TED Talks Daily - A guide to self-love for skeptics | Dan Harris
Episode Date: March 15, 2025Self-love isn’t self-indulgence — it’s the learnable skill of treating yourself with the kindness you'd offer a friend, says mindfulness expert Dan Harris. He shares science-backed tips for impr...oving your relationship with yourself and shows how a little more tenderness can enhance the rest of your life, too. (This live conversation was hosted by TED’s Whitney Pennington Rodgers and was part of a TED Membership event. Visit ted.com/membership to support TED today and join more exclusive events like this one.) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What if everything you thought you knew about your own child was a lie?
Ellen Pompeo and Mark DuPlace star in Good American Family.
In this all-new limited series, a couple adopt what they believe is an 8-year-old girl, but
when concerns soon arise, it forces them to question her actual identity.
Told from multiple perspectives, Good American Family is inspired by the true events behind
the disturbing story of Natalia Grace, and unpacks the case
that spiraled from private suspicion to public spectacle.
Streaming March 19th, only on Disney+.
This episode is sponsored by Cozy.
You know how daunting it can be to transform your living space.
Well, there's this Canadian furniture company called Cozy that's aiming to make that process
a whole lot easier.
Cozy is all about blending style with practicality.
Their furniture is customizable, so people can start small and add pieces as they go.
And get this, they've got this AR feature that lets you see how the furniture looks
in your space before you buy.
Pretty cool, right?
They've also launched the new Mistral outdoor dining
collection. It's designed for creating the ultimate patio setup with powder
coated aluminum furniture that's both durable and easy to store. Cozy offers
free swatches and quick two to five day shipping. Seems like they're really
trying to simplify the whole furniture buying process. So if you are thinking
about giving your space a makeover, you might want to check it out. Transform your living space today with Cozy.
Visit Cozy.ca, spelled C-O-Z-E-Y, to start customizing your furniture.
Support for this show comes from Airbnb.
Last summer my family and I had an amazing Airbnb stay while adventuring in Playa del
Carmen.
It was so much fun to bounce around in ATVs, explore cool caves, and
snorkel in subterranean rivers. Vacations like these are never long
enough, but perhaps I could take advantage of my empty home by hosting it
on Airbnb while I'm away. And then I could use the extra income to stay a few
more days on my next Mexico trip. It seems like a smart thing to do since my
house sits empty while I'm away.
We could zip line into even more cenotes
on our next visit to Mexico.
Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at airbnb.ca slash host.
You're listening to Ted Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity
every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hugh.
The concepts of self-love and self-compassion can feel cliché sometimes, but in today's
world, they may be more necessary than ever.
In a conversation earlier this year, former news anchor turned meditation advocate Dan
Harris sat down with Ted curator Whitney Pennington Rogers to discuss the importance of self-love
and how learning to love ourselves and others better will lead to living better.
Coming up.
Really excited to have him here today.
Please give a warm welcome to Dan Harris.
Thanks for having me. Nice to see you.
Yeah, nice to see you too, Dan.
Thank you so much for being here.
The title of today's event is Self-Love for Skeptics.
For those who follow you,
they'll know that your work is really heavily focused around
this idea of loving better, living better.
I have tons of questions for you around this,
along with our member audience. Thank you to those who have already submitted questions. Please continue to share some of those and we'll add them into the conversation. But before we dive into all of that, I'd love to first hear more about how you do this work and why you do this work. So as I know, did you host the 10% Happier podcast and you wrote a book of the same name for the uninitiated?
What does 10% Happier mean?
And how does this term capture the ethos of the work that you do that you've really dedicated your life to doing?
Well, it kind of started as a joke. I got interested in meditation in the arts a little
bit before it became socially acceptable. It was one of the
few times in my life I've ever been ahead of a trend. And I
was, I think in the summer of 2010, I did my first meditation
retreat. And I came back from that. And one of my friends in
the office was peppering me with very skeptical questions, basically asking, what's the matter with you?
Like, why would you do this? And I was searching for some sort of answer and I said, you know,
it makes me like 10% happier. And I could see that the look on her face transformed
from, you know, something approaching contempt to something approaching interest and I thought okay
Well, that's my schtick and I like it because even though it's a bit tongue-in-cheek
it's a reasonable description of how
Meditation can improve your life and lots of other modalities including therapy and improving your relationships
Getting better sleep, eating well.
