Office Hours with Arthur Brooks - Why You Literally Need to Touch Grass
Episode Date: April 20, 2026In a previous episode on leisure, I talked about how fewer and fewer people are spending time outdoors. Today, the average child spends just minutes outside each day, a dramatic shift from how most of... us grew up and from how humans have lived for thousands of years.In today’s episode of Office Hours, I explain why reconnecting with nature is essential for your happiness and well-being. Drawing on research from psychology and neuroscience, I show how time outdoors can reduce anxiety and depression, improve cognitive function, and even help you break free from the constant cycle of comparison and rumination.You might think your life is not compatible with spending more time outside. But the evidence suggests the opposite: you can’t afford not to. I share with you three practical ways to bring nature back into your daily life. I hope you try them and get outside to touch some grass!—Brought to you by:Noble Mobile—With Noble, there is only one plan: The No-Bull Plan. It’s simple. It’s transparent. And if you use less data, you get cash back. Get an exclusive offer at: https://noblemobile.com/arthurbrooks —Where to find Arthur Brooks: • Website: https://arthurbrooks.com/• Newsletter: https://www.arthurbrooks.com/newsletter • X: https://x.com/arthurbrooks• Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/arthurcbrooks/• Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ArthurBrooks/• YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGuyFRjJQFGCKzfHTBvWM6A• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/arthur-c-brooks/• Email: officehours@arthurbrooks.com—Timestamps:(00:00) Intro(05:14) How much time do people spend outdoors today?(07:10) Why we’re spending more time inside(11:05) What happens when you don’t get enough time outdoors(12:31) What happens when you add nature back in(19:08) #1: Spend as much time as you can outside(22:04) #2: Witness/touch nature(24:27) #3: Start a walking routine(26:36) Why you’ll enjoy being in nature more than you think(27:23) Lessons from transcendentalism(28:46) Q&A: The difference between happiness and joy(30:24) Q&A: Serving others without resentment—Referenced: • The Meaning of Your Life: Finding Purpose in an Age of Emptiness: themeaningofyourlife.com• Meaning Membership: https://hub.arthurbrooks.com/the-meaning-membership • Arthur’s newsletter: https://www.arthurbrooks.com/newsletter • The Happiness Scale: https://learn.arthurbrooks.com/the-happiness-scale • The Pursuit of Happiness with Arthur Brooks: https://www.thefp.com/s/the-pursuit-of-happiness-with-arthur • Global survey finds we’re lacking fresh air and natural light, as we spend less time in nature: https://press.velux.com/new-global-survey-finds-were-lacking-fresh-air-and-natural-light-as-we-spend-less-time-in-nature• The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness: https://www.amazon.com/Anxious-Generation-Rewiring-Childhood-Epidemic/dp/0593655036• Stanford researchers find mental health prescription: Nature: https://news.stanford.edu/stories/2015/06/hiking-mental-health-063015• Why Is Nature Beneficial? The Role of Connectedness to Nature: https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5d8921893ec7066969f68df5/t/5d94da7035bc6f4984f509d1/1570036337561/the_role_of_connectedness_to_nature_on_positive_affect_2009.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com• ...References continued at: https://www.arthurbrooks.com/office-hours—Production and marketing by https://penname.co/.
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My students have an expression, my kids have an expression, anybody who's under 30 knows this,
and most people over 30 as well, that when, you know, you're behind the computer screen all day
and maybe getting wrapped up into some stupid conversation on social media,
and you're losing touch with reality, you're getting sucked into the matrix,
into the simulation of life, that you've got to turn it off and go touch grass.
The average child today spends between four and seven minutes a day outside.
By the way, also more than four to seven hours online, this is an evolutionary argument.
Our brains are the same thing that they were about 250,000 years ago in the late place to
scene.
Sitting around the campfire outside, talking to each other while we shove pieces of yak meat into our mouths
or whatever it is, that's how our brains were made to understand each other, to find meaning
in our lives, and when we deviate from that too much, well, we're going to suffer.
Hey friends, welcome to office hours. I'm Arthur Brooks. This is a show dedicated to lifting people up and bringing them together in bonds of happiness and love using science and ideas. This is how I do my work, is getting these ideas out. The deepest ideas in the research on social sciences, on neuroscience, on all different areas that can actually help us understand human flourishing. And my job is to bring those ideas to you, whether you have a background in science or not. Why? Because when you understand these ideas,
as a layperson, then you become the teacher to the other people who listen to you.
