SOLVED with Mark Manson - Meditation, Solved: Is It Actually Worth It?
Episode Date: March 18, 2026Meditation has been sold to us as a magic pill for so long that the backlash is almost as overblown as the hype. I spent years deep in Buddhist practice, went on retreats, meditated daily — and then... slowly discovered that half the gurus evangelizing it were alcoholics, abusers, or running Rolls-Royce-funded cults. Here's what the more careful research actually shows: there are three things meditation does reliably well, and they’re probably not what you've been promised. More importantly, almost everything you've been told about how to do it is wrong — starting with the idea that the goal is to quiet your mind. If your brain turns into a chaotic mess the moment you close your eyes, that's not a failure. That's the whole point. Get your free episode guide: https://solvedpodcast.com/meditation/ • Sign up for my newsletter, Your Next Breakthrough. It will help make you a less awful person: https://markmanson.net/breakthrough • Get clarity on what actually matters. Try Purpose, Mark's AI mentor app that learns your patterns, challenges your blind spots, and helps you take action. Get 7 days free at https://www.purpose.app Check out our sponsors:• Factor: Head to https://www.factormeals.com/solved202650off to get 50% off and a free breakfast for a year. • Shopify: Sign up for your $1/month trial at https://www.shopify.com/solved• Waking Up: Get a free 30-day trial and $30 off the annual membership at https://www.wakingup.com/solved Chapters: 8:15 CHAPTER 1: Skeptic Claim #1: Meditation Is Overhyped 22:45 CHAPTER 2: Skeptic Claim #2: "Meditation Isn't for Me" 48:33 CHAPTER 3: Skeptic Claim #3: The New-Agey, "Woo-Woo" Crowd Turns Me Off 1:01:01 CHAPTER 3: A Secular, Grounded Alternative: Meditation Without Metaphysics 1:17:35 CHAPTER 4: Conclusion: What Meditation Really Is Follow Mark Mark’s IG: https://www.instagram.com/markmanson Solved IG: https://www.instagram.com/solvedpodcast/ Twitter: https://x.com/markmanson LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/markmanson/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@IAmMarkManson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Solved. I am Mark Manson, and today we are talking about meditation, and is it actually worth it?
Have you ever had that moment when you're lying in bed at night, brain running like a browser with 47 tabs open, half of them playing audio, and you think to yourself, maybe I should try that meditation thing.
And then somehow that thought alone stresses you out even more?
Here's the thing that nobody tells you about meditation.
The people who swear by it the most are often the worst advertisements for it.
I spent years studying Eastern philosophy, reading every guru I could find, and then slowly realized that most of those gurus were raging alcoholics, serial abusers, and running cult-like cash grabs with fleets of Rolls Royces.
I'm actually not making any of those things up, but we will get into that in a minute.
These were not exactly the poster children for inner peace.
And yet, meditation kept getting sold to us as a magic pill.
Less stress, more focus, emotional healing, spiritual awakening, permanent calm, basically,
everything short of six-pack abs and a winning lottery ticket,
which sucks because the only thing I actually need
are six-pack abs and a winning lottery ticket.
God damn it, meditation.
So here's the thing when you meditate for a while
that you eventually discover.
You don't suck at meditation because something's wrong with you
or you don't have enough willpower or stamina.
You suck at meditation because you've been given
the wrong definition of what good meditation actually is.
You think the goal is to empty your mind
and find some pure, peaceful consciousness
this hiding underneath all the mental clutter,
when the actual point is to see the clutter clearly for the first time
and realize that you were never in control of it in the first place.
Nope.
In fact, it's clutter all the way down.
So in this episode of Solved, we are going to talk about
why the early research on meditation was so wildly overhyped
and what the more careful recent science actually says it can and can't do for you.
We're going to talk about the three specific benefits of meditation
that are genuinely validated,
and why none of them are the ones that you've been promised by all the gurus.
We'll discuss why the most common instruction that people get about meditation,
which is sit quietly and think about nothing,
is actually terrible advice that is pretty much guaranteed to fail.
We'll discuss the invisible reason why so many people resist meditation
that has nothing to do with time, patience, or discipline,
and everything to do with what they're afraid to find out.
We'll get into why the people who meditated for decades
and were supposed to have it all figured out
turned out to be some of the worst human beings imaginable, and what that tells us about what
meditation can and can't do for us. We'll discuss treating meditation as an intervention
versus treating it as a skill, and why confusing those two things is actually responsible for
almost all of the disappointment around it. We'll get into why you're racing chaotic monkey mind
is not the obstacle of meditation. It's actually the first real sign that it's working. We'll
touch on the one form of meditation that most people have never tried that is actually backed by research
requires zero stillness and you can still do it while cleaning your house,
and why the real reason to meditate has nothing to do with happiness, productivity, or stress.
So what if the problem isn't that meditation doesn't work,
but more like you've been trying to use a skill-building practice
as a miracle cure this entire time?
Because once you stop expecting meditation to fix things
and start seeing it for what it actually is,
a process for better understanding your own mind,
It stops feeling like another thing you're failing at.
It stops feeling like spiritual homework.
And it starts feeling like something that might have been worth your time all along.
I am three-time, number one New York Times best-selling author Mark Manson,
and this is Drew Bernie, my co-host, producer, lead researcher,
and the only man to be formally uninvited to two silent meditation retreats.
You get formally uninvited to a lot of things, Drew.
Oh.
Is that how we're starting this?
Oh.
Just with some big ass on.
Oh my God, here we go.
Oh my God.
And this is solved, the most comprehensive podcast in the world where every episode we aim
to solve one burning question in your life once and for all.
It might be useful first for me to just kind of give a two minute summary of my journey
and my experience with meditation.
So I discovered meditation as a teenager.
Like most teenagers do.
I was a weird teenager.
I got really into Eastern spirituality and philosophy.
I started reading a lot of Buddhist texts.
I think in hindsight, as someone who struggled with ADHD,
I found meditation to be very therapeutic or meditative in many ways.
I found it helpful to help me manage my own impulses and attention,
or at least become more aware of them.
So I got really, really into it.
And as somebody who grew up in the Bible Belt,
in a very Christian household, in a very Christian environment,
who was not Christian, discovering Buddhism felt like finding water in a desert.
And it became a big part of my identity when I was in university.
I went to Buddhist centers.
I went on retreats.
I meditated every day for multiple years.
It was a very big part of my life and a very big part of my identity.
And it was very important to me for a long time.
As I got older, I started drifting away from it.
So actually, if you look at my early writing, I talk about,
meditation quite a bit like way back when I started writing online like 2008 through
2012 meditation would come up in a lot of articles and a lot of what I talked
about and then it slowly started disappearing and you you kind of stopped
mentioning it and that is just because in my personal life I started to drift away
from it the older I got the less consistent I was with it the less I felt
cold to do it there are a lot of reasons for that I'm sure we'll talk about
in this episode. And then by the time I got into my 30s, it became a very sporadic practice for me.
It became almost like a, you know, break in case of emergency type situation.
Right. Yeah. So two, three years, don't meditate at all. And then like life goes to shit.
And I'm like, oh, I need to like get back on the mat and start meditating again.
Very much like church for some people. Right. Ironically, yes. Yeah. Right.
So that leads me to today where I'm like, I don't, I like, I've maybe.
meditated, I could probably count on two hands how many times I've meditated in the last five years
and I don't feel particularly compelled to meditate frequently. What's interesting at all that time is
that when I started meditating, so this is the second surprise. When I started meditating, when I was
very into meditation in the 2000s and early 2010s, the early research on meditation was phenomenal.
People were raving about it. Psychologists were extremely excited about it. You started to see it get
integrated in all sorts of therapeutic modalities. People were teaching it everywhere. Interestingly,
in the 15 years since, a lot more data has come in, a lot more research has been done. And it
turns out that the meditation's efficacy as an intervention is spotty. Yes. Let's say. It's
uneven and not so clear cut. One of the reasons I wanted to do this episode this way was because
when I started talking to people about, you know, meditation, do they meditate? What do they think of meditation?
Especially like people on the team, a lot of them were like, I'm not sure I get it, you know?
I was surprised by that. Yeah. I mean, we're in the self-help industry, right? Like, this is a big thing, right? This is a self-improvement podcast. I kind of figured everybody on the team would have at least done it before or at least tried it or aspired to do it. A lot of skepticism. A lot of people in the team were like, yeah, I don't get it. I never understood why. I never liked it.
Yeah. So this is going to be a little bit of a kind of a response to the skeptics of meditation. And you're going to see there's just a lot of nuance. There's kind of three big buckets that I found that people are skeptical around. And we'll kind of go through the finer points of each one of those. And yeah, that's kind of how we're going to approach this. All right. Should we get into it? Let's get into it. Let's do it. All right.
This first bucket of skepticism, I think, you could call it, is that meditation is overhyped.
You already mentioned like that early research that came out.
There was a lot of hype.
There was a lot of hype.