There are all these things that we know from the science are good for us, and yet they
can sometimes be very difficult to do.
We'll talk about habit formation for sure.
And they can also sometimes be sold to us as panaceas.
And so one of the things I was trying to do is to counter programming against the sort
of reckless hope and hype
that is spread in the darker precincts of the self-help world.
So yeah, I wanted to make a realistic promise.
And I will add one last thing, which is that like any good investment, the 10% compounds
annually.
That these, you know, the radical good news news here and I spent much of my career
Disseminating bad news as a news anchor
But the radical good news here is that the mind is trainable that many of the
In fact, I would argue that all of the states of mind that we want calm
uh generosity
compassion happiness
generosity, compassion, happiness, equanimity. These are not unalterable factory settings.
They are skills that can be practiced through meditation and other, to use this word again,
other modalities.
So that's the two-minute elevator pitch for 10%.
I mean, the thing I really like about that is that it sort of speaks to this idea of
this, of a journey, right, that you're not going to, there aren't things you instantly
do to become fully happier, that you, it's incremental, it sounds like.
Yeah, I mean, I wish that were the case.
But you know, all these people making millions of dollars selling books promising, you know,
overnight success or whatever, they're the only ones profiting, you know, like and and if if if it was if there was an overnight fix
Why are they writing multiple books, you know, it doesn't make any sense. This is
You know learning how to do life better
Which is another little one of the little phrases that I use a lot to life better learning how to do that is messy
Involves messy marginal improvement over time. So the good news is that you can change. The bad news is that it's difficult. And then the good
news again is that there are ways to make it easier and fun and enjoyable. And all of
this has been studied by people much smarter than me. My job, essentially, one aspect of
my job is to be a kind of gateway drug as a professional
communicator who's looked at the scientific research and has spent a decent amount of
time studying contemplative traditions, especially Buddhism, to be a gateway drug who can sum
up what I've learned and then hopefully direct you deeper to experts who know more than I
do.
Well, to the point of today's conversation, in doing this work and having these conversations
and being this gateway drug, what has the work revealed to you about why self-love is so hard for so many of us? Well, let me just say that even after I got interested in meditation, I was not particularly
interested in love or self-love. You said something at the beginning that you, Dan,
are interested in how to love better. And that is true. And I hear those words and I'm like, does that mean really? I'm like a pretty stereotypical male in many ways.
And so I didn't, when I first started getting interested
in meditation and really the larger Buddhist context
for meditation, you hear a lot about love and compassion.
There's this word loving kindness that gets used a lot.
And I really struggled with
that. It didn't speak to me. However, there are lots of ways in here. One of them is that we tend
to beat ourselves up. I don't know that there's a definitive answer for why we do that, but I think there are
a couple of reasonable theories.
One is that we live in a, you know, I'm not anti-capitalist, although I think there are
some good questions to be raised about capitalism and some of its impacts on the mind But you know in a capitalistic individualistic society
where you know advertising has
You know infiltrated our minds in so many ways
We are kind of sold this idea that we're never gonna be enough
unless we make that next purchase and then you ramp that up through social media where
we are
are innate that up through social media where we are our our innate tendency to compare
ourselves to the people around us and also to experience FOMO when we're not
part of something just just gets you know put on on steroids as a friend of
mine has said it's a kind of ego itching powder and that that all ladders up to a world in which we spend a lot of time, I think probably more in Western
contexts than in Eastern contexts. But we spend a lot of time running ourselves down. And we many of us and myself
included believe that this is necessary in order to get off the couch and get anything done.
However, what the research shows is that that's not true.
Well, and I can't wait to get into what is true and sort of how we can think better about this and approach all of this in a better way. And I think this conversation feels especially timely right now. I sort of suggested at the top that we're, you know, a few weeks away from the beginning
of the year where everyone's really energized and running headfirst towards these goals.
And then also, we are just too shy of the day of love, right, Valentine's Day, where
people are giving lots of thought to these things.
Do you find that during this time of year people maybe struggle more with this idea of self-love
than other parts of the year?
Well, for sure. You know, it's, it's, it's, it has not escaped my attention that we start the year, many of us, with
these lofty ambitions and goals for making all sorts of changes in our lives. And then within weeks, the vast majority of us
fall off the wagon.
And that suggests there's something, you know, a rye here.
And then I would say about Valentine's Day,
you know, I'm all for romantic love.