And that's how we together lift people up and bring them together.
My mission, perhaps it's yours too.
I want you to live a happier life and help other people to do so as well.
So thank you for listening to the show and for suggesting this show.
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I hope that if you haven't gotten the book,
The Meaning of Your Life, it's out.
Here it is behind me on that beautiful sand, Zen cover,
The Meaning of Your Life, Finding Purpose and an Age of Emptiness.
I'm delighted to say that a lot of people are reading the book.
I hope you will too.
If you haven't, please go to the website,
The Meaningof Your Life.com,
and you can learn how to join our community,
get all sorts of special benefits from being part of the community
that we have of people who are reading the book
and getting involved in the work and passing it on to others.
All right. Now, one of the things that I've been talking about in my work and on episodes of the show in the past is how one of the ways that people find meaning and happiness is through beauty. And there are three kinds of beauty, artistic beauty, moral beauty, but especially natural beauty. It's funny because we kind of know that that if you want to get more meaning into your life, it's good to get out of the house. It's good to get out into nature. People know this intuitively. It's funny because my students have an expression, my kids have an expression, my kids have a lot.
expression. Anybody who's under 30 knows this, and most people over 30 as well, that when,
you know, you're behind the computer screen all day and maybe getting wrapped up into some
stupid conversation on social media and you're losing touch with reality, you're getting sucked
into the matrix, into the simulation of life, that you got to turn it off and go touch grass.
Man, I'm going to go touch grass. That's what my kids will say. And what that means is go into real life
and to get out into something that's actually growing and good.
And of course, there's an intuition behind that that when you're in the matrix, your brain
isn't working right.
You're getting a simulation of real life.
And if you're watching the show, you know exactly why.
You're sitting in the left hemisphere of your brain, which is the complicated part of your
brain for complicated problems.
And for reality and satisfaction and meaning and happiness, you need to get to the right
hemisphere of her brain.
And you can't simulate one with the other.
So you've got to go get into the part of the world that will stimulate that right
hemisphere of the brain. And the fastest way to do that is to go touch grass. So I want to talk about
touching grass today. I want to talk about why you need more nature in your life. I'm going to
tell you about the trends that we actually see and the problems that we see in modern life where people
are doing so less and less and less. The deleterious consequences of that, the benefits that you can
actually get from spending more time outside in nature. I'll tell you specifically what the research
is saying. And most importantly, the steps for actually doing so progressively in your life. And
I'm not going to go ask you to go live outside, but I am going to give you some very specific suggestions on how you can use the research to get what you actually deeply want in your brain and in your heart.
Okay, now the data are very clear. Fewer and fewer people are spending leisure time in nature.
And this is one of the reasons that, of course, meaning is becoming more and more elusive.
That's what this whole book is about is meaning is harder to find.
And we're using our brains less well.
and that's one of the reasons that happiness has been in decline.
You know, these are intimately tied to each other.
First, let me give you the evidence on that, not that you need it,
that people are spending less and less time outside.
There's the Vellex Group in 2019 published a really interesting survey
that found that Americans went on one billion fewer outings in nature in 2019
compared to 2008.
That's a lot.
That's something like three fewer per year outings.
like trips out of nature per year per American, as a matter of fact.
Now, similar to this, 85% of adults today say that their kids, that kids in general spend
less time outside than they did when they were kids.
Everybody in my age spent more time outside than kids do today.
We just did.
Now, part of it is you might, you know, be critical of parenting.
I remember my mother saying, don't come back before it's dark, right?
That might seem like underparenting.
But suffice it to say that there's a lot less.
Height, Jonathan Haidt in his work in The Anxious Generation, which is a great book. I strongly
recommend. I'll put that in the show notes if you haven't read it yet. He knows that the average
child today spends between four and seven minutes a day outside. By the way, also, more than
four to seven hours online. For many kids today, it's between 10 and 12 hours online. Four to seven
minutes outside, that's obviously upside down, isn't it? If you're falling away from nature,
you're almost certainly lowering your well-being and increasing your unhappiness.
So I'm going to try to prove that to you.
But, you know, as spring is upon us and summer's on the horizon, this is a perfect time to make
some new resolutions to be spending more time where you can find the meaning of your life.