It was like, oh, a study would come out and it was like, oh, my God, it fixed this for this person.
It made them less anxious, less depressed.
It made the like fix their relationships.
Right.
All of these things, right?
All of these claims came as stress relief, productivity enhancement, emotional healing, leadership development, creativity boost, even just like the manifestations and the spiritual awakenings and enlightenment and all these.
It's literally a magic pill.
Yes.
When you say that this one thing fixes everything, the rational response is skepticism there, right?
You would think.
It's funny because I distinctly recall there being mainstream articles back in the 2000s.
I think one of them was literally called meditation, why everyone should do it.
I wrote an article called Why You Should Meditate.
I think of our generation of like that era, 2000s up through like maybe 2012, 2015.
It was just the conventional wisdom.
It's like, this is not just an Eastern spirituality thing.
Everybody should be doing it.
Yeah, everyone should do it and it will fix everything.
Every problem you might have, it can do something for you at least, right?
And there were just common marketing claims like you're going to have, you know,
permanent happiness, permanent calm, enlightenment, confidence.
These aren't really like clinical or medical or even like psychological endpoints.
You can't reliably produce these through standard meditation interventions.
When you really do careful studies and all this, as we'll see, a lot of these claims, yes, they are definitely overhyped.
There's a little bit of a category error going on here because people, it was marketed as a treatment for any life problem.
Everything, basically, right?
But really what the more careful research is kind of shown is that it's more of a skill.
That's a thing that's going to come up a lot.
It's a trainable skill.
And with skills, you know, outcomes are usually very gradual.
They're also very sensitive to like the instruction quality that you get, your teacher or the method or whatever you're using.
It's very sensitive to that. Any skill is highly variable across individuals, right?
Some people are better at it. Some people aren't, some people are naturally good at it. Some people I really have to work at it.
Right.
There's a lot of individual variation around it.
That checks out with my experience. I think one of the reasons I have not felt very motivated to meditate in the last 10 years is I do feel like I gain that skill and I have it.
Right. Like, so for example, in my 20s, the first time I was able to look at one of my emotions and question the validity of it, that was profound. It was very, it was like, oh my God, I've never done this before. I've never actually considered that like I'm being irrational and I can't trust myself. Whereas like, dude, at 40, I do, that's like a daily occurrence where I'm like, I'm probably being irrational right now. I probably shouldn't trust myself so much. So it is, there's a lot of.
stuff that the first time you do it or the first 10 times you do it, it strikes you as like,
oh my God, this is like so huge. This is massive. But once you've learned how to do it, you can kind of
just call it. Like I don't need to go sit on a mat to sit like to really take a moment and think
deeply about my impulses or my thought patterns or, you know, what are my motivations for pursuing
this certain goal? Like are they actually genuine or am I kidding myself? Like those are things
you, you, once you've learned how to do it, you can kind of just summon it at will in any
point. I think the point you're bringing up is going to be an important one that will come up
repeatedly, which is that mindfulness is really the goal here. And meditation is just a tool
for mindfulness, right? Being more mindful. So what you're saying is I've learned how to be
mindful in my life. Right. Throughout like just an ordinary everyday life. That's kind of the goal.
And I mean, I would still say you could probably still get some benefit from meditation. As a skill,
you need to do some maintenance on the skill, right? You still need to practice.
practice it. But yeah, the goal really is mindfulness. As we'll see, meditation is not the only
way to achieve that. Meditation as a skill gives you all these other skills. Once you have those,
you can apply those in your life over and over again. And that's a practice in it of itself, too.
Right. Yeah. Okay. Meditation got more and more introduced to the West. And by the 90s,
2000s, it had kind of reached a bit of a fever pitch at that point. And also at that same time,
like information technology was taking off. And so you got all the market. And so you got all the
marketing hype around it as well. So apps came out or online courses or these retreats where
you could reach people from far-fallen places. And so there was a little bit of a perfect storm
there where the cultural moment hit this technological moment and all of that was amplified as
well. So that's where a lot of the hype came from too. So I agree with everything you just said.
And I think part of the internet, it led the hype into a fever pitch, but I think it ultimately
was part of its undoing as well. I remember there was a point in my 20th.
where I was like reading all these books and and studying all these teachers and gurus and all this
stuff. And, and I sort of realized that like pretty much all of them are just a mess, right?
Like, like, like, Shogromh Tumpa was like a raging alcoholic and physically abusive to his followers.
Alan Watts was an alcoholic. There was a guy named Adida who like sexually abused his followers.
There's Oshow who like took all of his followers money and bought 40 Rolls Royces with it.
Like it just, there's like example after example after example of these like supposedly enlightened gurus who like came to the West to teach meditation and all of the physical and psychological benefits of it.
And then it's like if you look closely at their character and their actions and their behavior, they were fucking terrible people and total scumbags.
And so that it just like for me that just raised a lot of red flags.
I'm like, okay, if the dude who's literally meditating eight hours a day is like stealing people's money and sexually harassing.
women who attends his ashram?
Like, it can't be that great.
It can't be that great.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's not a fix-all for shitty personality.
That's for sure.
Yeah.
I mean, as we'll see.
Yeah.
Shining the light on it through information technology was definitely part of his
downfall as well.
But there's, I think there is a middle ground we can kind of achieve though too.
So, but the science, when they started to do more, they started to do better studies on this.
Definitely, you know, there was early on there were definitely people saying, you know, first
of all the definitions you're using of meditation or mindfulness or whatever, they're,
they're inconsistent, they're weak, they're wishy-washy. You're not using proper controls.
Or, you know, you're comparing somebody to doing nothing when maybe what about comparing
it to, say, therapy or exercise or, you know, all these other types of things. Does it do
any better than that? They weren't doing that. Publication bias, too. There was just a lot of
excitement around it. People, you know, you have a positive finding. It's probably going to get
published, whereas the negative ones weren't. All of these things were going on. And,
Once they started to do better studies, though, there were a few things that came out and were like, okay, yeah, it actually does do some good around certain areas.
Okay.
So legit benefits.
Legit benefits are stress reduction in management, not stress elimination.
It isn't for you of all stress in your life or anything like that.
Basically, though, meditation programs, especially like the meditation-based stress reduction programs that are like specifically for stress reduction, they are typically.
typically it's like an eight-week program though.
It's fairly intense.
Yeah.
It's highly structured.
They have repeatable, I believe John Cabot-Zinn was actually, who was an early proponent
in the west of meditation.
I believe he was very instrumental in developing these programs.
But it's highly structured.
They have like very specific outcomes for them.
And they have careful controls when they've done all of this.
That actually does work.
Stress reduction, stress management.
Again, it doesn't eliminate the stress.
your life's life, but you have reduced reactivity, better physiological recovery too.
You know, we talked in the resilience episode about like heart rate variability and that
kind of stuff.
It definitely helps with that.
So stress reduction, yes, sure.
That can definitely help with that.
Similarly, along those same lines, emotional regulation as well.
It's not like suppression of your emotions, obviously.
It's more about noticing them and uncoupling from them.
You've talked a lot about this.
Yes.
Unfusing from your emotions.
It's, you know, CBT talks about that.
gap between action, reaction, and how, or stimulus in response.
And meditation is definitely a tool that widens that gap in your mind.
Put a little wedge right in there.
You start to see like, oh, I do get to choose how I behave in this situation.
The whole decentering thing around like unfusing from your emotion.
Seeing emotions as experiences rather than like identity, I think, is a real big one.
That was for me anyway.
Yeah.
And this has been replicated over and over again.
in studies.
And then finally,
to like,
attentional control.
So it does,
you know,
we just did this whole thing
on focus.
Right.
And it,
it's not like it gives you
like this laser focus forever.
It basically,
though,
it makes you aware of when your mind is wondering.
When you're messing up,
yeah.
And helps you to reorient back
to whatever you were trying to focus on
or anchor on or whatever it is.
Yeah.
So like meditation is just kind of that.
That is a huge part of the practice.
Oh,
my mind's wondering,
come back to the breath or come back to the bodily sensations
or the mantra.
or whatever I was aiming to do during this meditation session.
Just kind of get you those like reps and then you can apply that to when you're trying to get something done, you know, and focus on something.
There are benefits.
Yes.
And they are validated.
It's just that it's not like this cure-all catch-all practice that you can do and all of a sudden your life is going to be amazing.
Yeah.
Right.
I think most people kind of understand that on some level, but there's still that hype out there.
I think a lot of that is a residue of the religious background of meditation, right?
because it's when it ultimately it is a Buddhist practice.
It is an Eastern spiritual practice.
And when it came over, it was very much marketed as a spiritual practice.
And generally speaking, spiritual practices are, they do kind of promise salvation and a cure-all.
Like that's kind of what, that's their whole thing.
So there just seems to be kind of an awkward transition into the actual psychological literature
where it's like, okay, this is a useful tool.
It's helpful at the margins in a number of different ways.
Some people will probably get a lot of benefit out of it.