I'm happily married 17 years.
And I do think it focuses us on a narrow band of love.
You know, in other languages, there are many different words for different kinds of love.
In our language, as I said in my TED Talk, we use the same word to talk about romantic
love, familial love, and our feelings for gluten-free
snickerdoodles. And that creates a lot of confusion when in fact you can taxonomize love into,
as I said, familial love, romantic love, unconditional love for all beings, which is actually
on offer, believe it or not, not just for saints, friendship, self-love.
So, and I think that if we can get a more capacious, nuanced understanding of love,
it will be to our benefit, especially if we can then understand that all these different
types of loves are not, to echo the language I used earlier, not unalterable factory settings,
but in fact skills. That is where things get, I think, really helpful.
And I think for a lot of people, it seems that it makes sense, right? Like loving yourself
is a good place to start for just being a better person. But I imagine that there are barriers that all of us face
and then you maybe see some of the same ones again and again. What would you point to as
some of the big barriers and the big hurdles for people to practice self-love?
Well, first of all, it's just cheesy. Let's just be honest. I mean, if love is the ultimate cliche. Self-love is taking it to the next level.
And I think the concept can seem like the type of thing that's
written into latte foam art and therefore very annoying
to many people.
Or maybe I'm just speaking for myself here.
But that's one of the turnoffs.
The other is that, as I referenced earlier,
I think many of us believe that we
need to kick our own ass
in order to get anything done.
This is a really deeply held belief.
I would say on a deeper level,
and this is probably subconscious,
I've heard it argued by my friend Tara Brock,
who's a great meditation teacher and psychotherapist,
that there's a kind of addiction with self-hatred
and self-loathing and self-criticism
where it gives us a sense of control in a world that can feel out of our control. So that might,
that dynamic might not be conscious one, but it's interesting to investigate whether that's
maybe happening self-subconsciously for you. Well obviously, if you've joined this conversation, you are bought
into some extent and wanting to try this for yourself to try to love yourself better. And you
maybe are that skeptic that we're referencing in the title here. But I imagine that this is very
different for from person to person, we all have different experiences and different goals. And there are probably different ways that you go about loving
yourself. But are there some basic ground rules for self love
that really apply to everyone as a starting point?
Well, let me start with the science. So and this is really
for somebody like me, who's naturally quite skeptical. This
is what kind of gets me in the door.
Self-compassion is a booming field of modern psychological research.
The woman who really pioneered this, her name is Kristin Neff.
She's a researcher at the University of Texas.
And so she to me is a heroic, if not historic, figure,
honestly, for coming up with this concept
and then leading the research into it.
And what it shows is that people who, well,
let me define what it is.
And with my apologies to Kristen,
I might be mangling this, or might be just focusing
on one aspect of it. But I think of self-compassion as the ability to Kristen, you know, I might be mangling this, but or it might be just focusing on
one aspect of it. But I think of self-compassion as the ability to talk to yourself the way
you would talk to a good friend. Most of us use an inner drill sergeant to drive ourselves,
but Kristen would recommend you move to an inner coach. A coach does not let you off
the hook. A coach is not overlooking your mistakes.
He or she just isn't a jerk about it. And that's the difference. So this is not about, you know,
putting yourself in a forever bubble bath or lowering your standards. This is just about a
tweak in your inner posture vis-a-vis yourself. We all have this ability to be a good friend or mentor
to our children, people in our work life, wherever.
We all have this ability.
And what Kristen's research has shown among other things
is that you can channel this inward.
So how would you do that?
So there's a lot to say about this,
but let me just start with what Kristen calls
the mindful self-compassion break.
I call it the NEF three-step, named after her.
She does not co-sign on that nomenclature.
Anyway, there are three steps,. It's super easy to do. The first is just to notice when you're kicking your own ass. That's the first step. Just
the mindfulness of the fact that this is happening. Just catching, oh yeah, I am in a toilet vortex
of self recrimination right now. That's the easy first step. The second is to bear is to bring to mind the fact that you are not alone.