Okay.
Now, why is it that we're spending so much less time outside?
Number one, and this was even true, more than 30 and 40 years ago, that the world's
population has been urbanizing for a long time.
And urban life is largely inside life.
I mean, you can walk around New York City and people do, as a matter of fact.
But the point is that when you live in a city, you spend a lot more time in the house than you do when you live in the country.
And there's all sorts of reasons for that.
But I don't think I really need to prove that.
I think it's probably pretty intuitive.
Now, life was really different in 1800 to be sure.
The average American, which is to say the more than 50% of Americans, never left a 20-mile radius of the site of his or her birth in his entire lifetime.
Yeah.
So that was a different time of life.
And, you know, there was less transportation and fewer roads.
But only 6.1% of the American population lived in the city in the year 1800.
You know what it is today?
79%.
So 6% to 79% in 200 years.
200 years is a long time.
But that means a fundamental change in the essence of life.
I'll give you a quote at the very end about somebody who could have lived in a city and didn't,
somebody that you've read before that describes the result of that.
I'll put the references to all these statistics into the show notes in case you want to check them or you want to use them or whatever they happen to be.
So urbanization is the first big force that's actually keeping us inside and keeping us from touching grass, maybe even seeing grass.
The second, of course, is technology, which is, you know, over the past 30 years in particular, where technology is displaced outdoors in our attention.
In other words, going outside is just not something to do when you're completely addicted to wiping out any semblance of free time and boredom in your life by staring at your devices.
The average American looks at her or his phone 205 times a day.
That's every 13 minutes.
And sometimes a lot more than that.
Adults behind screens, not just little screens, but behind computers, et cetera,
spent an average of 10 hours and 39 minutes a day behind a computer last year.
That's a lot of time you have a screen.
There's not that much time to touch grass when the better part of your almost, I mean,
a big majority of your waking hours are actually spent behind a screen.
And by the way, what a tradeoff?
You know, it's like a lot of people are, what is their screens?
saver, some beautiful vista from, you know, the Rocky Mountains or rolling green hills. Why? Because
the good folks at Microsoft or Apple are trying to give you the semblance of touching grass. But
remember, if you've been watching my show, you know it won't pass the touring test. You can't fool
your brain and say, wow, that's such a beautiful picture of the beach. That's such a beautiful
picture of, you know, Mount Shasta or something like that. But all it is is a complicated simulacrum
for the right brain mystical experience
that the real thing would bring?
I dare say, looking at the neuroscience research on that,
that the most beautiful picture of the most beautiful mountain
doesn't compare to simply going outside in the backyard
and looking closely at a clover.
And that's because it uses your brain appropriately
when you do the real thing.
Now, maybe you're not an outdoorsman or woman,
but the truth is that my guess is
that you've done some outdoor outdoor...
activities, outdoor play, and that's going down like crazy. A hunting, fishing, camping,
these things have massively declined over the years. Some people still do them, but they,
they sound like a weird thing to do. And, you know, at one point, they actually weren't.
Why did we camp when I was a kid? Because, because motels were expensive. That's why.
You know, you sleep outside because being in a tent is cheaper than being in a motel.
So that probably sounds familiar to you, especially if you're in urban,
with an indoor job and you're tied to your devices all day long. And the time that you spend
outside is walking from your house or your apartment to the car or the train. And you haven't spent
serious time in nature in months or even years. So what's the result? The research is really clear
that what the result is based on a lot of studies, throw some of them into the show notes,
but these are easy to find. This is an easy Google search. That the less time you spend in nature,
the more stress you're going to feel, stress is the physiological.
response to anxiety, so therefore the more anxiety you're going to feel, and the more depression
you're likely to suffer, the more malaise that you're actually going to feel, because, frankly,
once again, I mean, I've said it again and again and again, psychology is largely biology. These
aren't just psychological phenomena. These are biological phenomena that your brain won't work right
unless you're outside a lot. And again, this is an evolutionary argument. You know, our brains
are the same thing that they were about 250,000 years ago in the late Pleistocene. We lived outdoors,
or at least pretty close to outdoors in bands of 30 to 50 kin-based individuals,
hierarchically arranged and depending on nature to make our living,
hunting and gathering and sitting around the campfire outside,
talking to each other while we shove pieces of yak meat into our mouths or whatever it is.
