social media is just the opposite, right? We really crave, ooh, I want to get back on TikTok right now. As soon even just talking about it, if people are here watching this, they may be like wanting their fingers or like going to their phone to go to it. But you don't actually like it that much. And this is a problem because it means we're often going after stuff, like really wanting and craving these things that we're not even going to like if we do it, if we achieve it. What don't we like, do we not like the way we feel afterwards?
Starting point is 00:25:01 Because I think that would be the number one reason. Yeah. I mean, I think people feel gross. It's like kind of a lack of purpose. You feel like you've wasted your time. Yeah. You know, often when you come off that like, you know, 90 minute, you know, TikTok binge, you're like, what did I even see? Like, what just happened? Yeah, you don't remember anything. Like, that's the thing. I would fall into that category because I like hate myself afterwards. It's like when you doomscroll, I'm like, okay, I just spent 45 minutes literally wasting my time, making myself feel bad about myself. Now I'm more anxious. Now I feel kind of crummy. You feel more anxious. You feel like it's so hard not to get caught up in the comparison trap. Yeah. It doesn't matter. And I mean, listen, I'm, you could be the most confident, self-assured, successful, happy-ish person going on social media for.
Starting point is 00:25:49 45 minutes to doomswirl, I don't know anybody who feels, you know, even like okay afterwards. Everyone always feels a dip in their, in their personal, in that way they feel, in their emotional state. Yeah, I think that's right. And it's hard, right? For nerdy researchers who really want to get the good data because everybody's on these platforms. Yeah. But when they're able to do really clear studies of like, you know, I assign you to say, go on read a Facebook feed for, you know, two hours versus not, what you find is people feel worse afterwards. What's worse? Instagram or TikTok. I haven't really done those studies, but I think, so a lot of what the studies show is it depends on how you engage, right? There are healthier ways to engage on social media. People talk about kind of
Starting point is 00:26:29 active engagement. So you're posting things, you're commenting on things, you're reacting, as opposed to what we normally do on social media, which is passive engagement, which is just a, you know. And I think TikTok, even more than other platforms, really encourages this passive, forever, scrolly engagement. Why, though? Is it a, you? Is it a lot, is it. they're just better at content. I mean, I think it's better. It makes more money, right? Because you see more hands.
Starting point is 00:26:54 Well, no, I'm not saying they're better at like creating these algorithms that really kind of pull you in fast. That's right. I mean, that's what I've noticed. Now I notice and I'm like, I thought a few years ago, TikTok was more for the younger generation. Instagram was more for my generation. But I feel like everyone now is just gravitating to TikTok because it's faster, instant
Starting point is 00:27:16 gratification. I mean, how much more fast can it be at this point? That's right. I worry about like what would that even look like? What would it look like? Which is scary, right? Because there is going to be, you know, the five years from now TikTok. And it's like, oh my gosh, what's that going to do to our attention? A hundred percent. And what I'm concerned about is that like I'm already past the point. Like I already had, you know, we, I should say, we were, we had like the generation when we didn't have social media and we didn't have cell phone. We were like just played outside and we had to like, we let ourselves in the house and we had to figure it out on our own. and we had to be bored and we had to kind of either like make friends or do nothing. You know what I mean? And also like depression and all the mental health situations weren't at the place they are now. What I guess what I think is very concerning because I have two kids, A, how it's really affecting their brain.
Starting point is 00:28:07 Like if it is the anxiety, depression, loneliness, if they're not on these phones, is that like what they're used to now? Are they now used to a different level of depression, anxiety, loneliness, if they're not engaged because the addiction is so terrible. Like, at least I know the difference, right? Like, I guess it's like kind of like having the ability to like know what it's like before versus after. They don't know any different.
Starting point is 00:28:33 That's right. That's right. And I think there's a couple of things that are problematic with that. One is like being on technology all the time, especially for young people, has a hit on so many things of social connection, social connection in real life, sleep, attention, right? It's fragmented. We know a lot about the fact that just this mindset of presence winds up making us feel happer.
Starting point is 00:28:52 If you could just be in the present moment, it sounds cheesy. But when you're flicking through a million things in some TikTok algorithm, you're not there. But a different thing I worry about is that I feel like young people, because they're on their phones all the time, they never have to deal with the friction of certain emotions that we had when we were kids, right? Boredom. There's nothing to do. I have to just like entertain my mind somehow. Or just like really simple social connection, right?
Starting point is 00:29:15 I think we didn't have the luxury of, you know, say if you're sitting in your high school, like, you know, cafeteria. If it's awkward to strike up conversation with somebody, you just pull out this device and now you're entertained and you're fine. But kids today really have this. And I watch the fact that they have these devices that are so entertaining prevent people from engaging in real life social connection. You know, I did a TED talk last year on being bored and like mental resilience for children. and, you know, people just don't want to be bored anymore, which is to me, I mean, that's where creativity starts, opportunity happens. You think that's how you start thinking. Can I tell you one super funny study about this? You bring people into the lab and you say, you just have to sit here at no phones in this room. But there's an electric shocker. You know, if you need something to do, you can, like, shock yourself. And people, rather than just sit there and be bored and be with their own thoughts, actually, like, shock themselves. Most of the participants wind up shocking themselves because it's like, like we're so uncomfortable being bored that we'd rather be in pain than just like sit there with our own thoughts.
Starting point is 00:30:20 That's crazy to me. But you get it. Oh, by the way, I totally get like, think about when you go into an elevator. The second that another person walks in, you're on your phone. You're looking down. Like, God forbid you make eye contact with someone. Yep. You know what else the kids are doing now?
Starting point is 00:30:35 Even when they get together. This is what I have so many fights with my kid over this. But like they'll get together or he doesn't want to have his friends at my house. like because I'll be watching them and I will not let them be on that iPad and I will like, you have to go outside and blah, blah, blah. And so the friends don't want to come over, right? They want to go to the other person's house where their parents don't care or they're not paying attention or they're not home or whatever.
Starting point is 00:30:59 Because what happens is they don't socialize beside each other. They're parallel playing on phones. So they sit together. They're not actually engaging. They're just playing video games now beside themselves instead of being in one house in the other house. Like, I feel like there's so many, like, this is what's happening in our world. Like, it's so, you have to be a guard dog these days. Yeah, to fight back. And they don't see it. You know, my experience with like that, I don't have my own kids, but I spent a lot of time hanging out with
Starting point is 00:31:27 my college kids. Right. And I remember when I first took on this role as a head of college on campus, I'm a faculty member who lives with students and I started eating in the dining hall with students. Right. And I remember the college dining hall is being like super loud and everyone's talking. And now you go in and they have these big, you know, like headphones on and they're all sitting there next to each side by side, like scrolling on their phones or typing on a screen. And I'm like, oh my gosh, this one spot where you have this opportunity for social connection of people who are your age like you and everyone's just parallel processing on their own devices. Yeah, they're just not even engaged. So it's probably like quiet as a mouse in there.