Whatever you're criticizing yourself for. So, for me, it
might be like, I don't like the way I look in the mirror. Um or
I said something stupid last night. Um both of those, I
probably went through both of those cycles today. Uh so, that
kind of thing, you you you notice that that's happening
and then you bring to mind the fact that kind of thing you you you notice that that's happening and then you bring to mind the fact that
Millions of other people are in the same place right now. You are not alone
This is a very common human experience
And then the third step for me is the most important which is at that point you talk to yourself
The way you would talk to a good friend and a couple of ways to supercharge this
one is to put your hand on your heart. And here I will invoke again my conditioning as a straight
white male. Putting my hand on my heart was not something that came easily to me. And
yet there is data to show that in Kristen's term, you are bringing online
what she calls the mammalian care system. You are, we know that appropriate touch with
other people can release all sorts of hormones and do good things for the nervous system.
You can do this with yourself. So that's one you can even hug yourself if you're
If nobody's looking, uh, and uh, and then when you talk to yourself now i'm gonna bring in somebody else's research
There's a there's another great researcher named ethan cross who I have a lot of admiration for he's at the university of michigan
and he's studied internal chatter and ways to
Uh change your own internal chatter and one of the things he's shown is that if you use your own name, he calls this distant self-talk.
If you can use your own name when you're talking to yourself,
it gives the subsequent words more weight because it's almost as if it's coming
from somebody else.
And so for me, I just say, dude, like dude,
I know what you're worried about me.
For example, I get a lot of claustrophobia.
So I worry about if I've got a day in the city
where I'm gonna take a lot of elevators
or I'm gonna be on a plane or something like, dude,
I know you're worried, but like you're good.
You've been through this a million times.
Even if you start to panic,
these are physical sensations you've
Experienced a million times before and you're still alive
You got this
Just a little pep talk like that
If you can get over if this strikes you as cheesy if you can get over yourself to do that
just know that there's a ton of research to show that this is really good for you and that it it
has knock-on effects like it makes you better able to keep your resolutions or to keep up whatever habit
Uh, you're trying to establish at any time at new years or any other time
So we're at we're at as you said before we're at a moment where a lot of people are falling off the wagon with the resolutions
Self-compassion has been shown to be a key
a key variable in success for
habit change.
I think of it as like the uber habit, the upstream habit that makes all of the other
habits possible.
And then the other thing is that self-compassion has been shown to increase your level of compassion
for other people.
And that's meaningful because probably the strongest piece of evidence I've seen in the modern psychological research
Is that the the the most important variable in human flur sorry the most important variable in human flourishing or human happiness?
Is the quality of your relationships? So this is not a self-indulgent thing
It does it improves your ability to relate to other people, which then
redounds to your benefit, which then makes you better with other people. And it's a nice,
as I called it in my TED talk, a cheesy upward spiral that is really impactful.
Hmm. I love all of that. I feel like there's so many, so many things that you just shared there
that I, I know I will be applying right away. I'm sure lots of other folks are resonating with
that. And I want to touch on something you've just shared now, this idea of loving yourself can
enable you to love other people better. And I think when you hear the term self-love, it sort of evokes
the sense that this is a solitary practice, that you're doing this on your own. But is it really,
is there a component of self-love that requires you to have support
from other people and what does that look like?
I'm so glad you pointed this out because earlier you asked me to list some of what I think
the blockers are to self-love and I said something like, well, some people think it's cheesy,
other people really believe they need to kick their own ass, other people might be engaging
in self-criticism as a kind of subconscious
Habit that that keeps them safe in some perverse way, but I another one on that list would be it can be
Understood as a kind of self-indulgence as an egotism and
And I think in some ways in which there are ways in which self-love
And I think in some ways in which there are ways in which self-love
Can be described in our culture right now that that might actually be fairly criticized as as self-indulgence
But I think properly understood
self-love has geopolitical consequences because if you
if your inner weather
if you if your inner weather gets bombier, it will impact the way you treat other people. And that is not nothing. That absolutely is not nothing. We are in an interdependent world.
We've always been in an interdependent world, but more so now arguably than ever. And so
how you treat people in your orbit matters. And then where things, as I said before,
where this gets cool and where there's
a positive boomerang effect here is as your relationships
improve, you will get happier.
This we know.
I mean, I love this study that's ongoing at Harvard,
has been going on for I think like 90 years.