That's how our brains were made to understand each other,
to find meaning in our lives.
And when we deviate from that too much, well, we're going to suffer
because we're too far away from our factory settings.
That's just the way it is.
So these findings about stress and anxiety and depression and loneliness and alienation,
there's no surprise in this at all.
It's exactly what biological evolutionary biologists would suggest.
Okay.
Now, what happens when you reverse that?
In other words, there's nothing that says that you can't try to replicate a state of nature,
at least a little bit more.
If you're somebody who's getting four to seven minutes outside
and you start getting half an hour outside,
that's a big improvement.
an hour outside, you're going for a walk?
Substantial.
That's a big deal.
What will happen when this occurs?
Now, there's great research that says,
what happens when you start to add in time outside
and especially time in natural beauty?
So it's not just, you know,
walking across the Walmart parking lot five times to get your steps.
That's not what I'm talking about.
I mean, that fresh air is better than nothing,
but getting out into plant life and nature
and especially seeing green.
And as you'll see in a minute,
touching things outside has special.
properties. And I'm not going to try to get all woo-woo on you here. I'm research-based,
but you'll see what I mean in a minute. What happens when you start to add in more of this
nature into your life? And the answer is there's a bunch of really interesting benefits that
actually occur that have been shown in randomized treatment controlled experiments. For example,
people get a perspective on life that they didn't have before. In other words, they're able to
zoom out on life and see life from the outside in a way that they couldn't see when they were
stuck inside. I'll give you an example. There's an interesting study that has nature walkers,
people who will walk in nature. And then the control group are going to be people who are just
hanging around in an urban setting. So they're outside, but they're in an urban setting versus
people who are walking in the woods. And then they were asked about statements such as the following.
I often reflect on episodes of my life that I should no longer concern myself with.
In other words, do you ruminate a lot on, you know, things in the past that really aren't,
that are really sort of trivial, but they're bothering you?
A lot of people do, right?
It turns out that the ruminators were the ones who were controlled in the experiment to be
the urban ones versus the nature walkers.
The nature walkers were less likely to say that they reflected on episodes of life that
they shouldn't concern themselves with. They had perspective on life. They were able to zoom out to
look at life in a neutral way. And wouldn't you love that? Yeah, well, you can get it. It's easy.
Go outside nature. You'll get that. You'll start to be a more philosophical person. Things will
start to roll off you more. That's what that research suggests, and that's probably what your own
experience suggests as well. The second is really interesting, which is this. It's related to the first.
that you have a tendency to fall prey less to social comparison when you spend time outside.
It's interesting, right? Because, you know, why would that be the case? Once again, it's because
you're getting perspective. You're zooming out. And when you get more perspective on your life,
you're less likely to compare yourself socially to other people. Now, social comparison, man,
I mean, it's like the famous old quote that's attributed to Teddy Roosevelt, who knows,
if it came from him or not, that social comparison is the thief of joy.
I mean, you know it's true. I've got these interesting studies that show I didn't do them.
I've seen the papers that show that if you take pictures of your vacation to post on social
media, that you enjoy your vacation, about a fifth less than you would otherwise.
And the reason is because you're not actually there.
You're in the future imagining somebody looking at your photos and being envious of you now,
and meanwhile, you've missed the experience.
That's how social comparison works.
Plus, you're probably insecure because you know that maybe somebody, probably somebody's
having more fun with somebody who loves them more than what you're experiencing right now.
comparison is terrible. We do it because we're evolved to understand our place in a hierarchy,
but overdoing it, especially on social media, it's terrible. You want to be free from social
comparison? Well, you'll never be free from social comparison. You want it to be less of a problem in your
life? Go outside. Transcend. You're going to zoom out. Now, again, there's a lot of hypotheses
about exactly why this is the case, but it's manifestly clear in the data that this is the case.
Here's what we find.
Researchers find that people who walk in a city for 15 minutes are 39% more likely to agree with a statement.
Right now, I'm concerned with the way that I present myself than people who spend the same amount of time walking in nature.
Once again, this is being in an urban setting outside versus being in a natural setting, all the worse if you don't even leave the house in your urban setting.
Right now, you're like Neo in the Matrix.
You can keep scrolling, experiencing a simulation of life.
Or you can wake up to how your attention is being harvested for profit.
It's happening to people all over the world right now.