Starting point is 00:32:01 Yeah. It's like a, it's not a library, but like it's much closer. That's really actually I'm not surprised to be honest. Yeah. I'm not surprised. There's all these funny things that we miss out, like the current generation misses out on. I had this other funny experiences ahead of college with my Yale students where one of my students was like, Ox Santo's like, there's this, there's this weird number on the wall in my room. Like, what is it? I'm like, what is she talking about? So I go in her dorm room and I'm like, oh, that's a phone jack. Like there's like a phone jack with a number. I'm like that, you know, if you still had phones in your room, that would have been your phone number. And so it was like, oh my gosh. And she was like,
Starting point is 00:32:34 well, did my roommate and I, like, did Lisa and I each have different numbers? And I was like, no, no, know, it was the same number, and, you know, you just shared one number for room. And she actually asked the question, is like, well, what would happen if somebody, like, called for my roommate? And, like, they didn't know she wasn't there. And I'd be like, oh, you'd have to pick up the phone and be like, you know, Lisa's not here. Like, I'll take a message. And I realize, oh, my gosh, young people today don't have this experience at home where these, like, subtle, tiny interactions or, like, you know, I bet if your son, like, goes to a friend's house to pick them up, they don't, like, go to the door and ring the doorbell and talk to the parent. They just, like, text,
Starting point is 00:33:07 Like, I'm outside, like come out. Like, these little teeny interactions that just made up our lives as kids, they don't have these anymore. I know. That's actually really sad to me. Like, that's 100% true. So I try to, like, you know, I don't give my kids a phone. I give them a very, my, I have a, one's going to be 13 in a couple days. But he doesn't have a regular phone.
Starting point is 00:33:29 He has a, he's got a phone where he can text me or call me. There's no internet on that phone and that's it. There's no social media. or all that stuff. And so, you know, it is what it is. So he screams and yells at me all the time about it. But I'm trying to like keep him as alert to the world as possible. And all the best practices really suggest that that's the right thing to do. There's a fabulous new book out by the journalist Catherine Price and the researcher Jonathan Hight. Jonathan Hites talked a lot about. I know John Hight. He's been on the show. I'm very familiar. But they have this awesome.
Starting point is 00:34:03 Oh, Catherine Price, I know who she is too. She was going to come on here too. In fact, I got a respond to her. I heard she's excellent. She's excellent. You should have run. But they, they partnered up to do this new book for kids called the Jonathan Heights. Jonathan Heights's original book was called The Anxious Generation. But this book is called The Awesome Generation. It's like a graphic novel for kids that explain all the bad parts about phones. And it's so worth getting if you have a 13 year old in your life or for anyone watching who has like a young kid in your life. Because it teaches kids at kids level, like what these companies are doing. And it's like, they're trying to steal your attention. They're making money off making you feel bad. And a lot of the kids who read this are like,
Starting point is 00:34:39 wait, I don't want to like have like, I want to be agentive. I want to do this. And so, yeah, I think teaching kids the problems with this and what what's really at stake can be incredibly powerful. It's super powerful. I want to take a quick break from this episode to thank our sponsor, Therisage. Their trite panel has become my favorite biohacking thing for healing my body. It's a portable red light panel that I simply cannot live without. I literally bring it with me everywhere I go. And I personally use their red light therapy to help reduce inflammation in places in my body where honestly I have pain. You can use it on a sore back, stomach cramps, shoulder, ankle. Red light therapy is my go-to. Plus, it also has amazing
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Starting point is 00:36:20 Okay, so I'm going to go back and ask these questions because I'm going to start because you are so knowledgeable. I don't want to miss anything, okay? So I have here at the beginning, but like the difference is like, but let's go back into happiness for a minute overall and the differences between your feelings, your thoughts, your emotions, because let's get into, I want to get back into like, how. people can go from not being happy to being even a little bit more happy. We know now, of course, you said about the social connection, super important. Exercise 100%. You said that the other one was
Starting point is 00:36:54 time after the idea of having some free time. By the way, I think that's like a massive one, the time affluence. I had that written down here because I think that's what gives people, like if you're making all this money, we have no time to do anything. Who cares how much money you're making, right? So you can, the $100,000 amount that you were saying, if you make a million dollars, you're still miserable if you're doing nothing. And usually that tradeoff is that, right? If you want to make more money, you have to spend more time to make more money. Right, unless you're just like a trust fund kid or like, you know what I mean. But then also there's a lot of, the trust fund kids, when they don't have to work for something, they're usually miserable also.
Starting point is 00:37:32 Exactly. Yep. So like, there's so many elements. Is it because you have to also be productive to be happy as well? Well, I think we like this idea of pushing ourselves, right? It helps to think about the definition of happiness. So social scientists talk about happiness as having these two parts, kind of being happy in your life and being happy with your life. So being happy in your life is the sense that it feels good to be you.
Starting point is 00:37:54 It's kind of the ratio of positive negative emotions that you have. People often call it the affective part of happiness or the emotional part of happiness. But then there's also being happy with your life. And that's your sense of meaning and purpose, how you think your life is going. People call this the cognitive part of happiness. And you want both of those to be good.
Starting point is 00:38:11 You know, let's cut back to our trust fund kid. You know, maybe they have lots of pleasures in their life. You know, they're flying first class and going to the fun parties and whatever. But in terms of meaning and what matters, because it all comes so easy, maybe you don't have those challenges as much. You know, again, we don't want to generalize to all, you know, trust fund kids or whatever. But it's the truth is. It's the majority of them. I mean, very few.
Starting point is 00:38:33 Yeah. We all know these people who have every hedonic. pleasure in their life, but feel like their life is kind of empty. Is it because then you just, like you said, it's because they don't have meaning in their life. So I love when you say that. I've heard you say this, happy with your life versus, hold on, happy with your life versus happy in your life. And so with your life is just, it's more of the overall picture. Yeah. How you think it's going, right? Right. Like I've got a great life and the in your life is like the day-to-day type of things like the going on the private jet or doing you know whatever going to parties or doing whatever you're doing or it's probably more just like
Starting point is 00:39:13 you're the fact that you have lots of positive emotions or have positive contentment and joy and humor and you have a decent ratio of that to the sadness and anxiety and anger and the negative emotions it kind of feels good in your life to be you and so how do we so what is like so how do we change these besides that you said, like the thoughts into actual behavior, like we know how the behavior is to start socializing more, to exercise more, all those things. What else is there that we are not doing that is causing us such unhappiness? Yeah. Well, another set of changes, we talked about some of these behavior changes. We can also think about mindset changes that we can make. I won't bring up gratitude, although that is a mindset. We can talk about it. I just feel like everything, whenever you ask,
Starting point is 00:39:59 ask a question now about like, how do we feel better? Like gratitude. You're like, have a gratitude journal or like, be grateful for this. Okay. And also, I just feel like a how do you do it? Especially when it feels like the world is falling apart a little. Right. Like number ones, how do you do it in an authentic way?