They've been studying multiple generations of people
in the Boston area
to get a sense of like what
leads to a
long and healthy and happy life and the variable that comes screaming out of the data is the quality of your relationships that
Is what keeps you alive and happy and successful why because stress generally is what kills us
and
Positive relationships are the best way to regulate stress and this just makes sense from an evolutionary standpoint
I know like there are a million TED talks that talk about how we're social animals
But there's a reason why this is a trope that we could keep coming back to we evolved in in bands and we
got to the you know to the top of the food chain not because
we have wings or talons or um teeth you know sharp teeth we got there because we have this
unique ability to cooperate and collaborate and communicate and when you take that out
of your repertoire in your life you will suffer for very clear evolutionary reasons. So, you
know, to put it in a more positive term, if you can get better at relating to other people,
it will redound to your benefit in really profound ways. So, no, I do not think self-love
is self-indulgent. And I do think that it is, it absolutely is in an odd way a team
sport. And in your TED talk, you talk about for your own growth,
how you've invited people in your world, both professionally and personally,
to sort of help you in identifying parts of yourself that you can improve upon.
And I'm curious if for others who are really interested in thinking about how they can be critical in ways that are healthy and also
are really committed to this journey of loving themselves. Is it sort of the same, would you
recommend that they take a similar approach, maybe not as intense as the one you chose, but to
call your mom and say, hey, mom, I'm on a journey to be kinder to myself and I need your support.
What does that look like? Okay, yes.
I see where you were going with this.
It's a fair question.
It's a great question.
Just to back up and explain what Whitney's talking about, probably the most embarrassing
thing that's ever happened to me is that I had a, and I talk about this in the TED Talk,
I had a 360 review.
I suspect some of you know what that is, but for those of you who don't, this is a diabolical corporate tool.
Generally, that it's a kind of an anonymous survey that an executive coach or an executive executive coaching firm will swoop into some sort of work context, identify the target of the 360. Usually they've been told they need a 360,
whatever executives in question here.
And then they do an anonymous survey
with that executives or individual contributors,
bosses, peers, and direct reports.
And the idea is to get a kind of holistic sense
of your strengths and weaknesses.
I, because I'm a moron,
although I guess that's not very self-compassionate talk, but I, because I'm a moron, although I guess that's not very self-compassionate
talk, but I, because I have questionable judgment sometimes, did a 360 review that included
many of my colleagues, but also my wife, my brother, and two of my close friends who are
meditation teachers. And this was back in 2018, and the results came back to me in the
form of a 39- page report filled with blind quotes
The first 11 pages were the good stuff the rest of it
the vast majority of it was devoted to the difficult stuff including the fact that I was overwhelmed at work which was making me
Unpleasant I was over scheduling myself. I have a tendency to be stubborn and dismissive
Especially when it comes to junior employees and that that was a surprise to be stubborn and dismissive, especially when it comes to junior employees.
And that was a surprise to me and something I spent a lot of time working on.
And then a sense of that I can be kind of emotionally guarded, hard to read or to understand.
And so I've spent the last six and a half years really working on the deficiencies identified in this report.
So that's the context.
The question that Whitney is getting at is, should we all be asking people in our lives
for feedback?
I mean, my short answer is yes.
And you want to be careful because if the feedback is, many people don't know how to
deliver feedback.
And so it can be very painful
experience so for me what really helped in gathering all of this feedback and incorporating
into my life is that I had a great executive coach whose name is Jerry Colonna just as
a shout out and Jerry working with Jerry and also like my own personal shrink I've had
the great good fortune to be able to have an executive coach and a therapist and I know it not everybody
Has access to these kinds of resources, but that really helped me integrate this quite harsh feedback into my life in positive ways
without that it's possible to kind of coil up into yourself and to
Compartmentalize the feedback or to put it in a drawer or light it on fire
or whatever and maybe not act on it.
So yeah, if you're going to ask for feedback, which I recommend, I think asking for feedback
is really important.
I think it's about picking the right people to ask and seeing if you can get support in
your life that will help you integrate it.
Does that make sense, Whitney?
100%. Yeah, it's, first, it sounds like it's do not try this alone at home.
You know, it's important to sort of do this with some guardrails,
whether that be executive coach or just going into it,
sort of knowing that people can be harsh and preparing yourself for that.
But then also, it seems like it's really important
to get people to kind of buy into the fact
that you're on this journey, that you're in a place
mentally where you're maybe trying to approach yourself
in a different way.
And so I guess that's my next question,
is how do you get people to buy into it
without it sounding to the point you made earlier,
that it may feel woo-woo to people or
sort of out of the realm of like what other people might feel comfortable doing for themselves.