You don't want to be productized like this anymore, but it's hard.
Tech addiction is so potent because it's been designed to tap into your dopamine system.
Just like heroin, porn, gambling.
You've got the cravings.
You're addicted.
You don't like it, and I don't either.
But I can't just tell you to stop doing it.
That's hard.
If you want to break free from the system, you need an incentive.
Here's one.
Why don't you join a phone company that pays you not to use your phone?
If you want to reduce brain rot, get Noble Mobile Mobile.
It pays you to use less data.
It gives you an incentive to unplug.
Noble mobile is the phone plan that finally aligns incentives with what's good for you.
Use less data, earn money back.
And when you do, you'll be living once again in real life.
And you're going to like how it feels.
Okay, now you might say,
great, but I can't afford it.
I can't afford to, you know, spend all this time outside because of my job.
I get it.
Actually, you probably can't afford not to.
Here's a great study.
The 2012 study in the journal PLOS 1, PLOS 1, which is an apex journal in all fields of science.
Researchers showed that four days immersed in nature without technology
increased people's creativity and problem-solving abilities by about 50%.
you're going to be better at your job if you spend more time in nature because your brain is going to work
better. Creativity in the wild, improving creative reasoning through immersion in natural settings.
It's a great piece. You've got to see that. Really good article. So if you're not spending time in nature,
you're going to be unhappier than you should be, more neurotic than you should be,
more open to social comparison than you should be, less perspective taking than you should,
and less productive in your job than necessary.
So let's fix it.
How?
How do we fix it?
Let me give you a few two-dos here.
I'm going to give you three, as a matter of fact,
with some subcategories along the way,
some sub-bullets along the way.
Number one, spend as much time outdoors
of your discretionary time as you actually possibly can.
So here's the deal.
I mean, there's a lot of time that you can't do it.
I mean, if you work in an office, it's unlikely that you're going to be able to tell your boss.
I tell you, I can I set my desk up outside?
It's funny because when you're a college professor, you always ask the question.
Professor, can we have class outside?
I mean, who the heck has class outside?
And yet every professor hears this.
And it's funny because I always thought, nobody's ever had class outside.
Then I found an old photo of my dad doing a calculus lecture on a chalkboard on wheels outside
and all of the students laying around to the grass.
Okay, so apparently that does happen.
said, I bet that you're not going to have too much success convincing your boss to take your
desk and computer outside. But you have a lot of discretionary time and you can actually spend it,
make a point, make it into a habit of spending as much time outside. You've got a vacation coming up.
I bet. I bet you've got some kind of vacation coming up. Select an outdoor vacation. I mean,
maybe you're not going to go hunting and fishing. Maybe that's not your thing. But there's something.
I mean, I started doing the commino in Santiago. I've talked about it a couple of times in the show where I walk
across northern Spain in the summertime. I've done it twice in the past few years. It's just the
best day after day after day after day. I'm 16 hours a day outside. And, and, you know, the first day
you're so stressed. But as you get more tired because you're walking hundreds of miles, you actually
find that life starts to make more sense. And I always thought, well, unless I'm, you know,
in so much pain, I can't focus on anything else because I'm sore and I have blisters. No,
it's because all the stuff I just talked about a minute ago. It's because social comparison is melting
away. It's because anxiety is declining because my stress hormones are lower than they were,
and they're probably within physiologically healthy parameters. It's just the way I'm supposed
to live is what it comes down to. Now, let's say you can't do that. There's a lot that you can
actually do it. I had a friend who had this really interesting idea. It was during the 2008, 2009
financial crisis, and he lost his job. And he had no discretionary income. I mean, he was just barely
holding it together with his savings to stay in his house, had a little house. And so it came time for
his two-week vacation. I mean, it was like, it was a staycation, man. He wasn't going any place.
So he took his tent and he slept in his backyard for two weeks. He camped out in his own backyard.
He lived not in his house. And he said it was like the best vacation. It was just so refreshing.
And it's probably good that he didn't, you know, make a campfire and burn down his neighborhood.
But, I mean, use your creativity. You've got to,
discretionary time, use it appropriately.
Second is to therapeutically have moments in your day that you either witness or touch nature.
Now, two areas of research I'll call your attention to.
Number one is something that Andrew Huberman has talked an awful lot about, about the neurobiological
benefits of actually witnessing the sunrise.