Starting point is 00:40:19 Yeah. I'm really, I think my point is that platitudes just bother me after a while, right? And there's so much data on the fact that they're what's called individual differences. in this, like different people differ in this. So, Sonia Lubomerski, who's an expert on happiness, who does most of the great studies on gratitude, she's kind of just not that into gratitude herself. She's like, I know it works, but like, it feels a little hokey to me. Right. So there are differences, right? Can you introduce me to her? I like her. Yeah, you'd like her. Yeah, but I think this is important, right? Whenever we talk about these practices that work, they tend to be
Starting point is 00:40:53 like averages, right? They're just like a study on average, and on average you go up. But some people get more a benefit from it than others. Although I'll give you my version of a gratitude practice that maybe you'll resonate with me. Okay. It's instead of gratitude, think about delights. It's like delightful things in the world. I learned about this. I interviewed for my podcast, the poet Ross Gay, who is a book called the Book of Delights, where every day he just tried to find something that was delightful and wrote an essay about it. And they're really stupid things like, you know, purple flowers. Why are there flowers that are purple? It's so weird. He had this one essay that I love called Tomato on a plane. He had to bring a friend, like, you know, a tomato plant. And he took it on the plane and everyone was commenting
Starting point is 00:41:32 like, oh my gosh, you got this plant on the plane or or even he has like an essay about El Debarge, the like, you know, crappy 80s band. Oh, my God. Oh, yeah. You know, the rhythm of the night or whatever. But it's like, those things are just like a thing that puts a quick smile on your face. And if you train your brain to find those, Roski actually recommends sticking your finger in the air and be like, delight, you know, it's a kind of a delight in the world. All that's doing is it's like counteracting all the negative stuff we see all the time. So this is a practice you might like. It's not like, oh, I'm so grateful. Like, because that's kind of weird, but like, oh, that's funny. That's cool. It's just delightful. Yeah. Delightful. I like that word. I just feel like, I don't know if it's
Starting point is 00:42:09 also because I've been doing this podcast for a long time or I'm very curious and I ask a million questions and like a couple of things just like it's always the same. Like how do we get from A to B? Well, meditation, gratitude, this. But like you just said, and this is my point. everybody's the same. And depending on where you are in your life or how you're feeling, like it's not about just writing in a gratitude journal 24 hours a day or like 10 minutes a day. Like people like me, I'll forget to write in the gratitude journal or like the idea. Like I can't think right. Like I'm not good in that thing or meditation. My meditation is running on a treadmill. That's when I have my best, you know, when I think the best and I'm super clear. So it's not like a
Starting point is 00:42:50 one size fits all for everybody. I like to, I often tell my students, think of it like a toolkit. And they give it like a scientist, right? These are, you're kind of doing experiments on yourself to see what works. And what works might be what makes you happier, what works might be what you can actually stick with, right? That's a big one. What you can actually stick with is like 99% of the game. In so many ways, it's actually like a fitness journey.
Starting point is 00:43:13 It is. Everything. By the way, fitness is the microcosm for life. It's truly true. I promise you. The life skills you learn from fitness can help you with anything else in life. But even as a trainer, it's like, it's like, it's a little bit. one thing if like, oh, if you do this exercise, it's going to make you stronger. But if you
Starting point is 00:43:29 like can't get yourself to do that exercise and you hate it and you're dreading going to the gym every time you have to do it, like pick a different thing. And I think these happiness skill sets are really similar. It's 100%. So your friend, I don't know how good. Sonia Lubramerski. What's the last name, Sonia? Lubramerski. Okay, so Sonia Lubramerski. She's a professor at UC Riverside. Great, great. She has a really cool new book about love coming out. Okay. Thank you. Good plug for her. And you're more than I want you. You're invited to come on this podcast at any given time, Sonia. I was going to say that,
Starting point is 00:43:58 so the gratitude expert is saying that she's not a big fan of gratitude anymore. So that to me is exceptionally compelling. And I want to know then, so she's probably done all this. What else did she, I mean, I can have her and ask her, but did she believe in gratitude for many years and then switch? Oh, I think she still really believes in gratitude.
Starting point is 00:44:19 She's just kind of like, I don't dig it, you know? Yeah. It's like, like, I know the power of squats, but like, I hate them. So I'm just going to, like, do some other leg exercise. You know? Yeah. So, okay, so the gratitude, why is everyone so on this kick then?
Starting point is 00:44:33 Like, why is that becoming, like? I mean, the data, for most people, the data are pretty clear, right? It's, you know, in as little as two weeks, scribbling down three to five things you're grateful for can significantly boost your satisfaction with life and your well-being. Okay. For the people that it works for. What are two in a week? That's different. Oh, three to five every day.
Starting point is 00:44:53 Oh, three to five every day. day. Expressing gratitude to others can be a powerful way to feel more connected to them. So on average, the data work. But again, on average, the Pilates works for everyone, but some people hate it. And so try something else. Well, this is what I was going to say. Maybe this is not, I don't know if this is gratitude necessarily, but like what I try
Starting point is 00:45:13 to do, and it's not force or contrive. But like if I notice something positive or like nice about something, I'll compliment them. Huge. Yep. Right? And like some people are very like, very. very like they withhold their compliments. I don't care. Like, I don't care if you're a man,
Starting point is 00:45:28 woman, you know, whatever. I'll say, oh, I love your smile. I love your shirt or your hair looks great. Or like, I really like the way you do this. Like, I always find, I notice things that I like about everybody and tell them. And that also changes the way. And the dynamic. And lots of great data for folks like Nick Eppley and others that compliments actually matter. Really? You feel like, A, well, I may shouldn't say people already know or like B, they'll like it, but they're not going to like it that much. We're constantly underestimating the benefits of them for the people who hear the compliment, but also for ourselves and giving the compliment. I think it's just like, I think so like for me, I don't have to be grateful in a sense. It's a different version. I'm giving you
Starting point is 00:46:09 permission. You're going to drop grads. You try some delights, try some compliments. I love the delight. It's also like, I guess that you're saying also, as not as cheesy is like, I'm so grateful for whatever. Like, I could just be like, you know, I had a great ice coffee. It was delightful. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I loved it. Yeah, delight, you know, like that works too. Another great practice if you do it with your family, if you have young kids is set up a delight practice with them. Or it's like, even just have like a text thread that's like delights and you just text each other delights. Like, you know, walking down the street and saw this funny looking dog like delight or you know, like, you know. Right. So it can also just this whole delight thing can also just be whatever it's kind of like cute and quirky that you like that gave you a nice feeling.
Starting point is 00:46:50 And often my delights are like stupid. You know, it's like, yeah. had one in L.A. where I was like just walking down the street and like somebody was going by in the car and I couldn't hear what they were listening to, but they were, you know, jamming in their car and just like, I was like, that's a delight. That is like, they're happy. They're happy. But what is that doing? Yeah. That's one second that I'm not thinking about what terrible things happening in the world, right? That's one second that I'm not ruminating on, you know, some conversation I had before that's making me feel bad. I'm training my brain to notice that there's positive stuff out there. That's very similar to what gratitude does in the mind, too. So tell me other things too. So like in your class, well, there's a couple days. In your class, how many years have you been doing this now in the class? So I started the first time I taught that class was 2018, which is interesting. It's like pre-COVID, you know, a lot has changed since then.
Starting point is 00:47:35 I wanted to ask you that. That's why I thought was 2018. How has, have you noticed a change in the students before COVID and 20, when you started versus now? I mean, there's not great data, but anecdotally, I think they, you know, they spent a whole amount of. time not being social, right, like in their typical social pattern, right, where they'd be talking to students in class and seeing them, right? Up until recently, the most recent class of students that we just graduated at Yale spent all of their high school online for the most part, right? You know, imagine how different you'd be if you just, like, didn't have a high school in person with other humans, right? And so I think they're playing catch-up, right? I think they're
Starting point is 00:48:16 less practiced at certain kinds of social skills than other folks because of, of COVID. And I think that's not just true for the, I mean, I think we all have to, you know, recognize that this was a traumatic time for lots of us. And we got out of practice with lots of things we were used to. And we haven't really given ourselves the grace to notice what that's done. So you did notice a very different, like a different child pre-COVID versus. And there's lots of other, you know, it's really interesting what's happening at the college level right now with AI tools and so on, right? You don't have to come up with your own ideas in the same way anymore. You don't have to do the work. And I think we,
Starting point is 00:48:52 you know, there's lots of conversation about what does that mean for their learning and how do we give them a test if we can't have them write an essay or write a paper. I think we're not thinking, what does that do to your happiness? You know, because so many of the things I remember about college that I enjoyed were like, you're putting some effort into that hard paper and I figured it out or I studied. Yeah, the struggle. Yeah, and I worry we're getting rid of the friction of learning, the struggle of learning, and that's not great. How are they allowed? Like, are there any kind of ways to figure out if they're using AI? Like, they're at Yale, for God's sakes. I would imagine And they would be able to.
