Life Kit - Feeling Anxious? Here's a Quick Tool To Center Your Soul

Episode Date: February 4, 2020

We all need strategies to push back against conflict, anger and worry. One of the globe's leading mindfulness teachers distills the practice of mindfulness into a simple 4-step tool from her new book... Radical Compassion. This daily practice can help you show up for 'life' – and let go of regret and anxiety.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The Indicator is a podcast where daily economic news is about what matters to you. Workers have been feeling the sting of inflation. So as a new administration promises action on the cost of living, taxes, and home prices. The S&P 500 biggest post-election day spike ever. Follow all the big changes and what they mean for you. Make America affordable again. Listen to The Indicator, the daily economics podcast from NPR. This is NPR's Life Kit. I'm Alice Knobry.
Starting point is 00:00:27 You know, with our busy lives, it can feel like we're constantly living for the future. What time do I need to leave for work? Can I get there on time? Or there's the bigger stuff, such as will I ever get that promotion or meet that goal? We have so many regrets about the past, worries about the future. Think to yourself, why did I pick the fight or say that mean thing to my sister? Why didn't I stand up for myself? We're in a trance of thinking. We're time traveling. We're in the future. We're in the past. That's Tara Brock. She's a psychologist and a kind of superstar in the meditation world. And she says often those distracting thoughts can be about bigger feelings,
Starting point is 00:01:06 like, am I doing a good job? Am I enough? Tara says all this ruminating, it makes us miss out on the good stuff. If we look at our lives, how many moments can you sense that in some way the fear of failing or the self-consciousness or the feeling of being not good enough was in some way dampening or contracting or pulling you away from real intimacy or spontaneity or enjoying a sunset. So this episode, a conversation with Tara Brock about her latest book, Radical Compassion. It outlines something called RAIN,
Starting point is 00:01:46 a simple, useful mindfulness tool that can quiet those distracting thoughts that, frankly, aren't very useful. And to be everything we most value, love, creativity, wisdom, compassion, comes from being present. So mindfulness gives us access to those qualities. We step out of the trance of thinking and we come into our full being.
Starting point is 00:02:15 What's in store for the music, TV, and film industries for 2025? We don't know, but we're making some fun, bold predictions for the new year. Listen now to the Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast from NPR. What is mindfulness? If you strip it down to the bare bones, can you describe mindfulness in a sentence or two? Mindfulness is paying attention to what's happening in the present moment without judgment. Wow, that may have been one sentence. Yeah. It just means we want to be able to choose, you know, is right now thinking and planning
Starting point is 00:02:53 helpful? Or is this really chronic worry that keeps me trapped in a sense of anxiety? And what is the purpose? What is the benefit of paying attention to the present moment? Well, what happens when we're paying attention to what's actually right here and now is, first of all, we step out of our thoughts about the past and the future. And we actually start occupying a space of presence that is bigger than the particular emotions or thoughts that are going on. And it gives us more choice as to how we want to experience things, what we want to say, what we want to do. There's a beautiful quote by Viktor Frankl that says, between the stimulus and the response, there is a space. And in that space is your power and your freedom.
Starting point is 00:03:43 And mindfulness of the moment actually gives us some space. So instead of reacting, we can actually respond from more intelligence, more kindness. It actually lets us inhabit our best selves. And it seems like an easy concept, this idea of forget about the worry of the past, forget about the anticipatory anxiety of the future. Be in the present. Though it's so much easier said than done. And in your new book, you outline a tool, really, to arrive in the present. You call it RAIN, which is an acronym for Recognize, Allow, Investigate, Nurture.