A lot of people won't get benefit out of it, like pretty much everything else in psychology.
That sits very awkwardly with the religious and spiritual heritage of the practice.
We'll get a little bit more into the spiritual stuff a little bit later.
But there's a lot of researchers who say that what we should really be treating it like is like weight training or strength training in some way rather than like a treatment.
Okay. So it's, again, it's a skill and it's a practice that you have to kind of keep up on.
There's kind of a dose dependency to it too. You have to be consistent with it. You have to have
good instruction for it, which is why I usually encourage people to either go to like a meditation
center or get an app or, you know, find some sort of structure and don't just jump into it like
that. And like you said too, the person has to fit the practice as well. I think the main framing here
is that like you treat it as a skill, not as like this. It's not a real. It's not a real.
replacement for therapy. It's not a replacement for other healthy behaviors by any means.
It's a skill you can develop and has a very specific way that it can't help you. It's not,
not this magical pill. I will point out that framing it as a skill, I think that, so I agree
with that. But I also see how it derails people. One of my best friends is, is a meditation teacher.
He's been meditating intensely his entire adult life. He goes on month-long retreats. It's like,
It's what he does.
And one of the things that he,
I've heard him say multiple times
is that like the most common objection
that he hears from students
is they say,
oh, I'm not good at this.
And his response is always,
nobody is good at this.
You're not supposed to be good at this.
Like it's not about getting good at,
he,
he's told me a million times.
He's like, dude,
I meditate more than anybody I know.
And he's like,
I sit down and within 10 seconds,
my brain's fucking thinking about my cereal
or like, you know,
what was on TV.
last night, you know, so he said, you never turn that off. He said, what improves is your relationship
with it. All right. That's a good caveat. That's a good framing. And also leads us right into this
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So what I want to do in this section is kind of go through some of these common claims that people
are common objections.
Okay.
That people make.
And then we can kind of, I don't want to say dismantle them because some of them I think are very legit.
The first one that I hear so a lot is just I can't sit still.
All right?
And Mark, as somebody with ADHD, I think you probably relate to this somewhat.
But you meditated for a long time too.
So you figured it out, right?
I went on multiple multi-day retreats.
It's funny because as soon as you said that,
it reminded me actually of a former teacher of mine
who used to always, whenever you said something like that,
whenever you're like, I can't sit still,
he'd always interrupt you and say,
you can, you choose not to.
And it was really fucking annoying.
That's so true.
Because he was right.
Yeah, yeah.
But, I mean, it is a real thing.
Like there are some people who just have a high baseline of arousal
or restlessness, ADHD, ADHD or other anxiety disorders.
It's hard.
intolerance of stillness sometimes too.
It's just like boredom or just sitting there.
It could feel unsafe for some people for sure.
Dude, I will tell you it's...
It's one of the hardest things to do.
Yes.
It's like I did one three-day retreat.
The second day of that retreat is like one of the most difficult days of my entire life.
It was it was torture.
It was absolute torture.
I was physically in pain because when you sit for 14 hours a day and don't move, don't do anything.
Like your body starts crying.
cramping up and things get sore.
I was in physical pain.
It was just mental anguish.
It was just like you're sitting there.
I remember I had like a four or five hour stretch where I had a commercial jingle
stuck in my head.
Oh, no.
And I was like, get out of my fucking head.
Like, for the love of God.
Remember what it was?
Was like, give me a break.
Give me a break.
I would drag me insane.
It was on level with, I don't remember what it was, but it was something like that.
And it was just like, uh, and I'm.
remember we had, everybody at the retreat had an hour a day with the Zen Master, or not an hour,
like half an hour or something like that. And so I remember I just walked in there and I was like,
I have this jinkle in my head, like, please help me get it out. And of course he was like,
he was like, the more you resist it, the more it's going to stay. And I'm like, God damn it.
But that's absolutely true. It's true. The instruction to sit quietly and think about nothing,
that is not meditation. And any, any teacher knows anything is not going to tell you to that.
terrible instruction, especially for beginners.
Yes.
Okay, so usually what you do is you're giving your mind something to do and you're trying to
keep on that.
So what happens on most retreats is that there's an understanding that you need some
variability.
So like what will often happen is that you will go through.
So you'll sit for maybe 45 minutes to an hour.
Obviously that starts to get painful for a lot of people.
So then what they'll do is they'll do walking meditations for like 30 to 45 minutes.
Then you'll come back and sit for another hour.
then you'll do like another walking.
And then on some retreats, what you'll do is there'll be like chores, right?
So it's like you can do some of the food prep or the cleanup or, you know, sweeping the floor.
And the idea is that you're supposed to be mindful as you're doing.
Chop would carry water.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, that's exactly what I was going to say is that there's like meditation can take many forms.
It's not just sitting.
Yes.
And staring at the wall and trying to empty your mind.
That's not what it is necessarily.
That walking meditation, though, is a very well validated, actually, form of meditation.
It's part of that mindfulness-based stress reduction.
Yeah.
They build that into it.
It's part of John Kabat-Zinn helped develop that as well.
And it's like the movement really distributes your attention that way.
So it's not all just like up here in your little head right behind your eyeballs.
Yeah.
I actually like it.
I like it better because it's like you're supposed to focus on your feet and exactly where you place your feet.
Yes.
Yeah.
And you're supposed to feel every part of the floor.
So it's like when your heel touches.
you feel your heel and when the ball of your foot touches, you feel the ball of your foot.
Yeah, it's actually very nice.
Yeah, it's distributed attention, right?
So it's attention on your movement, attention on bodily sensations, on the environment around you too.
That's meditation.
It's just it's mindfulness of being mindful of your environment, right?
Studies on walking meditation, you have improved mood, reduce stress and anxiety, and, yeah, me, get your steps in, right?
As an added bonus, right?
Um, 9,548.
If that works, yeah.
The other thing you said, though, too, like the chores thing, I found this, there's this book by, it's this guy called, named Shokey Matsumoto.
He was his Japanese monk, and it's a monk's guide to cleaning house and mind.
And he actually argued his preferred form of meditation was cleaning.
And if you ever have been to, like, a monastery, I've read anything about monasteries.
Like, cleaning is a huge part of their daily routine.
Like every single day they spend hours cleaning.
And they're supposed to do it very, very mindfully and get it in a meditative state
when they clean.
In his book, he talks about how cleaning is a form of mindfulness because it's a practice.
Yeah.
And you don't see it as a chore necessarily.
And then also like some of the other principles he talks about is like the outer,
outer order supports kind of inner calm or inner clarity at least too.
Like your outer environment often reflects your inner environment.
We talked about this on the focus episode, that there actually is resources.
That shows that a decluttered environment is helpful for focus.
Another benefit of it to doing small tasks with full intention.
Like you were talking about with the walking, like put your heel to toe, heel to toe.
When you're cleaning too, it's not just you're just mindlessly trying to get things in order.
It's like you are consciously these small, tiny little tasks.
He encourages you to pay very, very close attention and do them very, very intentionally.
Respect for everyday objects as temporary companions too.
I kind of like this is a little bit out there a little bit.
But I did like this because, you know, monks, they have very, very few possessions.
And each one of the, I think he spends time in this book going through why he owns everything that he owns.
And it's a very small number of things.
But you have a respect for these objects in your life as kind of these temporary companions.
And it reminds you that everything's temporary and impermanent, right?
And you need to take care of these things.
Then there's the routine aspect to it.
One of the things he talks about to is care over perfection that I really like to.
cleaning. It's about caring for life as it is, not for, it's not self-improvement. It's just,
it's something you just need to do. The whole point, though, is that you don't have to sit in a
room, quiet, staring at the wall. There's lots of different ways to meditate. You can meditate
in a crowd on a crowded bus or in an airport. I've had to do this before because I can just sit
there and it can be very therapeutic. It can. It can absolutely be. This whole stereotype of meditating,
sitting cross-legged on a pillow or whatever.
No. You don't have to do it that way.
To this point, I'll tell you a story.
So the first time I went to India, I went to Bodhaya,
which is supposedly where the tree is that the Buddha sat under
and became enlightened for the first time, the Bodhi tree.
And it's cool. There's like a big temple there now,
and actually a lot of monks do pilgrimages there,
and they'll sleep under the Bodhi tree the way the Buddha did.
So it's just like beautiful, but the town,
is tiny. It's in the middle nowhere. You have to fly. It's kind of like northwest India. So you
fly to this town called Gaia. And then you have to take like, you have to drive a couple hours
out there. And then there's basically just a temple and a, you know, a couple roads. And that's it.
And so I got all the way out there. And I remember I ended up sharing a took took with this
young English guy. And he was so excited to be there. And I was like, oh, cool, are you a Buddhist?
And he was like, no, but I'm really excited to meditate here.
I was like, oh, that's cool.
What's your meditation practice?
And he was like, oh, I've never meditated before.
But I figured how cool would it be to learn how to meditate under the Bodie tree?