So you're asking like if how can I start integrating self-compassion or self-love into my life
in a way that I'm communicating it clearly to the people around me so that I can have support and buy in?
That's right. Yeah, so that they sort of, I guess, can be there with you as you're through this
journey, acknowledging that you're not going through it in a vacuum and you'll have other
people impacted by it. Well, you know, I'd be curious to see what somebody like Kristin Neff
has to say about this, but just off based on my own experience with this I
Look I think it's possible to identify allies in your world and if that's possible great and I also think everybody's on their own thing and
not everybody is gonna be
excited about your
personal improvement journey to use the language of the day.
And I, it may be the case that for the vast majority of people you don't want
to say anything because they don't necessarily need to know or they may not
care, they may not be supportive. So I would go about this in a reasonably
careful way. I do think this is a team sport, but you want to pick your teammates carefully. And so for example, like
You know one of the one of the pitfalls. I'm hoping to steer people away from here. I guess is
It's possible for people to get interested in any number of self-improvement modalities from meditation to self-compassion to exercise or whatever, and to immediately be a little bit grating
to the people in their world.
There's a great cartoon that ran in the New Yorker
several years ago and has two women having lunch
and one of them says to the other,
I've been gluten-free for a week and I'm already annoying.
And I think that that is a very common thing
and a pitfall into which I have fallen in the past
Like when I first got interested in meditation in 2009
I got quite evangelical about it around the house
Which was not did not go down well with my wife who was in her training as a medical fellow at that time
And it was I just didn't skill and didn't have enough. She didn't have enough time really to meditate. And so I didn't skillfully introduce the notion.
And so there's a, there's a way in which
if you've got some big personal project you're on,
yes, it's great.
And I think crucial to have allies,
either people you're paying like therapists
or people you really trust in your world.
And I think you want to avoid advertising it
to absolutely everybody.
That is totally fair.
And I, yes, I love the cartoon you shared,
which I feel like perfectly illustrates
what you're saying here.
Well, I want to bring in some of our member questions
because we have a ton and people are really excited
by what you're sharing here, Dan.
So there's one here that was shared by both
Annika B. and Prince Kumar, which great, great name, by the way, where they asked, Can you love yourself too
much, where it turns into being selfish instead of stable and agreeable?
I just don't think that's love. Maybe it's a kind of self obsession.ession If in some cases might be pathological and somebody's on the narcissism spectrum, but I think just a pro an understanding of
Love just this is my opinion
Is is not one where real love doesn't
Manifest in an overlooking of a whitewashing of your shortcomings because that's not good for you.
So if you're talking about a self-love where a person is induced in themselves a sense
of denial about areas for potential growth, that to me doesn't feel like real love. And also if it's if if it's a kind of self love, where you're telling yourself that you should
I don't think that's real love either because as we established
The most important variable probably in human flourishing is the quality of your relationships and that stance would damage your relationship So it ultimately wouldn't be in your best interest. So yes, I think it's possible for there be
misfirings and misapplications of this notion of self-love or self-compassion and
We're all gonna screw it up and and we're all gonna this isn't
Generally speaking. This is there's a just a step back for a second. There was a great tweet a couple of years ago
By a Zen master named Roshi Joan Halifax who I'm an admirer of and it had this
very squiggly line and then the caption was the path.
And I love that because this is, there isn't,
it's not like some escalator that goes on a glide path
toward nirvana all the time.
It just, it's much bumpier.
And so yes, I think if you're interested
in self-compassion or self-love,
or frankly anything like meditation or therapy,
you're gonna over-correct sometimes,
you're gonna miss the mark sometimes and so yes
there may be times where you think you're engaging in self-compassion or self-love and it actually
Slips over into self-indulgence and hopefully you have people in your world who can say whoa
That wasn't cool
And and you should hopefully I think a self-compassionate stance
Would allow you to take on board that criticism without
catastrophizing without slipping over into shame which I kind of think of as a
cycle psychic
Constipation where like nothing can happen when you're in this shame state and you're making it all about what a horrible person you are
instead of the self-compass self compassionate stance would which would view difficult feedback as just another opportunity to learn and grow.
this place where this you know if you're in this sort of shame state Jonathan Arthur refers to this as a maybe hitting rock bottom and maybe your development isn't going as as you expect.
Are there ways you sort of adjust the advice that you're giving when you're in that very
in a very dark place potentially like how do you overcome those moments?
