Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 271: Why It’s Actually Good to “Settle” in Love | Feat. Oliver Burkeman
Episode Date: November 6, 2024Today it's my pleasure to sit down with the excellent Oliver Burkeman (@oliverburkeman), author of the new book "Meditation for Mortals", which I've found myself recommending to all my friends and fam...ily as his work has hugely influential on me in recent years. We sit down to discuss: - Why "settling" in relationships is necessary - How to find your Life Task - How to get over perfectionism - The power of intuition vs. reason - Being more present in your life + acceptance - Giving up on the illusion of "arriving" - How to get through difficult things, anxiety, and deal with your flaws And more! ►► Grab a copy of Oliver's wonderful new book Meditation for Mortals ►► Ask Matthew AI Your Biggest Dating Question for Free Now at. . . → http://www.AskMH.com ►► FREE Video Training: “Dating With Results” → http://www.DatingWithResults.com
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Welcome, everybody, to the Love Life Podcast with me, Matthew Hussey.
For those of you that are new here, I've been working for 17 years helping people find love
through increased confidence and relational intelligence.
And today I bring you a very special guest.
His name is Oliver Berkman. I have been wanting to get Oliver on the podcast
since I read his book, 4,000 Weeks. It is one of my favorite books in recent years, and it's not a
love life book. It's a book about time and how we use our time and how we approach our lives. And I
absolutely loved it. Oliver just wrote a brand
new book called Meditation for Mortals, four weeks to embrace your limitations and make time for what
counts. I have read this cover to cover already. It is a fantastic book. I'm a giant fan of Oliver.
So this, you know, I am having so much fun in this conversation. I think you will too.
He has such an insightful and often counterintuitive way of looking at things.
For those of you that don't know Oliver, he worked for many years at the Guardian where he wrote a
popular weekly column on psychology. This column will change your life was the name of the column.
His books include the New York Times bestseller, 4,000 Weeks, Time Management for Mortals, and The Antidote, Happiness for People Who Can't Stand
Positive Thinking. His new book is this one, Meditation for Mortals. And I'm really excited
to introduce both the book and him to you today. For those of you, by the way, who haven't tried
it yet, make sure you go and
give Matthew AI a go. If you've got a question you want to ask me about your life or your love life,
Matthew AI can answer that question for you. It also answers it in my voice, like a real phone
call that you're having with me. And you can try it for free by going to askmh.com so check that out if you haven't already
well without further delay i would like to present to you the wonderful the insightful oliver berkman Oliver Bergman, hello.
Hi.
I have to start by, I suppose, letting you know what a fan I am.
I read your first, not your first book, of course.
I know you've been a writer for many years,
but the first book of yours that I was aware of,
4,000 Weeks, that instantly I went around telling everybody
this is one of the most important books I have read in years.
I would describe my experience of 4,000 weeks as,
as being this sort of incredibly emotional encounter with something that, um, gave me a
giant sigh of relief. And I also had that wonderful feeling you have when you read a writer and you
feel that you share a decent amount of DNA. And so I want to thank you because I really, I really, that was a tremendous
piece of work. And your new book, Meditation for Mortals, which for anyone who has not heard about
this yet or hasn't got a copy, the subtitle is Four Weeks to Embrace Your Limitations and Make
Time for What Counts. What's funny, Oliver, is I had wanted to talk to you
about this book before I knew whether you would, you know, have the time or say yes.
And I had long since pre-ordered the book for myself, for my own purposes. And it was lovely
when your team reached out and said, we'll send you a book. I said, don't worry. I've already got
that covered. So I've read it cover to cover and it's just another beautiful, beautiful piece of work. So I'm
sorry for the long-winded intro, but I really am grateful for the work that you do.
Please do not feel that you need to apologize for saying a large number of nice things about me.
I'm happy with that. No, it's, it's great to be here. I think you're truly one of the really fresh voices out there.
That's doing, I don't even know whether to call it what you do, because I know that there's a
productivity tilt to your background, but it's so far transcended that um to be something that I would recommend to anyone I
love for for getting more out of life and for truly living life I'm going to really work to
get through all of my questions that I know we have an hour so I and to what extent you're aware of me on my work, Oliver, I don't know, but I will say a huge amount of our audience are people who would really like to find a meaningful relationship. wider lens for some of the things you talk about in dealing with our overwhelming life in general
and the kinds of lives that lead us feeling anxious and stressed and unhappy. But to begin
with, one of the things that struck me, even in 4,000 weeks, and you kind of actually continue
in this book with a chapter that relates specifically to commitment, you said in 4,000
weeks that your advice to people in their
love lives is that they absolutely should settle and that they should stop seeing that as some kind
of derogatory idea. Could you explain what you mean by that? Yeah, I will. And let me just say
by way of beginning that I've only just started reading your book, which you sent me.