And I just looked at him.
I'm like, dude, you realize there's YouTube videos?
Like, you didn't have to come all the way out of here.
It's, it's a, you could have just stayed at home, watched a video, and decided if you liked it first before you.
And gotten the same result out of it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
there's definitely like that elevation of, you know, sacred places and stuff where it's like actually the most sacred of places are the most mundane.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
And I think a big misconception that people have about meditation is that it, it literally can be done anywhere.
Like, you can do it on a bus.
You can do it on a subway.
You can do it in a taxi.
You can do it on an airplane.
Like it is simply the practice of pure awareness and directing your, you're, you're, you're, you're in.
attention towards something and that's it. Yeah. No, it is. Well, okay, that gets us into this next
objection, which is my mind is too busy, but I just don't feel calm. And so it's just not working,
right? Like, I'm trying to meditate. My mind's just racing. It doesn't work. Like, you know,
when actually, like, that observation is usually the first accurate observation that meditation
produces for people. It's like, oh, my mind is fucking crazy. Yes. That is meditation. That's like,
Noticing that is actually probably the first and most important step.
Many of the beginners just they implicitly believe that meditation means having fewer thoughts.
And that's not it.
Yeah.
The misconception is that you're supposed to get rid of that craziness, whereas you're actually supposed to just observe the craziness and detach yourself from it.
It's actually very interesting.
I've seen a lot of people come into meditation groups for the first time.
First time in their life they've meditated.
In Buddhism, it's often called the monkey mind.
Right.
It's like when you sit down and you try to focus on your breath and your brain,
and starts thinking about, you know, like cheesecake and, you know, what your sister texted
you last Wednesday and what flavor chocolate you want to buy on your way home.
Like that's, it's, that's the monkey mind.
It's just like this spontaneous, uncontrollable impulses of thought and whiffs of emotion.
And it's just, it happens to you.
Like, you realize that you're not actually in control of it.
And so often meditation teachers like that they always start out talking about the
monkey mind and if people are new, it's like, you know, observe the monkey mind. You're not,
you're not going to get it to stop. Your, the goal is to just be aware that it's there and
watch it and try to like make peace with it. But it's interesting because a lot of people don't
even get as far as realizing that, like they're so identified with the monkey mind that they don't
realize that it is a monkey mind. Right. Right. So it's like they're so locked into
what cheesecake they like and what flavor chocolate they're going to buy on the way home and what
their sister texted them, that they don't even realize that they're out of control, like that
that's not them, right? It's that that's something you can observe in the first place. So it's like
there's so many layers to this stuff. I think one of the little mini breakthroughs I had with
meditation too, and most people do at some point, is that though like those thoughts you're
having, that racing mind you're having, all of that is really no different than a car passing
in front of you on the street or somebody having a conversation with you and like those things
are just happening to you.
Yeah.
And so yeah, that separation you get between those two things is really the point.
And noticing that, yeah, I do have this monkey mind and it's probably never going to go away.
It won't go away actually.
But just like having a different relationship with it is kind of a goal there.
Yeah.
My first Zen master used to compare it to watching clouds go by.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What are you going to do?
And he said he's like some clouds are stormy and rainy and some clouds are.
beautiful and some clouds look like something and some clouds look like nothing and they all come and go
and he's like it it's silly to get attached to them the other common metaphor too is if you're sitting
under a bridge and the cars are going what are you going to do yeah some of them are big loud
trucks some of them are tiny quiet little EVs right or whatever what are you going to do yeah
it's just and it's useful because it's like sometimes sometimes there is going to be a big rain cloud and a
thunderstorm that's going to come over and you can either get really upset about it or just remember like,
oh, it's just a cloud. It's going to go by. The takeaway here, though, with this is that meditation,
it doesn't reveal this calm mind that you have under all of this clutter. That's not it at all. It reveals
the mind that you actually have. Right. It's like, like people think, oh, what I'm going to do is remove all
of this clutter and I will find this very centered, peaceful mind, pure mind, right? Just pure,
pure consciousness. And I guess that is probably there, sure, but that's not, you're not revealing
the mind that's there under all this clutter. You're revealing that your mind is cluttered. Yeah.
And so if your mind feels too busy, if you don't feel calm during it, yeah, that's kind of the
point, especially early on. Yeah. It's just noticing that. Now, okay, now this next one, this next
objection I have a lot of sympathy for in some ways, I guess, anyway, which is I don't have time.
I don't have the time for it. I'm probably not the best person to argue against this one because, like,
I don't have kids.
I set my own schedule, a flexible schedule that I have.
I have plenty of time where I can fit in things like this throughout my day.
Yeah.
And so I don't struggle with this as much as some people.
Yeah.
Time scarcity is a thing.
It's right.
But the thing I do come back to is, okay, you don't have to sit for 20 minutes.
You don't have to sit for 10 minutes.
What about one minute?
Yeah.
Take one minute.
You can find one minute at any part of your day where you can meditate.
You could be driving and you can meditate.
Like we just said, you can do it anywhere.
Do it while you're doing chores.
You can do it while you're taking a shower.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But, you know, a lot of people, like, a few people on team, I was talking to them,
they're like, well, you know, they say everybody, like my therapist or whoever,
they tell me that first thing in the morning, just get up and do, you know, 10 minutes or whatever.
Like, I wake up out of bed.
I'm like, I'm thinking about 10 million different things.
And I'm, like, checking emails already.
I'm getting ready.
I'm brushing my teeth.
I'm trying to get, yes.
Of course it's hard.
It's hard.
I mean, again, I used to have a teacher who said that anytime you feel like you don't have time to meditate
means that that you really need to meditate.
Right.
Because if your life was organized and you are actually in control of your day, you wouldn't feel like you didn't have time to meditate.
So Zena found a really good Zena on the research team.
She found a really good quote, which is everybody should probably meditate for about 20 minutes a day.
If you're busy, it should be an hour.
Yes.
That was like, yeah, okay.
So if you think you're too busy to meditate, you definitely should be able to.
Yeah, which I think there's, there is wisdom in that.
I definitely sympathize with it.
I'm now speaking as somebody who feels like he doesn't have enough time to meditate each day.
But I get the argument in that like the, if you do start meditating, say 10, 15 minutes a day,
you're probably going to have better awareness.
You're going to be more efficient with your time with everything.
You're going to make better decisions.
you're going to notice when you're when you're wasting time doing something that you don't need to be doing,
that would be the argument for it.
Like if there's like a single mom working two jobs,
multiple kids,
all this craziness going on,
I'm not going to sit here and say,
well,
you just need to meditate.
Like,
I think so much of this comes down to what,
what are your goals?
So I'll say this.
The only times that I feel like I need to meditate is when I'm really stressed and anxious.
You know,
and I just feel overwhelmed.
by my life at that moment.
That is when I do feel like I need to go back to it.
A lot of time these days, what I see a lot is that meditation is kind of prescribed
for these like hardcore, super productive lock-in bro.
We're going to work 12-hour days.
That doesn't feel super necessary to me.
To me, the benefits I've always gotten from meditation have been much more emotional.
I would 100% agree with that.
And actually, like, the impetus for me starting back up last year,
with meditation was very much around that. I was just like a bit emotionally disregulated. And I was like,
oh, okay, I need to like kind of chill. Chill. Yeah. Get a hold of myself. Right. Right.
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So I'll give you one more objection here. It's kind of a little bit of a bonus
objection because I actually don't think people actually say this out loud. Okay. But it's an objection,
which is if this works, I'm going to have to change some things. Right? Increased awareness around
things can be very, very uncomfortable, right? And so first of all, okay, yeah, oh, I got this monkey
mind. It's pretty crazy. All right. Once you get past that, then you start realizing, oh,
maybe I'm not really super aligned with my values right now in my job or my relationships or
unhealthy coping habits that I have. Yeah. This is a little bit more subtle. Like I said,
nobody actually says this, I think, but I think there's this little bit of a subconscious fear of it.
I think this is a resistance that people have towards a lot of things. Yes. I think a lot of
people don't go to therapy.
Change in general.
Because of this.
I think a lot of people don't go to marriage counseling because of this.
I don't want to know what thoughts are in there.
People don't journal because of this, right?
Because it's like, I'd rather be unaware of what's going on.
If this is the case, I mean, I'm not sure I can help you with that necessarily.
But I think it's a good thing to be aware of is like, where are you, if you have this
kind of like just vague resistance to it, that could be it.
And that might be worth something examining as well.
I think it's a very different statement.
And again, this could be true for almost any intervention.
But I'll say it specifically for meditation.
If I meet somebody who's never meditated in their life and they're like,
not worth the trouble, I don't give that a lot of credit.
Whereas if I meet somebody who has meditated quite a bit, who's tried it,
who's taken, like, gone the classes, has downloaded an app or something.
and maybe they've put in a good 10, 20 sessions.
And then they're like, doesn't seem worth it for me.
I give that a lot of credit.