And I've talked on my show a lot about the Brahma Mahorta, which is to wake up be.
before the sunrise, you've kind of lost the first battle.
If it's already light when you get up and, you know,
I'm sorry, don't turn off the show.
I understand that's hard for some people.
And it's not possible for everybody because of your schedule.
But if you can, get up before the sunrise.
And if you, especially if you can,
let the natural sun when it's really horizontal,
actually enter your eyes and witness the miracle that is the sunrise.
I see the sunrise most days, as a matter of fact.
And the reason I do that is because I get up early enough
that I finish my hour-long workout while it's still dark.
And then Esther and I, we go to mass.
And usually either, depending on the time of year, either when we're going into mass,
the sun is coming up or when we come out of mass, we're walking out is when the sun is
coming up.
So I get to see it every day.
But there are biological properties to, you know, how that's affecting you.
That early morning sunshine in your eyes is actually affecting you.
But that will affect your psychology.
And that's just a little therapeutic self-treatment that you can give yourself every day
of nature.
The second is an area that's been really controversial in the research, which is called earthing or grounding.
And I'm going to put something into a very nice paper actually on this, a peer-reviewed article that changed my thinking on this.
The first one I thought, oh, yeah, all right, go touch grass, literally touch grass, and like the vibrations of the earth will enter into you.
And like, okay, okay.
No.
Well, it turns out this is a pretty interesting paper.
This is a paper in the Journal of Science and Healing, which is a good journal called,
Integrative and Lifestyle Medicine
Strategies should include
earthing, in parentheses, grounding,
review of research evidence and clinical
observations. And what it shows
is that when people are in physical
contact with the earth in ways as
simple as walking barefoot, their
self-reported health and mood improve.
Just from the touch
the way this happens. And there's a lot of hypotheses
about why that would be the case.
I don't know.
But I do it. And then I like it.
I recommend it to you.
Okay, here's the third approach. I would build in, and this actually has a whole lot of benefits to it,
I would build more walking outside, just sort of into your health and wellness routine.
A lot of people are wearing fitness trackers. I mean, I do. A lot of you do too. And you've watched
probably my show on morning and evening protocols about, you know, my workout routines and what I try to do at night,
etc. A lot of you are trying to get 10,000 steps. That's an arbitrary measure. It came from a Japanese pedometer
company that basically just tried to popularize the idea that 10,000 is some special properties.
It doesn't. Most of the research shows that you get a lot of benefit once you get to 7,000,
but there's almost no upper limit on the benefit just gets flatter in terms of the benefits,
highly concave, but still more is better. So it comes down to when it comes to steps.
And so, you know, you manage to what you measure. And so if you're actually measuring your steps,
that's great. But getting your steps outside is an especially good thing to do when you can.
And so in the episodes, as I mentioned before, on my protocols, in the evening protocols,
if you go back to that show and we'll put the link in here if you want to go watch it.
I talk about the fact that my wife and I, we like to do 30 or 40 minutes of walking after dinner.
And one of the reasons for that is that walking after you eat is really, really good for glucose management.
I mean, it's excellent as a matter of fact.
There's a ton of research on that.
It's just good for you for your digestion and your mood and the way that you're actually managing your glucose.
so you don't get these big glucose spikes, which isn't good for you as you're digesting your meals,
but also it feeds this other need that you've got, which is actually walking outside and getting fresh air.
And if you live in a beautiful place, Esther and I are lucky that we live in a suburb that's got,
it's like living in a forest and we'll walk on forest paths outside.
If you can do anything like that, but the best you can do, any place outside is really a good idea
and getting into the habit of doing that as much as you can.
When you're home and the weather permits, if you're physically able, to do a,
walk after dinner and if it's dark all the better put lights on your jacket so you don't get
run over anyway these are three things that almost anybody can do now maybe you're not an outdoor
person because of the weather and the bugs find a way if you are an indoor person you might
very well be underestimating the benefits and overestimating the discomfort of actually doing that
one interesting study shows exactly that by the way a 2011 study in psychological science great
journal that people think they will enjoy walking in nature less than they actually do. And why? Because
you are evolved to want the couch. You're evolved to want inactivity because people are trying to
to conserve their energy. There's a lot of research that shows that. And so the result is that after an
energy, like, I want to sit on the couch. It's going to feel better if I sit on the couch. I won't
like it if I go walk around. What a pain. I'm so tired. You'll always like it more than you think.