I'm very glad I've started reading it.
I'm certainly going to keep going.
And I think, yeah, I mean, one thing that really is clear to me from that and from other
conversations is that to some extent, we're all sort of targeting the same big stuff here,
whether we're doing it through the lens of romantic relationships, relationships in
broader sense, or apparently I'm doing it through how you organize your to-do list and your
schedule, right? But somehow it is all about how we sort of show up in the world. And it's all
come back down to the same, the same stuff. So I, I think it's, I think we'll have a good
conversation. I mean, the point I was making
when I ventured to give the only romantic advice I feel qualified to give there was just that,
in a sense, all that settling could ever possibly really mean when you think about it deeply is
accepting a trade-off, right? It means deciding to do one thing,
to enter a relationship with one person
instead of the other people you could enter a relationship
with, it's the same in your job.
It's the same in where you choose to live.
You have to turn down possibilities,
at least hypothetical possibilities,
in order to do anything that's just built in
to being a human.
It's not the same as saying that you should sort of, you know, commit to a relationship with
somebody that you don't think is right for you because some guy on an interview said that you
should settle. But it's that idea that there's no option at any point open to us as humans that doesn't involve
putting up with some kind of downside. And I think that when somebody is stuck in commitment phobia,
a state of which I have plenty of experience earlier in my adulthood.
Me too. a state of which I have plenty of experience earlier in my adulthood.
Me too.
Part of what's keeping that going is the sense that you're not settling,
you're not burning a bridge, you're not closing a door.
But actually, of course, you are, right?
Because we're always doing it. And what you're doing if you decide to spend several years not entering a committed relationship when you could have had
that option is you're deciding to spend those years not in a committed relationship. And that
might be right for some people at certain life stages, but it's not. It's still like, you know,
life is finite. Time is ticking away. You're using that part of your life for that purpose,
and then it's going to be gone forever and you'll be on to the next part of your life.
So it's really just another way of getting at this whole thing that I'm always banging on about,
basically, which is that we are finite in our time and our amount of control over our time
and many other ways. And we spend a lot of,
we invest a lot of energy trying to feel like we're not,
but we are.
And in a sense,
what gives a commitment and especially in a relationship context,
what gives a commitment its value is precisely that you're shutting down
other possibilities, right? I mean, it's the act of
saying no to all those other life paths that gives meaning to the one you choose. Because
if we lived for eternity, or we could be in a thousand places at once,
it would not be of any great value that you were in a committed
long-term relationship in one of those realities right it would be like well sure but what about
all the other ones but we only have one to choose from and that's what gives it its its meaning
how do you think about you know i get asked the question a lot i would paraphrase the question as what do I do with the 70 to 80 percent right partner you know
they sure they have a lot of great things I do feel like I'm missing some important things or
some things that I would like but you know they're pretty great um or they're great in other ways. How do you think about making choices in those moments when it does
feel like there's this impossible question of, well, time is ticking, but do I give it another
five years to try to find my right person? Or do I make this the best I can by leaning into it?
Do you have any models or frames that could help people in that situation?
It's such a good question.
And I apologize in advance if there's a pattern in our conversation where you're asking the big questions about deep human relationships, and I'm somehow managing to pull it back to
productivity advice where I feel more comfortable.
Not at all.
Maybe we can find an interface between these things. The truth is, I think the excitement of having you here is that you're bringing a kind of a different way of thinking to this that I think directly applies.
I read 4,000 Weeks and went, this could just, to your point earlier, this could just as easily be a book about finding love or dating if you apply it through that lens.
So actually, I'm very happy to hear you talk from that angle.
Cool. I mean, the question about sort of 70%, 80% good enough situations,
it's such a good question because obviously, on the one hand, that feels like a far too imperfect a situation to settle
for if 100% is on the horizon.
Yet on the other hand, we know in all sorts of other areas of life that if you write a
novel and it's 70% as good as the best novel ever written, that is like an insanely good novel.
So in lots of other areas, we're sort of more comfortable with that level of good enoughness.
I guess in terms of what I really think is that there is a really severe limit to how far we can
reason our way into any conclusion in this area.
And a big part of my
own journey into sort of confronting and getting comfortable with my limitations
has been, you know, being a kind of a brain on a stick type person
who thinks that who's got a good, sharp intellect and therefore thinks
I ought to be able to use it to figure out the whole of my life.
And and gradually coming to see that intuition as an alternative way of navigating is a real thing
and you can trust it to a certain extent and it's not just totally woo-woo. And so,
you know, two perspectives that I think are really helpful here.
One is to ask the right question that will connect you to your intuitions.