You know, I'm like, okay, people know themselves.
They know what works for them.
They know how their particular brain works
and what seems to help them.
And I'm under no illusion.
Like I said, these days, I'm under no illusions
that meditation is a great solution for everybody.
I think it's one of many tools.
And I think for some people,
it's a very high leverage tool, and I think for other people it's a very low leverage tool.
But yeah, it's kind of like people who have never gone the therapy who are like,
what's the point of therapy?
Right.
It's like, well, you should go before you make that decision.
Yes, right.
And I think it's the same with meditation.
Like you should at least do it before you discount it and decide it's not worth the time or effort.
Yeah, no, for sure.
And all those objections I just went over.
I mean, they're common objections.
They're ones, I think, that have a, there's a rebuttal to them.
Yeah.
There's a good case to be made against them.
But that does bring us to, there are probably some people, like you just mentioned, maybe they shouldn't be meditating.
There's a few things.
Some newer research has come out that actually meditation can in some cases, a few cases, but in some cases can be harmful.
It can increase anxiety more.
It can make you ruminate more.
There's, you know, certain people, people who already have a calm demeanor, you know, and are good with solitude and introspect.
yeah, okay, you're pretty prime for meditation, and it's probably you're going to get something
out of it and you're going to enjoy it probably too. On the other hand, you know, people have
experienced, especially people who have experienced like trauma in their past, I would tread
very carefully around this. Okay. Because again, that cold like sitting in silence, that I think
for some people, your mind is probably going to go straight to a lot of that trauma response
that you have where there's conscious or just like a trauma response that you have in your body.
into. There's research to suggest that this can lead to some dysregulation, even dissociation
at some point, right, or even re-experiencing some of that trauma. So if you do have a history
of trauma, I would say, and you want to do it, and you still want to do meditation. Okay, so maybe
you just don't. But if that's the case, it needs to be supervised and you need to be highly structured.
And you need to go to somebody who knows what the hell they're doing. Not just, don't just hop on
YouTube and find like, oh, here's a trauma meditation. Don't do that. Yeah, yeah. This needs to be
supervised and it needs to be highly structured if you're going to do it at all. Did you find any
numbers around like what percentage of people have some sort of negative reaction or? Because I've seen,
I've seen that this is something that is becoming more noted. But I haven't seen like.
I haven't seen any reliable numbers come up. But they're like there's definitely in the more recent
responses and critiques of the meditation of the past meditation research, there's been several
researchers that have pointed out. They're like, you guys are underreporting the negative effects
on this for sure. So we don't actually know exactly what the percentages are. Yeah. But it's definitely
being underreported. There's some interesting, I mean, if you Google around, there's some
interesting substacks and articles that have been written by people who found meditation to actually
be very harmful to them. Yeah. Some interesting accounts out there. So they're definitely
out there, they definitely do exist. It seems like it's a very small minority of people, but
yes, yeah. I think it is. But yeah, anybody with like a trauma background necessarily if you're
high in anxiety too, and especially about anxiety disorder, like generalized anxiety or even
OCD. While, yes, you know, meditation can help with those things. Again, that needs to be supervised
and highly structured too. Probably depends on the person.
I think that's a big point we need to drive home too, is just that person practice.
fit. It has to be there. And especially in these cases where you're dealing with mental health
issues. Well, it's funny because I don't think there's anything, I don't think there's any
intervention that is other than maybe exercise. Right. That is, that is, that is just universally
positive. I think almost everything, like, because even therapy, one of the things that
never gets broadcast about therapy is that five to 10 percent of people who go to therapy actually
report feeling worse. Right. Yeah. And it's, so there really is nothing that is,
that works for everybody.
I would guess that meditation is probably about the same
in 5% of people.
They could actively make them worse.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Which obviously, if it does, stop doing it.
Obviously, right, right.
Okay, so that's it for that bucket of, you know, the whole, it's not for me.
Yeah.
Okay.
So again, some people, it's not for them.
That's true.
I think, though, finding ways to be more mindful in your life, I think that's probably just about
for everybody.
whether that's through meditation or not,
that you can decide for yourself.
I just feel like there's...
So one of the things that is unique about meditation
is that it's so easy to try.
It doesn't cost anything.
Right, right.
The downsides are really...
Right.
It takes five, ten minutes to give it a whirl, right?
Like you can...
There's so little upfront cost,
or there's so little barrier.
It's not like therapy where it's...
You've got to spend time finding a therapist
and it costs hundreds of dollars and you need health insurance and you need all this shit.
Like meditation, like you can literally just get online and find, you know, some audios or like an old
Alan Watts meditation or something.
Like, there's so much stuff out there.
No, for sure.
For sure.
Yeah.
I'm biased.
I think people should absolutely try it out.
Like, again, though, find the fit that it's for you.
If it's walking meditation or cleaning or whatever it is.
And there's so many different styles.
We're not going to go through all the styles of meditation.
I'm just partial to kind of like Zen and mindfulness.
meditation, but, you know, there's lots of different stuff.
Compassion, caring and compassion type stuff.
Many, many different.
Mantras, there's chance, there's, yeah.
So yeah, give it a try.
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Okay, so this last bucket of objections that we'll go over.
This gets into one of your favorite topics, Mark, I think.
I don't know.
The woo-woo, new-agey, pseudo-religious.
I'm not into that whole thing, which I totally get that.
And there is this whole.
Totally fair.
Yes, very, very fair.
There's this whole packaging, at least in,
one wing of meditation where, like you mentioned, it came out of a lot of religious traditions,
so there's a lot of spirituality tied to it.
Yeah.
And in the modern age where, you know, kind of this new age or new age adjacent at least
kind of mindsets grab onto something, then they take it maybe a little too far.
So like some of the claims that come out of it, you know, meditation helps you tap into this
universal energy, whatever that means, right?
It's very vague, of course.
Chakras are big, right?
and they treat them as like a literal anatomical or neurological phenomenon.
There's all these enlightenment and narratives that come around it.
Like if you meditate, you can become enlightened.
And that's always kind of a vague concept, a cosmic consciousness that you're tapping into.
All of these types of things, right?
That really turned skeptical people off.
You know, especially if you're kind of like a more scientifically minded person, you'll point out,
hey, these claims aren't falsifiable.
You can't prove these right or wrong.
You're presenting these like with chakras, you're presenting these like medical level advice
or evidence and it's not.
There is just a general blurring
of like empirical fact with subjective
experience a lot of times, which I think that's
a valid criticism.
It is, it's an interesting
confluence of
different philosophical
schools. So
it's interesting, if you look at the modern
self-help movement, where these
ideas originated
or like the New Age movement.
These things, these ideas about
manifesting your future and the
universe and a universal energy and a cosmic consciousness that we're all tapping into.
A lot of this traces back to early 19th century America.
There was a group of philosophers loosely known as the transcendentalist.
The most prominent and probably respectable one was Emerson, but there was a whole group
of them in the Northeast United States in the 1800s.
And it kind of became popularized during the time to the point that they were traveling around
and giving lectures.
and it kind of became like a whole movement of manifesting your future
and asking the universe.
They probably didn't use this exact language at the time,
but it eventually transformed into a very populous version
of transcendentalism known as New Thought.
And New Thought in the 1900s was just very much
what we would recognize is classic New Age self-help today.
In fact, the genre self-help came from a book
in I believe it was 1849 called self-help. This strain of thought has been, it's been around
for centuries at this point. And throughout American history, it keeps getting re-adopted and
repackaged for the next generation in a new form. So in the early 20th century, there was a very
popular book called As Man Thinketh, which was repackaged the same ideas for the new century.
And then you get into the 1920s and the Great Depression, and you get Dale Carnegie and Napoleon Hill.
And then by the 1950s, you get the power of positive thinking. And it's
just like on and on and on up until 2000 you get the secret and it's just like this lineage of
the same ideas being repackaged into new books and new formats and new seminars over and over
and over again and it's funny because like the the strand the DNA of this school of thought
is kind of this unfalsifiable lofty generic we are one with everything and uh and you we've lost touch
with our nature, the natural order,
and we need to do certain practices
to get back in touch with our nature.
And if we do that,
then we'll be really happy and get rich
and everything will be great.
It's interesting seeing the Eastern philosophy
that arrived in the 1960s and 70s
because there are aspects of Buddhism and yoga,
which is where the chakras come from,
that cohere perfectly with new thought
or new age thinking, right?
It's, you know, Buddhist philosophy is very explicit of like the self does not exist, that we are part of this kind of infinite nothingness.
In Buddhist philosophy, it's there's, it's emptiness, but it is kind of this infinite oceanic existence that we all kind of float in in various ways and forms.
There is this idea of kind of the shedding of self, the return to your true nature, the remove, you.
of illusions and attachments and of course the the power of thought the power of focused attention
and the power of directing that focused attention towards specific things and the the repercussions
that that has in your life and so what you've seen is that you've seen a lot of this eastern
spirituality and eastern thought just get merged and integrated into new age thinking wholesale
like there's like nobody even batted an eye they're like oh yeah yeah yeah
The universe wants you to be this way, so yeah, you should meditate.