Starting point is 00:04:22 Walk us through it. How do you do this? Well, first of all, the acronym RAIN is a tool. It's a mindfulness and compassion tool that helps us to untangle difficult emotions. And so often in our daily life, we get caught. We're caught either in anger or we're caught in feeling hurt or we're caught in anxiety. And most often, we're caught in feelings of our own personal failure, but not really dropping in and feeling our moments. So recognize comes when we realize on some level we're stuck, we're having a hard time. So all we're doing with recognize is doing a scan and sensing whatever's predominant in that moment. And it might be, we simply say
Starting point is 00:05:05 upset, or confused, or angry, or hurt. It's just noticing what most stands out to us. So the next step in RAINN after recognize is allow, right? What happens there? You actually are pausing saying, it's okay, let's just let this be for a few moments. And that's the pause. That's the space we're just let this be for a few moments. And that's the pause. That's the space we're creating that gives the power and the freedom. So the next step is I for investigate. What are some questions that you can do to help investigate? Some of the best ways of investigating is first to ask, well, what really wants my attention? Just asking what most wants my attention right now and look into the
Starting point is 00:05:46 body, feel the throat, the chest, the belly. So it's somatic. Another really good question is, what am I believing right now? Because I find for myself when I'm in a bad mood, usually I'm believing that in some way I fell short. I'm feeling like I've in some way not come through. I'm failing in some way. Self fell short. I'm feeling like I've in some way not come through. I'm failing in some way. Self-doubt creeps in. Yeah. And if I can identify it consciously, it doesn't affect me as much. These are parts of investigating.
Starting point is 00:06:13 But the single most valuable finale with investigating is to ask the part of you that feels most vulnerable, so what do you need? And if we're in conflict, it's not that you and I are in conflict. It's a conflict of unmet needs. So that leads us to the last letter, N, which is for nurture. Explain that one. So in RAINN, the N is whatever we're feeling, the anxiety, the fear, the feelings of shame, we bring kindness to it. And that's the key, because we need to have ways to nurture ourselves. And the way I often do it is I'll just put my hand on my heart and I'll say, it's okay, sweetheart. Or other people will say, well, I'm sorry, and I love you. Or another person might say to themselves, it's okay, I'm here, I'm not leaving. But some nurturing. And
Starting point is 00:07:06 when we can't offer to ourselves, because sometimes we feel too regressed to even offer ourselves comfort, we can imagine it coming from someone else, from a grandmother, or from a spiritual figure, or from our dog. It doesn't matter. And after the nurturing with RAIN, there's what I call after the RAIN, quote unquote. And just the other day. I was on the metro. I was running late. I had a 9.30 meeting. So I immediately went into this, woe is me. It's not my day. It was all bent out of shape. And so I had this thought, okay, I'm going to try RAIN, just like Tara Brock has outlined. And what was really hard for me to do was the nurturing part, because I kind of ended up laughing at myself. Maybe that is a form of nurturing. Well, that's just what I was going to say. Nurturing is any way that you create a larger,
Starting point is 00:08:16 lighter, kinder space. And humor is fantastic. I mean, often if I can laugh, I know, okay, the tangle is no longer dominating me. It's not, Alison, that you're going to get rid of the angst. I mean, there's going to be some anxiety when you're running late that's still going to be in your body. But can your consciousness be big enough so that it doesn't dominate you? It's not taking over everything. And that's the thing with RAIN is that it's not like it gets rid of the waves of experience. It makes you more ocean-like. You have more perspective, more wisdom. Wisdom brings on humor.
Starting point is 00:08:52 Wisdom brings on kindness. In other words, you're not suffering. It's not pleasant, but you're not suffering. Can RAINN kind of get you through the bigger stuff? It absolutely can. And one of the tricks with rain is this belongs. Because if you can have really intense experience happen and feel the grief of a very major loss, or feel the real fear that you're about to have a loss, the really big things in life, and in some way send the message, and this is kindness, this is nurturing, this belongs, this is a natural feeling, this is a wave that's part of the ocean. Explain this concept of limbic hijack.
Starting point is 00:09:36 The way I've heard you talk about it is that we kind of have two brains. We have sort of an old ancient brain, the limbic system that is very reactive, driven by fear. And then we have sort of this higher consciousness that we can cultivate. You've said that if you can sort of move to this higher state of consciousness, you can kind of tamp down the reactivity or the fear of living in the limbic state. Is that right? So yeah, when there's a limbic hijack, it just simply means that fear and wanting have taken over in some way, our anger, and you're in the grip of it, and you have very little access to that frontal cortex.