And one of those that I've written about before comes from James Hollis, the Jungian psychotherapist, an extremely wise man,
but also very sort of humane and funny writer and person who recommends asking
this question, does the path I'm on enlarge me or diminish me? Really as an alternative to asking,
will this make me happy or not? Which is a very, very troublesome question that we're terrible at
answering and all sorts of pitfalls involved.
And I think that a lot of people find that connecting to that intuitive sense of like, is this like a path of growth?
Can I feel that this is enlarging me? This is something that has really been of great help to me.
I mean, the first time I was navigating this way, I think early in
what was to become my marriage, I wasn't doing it having encountered this question. It was more
a gut feeling, but later the question really put it into perspective for me.
Just trying to connect to that felt sense of whether this is kind of a growing path
or a shrinking path. And that's what's so helpful about that, of course, is that, you know,
when you're making those kinds of decisions, especially in the relationship context,
there are certain kinds of difficult time that you might have in a relationship that are a huge
red flag that you should get out immediately. And there are certain kinds of difficult time that you might have in a relationship that are a huge red flag that you should get out
immediately and there are certain kinds of difficult time you can have in a relationship
which are the very substance of growing in a relationship right and and you know learning
more deeply how to be with another another person and i find that kind of james hollis question is great for distinguishing
between those those two uh kinds of difficulty the good difficulty and the bad difficulty
then i think the other thing that is really helpful and it's another sort of perspective from
carl jung and the unions is that um although it is also also the subject of a song sung by Anna in Frozen 2,
so you can choose the source you wish, you only actually ever have to figure out
the very next moment. You only ever actually have to try to make the wisest choice about what you're going to do with the next day and the next day
and the next day. And of course, there are going to be days in a life when that involves, you know,
breaking up with someone or proposing marriage to someone. But very, very often I find,
and I'm thinking, I guess, more in other contexts contexts and relationships but i think it applies here too um when you narrow your field of focus to what you as a limited human actually have the
right to kind of ask about which is where do i what's my next step as opposed to where do i see
myself in five years time or something very often clarity arises from that and it becomes clear that you
know the only reason you're continuing with the course of action is fear or no that you haven't
got to the point yet where you really know what you're what you're talking about those things
really resonate with me firstly on the level of the jamesis question, because I really viscerally connect to that
in my memory of my early days dating my wife, where I felt resistant to commitment on some level,
but I had become quite dissatisfied with being single and dating around and that dissatisfaction met with a person of such
incredible character and personality that I felt like I was growing with every interaction even
in the early days where you know we would have an argument, which usually was my fault, not hers, I would,
I would come away from that argument in some way enlarged because I would
feel like the way that it was handled from her side was so competent and so kind and so
compassionate while also being very strong that I couldn't, I remember coming away from argument, even arguments I would
come away from going, Oh God, I think I'm the problem here. Like I, cause, cause I couldn't
blame it on how her bad handling of the situation or that I was just, I came away going, I had this
really deep sense of, I'm going to learn a lot here. Right. Right. So it's not only that you were the problem, but that actually you were sort of
excited to dig into addressing that problem. I truly saw this as the path that made me the
best me. And that was really, there was something very exhilarating about that to me. And so again,
I didn't have that question, you know, specifically in my mind of will this, I think, will this enlarge or diminish me?
Yeah.
I didn't literally have the question, but I definitely viscerally felt that sense of I can't walk away here because this is going to continue to enlarge me.
And I felt like I was somehow now on a steep learning curve.
Right. That was really wonderful. So I completely relate to that idea. And, and that idea, I knew
exactly where you were going when you mentioned Frozen 2. Because that, that idea of the next,
when I heard that song about, you know, taking the next best step you can, I remember having a
visceral reaction to that idea idea because there's something very manageable
about that. And whether someone is, you know, I think so many of us miss out on relationships
because we spend so much time obsessing over whether they're right or wrong instead of saying,
well, look, let me actually go on another date with this person in a different context,
maybe show a little more of myself, maybe get a little more curious about them and see if more data helps me. Or if I've been in
a relationship for five years and I constantly just find myself doubting it, can I give myself
three months of permission not to doubt it and instead just to do all the things I would do if
I was earnestly, sincerely trying to make
this relationship work. And if at the end of those three months, I feel no better off, well, okay,
maybe I've gotten closer to a decision. Or if my response to being told to do that is that I really
don't want to do all of that, then maybe I already have a kind of answer. So I relate to all of that. What do you say, Oliver, to people who,
you know, you talk in the book, Meditation for Mortals, your new book,
about this idea of waiting for life to start and how, in fact, this right here now is life.
Life isn't going to start at some point in the future. And in the context in which I often
speak, the classic example is of someone thinking that their life is going to start once they find
the relationship they're looking for. And that in a sense, their life is on hold until that point.