And now they'll help reveal your true self and shed your ego, and then you'll be able to manifest your true nature that much sooner.
And it's kind of like it just fits in, slots in nicely with kind of the gobbledygook that gets repeated often.
It's stuff that feels good.
I think meditation slots in nicely too because it is, we talked just a few minutes ago, about how you and I, the primary value that we,
find in meditation is very much an emotional one, right? It helps us regulate our emotions. It
de-stresses us. It calms us. I think a lot of new age self-help is really just that. It's kind of
this elaborate intellectual structure that's not actually very coherent, but it just, it's coherent
enough to get you to do certain things or think about certain things that calms you down.
And so it's really just like an elaborate cope for an anxious or overwhelmed
existence. Well, so, okay, what's the, what's the harm in it then, Mark? If that's what it's,
we come back to this. Okay. So much. Okay. Yeah. What's, what's the harm in it if, if that's
doing. So how you get there? Well, what, where I was going with this is that I think, I think
meditation is probably being unfairly implicated in a lot of the, the same woo-woo nonsense that,
that we often stick our nose up at on this podcast and it make fun of. Sure, it's been adopted by
of these people. And yeah, it does fit quite nicely into their framework or understanding of the world.
Okay. Yeah. But it didn't come from the same place. Like meditation actually has a lineage going back
3,000 years. Right. Right. And it actually has a very deep spiritual practice that has existed for
a very long time. And there are real phenomenological and psychological implications and experiences
that come with that spiritual practice.
So all this is the say is that I don't think people,
I get the aversion, but I don't think people are being fair to meditation
if they associate this with just more woo-woo stuff.
Right.
It's guilty by association at this point.
It is.
Okay.
Yeah.
That's definitely where I land on it.
Again, I think we have a category problem here, right?
Which is, you know, meditation is often framed as like this pipeline to some cosmic
order that we can tap into or whatever.
it is when really, you know, if you look at it from a more empirical lens, it's just, it's
attention training. It's metacognitive awareness and skill building. It's emotional regulation like we
talked about. That's what it is. And you don't have to complicate it any more than that.
Yes. And well, I'll say this too. A lot of the quote unquote spiritual woo-woo stuff,
I actually think Buddhism is a more proper explanation for what they're trying to get at.
So I'll just give you a quick example or a quick primer.
Like in Buddhist thought, the whole reason you meditate is to remove the illusion of self,
is to come to the realization that what you understand as Drew is just this completely made up arbitrary definition that you have cobbled together over 40 years of life experience.
And the same way you cobbled it together, you can uncobble it.
and recobble it however you want.
But the point that Buddhism makes is that however you choose to cobble that definition of self together,
it is going to cause suffering in whatever way.
Right.
So if you redefine yourself in such a way, if you meditate enough and you look at your thoughts and feelings and associations in Buddhism,
it's often translated as attachment.
For me, attachment, I think, is not a perfect English translation.
and my observation is that it seems to confuse people more than it actually helps them.
To me, a more accurate way of describing it is an identification.
It's if you're angry, anger is not necessarily a problem.
The problem is when you identify with your anger and you decide that that is like actually representative of who you are.
And you see no separation between yourself and the anger.
It's that there's a lack of that gap that we spoke about.
or, you know, if I define myself as a podcaster, you know, like it's, there needs to be some
sort of awareness that these, these identity markers are arbitrary and made up and selected,
and I am opting into identifying with them or I can also opt out of identifying with them.
And the point that Buddhism makes is that the more stuff you opt into identifying with,
the more you're going to cause yourself to suffer.
And so it's by holding all of these experiences,
loosely in understanding that they're all transitory and that they're all arbitrary and they
all both good and bad don't necessarily signify anything about who you are you're able to
relieve yourself of of unnecessary suffering in the world there's a lot of real value in that
that's a deep spiritual thing you just said without being like supernatural going into the supernatural
or at no point that I described the universe or energy or uh it's a
incredibly practical, but it's incredibly spiritual.
Cosmic consciousness, right?
And part of that disidentification with everything is when you start, is when that dissolution of identity begins to happen.
What happens is that you actually, paradoxically, you start to feel very one with everything, right?
Because it turns out that by identifying with a certain experience or emotion or trait or aspect of yourself, you're actually very much limiting your experience.
right? Like if I decide that the most important part of my identity is being a podcaster,
everything I experience in my life is going to be about podcasting. I'm going to see everything in
terms of podcasting. I'm going to feel everything in terms of podcasting. I'm going to feel
threatened in terms of my ability to podcast or not. Whereas when you let go and loosen up and
you disidentify with everything, you actually, it actually frees you to experience everything more
fully. And so what you end up with is kind of this, the boundaries between yourself and the universe,
for lack of a better term, or reality existence, starts to dissolve and get more faint. And so
people who have meditated extremely intensely, you also see this happen a lot with people who take
a lot of psychedelics. There is an ego dissolution that begins to happen. And you feel like the
individual self or the consciousness that is you is no longer limited to your skull and it is now
like pervades anything and everything that you're experiencing. So I can see why that would be
called the cosmic consciousness, right? And so there's like there is a real phenomenon that that
idea comes from. It just tends to get very butchered. Yeah, the interpretation can can really be
misleading there. Yeah. I think that the John Caput-Zinn came up with the definition
which is something along the lines of what meditation actually is,
which I think fits in really well here,
which is paying attention on purpose in the present moment,
non-judgmentally.
I like that.
And so, like, again, all of those things can be very,
I guess, for lack of a better word,
spiritual in their nature without being,
without appealing to supernatural forces or overly cosmic explanations of things.
Yeah.
There doesn't have to be these spiritual claims.
It doesn't have to be these belief systems.
It's more like an instruction manual when you look at it like that.
And yet that's still very profound and very spiritual at the same time.
But even when you're sitting here explaining like, oh, you're becoming one with the universe or reality or whatever it is,
that has that hint of kind of like this supernatural, you know, woo woo, new and G type thing that will still even turn people off.
But I think it's the definition of that word spiritual that you need to also hang on to very loosely as well.
Right. Well, and this is the challenge of this is that because if you think about it, the act of trying to put word, like what are words, right?
Words are identifiers, right? Like you're taking some arbitrary concept or experience and you're putting a boundary around it and you are like labeling that thing.
And so as soon as you do that, that is completely antithetical to what, you know, like a deep Eastern spiritual practice is trying to get you to do.
So by its very nature, these experiences defy words because words are exactly contrary to what the experience is.
So as soon as you say like something like cosmic consciousness or one with everything, ironically, that's a very limiting way to describe it because it doesn't, it's, you're still putting a boundary around.
it and putting a label on top of it and saying,
see this thing that I'm holding in front of me,
this is what that is.
It defies labeling, it defies identification,
it defies boundary, which is paradoxical.
Ken Wilbur used to call it non-dualism,
which is a fun little term to think about.
He called what non-dualism?
It's non-dualism.
So it's like a non-dual consciousness.
Oh, okay, okay.
So it's the lack of division.
If you ask Freud about meditation, I imagine what he would say is that you're exercising your super ego.
Like the super ego in Freud's framework, you've got the id, which is all the emotions and impulses, you're unconscious.
You have the ego, which is your identity, like how you define yourself.
And then you have the super ego, which is kind of observing your ego and I guess tries to observe your id, but can't really see it.
I think what Freud would say is that you're exercising your super ego.
you're training the observer inside your own mind to get a more accurate picture of
your ego, who you are, and then also like how it's responding to your id, your impulses and
emotions and desires and whatnot. The better your understanding of your ego, the more
adaptable that ego becomes and probably the healthier you become. That would probably be
the Freudian explanation. But the funny thing is like when Freud talked about spiritual
experiences, he actually saw it as like an infantile regression. Like a, like when the ego
dissolves, you fall back into your id, which is where you were when you were like a child.
And so your pure impulse and your pure lack of differentiation and your pure lack of identity.
Ken Wilbur came along and he made the astute observation.
He said it's not infantile regression.
He said that's more like what this association would be.
The spiritual experience of a non-dual awareness is actually you don't lose the ego.
You transcend and include the ego.
So it's like when you're having this non-dual awareness, you're still aware that this thing that you know as Drew exists, but you're just not attached to it.
You're like, oh, cool.
It's just another thing in the room that you can observe and play with.
But you're not identified with it.
You're not identified with it.
You're not attached to it.
Okay.
Yeah, we talked a little bit about that in the ego episode, I guess too, where the point wasn't necessarily to get rid of your ego.
Yes.
It was to have a healthy sense of ego and know when it's online.
what it's doing. Yeah. Yeah. And then the spiritual practice is to transcend the ego,
but not eliminate it. Okay. Okay. Interesting. Okay. For all the skeptics who do want to stay
away from that, the whole overly spiritual, I guess, or overly supernatural side of things.