Starting point is 00:49:23 There are tools, but they're not like fullproof. They have a lot of false positive. So you can run, you know, a paper, for example, through one of these tools that tells you if it's AI or not. But sometimes it says it's AI and it isn't. And so it's, my mode is just like, you just have to trust students to want to learn themselves. So I often present a lot of these data on, well, what does that mean if you're using this tool? What are you losing for yourself? What are you teaching in the class?
Starting point is 00:49:48 Like if I was a student, what would I like, what would be the class? What would be the syllabus? Yeah. Well, we start by all the misconceptions we have about happiness stuff that we talked about money for my students, grades, for example, perfect looks, all these things. And we go through all the data. Yeah. And then we talk about, well, why do we get it wrong? And we talk about things like heedonic adaptation.
Starting point is 00:50:06 One reason where, you know, money doesn't make us as happy or perfect looks don't make us as happy is we just get used to it. Talk about looks. I think that's a really important one for everybody. Old or younger. Yeah. People as they get older feel like they're losing their looks, whatever. Yeah. Well, the mind naturally makes these social comparisons, right?
Starting point is 00:50:23 Or comparisons in general. And what are the comparisons we make with our looks? One is to how good everybody else looks. And especially in the age of TikTok and Instagram, you can constantly find somebody who is bitter than you, prettier than you, better hair than you, better eyelashes, whatever it is. All the things, yeah. All the time. Another comparison we make is we compare against ourselves.
Starting point is 00:50:42 And at least with the current beauty standards being the way they are, maybe particularly for women, but I think for men as well, like, like, over. Over time, you're moving away from what is typically the ideal if you're in middle age, like you know, you and I are. And so that means you're constantly feeling like everybody else is better than you and even like old you was better than you. What's funny about the comparisons we make is we tend not to pick comparisons that make us feel great. Right. Our mind naturally goes to the person that makes us feel crappy. And that's not helped by the fact that these algorithms and these filters and all these things, like people are curating the best images of themselves.
Starting point is 00:51:17 They're not even real. Yeah. You're looking at people with face tunes and like just filters or whatever. And because of it, though, people like the plastic, I don't know if you've noticed, well, you're probably not on social media like I am. But the amount of jargon around plastic surgery, like with Chris Jenner getting her with her facelift, every third reel or third clip is about like how to like change your face. And getting a facelift has become synonymous with like getting a smoothie down the street.
Starting point is 00:51:48 Like it's not any different. Like, the facelift is a massive surgery. They're, like, moving your face. Yeah. And I see this even not, I mean, that's like, you know, people in middle age and these kinds of things. I often worry about it even in our tweens, right? You know, there's so much more emphasis on, you know, skin care and getting retinol
Starting point is 00:52:04 and all these chemicals that we didn't necessarily even have. By the way, they're getting facelifts in their 20s. Maybe that's the L.A. thing. No, no. Oh, you'd be surprised. I mean, I think it's very prevalent in socioeconomically. I mean, of course, if you can't afford it. But if people are like, or actually, maybe I shouldn't even say that that's not true
Starting point is 00:52:23 because I know a lot of people who I've, because a lot of young girls follow me. And they're not necessarily, they're not super rich. They're like, they're working people, middle class, I would say. They're flying to Turkey and all these other Columbia to get their eyebrows done. They're getting their face to be like a ponytail snatch. They're getting their face. And these are girls are like 27, 28 years old. What I wanted to ask you, because I think.
Starting point is 00:52:48 I think that's unbelievable to me. Have you done any research to show how people's happiness changes after they change their face and the looks thing? Because I bet you it's exactly the same as the lottery ticket winner and the money and everything else. You're not any happier just because you're hotter doesn't mean you're happier. Yeah. You find something to feel like you're not hot about. Exactly. You'll find more shit to complain about.
Starting point is 00:53:13 The most data on this one is in cases of weight loss. and what you find is that it doesn't really improve your happiness in the same way you think. Right. I think what it does maybe is it gives you like, I think what I noticed, I had a weight loss show many, many, many years ago. And it was like a, it was basically people who are going to be married, like engaged and whoever like wins, they win like their dream wedding. Okay.
Starting point is 00:53:38 I was a trainer on the show. Anyway, what I noticed actually was when they lost the weight, what I think, what I really kind of, what I really noticed was that they were proud of the work that they did. And so that self-ethicacy that I did it gave them the confidence to then change pieces of their lives, like the ripple effect of like, oh, that I can't get the better job I want. I can't get the guy I want. Half of them, I think, broke up with the, you know, whoever they're engaged to. But my point is, and that in all, in my life with all this stuff, is the fact that you are doing a hard thing over and over again that gives you that self-esteem and self-confidence.
Starting point is 00:54:16 But it's not that the scale is saying something different. It's not the actual number on the scale. It's not like, oh, now I'm a size two, so I'm happy. That's why people who take Ozempic and all these weight loss things, they're not the, I guess you would say, like the hedonic treadmill doesn't apply because they're not building the habits that they can prove to themselves. Like, you know what, I can do hard things. I did this. I made this. I made the, you know, this happen. I'm in charge. I consistently made this happen. So I don't, I actually agree. Like, I don't think when you can just, like, lose weight, that doesn't make you any happier or change your face. By and large, all these changes to our circumstances. And I put, you know, changing your
Starting point is 00:54:58 looks in one of these things, they just don't impact our happiness as much as we think or for as long as we think. So it's not to say that if you, you know, achieve your fitness goals or something, you're not going to feel good. It's like, it's not going to feel as good as in your mind you're predicting. And it's not going to stave off, right? You know, instantly, you know, you might be, you know, a weight that you care about or a fitness level you care about, but like there's still other problems. The world's still falling apart. Like, you know, you're still going to have bad days, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:55:22 And so it doesn't have, I think that where we get it wrong is we assume, if I get this thing, then I will be happy ever after. Right. Researchers call this a rival fallacy. If this, then happy forever. And, like, that's just not how happiness works. It's taking constant work to kind of keep going. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:55:41 Okay, go back to the class. So then you, that's what you guys go over. Yeah. So we go through, you know, why we get it wrong. And then we talk about the things that really do make us happy. We talked about some of these behaviors, maybe some of these mindsets. One that we go over a lot with my Yale students that we haven't talked about yet is this idea of thinking with a little bit of self-compassion, which is something that I think we get wrong, especially in the modern, like, influencer age. We think we have to push ourselves and kill ourselves. And we sometimes are like really mean drill instructors inside our heads. And we think that that works. to motivate us. But what the science shows is it doesn't work in the way we think. It makes us procrastinate, causes us to have lots of resistance, or actually better off if we can engage in what researchers call self-compassion, which is kind of treating yourself like a friend, or treating yourself like a good coach would treat you rather than like a mean drill instructor. Really? And so it has these different parts. It has the part of kind of noticing, like this is really hard right now. I'm struggling right now. It's tricky. It's the kind of mindfulness noticing part. then it comes with a practice of what's called common humanity often, but it's basically like, and that's normal. Everyone struggles. Everyone has a hard time. Everyone's screwing up in 2026. No one feels perfect, right? Right. And then the final step is what's called self-kindness, where you just kind of are nice to yourself. I think the reason we get this wrong is we assume that self-compass is kind of like self-indulgence. And if we're nice to ourselves, like, we'll never get off the couch. But if you think about like how you treat a good friend who is actively screwing up, I hope you wouldn't scream at the
Starting point is 00:57:07 them like a drill instructor. Like if you're like, what's wrong with you? But I hope you wouldn't let them off the hook either. I hope you'd like get curious. Like I want to fix this. Let's do the hard thing. Let's work through this. You'd like get problem solvy and coachy.