What would your perspective, your advice be to someone who is really struggling to enjoy their life now
before they've had this what what for some people is the number one goal in life is to find love
and it hasn't happened how could people really connect to that idea that life is happening right
now and that there's more enjoyment to be found there i mean yeah it's it's so um interesting to
hear you talk about this
kind of idea of the provisionality of life in the context of relationships, because I'm very often
coming at it from other angles, but it's of course the same phenomenon, this notion that there's
something that needs to happen before life can really begin. And maybe for other people, it's,
you know, when they've solved their procrastination problems or
when they've got the right promotion in their career or something, but it's the same idea.
You can start sort of pushing back against this idea just from an intellectual level? You can say, for finite humans, meaning has to be now because all we have
is this succession of nows. You know, I think if you're in your sort of early 20s and you're
thinking that it might be that you're going to feel more secure in your relationships by the end
of your 20s, right? This is not something to beat yourself up about this notion that you're sort of, you've got a goal and the goal is very important to your
well-being. I think the problem comes when you're sort of, yeah, when you're postponing
engagement in the present, pending that thing. And of course, what you find is that it gets
harder and harder to sort of, it gets more and more troublesome as you get older because the idea that the moment of truth
is coming later is obviously a lot easier to believe in when you're 22 than when you're
in your mid-40s there are two distinct groups i have in mind one is the group that especially
women who you know really want to have a biological family of their own.
And there's a kind of, there's a very real time pressure there.
And they see that window closing for some of them.
And at the very least, there's a fear of that window closing.
And then there's people who are on the other side of that equation who maybe they did have kids, maybe they didn't.
But either way, maybe there's a long-term relationship that ended. Maybe there's a marriage that ended in their 50s or 60s. They never thought that would happen. Or maybe they've never had a long-term relationship and they find themselves in that season of their life.
Still thinking, God, I'm, you know, life hasn't turned out the way I want and it's terrifying and this feels like it's at the heart of a good life. certainly in that if your particular struggle is the sense that something didn't,
that things didn't go the way that you wanted them to go
and that it is in some sense too late,
I think there is something really beautiful and powerful
in sort of really feeling that and turning towards it.
Let's see if I can sort of port this idea
of playing in the ruins into relationships.
This comes, I've got to give full credit
from a writer called Sacha Chapin,
who among other great pieces of writing,
wrote a newsletter, an edition of his Substack newsletter,
where he talks about when he was in his early 20s,
really wanted to be a novelist
on a par with David Foster Wallace.
And the worst thing that could happen in that domain would be that he failed to become a novelist on a par with David Foster Wallace.
And then, you know, some years later, he realized that that was not going to happen.
He had failed. And how liberating this was, because now you no longer had to,
you no longer had to tell himself all these stories about what his life was going to become.
He could just say, okay, well, what is my life?
What is this scrap heap that I'm actually in?
And what could I make of it?
And I think there are all sorts of contexts where you can understand that same idea that there's a moment you can exhale and a weight being lifted
off your shoulders when you really appreciate in depth that this is where you are either you know
in the situation of not having got something yet that you think you still can soon or especially in the position of thinking that
something has passed you by or that you've or that a relationship has failed to work out in
the way that you had planned and in fact it's coming back to me now that Chapin also writes about this happening to him after, I think, a fairly youthful divorce.
It's like, well, at least you're no longer putting all,
have to put all this effort into trying to never become a person
who gets divorced, right?
That ship has kind of definitively sailed.
And, you know, the same can come in sort of creative work, I find. It's like, at least,
at least I no longer have to put any effort into trying to be the person who never puts a foot
wrong in, in my creative work, because I've done it plenty of times at this point. And there is a
kind of a liberation in that, that is like, okay, so here we are. And there's a, there's a Zen
writer called, oh, his name is escaping me now, but he's a Zen writer and a sort of a chef and a bread maker.
I'm sorry, I can't, Edward S.B. Brown, maybe?
Something like that. spiritual questions is to just look at your situation or your ingredients before you're
preparing to cook a meal or life, you know, and say, and ask the question, well, like,
what have we here? Um, and no longer, you know, what do I wish this was, or what do I think I can
make it into if I really try hard and get lucky in the next couple of years. But like, what do we have here? And just to finish that thought off, I've got to also believe,
I'm pretty sure it's true that, you know, that there isn't a trade-off that you have to make
here, a choice you have to make here between enjoying yourself now and working
on bringing about the life situation that you want. I mean,
it's an old cliche I know,
but I am sure it's as true in romantic relationships as anywhere else that
actually, if you, if you are enjoying yourself,
if you are making something of your life right now,
that just turns you into the kind of person who was going to find it easier to
you know find the relationship that would complement that it's um you know apart from
anything else it's just a more attractive trait i i think to be enjoying life than
than not to be enjoying absolutely it's funny i wrote uh that idea of what have we got here
as far as ingredients go i wrote a part of my book on having seen just the introduction to the tv show
chopped i don't know if you've ever watched it but there was something fascinating to me about
the idea that the chefs were given baskets of ingredients. They didn't
know what was in there and their job for the next 20 minutes was to do something with those
ingredients. And it always struck me that there was something very true to life about that concept.
