How to Be a Better Human - How to craft the work-life balance you deserve
Episode Date: July 29, 2024Most of us would like to find meaning in the work we do, but many of us are burnt out or stressed at our jobs. In this episode, an international mental wellness educator, a former journalist turned me...ditation advocate, and the author of the literal book on millennial burnout share why –and how– we can rethink our relationship to work and stress entirely.The episodes we referenced were:• Anne Helen Petersen on changing your relationship to work and the guardrails that can prevent burnout•How to cultivate the skill of happiness (w/ Dan Harris)•How to stop finding your self-worth through your job (w/ Gloria Chan Packer) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to How to Be a Better Human. I'm your host, Chris Duffy.
On today's episode, we're going to be focusing on work. When I think about what it means to be a better human, a lot of the ideas that come to
mind first for me are things that I do in my free time. It's how I deal with interpersonal
relationships, how I treat my family, my friends, how I treat myself. But the majority of my waking
hours are spent working. So what can we do to improve our relationships to our jobs? But it feels like
the demands of making money and showing up to work are going to go on and on and on and on forever.
I mean, that's how I feel. And I have a remarkably easy job. I don't have to do manual labor. I am
just sitting in a chair right now talking out loud to myself while trying to pretend that I'm
talking to someone else. So this applies to everyone. If you're struggling with work-life balance,
if you are trying to figure out
how to find meaning in your work,
or if you're just feeling burned out,
this is an episode we put together for you.
We've pulled some clips
from some of our favorite past interviews
that touch on these topics,
and we're gonna get to them in just a moment.
But first, I have to do my job.
I gotta do a little bit of work.
And my work right now is reading some podcast ads.
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That's uvic.ca slash future MBA.
Today, we're talking about work and life and figuring out how to balance the two,
or if there even is a real distinction between them.
Maybe work and life are actually all part of the same thing.
To start us off, here is a clip from our episode,
How to Stop Finding Your Self-Worth Through Your Job
with Gloria Chan-Packer.
Solving for our burnout and setting boundaries
feels like something we need to either achieve
versus fail at.
And so when we like set that boundary,
we're like, wait, this isn't working.
Then we feel like we failed.
And a lot of times we're like,
this whole wellness thing is like not working out for me and we give up.
And so, yeah, I try to also remind myself and everyone else, right, that this entire journey
around behavioral change and just feeling more sustainable and more healthy is not linear. I
think the goal should be almost like acting like the stock market where it's like up and down and
up and down, but like generally trends upwards towards something healthier and towards more behavioral growth and change.
But knowing that sometimes you're going to feel up and sometimes it's going to be like a giant regression backwards.
And that's just the nature of it.
I think a lot of us struggle with burnout because we just overscope and say yes to everything. I'm guilty of this too.
Absolutely. Yes. So if you have a propensity to be like a yes person to always say yes without
thinking, try to start buying some time for yourself to truly evaluate your bandwidth and
your priorities before you say yes. So when someone asks you something like you don't have
to say yes or no right away. Say like, okay, I hear
you. Can I have until the end of the day to get back to you? Or just say, I need a little bit of
time to evaluate what's on my plate and where my priorities are. When do you need to hear back from
me? Bye. I personally do not feel that the goal should be to eradicate burnout. In my personal
and professional opinion, eradicating stress and burnout is neither realistic nor makes any sense
because stress is really this biologically wired human reflex, right? And so the goal shouldn't be
to, I think, get rid of burnout, but really to build a healthier and more sustainable relationship
with your stress and your burnout too. I've been reflecting on this personally a lot, right?
and your burnout too. I've been reflecting on this personally a lot, right? That feeling of like, I feel like I've failed was actually what was really keeping me from being able to
help fix where I was. Because it was almost like what I tried to prevent burning out from being
a new mom and working and a business owner and blah, blah, blah. My fear of failing at that
is what actually I think guaranteed and like kept me stuck in
burnout mode. Cause I was like, no, this should have worked. This is going to work.
I was really like, no, this is not working. What do you need to change? And that's always
probably going to be a pretty tough moment and a pretty tough change, but you make the change
and you heal and you move forward. And you kind of just keep doing that as you need to throughout the different seasons of life.