Starting point is 00:57:20 That's the self-talk that you want to bring in your head for everything, whether that's trying to get happier, achieve your fitness goals, whatever hustle you want to engage in. If you can engage in that hustle in a more self-compassion of way, the studies show that you'll achieve your goals better. Then what is toxic positivity? Mm, that's a big one. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:37 I think this is a misconception about that piece of happiness that's about being happy in your life. We think it's only being happy in your life. If you have any moments of feeling sad or anxious or angry or whatever it is, then something's wrong. Right. And this is bad because this is a messed up notion because I think one thing we know about negative emotions is that they're important signals. Right. Think about why we have emotions like anger or sadness from like an evolutionary perspective. They're like the dashboard light on our car.
Starting point is 00:58:05 It's like when your engine light comes on. that's telling you something important. It's like, oh, something's up. Your tire light comes on. Like, I got to put air in it. Sadness is your, like, psychological engine light coming on and saying, like, something's wrong. Something's missing. Loneliness is your psychological engine telling you, like, I need to get some social connection. A big one for me and my students, overwhelm is your psychological engine. Be like, there's too much on my plate right now. I got to take something off my plate. These are alert signals that our bodies and our minds are telling us that if we just like, No, no, toxic positivity, pretend that's not happening. We're like losing out on this really important
Starting point is 00:58:40 signal of what we might need and what we might need to do differently. Well, I think there's all this chit chat around like, you know, your peace and there's like these, again, it's the, but it's these like, these like tag words or these taglines, healing, peace. Self care. This is another one that the studies show is, you know, really, if you look at happy people, the studies show that happy people are other oriented. They're more focused on other people's happiness than their happiness, right? And so, yeah, I also think the self-care is problematic because when you look at what's being advertised with the self-care, it's often like a bubble bath or like a spa product. And often true self-care is asking, like, it's asking for help. It's like doing the hard thing of like taking a really good thing in your life off your plate because you don't have the bandwidth for it.
Starting point is 00:59:25 It's often harder than like pouring a bubble bath. I also think it's very self-indulgent. I think we're living in a very self-indulgent. society culture now where everything is about me healing and feeling safe and safe spaces and triggers and you're not giving me peace and all these other things that are like really kitschy. Irony is that like that's probably hurting our happiness. And the people who are talking like this are the most miserable people I've ever seen
Starting point is 00:59:52 in my life. Like they're so miserable. They're the toxic ones. They're the ones for triggering me because I can't, like it's that feeling of constantly focusing on yourself, yourself, yourself. So like, that's, I think it's actually a great thing. I have these, like, having kids, right? It's a great thing because then you can't, you know, you can't focus on yourself that much. Hopefully you don't because you have other people. You have to, like, concern yourself with. Yeah. It's really not just about you.
Starting point is 01:00:18 It's not just about you. And so, again, this is another reason why, like, I think they're the most, that's kind of creating a lot of, like, toxicity or miserable people is because they're focusing way too much and how they feel constantly. And I mean, if we could just take that part away. But how do you, like, if someone doesn't want to do these things, like you can scream until you're blue in the face, you know, they're not going to, they don't want to listen. They're not going to do it, right? Yeah. Yeah. Well, I find it helps just like for people to know the facts about the happiness, right? Like, if you see like, oh, if you do X, Y, and Z, you'll be happier. I think sometimes people are like, oh, well, I would definitely want to be happier.
Starting point is 01:00:59 So let me do X, Y, and Z. So that's one of the reasons I love sharing the science with my students and beyond. It's like, now you know what, now I've given you, you saw the graph. Like, now you know what to do, like go for, right? I think another thing is that we, you know, we, it's hard to do the uncomfortable things. Yeah. Like, it's hard to sit and allow your negative emotions. It's hard to, like, focus on other people and get out of your self-brain.
Starting point is 01:01:22 And it winds up being better for happiness, but it takes some work. and sometimes it's hard to put in the work. Do you think high achievers in general are more miserable than just regular people who are just living their life? Perfectionism is not great for our happiness. And there's lots of evidence that perfectionism has been going up over time. One researcher, Curran and his colleagues found these old data sets from like the 80s of people self-reporting their perfectionist beliefs and ones that went up till today, and they find
Starting point is 01:01:51 that you just see this sharp increase in perfectionism from the 1980s. until now. And it's a particular kind of perfectionism because we can think about perfectionism, like, I have these like hard standards for myself. But then there's another one of like other people are watching me and they have high standards that I have to live up to. And that's the one that's been going up. It's like seeing yourself through other people's eyes. That's where we feel like we need to be perfect. And I feel like you can't help us see that statistic and not think like, well, that's got to be due to social media. Absolutely. Let me share my daily routine game changer with you. It's the Momentus 3. I've been using their protein, their creatine,
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Starting point is 01:03:28 trust me, you'll be happy you did. So like type A people, people who are, because right at high performance, all these men, like all these things that are being very much, I talk about, you know, very successful people. I think it's really how you do it, right? If that high performance is coming in with lots of perfectionism, lots of self-criticism, you could only perform highly because you have this crazy drill instructor in your head. Right. You're setting your expectations way too high for what's actually doable. then that's going to lead to some unhappiness. You can push yourself if you push yourself with a little bit of compassion.
Starting point is 01:04:09 And grace? And grace, yeah, just realistic standards about what's possible, right? A lot, most often than not, though, that those two don't go hand in hand. Oh, for sure, which is ironic because we'd achieve more if we gave ourselves some grace. I actually was working with a group of former Navy SEALs who are like some of the most type A, like, hard-poor people. And I was talking about this work in self-compassion, but I was bringing up the studies showing that people who engage in more self-compassion can get through trauma better. In fact, Kristen F has these studies where she shows that combat veterans who engage in more self-compassion have lower rates of PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder. And so the idea is like, if you really want to push yourself through some hard stuff, you need to do that in a way that's like being nice to yourself. And they either resonated with it, but they were like, well, the marketing's all wrong. Like I wish it wasn't called self-compassion. I wish it was called like. like hustle and performance. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 01:05:02 Which it should be called. Habits and hustle. Yeah, yeah, yeah. We should brand it based on the podcasting or something. But yeah, but I think the problem isn't the pushing yourself. The problem isn't wanting to hustle part. The problem is the how you do it part. But unfortunately, I feel like very rarely do I know, in my world that I, in my experiences, the two go hand in hand.
Starting point is 01:05:27 And I think we're trained wrong. Yeah. I think that maybe you get there after a lot of bad experiences or being very unhappy. That's what I think. It's like you hit this level of burnout and it's not working anymore. 100%. So you try new strategies. You try new strategies.