They may not have intended it to be, but the idea that, you know, the show isn't about the chefs
opening the basket of ingredients and then judging themselves based on
what ingredients they happen to get in the basket it's a show about chefs it's a it's a show about
what this person is able to do with these very obscure and sometimes you know really difficult
ingredients and uh and at the end they're judged on how creative they can be with that. So I really love that the idea of what have we here, what have we got here really fits with that.
If I wonder if this is an interesting segue to, um, the, the concept you write about in your book
of, I think, I think you call it the life task. Um, but this But this idea that your life may be calling you to do something right now,
I'll leave you to explain it. But the thing I really enjoyed about this concept and found very
liberating was this idea that your life task will never be something that's not possible for you
where you stand right now. Could you just speak to that idea of a life task? Because I think it's actually really reassuring wherever someone is starting from now, whether it's, you know, 65 and single
again in a way they never thought they would be or 32 and wondering if they'll ever find love.
There is something applicable universally about that idea.
Yeah. I mean, this is just a notion, again, it's from Jungian psychology, really.
It's the question of sort of asking, it's a sort of a reframing, I suppose. It's a question of
saying, instead of asking yourself, what do you want to get out of life? Where do you want to go
in your life? Asking instead the question of what life is asking of you in this moment. And I tell
a story in the book about how this happened
to Carl Jung himself as an adolescent,
when life was asking him to buckle down to his studies
after he'd spent six months playing truant from school.
But there are so many contexts in which this is
a really useful way of kind of surfacing something.
And of course it's still you who's providing the answer,
right? But it's a deeper or less, more unconscious part of you. So it's really just that question,
you know, what is reality asking of me right now? And, yeah, there are these two criteria that I
think help you identify what that life, if you're sort're dealing with a legitimate, genuine life task. The first,
as Jung says, is that it's something that may well only be doable by effort and with difficulty,
or with effort and by effort and with difficulty, I think he says. Meaning it's not going to be the
thing that comes most easily. It's not going to be the lazy option. It's not going to be the sort of lazy option. It's not going to be the thing that is just going with your instincts and not finding
any kind of self-discipline.
But at the same time, as you say, it's going to be something that is doable by you in the
life situation in which you find yourself.
So the examples I give are, you know, if you've only got $50 in the bank, it's not going to be something
that requires you to have $10,000 worth of movie making equipment that is where your sort of
destiny lies. If, um, if you're not able to have a biological children, another example I give,
then it's not going to require that you do because that's not something that's open to you.
And that is a very useful way,
and I think you're right, reassuring way of distinguishing it from all these kinds of ideas of destiny and purpose that clutter the self-help space. And very often give rise to the sense
people have that there's something they're meant to be doing on the planet that they can't do
because of their situation, right? So it's like you're meant to have a big family, but you can't find the person
to do that with, or you can't have children, or you're meant to be launching a certain kind of
business, but you don't have the financial resources that it would require. And the idea
of the life task really pushes back against that and says, well, no, it can't be the case that you're meant to do something that you can't do. It may
be that there's something very unexpected and difficult that you weren't thinking of that is
what you're meant to do, but it can't be the case that you're meant to do something that you cannot
do because that's not what we're talking about here we're talking about how you respond to the reality you're actually in not the one that you think you should be in or
that um you you wish you were in again you you know you talk about sanity being something that
can always feel like it's out of reach and defining sanity as this i i suppose more of a feeling of equanimity and not overwhelm, a sense that we can actually
connect to things, enjoy things, approach them with a lightness as opposed to that heaviness of,
oh my God, I've got so much to do and I'm so overwhelmed. And now we can't enjoy anything
because everything in our days just becomes one giant never ending to-do list that bleeds into the next day and the next day and the next day and waking up in deficit every morning, feeling like we have to earn our worth by the end of the day only to start the process all over again the next day.