The data don't lie on that. Here's my last thought. And we're going to do.
somebody's question. So this isn't the last thing I'm going to say. But I really love the work of
the American transcendentalist philosophers. Anybody watches the show for any length of the time.
I'm always quoting Ralph Waldo Emerson. He's my favorite philosopher. But his great friend,
Henry David Thoreau, they were both in Concord Mass in the 1840s. Henry David Thoreau,
of course, of Walden fame, you know, that's a little bit dubious. Walden were the Walden Pond,
that he built his cabin on Walden Pond. And then he saw nobody who was a hermit.
There was a train track right behind him. His friends were visiting him all the time. His mother
brought him food and did his laundry. But be that as it may, he wrote some very beautiful words about
nature. And here's one of the things that Thoreau said that I think is really beautiful. It kind of sums
up what we're talking about here. I was walking in a meadow, the source of a small brook,
when the sun at last, just before setting, after a cold gray day reached a clear stratum in the horizon.
Phil one day the sun shall shine more brightly than ever he has done, shall perchance shine into our minds and hearts, and light up our whole lives with a great awakening light, as warm and serene and golden as the bankside in autumn.
What we're saying here.
More nature, more meaning, more love and happiness than your hands.
A couple of quick questions, and then we're out.
David Ahern wrote in at the website, I,
at Office Hours at arthurbooks.com. I've wondered for a while why you choose the word happiness over joy.
Good question. The reason is because joy for behavioral scientists like me, it describes an emotion and a
feeling, and happiness isn't a feeling. Remember, feelings are related to happiness, like the smell of
your dinner is related to your dinner. It's evidence of your dinner. So joy, feeling joy,
which is largely the activity of the limbic system. For example,
there's a part of your limbic system in the reward center of your brain called a ventral tegmental area.
If I tap it by, you know, somebody you most, most, most love saying, I love you.
That'll tap that ventral tegmental area.
A big bump of cocaine will do the same thing because our brains are very thrifty.
You're going to feel this rush of a bully.
It's joy.
That's an emotion.
And that's different than happiness.
Again, it's evidence of happiness in its way.
So that's one of the reasons.
The second reason is because in every religious tradition, joy means something else.
In Christianity, my religion, for example, joy means the beatific vision to lay your eyes on the face of God when you get to heaven.
And so what religious people believe in many religious traditions is you get to heaven, you're going to get unremitting joy because you're going to get to be with and look at God.
That's obviously different than the psychological definition or the neurophysiological definition.
but that's the reason because neither of those is the same thing as happiness on earth as we
understand it, the imperfect happiness that we're striving for. It's a great question. Thank you for that.
Sahiz Kaur writes it also to the website at office hours. How can I continue to show up in service of
others while also protecting myself from resentment? Yeah, that's a good balance, isn't it? That's a good
balance that you need for yourself. You want to show up for other people because you want to be focused
on others. You want to transcend yourself in the service of other people. But at the same time,
a lot of it, when people, you know, go from friend to take her, that's going to actually spawn a whole
lot of resentment. And that requires understanding balance. It's an understanding of balance between
the I self, which is truly in service of other people and the me self, which is resentful.
You will start to notice yourself in a negative way when people are taking from you. Or, by the way,
when you feel like you're doing something out of obligation, this will lead to resentment
and not the feeling of peace that you're looking for.
So the result of it is that you need to calibrate what you're doing
and think about the motives of what you're doing
and showing up for other people.
Now, you can get better at this.
The skill can be really important.
And this is what a happy marriage is all about,
is showing up and showing up and saying,
yeah, I could be resentful, but I choose not to be
because the love that actually is in my heart,
which is to will the good of another person as another person,
that's the essence of who I am.
That's the essence of who I want to be.
But in the meantime, it's really important that we distinguish between doing something out of
our commitment to help and the joy in doing so and a sense of obligation, even against our will
that we can avoid that resentment.
That prudential judgment and finding that balance.
Well, that's one of the great skills of life, isn't it?
Thanks for that question.
We've come to an end.
Please let me know your thoughts right into the show at our email address, which is on the screen right now.
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useful refer back to it if you need reminders and in the meantime i hope you have a wonderful week
and i'll see you next monday