Look I think this is where we reach the the limits of my expertise in that I'm not a mental health
professional.
What I would recommend, and just based on my own experience and my own intuition here,
is that if you're in a true rock bottom scenario, you should seek professional guidance if that
is accessible to you. I think of self-compassion as good for like the worried well, the people
who are not necessarily in an acute crisis. I think it can be very helpful if you're in an acute
crisis as well, but I would also want in the mix there for you to have professional help and not just be trying to freelance and apply
these concepts without oversight.
Because if you're in an acute mental health crisis or a life crisis, there may be other
interventions that are also needed like weekly therapy, perhaps even medication.
And so I would see this as a Piece of the puzzle and generally I mean that just kind of ladders up to a larger point
Which is that you know as we discussed at the beginning? I don't think there are silver bullets
I I think of self-compassion or self-love as
one
aspect of
Healthy life one lever you can pull that will
Improve your life, but it's one of many
And I so I to get to
Fundamentalist about any one thing like meditation or nature or relationships or exercise or sleep is to is to miss the fact that
These are these these are all
aspects of personal development that kind of work in concert.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, I think that makes perfect sense. And it feels like everyone should approach this and sort of assessing for themselves what makes the most sense. And only you know what you personally need. There's no sort of blanket way to approach this and taking things, some things from here and
some things from there, I feel like it's the best way to go. Well, I think and speaking more to this
moment, we talked about being a few weeks removed from the beginning of the year and also Valentine's
Day being around the corner. And obviously, we've had a very eventful few weeks in the news,
and that whether there are things that
make you really happy, things that make you really terrified, there it's just I
feel like a roller coaster of feelings I'd imagine for many of us watching.
And Gordon G asks about how we can learn to practice ways to calm yourself in the
face of the news and things you see happening outside of the world?
Yes, so many. It's like where to start and do you want me to give a 20-minute answer?
The thing that's coming to my mind and I think this is actually very relevant to everything we've discussed because this is a meditative practice that I'm going gonna recommend that is directly supportive of
love of self love and and again understanding self love within the context of our
Relationality the fact that we are these social animals
this is a practice that I actually talked about him in in the TED talk and
Has
Has also been the subject of a lot of research.
It's called loving kindness meditation.
Loving kindness is the modern translation of an ancient word, meta, M-E-T-T-A, not like
the mega corporation that dominates so many of our lives, meta, M-E-T-T-A.
And I prefer the translation friendliness and I love the idea
that friendliness is a skill that you can train through this meditation technique and
the Buddha is said to have invented this this style of meditation as an antidote to fear
and so it's directly relevant to this current moment,
which is creating so much stress, fear and anxiety
for so many people.
And again, I wanna acknowledge as Whitney did,
there are people who love what's happening right now too.
And whatever side you're on,
and I put that word side in quotes,
there really is so much anger and and
fear sort of directed
to the other and
This practice can help you no matter what your politics are
So it's yet another
practice that for me given my conditioning I
yet another practice that for me given my conditioning I
Found quite annoying when I first heard about it. But again
What what got me over the hump is that there's a ton of research, but so it works like this you sit quietly
You can actually hurl yourself on the ground if you want
Just assume a comfortable position close your eyes
and then you start by envisioning an easy person or even an animal.
So some being, a little kid or a cat or a dog, some being that is easy to love.
And you bring them to mind either visually or a felt sense in your body, sort of somatically,
if that's what you prefer. And then you
repeat four phrases. May you be happy, may be safe, may you be healthy, may you live
with ease. And then you move through a progression of being. So you start with
an easy person, then you move to yourself. I love that because it's kind of a bait
and switch where you get the juices going with and you know your cat or dog
and then you switch.
Once you're starting to feel some warmth,
you switch in yourself.
And then you move to a mentor, somebody
who's helped you out in your life.
Could be a teacher, a parent, an uncle.
If you don't have somebody like that,
could be a sort of a world figure who you admire,
the Dalai Lama, whoever.
And then you move to a neutral person
um
Somebody who you see frequently but tend to overlook and then a difficult person probably not easy to
To come up with somebody who fits the bill
I I often advise people to go with somebody mildly annoying not you know, don't go straight to pole pot
And then uh, the final category is all beings everywhere,
everybody.
And this exercise, this contemplative exercise
has been shown to have physiological, psychological,
and even behavioral benefits.