I find these ideas so liberating and the practical advice you give in the book for overcoming that trap very liberating
you in fact i actually wrote these down today um because i was like god these are really going to
help me um you know you you talked about freeing up time by you know one way to operate from sanity
and deal with the overwhelm is to free up time simply by renegotiating existing commitments,
not by planning to make fewer ones in the future, which we can certainly do, but you can literally
reduce your overwhelm right now by reducing your number of commitments, saying you can't go to the
party when you originally said you could, or, you know, dropping a project that maybe isn't as
important as you've been making it, or is certainly not more important than your sanity and so there's all these ideas in the book
that I find so liberating I am curious Oliver from your perspective when we're writing a book
it's almost like when we're actually in the chapters ourselves, we're never more close to the material than then. And that's when it all feels very real to us. And I'm sure you must have it regularly when you're writing something and you breathe a sigh of relief at the truth in what first time, and we've been working on it for the
last couple of years, they're more connected or we're in danger of our audience being far more
connected to the concepts than we are, because we're now talking about them kind of almost in
the abstract from the outside, and they're suddenly the ones on the inside. Where I'm going with this is it's sometimes with a sadness that I read a
book that I feel was changing me or a fear that I read it because I go, what if I don't connect
to this a month from now? This is so helpful. What if a month from now I forget? What is your,
do you have a system for connecting and reconnecting and reconnecting to
the truths that you are writing about? And if so, what is that system or is it something that you
rely on sort of happening to you regularly enough that it saves you?
Yeah, great question. I've thought about it a lot and I've sort of
changed my answer. But where I'm at now is that there's a lot of hunger for that kind of system.
And ultimately, I think it is another of these kinds of systems that we long for because it
would just make everything so much simpler if we could put in place
that system and you know if you spend any time on uh youtube looking at sort of personal knowledge
management there's all these kind of people with all these amazing systems for memorizing
everything that you read and retaining every fact that you learn and and that's a part of the same urge i think this idea that there must be a
way to really like install these insights or uh you know epiphanies or whatever once and for all
and i've sort of reached the point now seeing that i think that's just another example of sort of trying to be kind of perfectionistic
and, and to sort of do something that is not in our human gift to do. So really now I just think
about the importance of sort of marinating in this, in this stuff, the importance of kind of
circling back and back and discovering new ways of articulating it and discovering
writers who articulated in in different ways um and in my own book you know in this this new book
it's it's really a conscious effort to create a book that leads people through this material
in a way that kind of resists any kind of system or any kind of, you know, attempt to store all this knowledge away and
then put it into practice perfectly at some subsequent point. Or it's really about this
very topic, I think, of like, how do you keep this stuff alive? Because it's got this kind of
four-week structure, short chapter for each day of the month. And the idea being, you know,
obviously I can't control how people read my
book but the idea might be that you would go at it roughly a chapter a day and and that in so doing
you'd sort of increase the degree to which you're sort of marinating in these ideas and letting them
seep under your skin rather than trying to find the way to kind of install them in a kind of hug and play kind of fashion. And when it comes to my own
creative work, yeah, I just find that I have to be writing, journaling,
reading sort of pretty much all the time in some way. I really feel it if too many days go by
without that. And I think there's something very, there's a sort of ironic, but very important
moment in personal growth when you realize, and in creative work, when you realize that you're not
heading towards one specific point when you will finally
be there which at first is very depressing because it's like what am i growing towards if i'm not
getting to this this point but actually i think that's actually the deeper that's the deeper thing
right to sort of it's like a spiral deepening spiral of re-engaging with all this stuff which
is a long-winded way of saying,
you know, maybe there are people who have sort of a sudden and immediate spiritual transformation
and they're different from that moment on and it never fades. But I don't think that's common.
But for those of us mortals who aren't that kind of person, you know, I wonder if there is any kind of a a trigger for you that you've been able to
ingrain because i would describe my life in a way that i'm still ashamed isn't nearly far enough
along in this department as these moments of just truth where I feel really connected to everything that
you've written about here in this book. And I think you write about better than anyone I've read
and feeling like, oh my God, this is, my mind is the problem. My mind is the whole problem here. My standards for myself are the cause of all of my suffering, my relentless urge to do more, to take on more, to fill any space in the diary, to keep. it's depressing how quickly I can go back to that either fight or flight mode where it feels like
something disastrous will happen if I don't get this next webinar right. Or if I don't do a great
job on the Oliver Berkman interview, which I've been looking forward to, um, you know,
that there will be some kind of catastrophic consequences, but also this
general feeling of, you know, the days get filled with to-dos where you feel on the outside
of your life, where even the things that should in theory be pleasurable, just become another
thing to be scratched off of the the to-do list yeah when you find yourself
slipping back into that way of being or maybe you find that you've worked the muscle sufficiently
that you slip back less but when you do do you have any kind of a trigger for the the kind of
doesn't allow you to get too far gone or doesn't allow you to realize that you've been operating
from that place of obligation and drudgery for a month
before that truth revisits you again?
Such a great question.
And I'm certainly not, so I certainly haven't strengthened that muscle
to the degree that it doesn't happen frequently.
I have two thoughts that might be
helpful. One of them in terms of a concrete practice is that I think that any kind of
journaling or free writing or morning pages, whatever, this is a habit that through all my
years of trying out habits and routines and getting
sick of them within 24 hours, this is the thing that has stuck.
I do this pretty much every day of my life, spend 40 minutes in the morning, 30 minutes
writing on three sides of a narrow-lined A5 journal.