I mean, if you think about it, like your mind really is, it's just constantly generating
bullshit. Bullshit. Thoughts. You call it thought. I call it bullshit.
thoughts, predictions, interpretations, simulations, right?
I always say our brains are big comparison machines.
We're always generating these comparisons.
Really what meditation boils down to is that noticing of those thoughts, interpretations,
bullshit, redirecting that attention, being able to redirect it,
and as you just pointed out, disidentifying from all of that, too.
That's what it calms down to.
That can be a very deeply spiritual thing for someone without getting into all of the
problematic supernatural takes on it too. I think a nice way to differentiate. You can you can
experience meditation in both ways. There's a casual version of meditation, which is is like almost
like a hygienic practice, right? Like it's just mental hygiene. Right. Lifting weights, yeah.
And then there's a hardcore approach to meditation, which is really treating it. You can call it
spiritual. You could you could call it just like deep identity work, like deeply therapeutic. But I mean,
If you go super hard on meditation for a long period of time,
you will start having very interesting experiences and observations
around your ego and your identity and who you are
and what you feel and what matters and what doesn't matter.
That stuff is down there.
That isn't to say everybody should go there,
and it's also not to say that's the only way to get there.
Gotcha, okay.
Yeah, I would say I'm much more on the hygienic side
of how I use it anyway.
Yeah.
Maybe at some point I'll get way more deeper into it.
I don't know, but yeah, so far the hygienic side.
You can still get a lot of value out of it, and it still feels even spiritual to some degree.
Yeah.
The discipline part of it actually is very spiritual.
We've discovered, okay, there's kind of two ways to approach it.
There's this ultra-new-a-g-woo way to do it, or you can be a little more of an empiricist around it, and there's still a spiritual side to it, sure.
However, okay, as you've noted, as we've noted several times already, meditation came out of a lot of ancient spiritual traditions, a lot of ancient religious.
too. So are we missing something when we separate it from that? Like are we are we when we
divest it from that when we when we when we separate the two out? Because I there's there's part of me
that sees you know when you do that then you can run a corporate retreat on meditation. Right.
And you can have calm, good little well-behaved employees now right. Right. Okay. Yeah. Or you know
you can get you can go all sorts of ways with it at that point. There's people who will argue when it
doesn't have that kind of moral and ethical backbone attached to it, that you can start running
into those sorts of problems where it can be used for the wrong reasons or become a caricature
of itself. I would say it's not just the moral backbone. It's the time horizon as well.
So I have multiple friends who are very serious Buddhists. And they measure.
the success of their meditation practice in decades, right? Like, you and I measure the success of our
meditation practice in, like, minutes. Right. Yeah. Well, yeah. Was that good or bad what I just did?
Did I do it this week or not, right? Like, that's pretty much where I'm at these days. Right.
I don't know why I say it's more hygienic for me, but yeah. Right. Like, when I talked, when I talked to
my very serious Buddhist friends, like, it's, you know, one of my friends just got a new teacher.
And it was a very big deal for him. And he was telling me, he was like, yeah, I just felt like
after eight years with my last teacher, like I wasn't really progressing anymore.
And I felt like it was time to kind of move on and try something different.
Nobody talks about meditation in that way.
Like everything you just described about corporate retreats and like morning routines and everything.
Like it just, it seems almost a little pedantic.
I think there's something about the long term commitment of the practice that is,
it might be one of those things where it's like it's, it's less the practice.
itself and it's more just the fact that some people are committed over a long period of time
to a single thing that is relatively healthy, right?
And this kind of bleeds into like, we keep teasing the audience that we're going to do
an episode on religion at some point.
This kind of, this kind of, I'm, by the way, I'm shocked how many people write in and say
that they want it.
But this kind of people on the team too are like, yes, go for it.
I'm like, uh, I don't know.
I kind of like to live for a little bit longer.
This kind of bleeds a little bit over into just some of my perspectives on religion,
like what the value in religion is.
And I think a lot of the value is just you have people who have committed their lives
to something that they feel is incredibly meaningful.
And it happens to also be something that has some psychological and physical health benefits.
Like in the purpose episode, we talked about how it's almost secondary of what you commit to
versus just the fact that you have something.
have some lifelong commitment to something.
And I do think the value of religion,
a lot of the value of religion falls under that umbrella.
And I imagine a long-term meditation practice does too.
It's funny too.
This is a question for you.
But when I think about everybody I know who meditates or has meditated,
all of the casual people who've meditated here and there,
like most of them will say some good things,
but most of them don't keep up with it.
it's not a regular part of their life.
It comes and goes.
It's a habit that they gain and lose.
And most of them, if you talk to them about it, it's like, yeah, it was very helpful.
Or like, yeah, I was able to focus better.
Or like, I went through a tough time in my life and meditation was, yeah, it was useful.
Whereas when you talk to people who are like actually Buddhist and actually in it, it's everything for them, right?
It's like talking to a very devout Christian about church.
Yeah, or prayer.
Or prayer.
Yeah.
Like to them, it's almost like unfathomable that they don't do it.
Yeah.
I mean, I don't know where I land on that, I guess.
But that does make sense to me where if you're attaching it to like a, you're attaching
a practice to a larger system, you're more likely to stick with it for one, but also it
means something completely different to do.
And I think that added context is probably what brings a lot of the benefits.
So this is the other thing.
You get you, you have your woo-woo people who, right, they do their little meditation retreats for a couple times a year.
And they, they go hire some specialty.
Like, I don't want to talk too much shit.
But like I had some friends out here in California who got really excited because they like went and found the quote unquote best meditation teacher who was like $5,000 a day or something ridiculous.
Like come to their hair in their wrong business.
Yeah.
To like come to their house to teach them to meditate for a day.
And they, like, invited me and I was like, absolutely not.
Like, the actual Buddhist teachers,
Muslim don't charge anything.
Yeah.
Most of them don't even broadcast that they're, like,
actual, like, llamas or what their rank is in the Tibetan school
or, like, whatever branch or denomination that they're part of.
And they'll just teach you over Zoom.
Like, if you're serious, they'll teach you over Zoom.
And they won't ask for anything.
So there's, like, there is kind of this hidden third category of, like,
if you do really want to take this seriously as a religious practice,
it's a completely different world in existence.
And I was just going to say, like, one of my friends who's in that world, I mean, I've taught,
he's sat there and excitedly told me about, like, the lineage of his teacher, like,
his teacher's teacher and his teacher's teacher and, like, how it goes back to Tibet
and how, like, how many centuries it goes back and how you can actually trace where it branched off
from, like, one of the monasteries there.
And, like, so it's cool to know that you're part of something that's thousands of years
old and you're like part of the continuation of it. Yeah, yeah. That I totally get and there's like
the tradition and the ritual and everything. I like sometimes I'll get a little bit into that too
just because it's kind of fun. Yeah, I still don't know where I land on that because it does feel,
you know, you can get into the whole cultural appropriation and all that kind of stuff. I do
yoga too, which is another, you know, it's a Hindu, um, a tradition that I do that I'm not.
There's no spiritual. Fuck cultural appropriation. Like seriously, the stupidest fucking concept.
I agree. Stupidest fucking concept. I agree. You know what?
You know what I'm going to do, Drew?
I'm going to go to China and I'm going to start lecturing Chinese people about all the McDonald's
that they have over there.
How dare you steal our culture?
Of course.
The American culture, you're appropriating our culture, our Big Macs.
Right, right.
How dare you, Chinese people.
I think it's perfectly fine to go take the best parts of whatever culture you use them, how you need to use them.
That's great.
Like I said, I go to yoga and I don't attach any sort of like, there are definitely people in
there who are in the New Age woo woo crowd that do this.
But it's more for me.
It's actually meditative too for me.
Well, there's, there's a silent yoga I go to sometimes. It's very meditative. I'm more in the
hygienic crowd like you were talking about. And I still see a lot of benefit from that. So I don't
think, I get it if you're turned off by that, the whole kind of pseudo-religious side of it,
absolutely a valid concern. It doesn't have to be. Yeah. I guess. And that's not a huge breakthrough.
I know, but yeah, that's where I land on. It's, it is one of the few practices that it can meet you
where you are. Yes. Right. So if you just want a little boost in your morning, it can do that.
If you want to give your whole life to a 3,000-year-old lineage of beautiful history and
tradition, you can do that. Yeah. Hey, that's the other thing, though, too. It's been around for so
long. There's something to it. Yeah. At the very least, there's something to it. And not only,
it's not only Eastern religions, too, like actually Christianity actually has a meditative
tradition. Yes. And it too. It just hasn't been highlighted for a few centuries.
But yeah, prayer is a kind of meditation.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This episode is brought to you by waking up.
After everything that we talked about today,
I want to tell you guys about something that Drew and I actually love and use.
It's not one of those ads where I just have talking points in front of me.
Like, this is actually a product that I love.