Starting point is 00:10:18 One person I'll just describe, and this was a guy who had a terrible temper. So his limbic hijack really was violating other people. You know, he would act out of it. And he started doing RAIN. And one of the guys who's a manager in a team in his company told him that his team was kind of behind on their work. And this guy normally would have just laid him out. But he had been practicing RAIN. So he had a pause. Remember that in between the stimulus and the response, there's a pause. That's the power. Exactly. He had a pause and that took him out of the full limbic hijack so he could start seeing this other guy. And he reminded himself, this guy's a hardworking guy. He's done a lot for us. He's honest. He's admitting it. So he did not go at him. And instead he said, well, I understand there must be good reasons. And the guy said, well, I wasn't going to say this, but my wife has breast cancer, I think it was. And we have two teens at home. It's just been a really hard time. And this man told me they hugged
Starting point is 00:11:20 and it was the first time at work he had ever had an experience like this, that because of RAIN, instead of lashing out at someone, having a limbic hijacked, he had had enough of a pause, enough of an enlargement that he could see more clearly who this guy was, treat him humanely, and instead of violating him, be a comfort. This is the possibility. I think this is really hard for all of us, probably everyone listening. And you talk about it as conditioning. But from the very beginning of our lives, we're told, like, I have an 8-year-old. And just this morning, I was like, Lily, it's 8.20. The bus is 8.50. Lily, it's 8.30.
Starting point is 00:12:02 You need to eat breakfast. Lily, do you have your homework? It's all about, you know, how do you keep people on track and how do you control them in a way that they're focused on succeeding in a way that fits off of everything we've been conditioned to do and the very way we've been conditioned to think? ways you're describing. But what I found is that that kind of conditioning actually creates an anxiety that leads to more mistakes, less empathy, less emotional intelligence, and actually less effectiveness. So people I know, and we train people in corporations and medical schools and so on, they actually find mindfulness increases competency. So mindfulness doesn't remove motivation. It just allows us to be more centered and respond from, really, from our natural intelligence. Fear doesn't make us more intelligent. And once you learn to use this tool, to use RAIN, this whole recognize, allow, investigate, and nurture, once you've got a handle on it, is it kind of like a gift that keeps giving?
Starting point is 00:13:27 Is it easier to do? Is it then part of the way you operate without thinking? Or do you have to continue to keep working on it really, really hard? The description in neuropsychology is neuropathways. It's like once you start establishing more pathways to nurturing, the more you practice, the stronger they get. Whatever you practice gets stronger. If you practice judging yourself every day, that gets stronger. If you practice recognizing, allowing, investigating, nurturing, that gets stronger.
Starting point is 00:13:57 And also quicker. So it doesn't feel so much like you're doing a step-by-step long process. I can in just a minute and a half just kind of in some way sweep through and reconnect with myself. And the gift really, Alison, is that we start trusting our goodness. We start trusting the love and the awareness that's really our essence. And not only that, we start looking at each other and seeing that. So it's not like we're Pollyanna-ish. We still see the conditioning that has everybody acting out in different ways. But if we can trust the goodness,
Starting point is 00:14:36 then we can help to bring it out in ourselves and each other. For more NPR Life Kit, check out our other episodes. I hosted one recently on how to take a break from drinking. And we've got lots of episodes on topics such as money, parenting, and health. You can find these at npr.org slash LifeKit. And if you love LifeKit and you want more, subscribe to our newsletter. And here, as always, is a completely random tip, this time from listener Pat Taylor. When I have to do chores, when I used to have to clean houses, I would take the job I least wanted to do first and get it over with. And then I wouldn't have to think about it the whole to do first and get it over with.
Starting point is 00:15:28 And then I wouldn't have to think about it the whole time. I could get it out of the way, like cleaning bathrooms. And I could have a good rest of the time cleaning the house. If you've got a good tip, let us know. Leave us a voicemail at 202-216-9823 or email us at lifekit at npr.org. This episode was produced by Claire Schneider. Megan Cain is the managing producer. I'm Alison Aubrey. Thanks for listening. This message comes from Grammarly. 89% of business leaders say AI is a top priority. The right choice is crucial, which is why teams at one-third of Fortune 500 companies use Grammarly. 89% of business leaders say AI is a top priority. The right choice is crucial,
Starting point is 00:16:06 which is why teams at one-third of Fortune 500 companies use Grammarly. With top-tier security credentials and 15 years of experience in responsible AI, Grammarly isn't just another AI communication assistant. It's how companies like yours increase productivity while keeping data protected and private. See why 70,000 teams trust Grammarly at grammarly.com slash enterprise.

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