What I think is really good about this, and there are other practices that could
fill the same gap, is this is something that those of us who want to kind of follow rules
and have a routine and stick to a certain protocol can do. Because it's a thing, you have to sit down,
do it for a certain amount of time. There's an action associated with it. It's very clear. But then
what you do inside that space is completely outside your control. It's completely free
form. I think it's very, very useful to follow the rule if you're doing that of um that you don't ever stop writing you can in the time
for the time period you're or the length of space that you're trying to fill doesn't mean you have
to write fast certainly doesn't mean you have to write eloquently i think you can do it longhand
or on a keyboard but just that notion that you're going to keep going and not allow the internal editor to sort of pull down the the pull up the drawbridge or
whatever you know on what you want to say and i think anything like that is really amazing because
it puts this very sort of formal boundary around something but then what you're doing inside that
space is just letting and allowing and permitting and, you know,
things bubble up.
And I find that that does bring me back to these things.
Very often in the like last paragraph of three sides of,
of free journalism, right after a whole lot of rubbish,
something surfaces and I'm, and i'm reminded of you know
the path that i what i want to be on so that's one that's one thought and then just quickly
the other one um i'm sort of paraphrasing here from the psychotherapist bruce tift
just listening to you talk about how you know thinking of our own seeing that your own mind
is the problem and all of this stuff i think there's something to be aware of here, which is that you can go a little adrift in this
direction if you think that there is a big problem to fix here, right? That because you're not
spending your whole life in a sense of total communion with the deepest truths of existence,
that that's a big issue that you need to fix. You can recapitulate that whole problem of
postponing life until you've fixed it. Bruce Tift has this great thought experiment that I find very
liberating where he says, take the thing that bothers you the most about yourself, your procrastination or your anxiety about commitment,
or maybe it's your inability to stay conscious of the things that you think are the truest
ways of looking at the world. And just kind of imagine what it would be like to know
that you were going to be afflicted by some degree of that problem for the whole of the rest of your
life you know maybe that'll just always be the case maybe i'll always be prone to catastrophism
and too much anxiety about travel plans when it just doesn't matter at all uh if i miss the train
or not really you know and all this stuff.
And along with a lot of other people, I find that really freeing. Like that thought is like, oh,
maybe that's just part of me, right? I mean, maybe that's not something that needs to be
got rid of. Now, of course, you can circle around on itself because you can think,
well, how do I keep remembering that? But I think it's very powerful that sort of,
what if part of my personality is just that I have this kind of adorable eccentricity
that maybe the perfect person wouldn't have, but who's perfect?
And I think it's also Bruce Tift who has just in that same vein,
I think I've heard him say on a podcast that he no longer experiences
any problems at all in his marriage, but only because he no longer defines
experiencing emotional disturbance as a problem.
Because, you know, getting wound up or getting triggered is just like, just part of the deal.
So that's one way to get rid of all relationship problems is just not to see them as problems.
But there is something so profound to that because I'll always remember
when I first started jujitsu, the jujitsu you roll, that's the jujitsu version of sparring
in boxing. And I remember being so unfit stamina wise for the task that after three minutes,
I couldn't breathe. And the person coaching me at the time
said you know sometimes we'll set a timer between the the professors to just roll for an hour
and it was inconceivable to me that what I had just done for three minutes that anyone could do for an hour.
And I said, how do you do that for an hour? And he said, well, when you know that you're
going to be doing it for an hour, you, you just, you strap in and you start breathing differently
because you know that, you know, that the way that you scrambled around for
three minutes just now you couldn't scramble like that for an hour so you actually start to approach
the whole thing differently because you know that you're going to be doing it for the next hour
and um and that was a really big realization for me i think we do the same even in dating you know
you can kind of be anxious because someone's not texting you back or something's, you know, oh my God,
do they like me? Do they not like me? And if you, I always say to people, if you think about the
fact that if this works, you're going to be with this person for decades. Can you continue to
breathe like this for decades, you know, or if you knew you were going to do this for decades, would you, would you actually breathe differently and embrace it differently?
And, um, yeah, that's great.
I think it's such a great point.
I am wondering what to ask you as my last question, cause I have at least a hundred more.
Um, but I, I will try and settle on one. I had made lots and lots of
notes for this and it was actually my own practice in finitude and accepting finitude
to have to narrow the questions I wanted to ask down.
It's all part of the point.
But I suppose I'll ask a selfish question. How do you, Oliver, if you do, resist the urge to do more?