Starting point is 01:05:41 Wouldn't it be nice to do it first and not hit their burnout here? It would be fantastic. Or like, you know, another misconception is work-life balance. Right? Do you believe that there's such a thing of work-life balance? No. And in fact, I hate that term. I'm really trying to push a different term, which is work-life harmony.
Starting point is 01:05:59 because everything we know. It's like delight. Yeah, work-life harmony. The reason for work-life harmony is that there's tons of studies showing that if you feel happier, if you have more of a positive mood, you perform better. One of my favorite examples of this comes from medical doctors. You bring medical doctors into the lab and give them a really tough problem. Like those TV show medical shows and it's like hard.
Starting point is 01:06:21 But half the doctors are put in a good mood first. They just like watch silly cat videos. They're laughing. What do you find? The doctors who are in the good mood come up with the most innovative. solution. Like, and that's just one example, but like study after study is like, if you're feeling good mentally, you perform better. And work life balance gets that wrong. It's like, well, if I want work to go up, you know, life, you know, my social connection, my sleep, all the stuff I care about
Starting point is 01:06:46 has to go down. And it's just wrong. Like it scientifically doesn't work that way. So work life harmony is what it really, like, if I invest in my positive mood, if I invest in my social connection. The work is going to go up too because I'm going to think more innovatively and be more creative and then I'm going to have more juice to like get, you know. Yeah, I know what you're saying. I'm just thinking realistically, right? Because then you have like life, right? We have so much to do. And, you know, the more successful you become, the busier. Yeah, more. And like you said, like that does not, that does not equal happiness by any stretch. So where is the happy medium, right? Because if you want to be, if you are a driven, ambitious person that wants to be successful, you have to do the things
Starting point is 01:07:30 to be successful. It's always more, right? So then you get here, well, if you want to get there, like, you've got to do this and this. You've got to go to that extra speaking gig. You've got to do this thing. It's a very overwhelming. Yeah. Right. And I think step one is the step of noticing where you are. Right. And noticing what your bandwidth is. This is what in the self-compassion literature is called mindfulness. It's not what we normally think of mindfulness. Like meditation, it's just like noticing like, I'm frantic right now. Like I don't feel good right now. I'm snappy at my spouse right now. Like I'm not in a great place. That's the mindfulness that matters because then you can be like, oh, well, the balance is off. Like somehow the balance is off. This is looking at, this is like
Starting point is 01:08:11 responding to the alert light in your car where it's like overwhelm is flashing. Yes. And then that means you really got to take something off your plate. And that's hard. Right. It's hard if you're successful if you're like, I'm going to do one less speaking gig, or I'm going to do less of my successful podcast because I need more time. But that's the healthy thing to do. Right. Because it's that time affluence part. And just like the burnout part, right? Burnout is usually due to over workload, right? So if we do that to ourselves. And again, this is, we keep using these fitness analogies. This is something we know. I told you the microcosm. Fitness is a microcosm for life. Like in fitness, you have active rest, right? You have if you're training for a marathon, you train at 80%, not
Starting point is 01:08:50 110%. Are you a trainer? No. I have my trainer. My trainer will be very proud of me for these things up. But no, but we know that like bodies need rest, that bodies can't be at 110% all the time. Right. We forget that our working selves can't do the same thing either. So sometimes to get forward, you need to scale back. So if you were going to do a happiness curriculum for adults versus the college people that you deal with, obviously, what would you put on there that's? That's, different that we're, and then what we're doing wrong. Yeah, I think it's pretty similar. You're right now online, we have the original version of the class that I taught on YouTube and then we made a teen version for middle school and high school students and we made a version for parents. And the dirty secret is like, it's basically the same class. I use slightly different examples, but the things that I'm teaching are all the same. I think, for example, social connection and there's data to back this up matters if you're 13 and if you're 93, right? Engaging in self-compassion, treating yourself like a friend, giving yourself some grace. That helps if you're in high school or if
Starting point is 01:09:54 you're a Yale student or if you're, you know, in midlife, right? The things that we need are pretty consistent. So really, there's no difference between what a parent, a college student, an adult should be doing to be happy. There's not like an added thing that it, because everything you just said, it applies to everybody. Yeah, yeah. It's the same across the board. But when I use the example of going to prom and the like midlife people are like, oh, this is not for me. No, no, it was for you. It was just a different example. Exactly. But no, so you're just like you basically swap out an analogy or an example. And there's less memes for the adults.
Starting point is 01:10:28 Right. But other than that, I mean, but the class is the most popular class of all time. Why do you think that is? I think it's because our young people are struggling so much, right? I mean, right now nationally, more than 40% of college students report being too depressed to function most days. Over 60% report being overwhelmingly anxious. More than one in 10 has seriously considered suicide in the last six months. Like this is a national phenomenon of students struggling. And I think students hate that.
Starting point is 01:10:53 And I think they don't want, woo, right? I think they want this evidence-based approach to tell me, hey, what does the science say I can do better? That's an insane. Like, that to me is so insane that those numbers are like that. And they're rising, right? The depression statistic doubled in just the last 10 years. So, yeah, we're really in crisis. And that's frustrating because, like, oh, my gosh, do we have tools?
Starting point is 01:11:17 if we could just share these tools for how people could do better, I think everyone would benefit. So if someone only has 10 minutes a day to work their happiness muscle, what would you tell them to do? I think one of the things I often suggest is you heard lots of strategies, you know, today in our conversation from like social connection to time affluence to self-compassion. Some of those you like patted yourself on the back. Why are you like, oh yes, I exercise. Oh, yes, I engage yourself. And some you like felt a little called out. I would do the ones that you felt a little called out on, right? It's like, you know, again, the fitness analogy, if you're only doing leg day and you haven't worked on your upper body at all, you're going to get more bang for your buck if you squeeze in a little bit more upper body if you have that five minutes extra workout. And I think the same is true for the happiness stuff. You'll, if there's some strategy that you're not engaging in doing that will help. But if you're like, I'm bad at all these things, I would say in your five minutes, like text a friend and set up a time to like meet up in real life or, you know, call someone, literally use the phone for what it was meant to be as a phone. where you can call someone and call people all the time, but don't answer the phone. And then I would say maybe just really sort of think about and notice what your self-talk is doing.