Because if there's any, I think, guarantee in life, it's that shit doesn't go your way and might go sideways sometimes and things will get very stressful.
And you'll have to realize that you have to make a change so you don't burn out.
We're going to take a quick break and we will be right back.
And we are back.
One of the things that I find most confounding about work is that you can do the exact same tasks on two different days. And one day they feel insurmountable and overwhelming.
And another day you feel totallyurmountable and overwhelming,
and another day you feel totally in control and capable. Same work. Exactly the same work,
but very different reactions to it. Dan Harris knows that feeling all too well.
After working as a TV news anchor for years, one day he had a panic attack live on air.
And after that experience, Dan got increasingly interested in and involved with meditation and mindfulness. He is now the author of 10% Happier and the host of the podcast by the same name.
And here's what Dan had to say about how those skills have affected his life.
This is from our episode, How to Cultivate the Skill of Happiness.
People say when they start meditating, it's like, wait a minute, I'm more anxious.
But actually, that means you're doing it right because the whole goal here
is not to like become super Zen.
I hate when people use that word actually
because Zen Buddhism is actually not at all
what we think of as Zen.
It's pretty like hardcore.
So, but the goal is not to become blissed out,
but I don't even think that's doable
without, you know, like an IV drip of Klonopin. Like it doesn't work like that. So what the goal is, is to get familiar with the
chaos and cacophony of your own mind so that it doesn't own you as much. But definitionally,
that requires seeing the chaos and cacophony, and that is going to be uncomfortable. It's like,
it's humiliating. But what's the alternative?
The alternative is all that shit's happening anyway, and you're just owned by it a thousand percent of the time.
So what do you want?
You want to sort of wake up to this stuff, take the red pill in the positive sense of that term and start to get out of the matrix to see, you know, what your life is actually about, which is, you know, mostly random thoughts and,
you know, inappropriate impulses and to see, you know, your ancient storylines, all of that stuff.
Do you want to see your anxiety, your depression, whatever, rather than have it own you and rule you like a malevolent puppeteer? I think, I think it's pretty obvious what the right answer is. And
it's not going to be, you know, all barfing unicorns.
I love that clip.
I love that clip so much.
And also, as far as I know, it is the only time anyone has ever used the phrase barfing
unicorns on our podcast.
But you know what?
I hope it is not the very last time that someone says that.
So future interviewees, take note.
You're allowed to say that.
I love what Dan said about how you have to be willing to see your own issues.
I have to admit that I have sometimes felt in the past like meditation, as I understood it, was a little navel-gazy, a little bit like making all of the issues of the world about you and your feelings rather than engaging with structural issues.
But when I raised that point with Dan, he had a really interesting response to my skepticism.
And what he said has changed the way that I see the point of meditation and
mindfulness. Here's that clip. We have these burning structural issues in the society,
just to name a few, war, bigotry, inequality, climate, AI, loose nukes, lots of big problems.
And so some people were worried that we're promoting meditation as a way to self-soothe and anesthetize and reduce the stress that is being caused by these structural issues, but not to actually deal with the structural issues.
And I actually just don't think that's the way meditation works.
I think properly understood meditation, especially in the Buddhist tradition, which is what I come out of, really is about waking you up. And it starts with dealing with your own suffering and pain and stress and hangups and ancient neurotic storylines. It starts there because it's hard to be effective if you don't deal with that.
because it's hard to be effective if you don't deal with that.
I think that is what the point of this practice is.
It is to get your shit together so that you are helpful.
That is the point.
And, you know, you start by just dealing with your stuff.
You increase the amount of bandwidth you have to be helpful to other people. Then you very quickly see that being helpful makes you happy.
And so then you have more bandwidth and you can help more people.
It's not going to be like a forever thing. It's not like an unbroken hockey stick trend where
you're on this virtuous spiral, which I call the cheesy upward spiral. You're not on that
in an unbroken way. I retain the capacity to be a schmuck. I mean, I make all sorts of mistakes,
but if I can make that my default pattern rather than a rarely accessed one, then I'm in good shape.
So I think having said all of that, I think if meditation is being taught correctly, it
will put you on a glide path toward more of that and less of being stuck in your own stuff.