You strike me as a person who has settled on some really core things that you value and have
found a degree of peace and happiness and fulfillment in
both the work you do and the family life that you have. And I
say that from a distance. But it does seem that way for your
world and my world. There's always more if you want to start
making videos every week and you want to start making videos
every week and you want to start doing you start your own podcast and do this and do that and
there's always a you know someone with your brain could do all of that and more and more would come
and it would lead to more and I'm just wondering if it's easy for you to not do those things or to not constantly be saying yes to the more that
sounds exciting and sounds like it could get your work out there more it could do this
whether you find that easy or whether it's a constant struggle and how you do say no when
you say no yeah i've got better at it it's definitely still a still a thing for me um
and as per earlier parts of our conversation,
I'm not sure it ever won't be a thing. I think on the level of sort of perspective shifts,
what has helped has been everything we've been talking about, that real understanding on a deep level that there will always be more, that by grabbing a bit more of the more, I will not actually reach the position
of thinking that I have enough of it, that that's never going to happen, that there will always be
trade-offs, there's always going to be somebody disappointed by the choice I make or something I
miss out on that would have been good to have.
This is just completely non-negotiable and given.
And that makes it a lot easier to pick some things.
And not other things, I think thinking about it seasonally.
Has helped right now, I'm in a period of a lot of intense work and,
you know, spreading the word
about this new book and all sorts of things and it does take away from the time i have with my
family and the challenge for me is to make sure that that doesn't just become
my life from here on out but that it's a thing for a while and then something else is a thing
for uh a while and then just to be much more sort of practical about it,
sort of technique-based,
it's really a matter of...
One thing I do a lot is sort of in the productivity side of things,
for example, keeping a very long list of all the things
that I want to do or that are on my plate
and understanding just how long it is and that I can only pick a few things from it onto my list of
things I'm actually going to do. Any practice like that, that sort of really brings me into contact
with the fact that there will always be more. Maybe this is harder to sort of make real
in the context of relationships.
Maybe that's where journaling would come in.
But it's really sort of really sinking into that awareness
that being a finite, limited human just means
you could always do more and more and more.
And that really breaks the spell
that whatever you don't have
must be going to be better than where you are right now.
Oliver's book, Meditation for Mortals, is out right now. I think I was one of the first people
in the world to get a copy. The subtitle is Four Weeks to Embrace Your Limitations and Make Time
for What Counts. One of the really interesting things about this book, as Oliver said, is that it's designed to be a short chapter a day to really let this seep in and have it help you make real changes in the way that you approach things, the way that you approach your life, your work, and your thoughts over the space of an entire month. And I think that's really, really powerful. It's a great read.
I would recommend every single person go out and grab a copy of this book. And I say this without
exaggeration, there will be many people in your lives who you know are like me, can struggle with their own mind and the way
they approach things. And this book will help them. I literally said to my mom this morning,
who has sat across from me, who wanted to sit here and listen to this because she knew it would help
her too. I said to her, you have to get a copy of this book. I've just ordered one for my wife,
Audrey, as well, because mine is littered
with notes now. And my book, if she reads it, is just going to tell her what to think about
everything in the book. So she needs her own copy. But it really is a tremendous book. And
I recommend everyone grab a copy from wherever books are sold. Oliver, is there anywhere else
before you go that you would like people to
visit of yours or anywhere that they could benefit from hearing your work or is the book the place?
I think the book's the place. My website, oliverberkman.com is also where you can
sign up for my newsletter, which I call The Imperfectionist. So that's the other,
that's the other place. Which I'm an avid reader of. So that's a great shout. The Imperfectionist.
Is there a specific domain for The Imperfectionist
or is that just on your website if people go there?
The place to sign up is oliverberkman.com.
Okay.
Yeah.
So oliverberkman.com.
Oliver writes regular articles
that I find really, really helpful.
So go check those out as well.
Oliver, it truly has been a privilege
for me to speak with you.
I hope we get to do it again. Me too. What a lovely conversation. And thank you. Really appreciate
it. Thanks, Oliver. Be well and good luck with the rest of the book tour. Thank you.
I hope you enjoyed that interview. Leave me a comment. Let me know what you thought. If you're
watching this on YouTube, if you're listening to it on the Love Life podcast, email us podcast at matthewhussey.com. Pick up a copy of Oliver's
book. I cannot recommend this book highly enough. I believe that it will make a measurable impact
on the life of anyone who reads this book. It certainly has on mine. And thank you, Oliver,
for joining us. It really means a lot. For anyone who hasn't
yet, if you're finishing with any kind of a question you would like to ask me about your
love life, about your dating life, about a relationship, or just about your confidence
in your life in general, go try out Matthew AI. It is an incredible way for you to access my answers,
even if you haven't been able to reach me or you haven't
ever been able to ask me a question matthewai has all of my content uploaded to it so that
the answer that matthewai gives isn't just some generic answer it's my answer go check it out for
free at askmh.com think of what you want to ask and go ask it now.
And thank you as always for listening to the Love Life Podcast.
It means so much that you're here and I can't wait to see you next time. Bye.