Starting point is 01:12:24 And if it's super self-critical, if it's always ruminating about the past, maybe engage in some mindset shifts to feel happier. Do you think therapy is making people happier or more depressed? Therapy, I think, can be really useful. And I think it's worth distinguishing between like what's going on, right? And use the physical analogy. If you go into your doctor's office and you're like, I, have some high blood pressure. A doctor might be like, well, you know, hit the gym and maybe,
Starting point is 01:12:49 you know, cut out the salt or whatever. If you go into your doctor's office and you're like, doctor, I'm having acute cardiac arrest right now. Then I can be like, well, go to the gym next, a little bit more. They'll be like, oh no, and bring the thingies and like clear. You know, it's a different treatment, right? Right. And I think therapy is particularly helpful for when you're in an acute mental health situation. You know, if you're experiencing panic attacks, if you're clinically depressed, right, like you need some like advanced help. You know, all the things I mention are really good preventative mental health therapy, but sometimes you need to kind of jump in. But yeah, I think therapy, you know, there's lots of evidence suggesting that therapy is really useful, just as we were saying
Starting point is 01:13:24 different kinds of therapy, resonate with people in different ways. Like some people are more cognitive behavioral therapy where you really want to be changing your thought patterns. Some people you know, really, you know, need an antidepressure medication to get through it. And that's why I think talking with a qualified professional who can help you figure these things out can be so useful. I think what I'm talking about is that there's been a lot of research that I've read. that the people who are going to therapy regularly for years on end, I'm not talking for an acute situation that happened, but more chronic. Again, the self-indulgent part of talking about your problems, ruminating about what's wrong. I've seen statistics that show people, that has actually
Starting point is 01:14:08 contributed to people's mental health decline and their depression and their anxiety. Yeah. I mean, I think one thing you need to do is you need to make sure that you're really moving forward and that you're really making changes, right? And sometimes that talk therapy can be that, right? You get this insight like, oh my gosh, I didn't realize I was speaking to myself like that or oh my gosh, I get this insight. But often these insights come with work about what you need to do to change things. Right. And if you're not doing that, then it's not really helping. So there should be some kind of like implementation. That's right. Right. So like it's not about just talking about it. It's about what are you going to do to? to do something different. The talking gets you the insight, but then the question is like, you know, for sure. Yeah. But then, then what? Because if you just sit there and ruminate and ruminate, so like, to me, like I just had someone on here recently we were talking about this. And some of the research was staggering about how people's mental health is really declined because there's been so much more chatter about going to see a therapist. My therapist said this. My therapist
Starting point is 01:15:11 done that. My therapist. And people go see these therapists for like 10, 20 years. at a time. And it's, that could be very, I think it's shown to be quite detrimental. Yeah. I mean, I think, I mean, I often worry about the therapy speak that I see less in like true clinical practice and more like online. Oh, because we hear a lot of like, oh my gosh, you know, he's insecurely attached and like, you know, this is my trauma and like we hear a lot of these terms online. Like dime store to say, was that sync that you're getting your information from the dime store, whatever that is? I agree with you. I think there are some great people out there who can really move the needle in real time,
Starting point is 01:15:49 but you should be cognizant of where you're getting your information from and who you're talking to. There's so much. I mean, this is one of the reasons we've tried to put out all this evidence-based stuff is there's so much bad stuff online. You know what I've found to be very trendy and I'm actually unbelievable. People are using chat GPT as their therapist now and are like actually firing their therapists and just talking into chat GPT. GPT and they're getting like actually more profound results than with the with their therapist. So the data, I mean, these are the things where like the research is coming out, you know, because obviously chat. GPT is so new.
Starting point is 01:16:26 And so my read on the research is like it has some benefits and can be effective, right? If you're having a panic attack in three in the morning, it's hard to call your therapist, but chat GPT is there. So it's kind of available all the time. Interestingly, it also seems to work better sometimes because people don't tell their therapist the same things they tell their chat TPT. So there's some things you're like holding back from your therapist, whereas online with the LLM, you just kind of unload.
Starting point is 01:16:52 And so, you know, to really process things, you've got to be honest. If you're not being honest with a human therapist, but you're being honest with the LLM, then you're going to see a difference. So, yeah, so I think the jury is still out. And the problem is that these tools don't necessarily always know the right thing to say, and there have been some awful cases of giving really bad information. But yeah, I think that I think these things are going to wind up being used. The same thing with them, for example, like chatbot friends.
Starting point is 01:17:20 Yes. Right? Where people are using these tools to, like, fill in when they're feeling lonely. And I think the short-term benefit of that might be high, but the long-term consequences might be more negative. I saw movies about this many years ago about these like girl, you know, like these artificial like these girlfriends. Like it was an ex-machina.
Starting point is 01:17:40 Do you remember that? That was the one I was thinking about. And now it's actually real. It is unbelievable that life is now imitating art so quickly. And I think these changes happen fast and we need to understand the benefits and the drawbacks of them. Well, there are some of these AI things, not even chat GPT. I think it was Claude AI, okay? I think. And I remember asking Claude AI a question. And I asked it like a few times. I think it's the same question. And it's like, Jennifer, you've already asked me this question. many times do you really want me to tell you to say do want me to repeat myself it's not going to be helpful or useful why don't you and like I was getting yelled at by flawed like by the AI I was basically
Starting point is 01:18:23 telling me to go fuck off basically it's like unbelievable I'm like and I'm like well what do you mean like I'm just wanted to ask and they're like you've asked me in every direction possible there's no other answer I wouldn't give you and I'm like is that a normal thing the reason why I'm bringing it up is that, like, I think that there's certain AIs, like, I think maybe chat GPT and I, I'm not an expert by any stretch. But what I was going to say is that their program to, like, to basically, like, just, like, like, just kind of, like, like, acquies, just kind of, like, tell you whatever you want to hear, placate you as best as possible. And for certain mental health things, for example, for something like schizophrenia where you have these mistaken beliefs, it can be really dangerous. It is. And, like,
Starting point is 01:19:04 they're, like, basically program to say how wonderful and great you are. But there are other ones out there, I guess like Claude. I don't know if that's just my experience, but that was basically like browbeating me for asking the same question three times. This is the interesting thing is we're finding out these data of what these tools are good at, what they're bad at at the same time as the companies are changing them really quickly. Yeah. You know, so if we hear his data about like, oh, you know, Chad GPD is too nice to you, then, you know, the next version won't be anymore, perhaps. I was going to say, now I'm going to go on there. They're like, what do you want to get, you know? But I just find it very interesting. And it's like a time saver, it's a money. I just think that like,
Starting point is 01:19:37 it's funny how things are kind of evolving like that. Yeah. And I wanted to ask if you had any science or any data on like what how, like how people's level of happiness have either declined or inclined by using these tools. On the, on the like friendship one, my read is that the data suggests that short term it's great, but long term it's kind of making things worse. Yeah. You know, because you really do need in real life community and in real life connection. Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 01:20:03 On the therapy, I think there are benefits and drawbacks too. But I mean, these tools are getting. faster and more interesting, so I think the jury's still out. Oh, it's crazy. Okay, so anything else that I didn't ask you about that I should? Not really. We covered a lot of ground. I wasn't expecting. This was fun. I really. Thank you. I'm glad that you had a good time. I feel like with the, I feel there's a couple of things. I put here is what is one habit that looks productive or impressive on the outside, but quietly erodes happiness over time? hustle culture, like, you know, perfectionism, I think. You know, people, perfectionism is a
Starting point is 01:20:39 funny one because we're often a little bit proud of it. You know, in job interviews, that's the cliche of like, what's your worst habit? You're like, I'm a perfection. But you really were like, I'm so proud of. And I think that we, I work too much. I work too much. We hold these, but I think in practice, they're really eroding my happiness. But I thought you were going to go different way. I thought you were going to ask what's the thing that like people believe is positive, but is bad. That was my next question. Let me ask that. What does one thing that people think is positive. So this one's going to be controversial. We're going to get like hate mail sent to you about this one. Bring it on people. The bad thing, the people think is good, but isn't good.