Okay, well, one thing that Dan and I definitely share in common is that we both retain the capacity to be schmucks.
I certainly have that capacity.
Thinking about what Dan was talking about there, the ways in which the personal intersect with broader structural issues, that strikes me as an extremely powerful way to frame this.
And it ties in with how Anne Helen Peterson told me she thinks about burnout and what that phrase burnout really means.
This is from our episode on changing your relationship to work and the guardrails that
can prevent burnout. Well, I think the first thing is to figure out whether you, your burnout,
the primary source of it is this feeling of financial precarity, right? Like, and if that's
the case, is there a change that you can make in your life? And I'm not talking about like stop drinking lattes or anything inane like that. Is there a future point in your life where that precarity would end? Right? Like, are you in a place where like, oh, my student loans are going to be paid off in a year or my living situation is going to drastically change or there is absolutely going to be a
huge promotion at work if I can just get to this point or if I can just finish this program or
whatever. I feel like that's actually a very small portion of people. Sometimes it's that
whatever you are doing as your job is going to keep you in that precarious position for the
rest of your life unless something changes. And that's when you have to be like okay i'm a person in the world my job is not my life right like or i am more than
my job so does that mean i need to change my job does that do i need to change careers if this is
not sustainable right financially moving like nothing's going to change is this i need to have a
conversation with myself about that. And then
if you get past that point, the primary thing is not financial. It's not that feeling of precarity.
It's more this feeling of addiction to my job, right? Not knowing how to stop working. And that,
I think there are some like very basic utilitarian things that you can do that make work less omnipresent in your life in terms of
turning off notifications, creating bumpers in your day, like an on-ramp and an off-ramp,
being much more mindful about using delay send for emails or, you know, even something like
inbox when ready, which makes it so that you only get a batch of emails once every hour.
And then also,
I think talking with your manager too, because oftentimes we put expectations on ourselves in terms of availability that our managers do not actually place on us, right? Like if you have an
even decent manager, they don't want you to burn out because churn is expensive. So how can you
actually create a clear expectations about availability and expectations in that way?
So those are like kind of the basic things.
But then the next thing, too, is figuring out who am I besides my job?
A lot of people lost anything, any part of themselves that wasn't their job along the way.
Or they're very, very, like maybe their partner right i just i know
a lot of people who have failed to cultivate or to sustain close friendships are have no feeling
of community around them all they do is um work and then kind of they're just so exhausted that
like maybe they can deal with one hangout a month. And that too feels exhausting.
They don't have any hobbies. Even the idea of a hobby seems frivolous. But a hobby is just
something you do because you actually like it. And then the last thing I'd say is get a good
therapist. Most people I know who've untangled their relationship with work and recovered from
their burnout, they've done so through a good therapist.
That is it for this episode of How to Be a Better Human.
Thank you so much for listening.
You heard clips from Gloria Chan Packer, Dan Harris, and Anne Helen Peterson.
I am your host, Chris Duffy, and you can find more from me, including my weekly newsletter and other projects at chrisduffycomedy.com.
How to Be a Better Human is a podcast, but it is also a team of people working together.
And on the Ted side,
the people who are doing that work are Daniela Balarezo,
Ben,
Ben Chang,
Chloe,
Shasha Brooks,
Lainey lot,
Antonio lay,
and Joseph DeBrine.
This episode was fact-checked by Julia Dickerson and Mateus Salas.
And on the PRX side,
this is also a job because if you don't think that it takes work to edit out
all of my strange noises and bizarre non sequiturs, you better think again. Thank you to Morgan Flannery, Norgill, Maggie
Goreville, Patrick Grant, and Jocelyn Gonzalez. And of course, thanks to you for listening to
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It's so fascinating.
We will be back next week
with another episode of How to Be a Better Human.
Until then, take care and thanks again for listening.
If you're at a point in life when you're ready to lead with purpose, we can get you there. The University of Victoria's MBA in Sustainable Innovation is not like other MBA programs.
It's for true changemakers who want to think differently and solve the world's most pressing challenges.
From healthcare and the environment to energy, government,
and technology, it's your path to meaningful leadership in all sectors. For details,
visit uvic.ca slash future MBA. That's uvic.ca slash future MBA.