Drew and I, I can honestly say we're using waking up before it was cool.
The only meditation app that I personally have ever stuck with.
It was created by Sam Harris, the neuroscientist, philosopher, bestselling author,
and genuinely one of the sharpest thinkers on consciousness out there right now.
And you can feel that in the app, just doing the introductory playlist.
You'll be blown away at some of the insights and perspectives that you'll be exposed to.
Now, unlike other meditation apps, this is not just trying to get you to fall asleep or calm the
f*** down.
It's actually trying to change how you relate to your own mind, how you understand yourself,
your identity, in the world you live in.
There's no single way to meditate and waking up understands that,
which if you listen to this episode, you get it.
Waking up has helped me notice things about my own attention and reactivity
that I've been reading about for years and never actually experienced while sitting on the mat.
The guided meditations are great, but it's the lessons and conversations that also just add to all the fun.
Conversations with some of the best meditation teachers in the world,
all free of religious dogma, all designed for people who actually want to understand what they're doing and why.
It's genuinely one of the most valuable things I've added to my life in the last few years,
And I don't say that lightly.
And because we're doing an episode on meditation,
we actually reached out to Waking Up to put something together for you guys.
So I curated a playlist of my favorite waking up content for you to check out and sample.
And they're giving Solved listeners a free 30-day trial
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So if you want to check it out, go to wakingup.com slash solved.
That's wakingup.com slash solved.
So you pose this question at the top.
Yeah. Is it worth the trouble?
Is it worth the trouble? Is meditation worth the trouble?
As with almost every solved episode, the answer is it depends.
Sure. Yeah. Yeah.
It depends what you're looking for, what you need. I think it is worth everybody trying.
Like I really can't think of, if you've never meditated before, I cannot think of a good reason to
not give it a genuine attempt and see what happens.
It's like eating broccoli.
Try it.
Eat your veggies.
Just try it once.
You got to try it.
Sure.
All right.
We'll go with broccoli.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I would absolutely agree with that.
I might go a step further and say I think it is worth the trouble,
especially for the kind of person who's probably listening to this,
who is a little bit skeptical.
either you either never tried it before or I've tried it and had mixed results at best,
get some structure around it, you know, get it, go to an instructor, find the thing that fits for you,
you know, whether it's the walking meditation or sitting in a room by yourself or doing group meditation too.
We didn't really get into that, but going and making a social thing out of it,
cleaning your house, doing mundane things, sure, go for it.
My thing is, though, is that I think people should do it, but probably not for most of the reasons we've even been talking about so far.
Which it's not, it's not a health hack.
Okay.
This is the part that the hype, I think, has done the most damage is that, oh, it's going to fix all these problems.
This is what we opened up with.
It's not a health hack.
Yeah.
It's just, it's not.
There might be some benefits of it, sure.
But it's, you're not, you don't want to do it for those.
I don't think those, that's the primary reason you should be doing.
Something I just thought of, the irony of meditation is that if you're disciplined enough to actually do it regularly, you're probably disciplined enough that you don't need it.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Right.
I mean, I would actually encourage people, too.
If you live in a major city, try to go find a group.
Okay.
Go find a group.
Okay.
Because it is, first of all, it's way easier to do it with other people.
Like, if you're sitting, if you've never meditated, the act of sitting by your city.
in a room for 10 minutes, staring at a wall is, like, it's agonizing. It's really rough.
Yeah. It's, it's, it, a lot of people will not get through it. But if you're in a room full of
other people, and there's kind of a ritual aspect to it, there's, there's, there's like
an agenda and a schedule. And like, you just, you have, you're inside this framework. You know what's
happening and why it's happening. It, it does get a lot easier. And it's nice, because you, there's
just something about, I don't know, you're, you're, you're experiencing meditation in the way
that it was kind of intended to be experienced. Yeah. Yeah, it really never was supposed to be you
sitting in a room alone in silence. Or yeah, unless you're a monk, no. Yeah, right, right.
Like, nobody did that. Right, yeah. Meditation for the people. Yeah. Yeah. For the people.
Yeah. Social meditation. Yes. No. I, and, but I think there is a, I think there needs to be a
clarification around motivation still, though, too. Like I said, not for the health reasons.
Don't do it because somebody said it's going to make you happy either, which I think that is,
that's actually a terrible motivation for it. That could happen. You could be happier because
as a result of a good disciplined meditation practice over time, sure, for me anyway,
what meditation has become is I'm sitting down to like learn about my mind, to know my mind.
There's nothing else to do at that point. To know.
the dark parts of your mind even too.
And to look at some of those shadowy,
ugly parts of yourself.
And look at it, examine them,
see them for what they are.
And importantly,
like you've mentioned over and over,
to not identify necessarily with them.
Right.
But to understand them.
Okay?
It's not about happiness.
I mean,
fuck your happiness at that point, right?
Like, who cares about your happiness
if you're able to train your attention
on itself?
Yeah.
And know what's going on in your mind.
Know your own mind.
Like, to me,
that's the real value of it.
And that's not always easy.
It's not always fun.
It's not always helpful even, too.
Sometimes it, yeah, sometimes it does hurt.
Yeah.
I mean, well, you know what's interesting that relates to all of this?
Yeah.
Is so when we were developing purpose, like I did a lot of research on the meditation
apps.
It's kind of like case study.
And the two biggest ones, most people have heard of, is Calm and Headspace.
Yeah.
And Calm and Headspace very much went after the cat.
usual user. It's like five minutes in the morning, de-stress a little bit, help you relax.
Mass-market, yeah. Mass-market. And it's interesting because both of those companies have
succumbed to massive amounts of churn, like they really have trouble keeping people on their
apps for a long periods of time. And then secondly, both of those companies have pivoted very
hard in the sleep, just because it's probably a better business model. And then interestingly,
the meditation apps that actually do have a lot of traction and do seem to have very
sustainable business models are the smaller, more focused, kind of more intentional apps,
things like waking up or Sam Harris is waking up and then Dan Harris is 10% happier.
Both of those apps have much more of a philosophical, psychological focus in their content.
And they attract more serious meditators who actually do want to do the work that you're talking
about and do want to have a better understanding of their own consciousness and their own
their own identities. Those apps have much smaller user bases, but they're thriving and super profitable.
Yeah. Yeah. And people stick with them more. Yeah. Dan Harris is an interesting case study here. So for people
who don't know, he was a news anchor, ABC news anchor. He had a very public panic attack back in
like the early 2000s, I think, or something like that. And that's what led him to meditation.
It's interesting because he's very nuanced about it as well. It's like, it didn't save my life
and maybe 10% happier.
It's like as a 10% improvement,
which I think that's probably,
that's probably about right for meditation.
Yeah.
And honestly,
I mean,
you and I talk about this all the time,
that like when,
if you are currently struggling,
say with anxiety or depression or whatever else,
there is this internal sense of like,
I need to do a full 180.
I need to completely change.
I need to get rid of everything.
You probably need to be 10% less anxious
or 10% happier.
One of the things I'll end on here anyway
is that what meditation
also does is shows you how little control you have. And that can be terrifying at first,
but it's also that's what gives you agency in a paradoxical way. This is the thing I love about
meditation too is you're just forced to sit with all these paradoxes. And I know you like this too.
Like you're really big into paradoxes. But one of the most useful ones for me anyway that meditation
has showed you is like, oh, you don't like the thoughts, that monkey mind you talked about,
you don't control that thing at all.
No.
You have zero control over that, actually.
Yeah.
And you need to somehow come to grips with that and face that reality at some point.
And only then can you then actually have agency in your life.
Yeah.
So yeah.
I love the fact, and we talked about this before we started, we went on air.
But just the whole question, meditation is it worth it?
Is it worth the trouble?
Yeah.
Like, looking at that title, I was like, what trouble?
What trouble?
Like, literally, meditation is just.
just literally doing nothing.
Like you just,
all you have to do is just stop doing everything you're doing.
How,
why is that so hard?
Why does that feel so difficult?
We go to the gym.
We like obsess over our diets and sleep routines and everything like that.
What is it about just sitting there doing nothing?
You've got 18 tabs open on your browser and you've read half of each of,
like,
but there's just the idea of like sitting quietly for five minutes feels overwhelmingly
difficult.
Like it's such a funny,
such a paradox for you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You work out regularly.
Is it worth the trouble?
Of course it's worth the trouble.
Absolutely it is.
And this is just sitting there doing nothing.
And we have to do a whole like, is it, I don't know, we're even calling it trouble.
Right.
What's the trouble?
What is the trouble?
Yeah.
I think that's a good place to end.
I think if you look at it that way, you're going to come to the conclusion that I've come to, which is, yes, it's worth the trouble.
Yeah.
Give it a shot.
Could be.
All right.
Well, thank you, everybody.
This was another episode of Solved.
please check out the website for free PDF guides on each of the episodes.
That's at SolPodcast.com.
And Drew and I will be back in a couple weeks.
Good.
Let's wrap.
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