Starting point is 01:21:14 Manifesting. I knew I liked you from. Hello. So here's a, so it's nuanced. It's nuanced, right? Positive thinking isn't bad, right? Like, believing that you can do something is great. But the way people talk about what you're supposed to do for manifesting has a problem. So this is the usual manifesting. Like say, I want to get fit, right? Like, I want to, like, have better legs. I'm going to do leg day at the gym. And what happens is you start to fantasize about the positive outcomes of it. Like, oh, my God, if I hit the gym and we did leg day every day, like, I'd have stronger
Starting point is 01:21:45 legs and my legs would look great and I'd be so proud of myself. You get all these rewarding thoughts in your head about how awesome it will be. So our brains are, like, kind of stupid. When they start elaborately fantasizing about the reward we're going to get, there's some part of us that thinks we already got that reward. And so we don't have to put in any more work to go after it. So Gabrielle Oettingen has these studies where she finds that the women who have most positive fantasies about losing weight are the ones who are less likely to put in the work to lose weight. And the college students who have the most positive fantasies about good grades, like, oh my gosh, like, I'm going to be my mom's going to be so proud.
Starting point is 01:22:19 I'm going to get into this program. They're the ones who put the less work into studying. See, what I find so interesting, like, I know you don't know me from a hole in the wall, but I'm a person that always like just this kind of. of rails on this whole manifestation thing because I'm a action-oriented person. And just like the idea of just thinking something never really kind of, it didn't like, it didn't like feel good for me. But what I was going to say is, so you're saying basically the same thing. But what if you manifest, like think about it and then like what's the alternative? Like how do you do it? So a healthier way to do this. And this is from Gabriel O. Diggins work. She has this acronym she uses,
Starting point is 01:23:00 whoop, W-O-O-O-P, which is like healthy manifesting. And that stands for wish outcome, obstacle plan. So normally the manifesting is just the wish outcome. Like, oh, my God, I want to lose weight. Oh, it would be so great. I'd fit in my stuff better, whatever. And then we stop. But you've got to do the next steps, obstacle plan. What are the obstacles to losing weight? Oh, I travel all the time and I don't really have a healthy eating plan when I'm traveling. Oh, like, I don't have a gym membership. I like really like fattening food. Like these are the obstacles and I'm using my brain to go through and notice all of these. And then you get to the last step plan where you say, okay, I'm traveling a lot. How am I going to, oh, I should pack healthy food. So when I, you know,
Starting point is 01:23:41 travel to L.A., you know, for this talk, I'm going to pack some healthy food. Or like, I need a plan for like, I got to go to the gym every day, right? Right. It's like an action plan. Exactly. So what you're using your imagination to do is to plan out what you would do, like, when the time get, like, if the obstacle comes up, how are you going to get through it? Because you feel like, in your head, if you're thinking, oh, when I'm, when I have a six-pack or whatever, or when I get an A plus on this test, the idea of you thinking about it actually is just as good as what the reality is. Exactly. There are all these funny studies on the effects of mental practice of like the consequence of imagining something vividly. One of my favorite studies is you have somebody either vividly
Starting point is 01:24:22 imagine putting quarters like into, you know, maybe a phone booth over and over. So one quarter at a time or imagine eating one M&M over and over slowly over time. And then you just have subjects do that. And then they come out and in their waiting room, there's just a big bowl of M&Ms. And you ask, who eats them? And what you find is the person who imagined eating all these M&Ms, the last thing they wanted to do is eat more M&M's.
Starting point is 01:24:45 Because even though it was just in your head, you kind of like have this leftover reward. Like, I already ate all the M&Ms, right? And so the same thing happens with like, I already got the six-back. Why don't have to go to the gym? Like I already got the perfect grade and my mom's proud of me. Like, why do I have to study?
Starting point is 01:25:00 So what you need to do is to, you know, have a little bit of that, but shut it off and say, okay, let me use my imagination for something good, which is to get to the action part. That's so interesting. So are you not supposed to fantasize then? You can. Because like a fantasy, right? Then it just becomes a fantasy. But just like follow it up with, okay, that would be great. I'm motivated to do that.
Starting point is 01:25:22 Why am I not doing that right now? Yeah. What do they do to get to that point? Exactly. And this is what, like, effective people do. I had Michael Phelps's coach on my podcast, and he talked about that one of the things Michael Phelps did a lot was visualization. Yeah. But because he was so good at it, he would often visualize, what would have something bad happened?
Starting point is 01:25:41 So he'd think, like, what if I dove into the pool and my goggles fell off? Or what if I, like, hit my foot, right? That's what this whoop strategy is, wish outcome, but then obstacle, oh, my goggles fell off. Or like, oh, I don't have a gym membership. Oh, oh, studying's going to be hard because I want to go to this party. this weekend, right? And then you come up with an action plan and you imagine it in your head, like, oh, what I'm going to do if my goggles fall off. This was what actually happened to Michael Phelps in Beijing. He trained like that. He was like, oh, well, what I would do is like,
Starting point is 01:26:08 if I didn't, couldn't see, then I'd just count my strokes. There's always four strokes to the end or whatever it is. And in fact, that actually happened to him in a gold medal rate, one of the races he won the gold medal in where he was like, goggles fell off and he was like, oh, I know what to do, right? So when you imagine the plan to overcome the obstacles, it gets easier. So that's the secret weapon and manifesting. It's not the like, ooh, good things have come to me. It's like, what are the things preventing the good things from naturally coming to me? Oh, I might need a plan of action to get through that. I love that and I could not agree with you more. Again, how many people have sat here talking about manifestation? And I either, well, I don't really bite my tongue. I usually say something
Starting point is 01:26:43 because I'm not someone who can just sit there and not say a word. But I will say that I'm so happy to hear that someone of your stature. Again, it's nuance. It's not that the, it's not that the fantasy is bad is just what you follow it. Do you stop there and you're like, I'm none or do you do the planning part? Right. But everything in life is nuanced. Nothing is just like straight, straight for. Like everything has like different variables and nuance, right? Like yeah, of course I can I can wish a million things. I can wish that I can get like a, you know, whatever. I can go on a private plane to Bermuda right now for a week. But is it going to happen? No, unless I do this and this and this to make it happen. Exactly. But I'm so happy you said that because there's such a.
Starting point is 01:27:24 You will get some hate mail. I'm sorry. I know. Listen, that's okay. I mean, whatever. I'm fine with it. I've got thick skin, so it's okay. It's so funny. Even with my Yale students, you have a whole lecture on money doesn't make you happy and that hurts them. But when I was like manifesting, does it work? They were just like, yeah. Really? I don't know what it is with people. Like, this is what I'm saying. People get so easily offended. Like, did they make up the word manifestation? What do they care? And like this is just, we're not allowed to have discourse. We're not allowed to have different opinions. Like the fact that that's even a situation that I can even get hate mail because I don't believe in the, just the word manifestation on its own is so ridiculous to me. And this is also a cause of why people are unhappy. People like to be, I think there are people who actually like to be unhappy or love. like to be miserable, like to be confrontational. They get off on it. Yeah. And I think, you know, the moral outrage is rewarding, right? And I think especially in online spaces, we see this a lot. Exactly. It's attention. Right? Exactly. Well, I love that you came on this podcast. Yay. Thank you so much for having me on the show. I'm so happy. Can you come back again? Yeah. Yeah. I love this. I mean, I don't know what we can cover next time, but we can do the same thing again. I'm fine with that.
Starting point is 01:28:34 All right. So, doctor, okay, so where do people find you, Dr. Santos? You should check me out at Dr. LorrySantos.com, which has links to everything else, and you can get free copies of all the courses I teach on YouTube at Dr. Lory Santos. And very worthwhile, very worthwhile. Thank you so much. Thanks so much for having me. Bye.

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