When you teach preschoolers loving kindness
or friendliness meditation,
they become more likely to give their stickers away
to kids they do not like.
And so I think this is a great way to relax the nervous system
in
turbulent political times. So that's just one idea. Like I said, I could go on, but I don't want to flood the zone.
So I'll stop there.
That's great.
I feel like this idea of giving
your stickers away to the kids you don't like is something that I, it's definitely going to stick
with me and thinking about how to better approach some of these things and how this can help. Well,
I guess along some of the same lines and you mentioned in explaining meta, not meta, that
social media and there's a question from Edmilson about how social media can also help
or hinder our ability to love ourselves and is that is there a different I guess
approach you would take there? I think social media is really tricky. I'm not a Luddite and so I always
I always feel some reluctance to advise people to opt out of
You know huge aspects of modern life, although
I if that's your instinct I completely support it
But I also want to recognize that for many people that feels like too tall of an order
um, and yet it is social media is really tricky because it does
with extreme prejudice induce a state of,
states of comparison, a kind of toxic comparing mind,
and also FOMO.
And then there's also a ton of advertisement on there.
And again, I'm not like reflexively anti-advertisement,
but the way advertising often works is to engender a sense of insufficiency so that you make a purchase not always but often and
To social media is a tough spot for the mind
Now I would add one other thing which is that the algorithms appear to reward outrage
thing, which is that the algorithms appear to reward outrage. So what's happened is we have this whole group of what would have been called conflict entrepreneurs who swoop in and take advantage of
the way the algorithm is structured to enrich themselves and to give themselves clout. And
I mean, I think that's a really good thing to keep in mind, which is that there's a lot of money
to be made off of making you unhappy,
making you hate the people on the other quote unquote side,
making you outraged about all the developments in the news,
making you feel like you're not enough.
There are huge
societal forces that will profit off of this. So what do you do about it? I just
off the top of my head one thing is just the practice of gratitude to remember
you know and Chris Anderson and I have talked about this on my podcast Chris
the man
Who has has been leading Ted for quite a while?
That if you if you don't get suckered by
the news industry which I used to inhabit and
social media
Platforms that want you to believe everything sucks. The
news and social media aren't spending that much time on all
of the mundane good things that are happening all around us.
That doesn't get a lot of coverage and yet small and large acts of kindness are unfolding all around us all the time
And so gratitude for the good things in your life and the good things in the world is a nice way to counter program
even better and this picks up on a book that Chris wrote is to be a
Locus of positivity yourself in other, to engage in generosity or compassion.
And this can be big things like giving big gifts of service or money,
or it can be small things.
One of the little mental exercises I ask people to do is,
what is it like in your mind if you're paying attention
when you hold the door open for somebody?
It feels good. And that feeling is infinitely scalable
And so you can be a node of sanity in an insane world by just being by just
Doing a 10 boost in your utility quotient to the people around you
So it doesn't even have to be grandiose in any way
And that I think will help you survive the next time you go on Instagram.
And again, I'm not trying to say that Instagram is an unalloyed ill because I don't believe
that. I'm on Instagram. So I think it is a place where lots of eyeballs are and good things can be
done there. And I know it can make a lot of people unhappy. And so how can you reduce that? I think
gratitude and generosity are two big things. then finally I would add mindfulness which is again
This I don't know if we talked about this
But I think of mindfulness as I don't think we did mindfulness is just the ability we have to have the self-awareness
Of our thoughts and emotions so that we're not so carried away by them
And so if you have that self-awareness as you're on social media
You might notice when you're on hour eight of doom scrolling and you're starting to type in all caps, that maybe it's time to put the phone down.
And so that could be a good way to type, trait and regulate your social media usage so that you aren't driving yourself nuts. Well, I think one thing that strikes me about what you're sharing here is that it's in many
ways an argument for maintaining interaction with real people, right?
That there is in some ways in the loneliness epidemic that where we all find ourselves
in the, you know, with the rise of tech and so many opportunities for you to stay secluded and just communicate with people digitally doesn't
help a journey to being kinder to yourself or loving yourself.
I'm so glad you brought that up and I am a little embarrassed that I didn't say it myself,
but thank you for prodding me. I think about, I've spent the last six plus years working
on a book, a kind of sequel to 10%
Happier in this book, which I hope comes out next year if I can get my act together. And
I'm trying to motivate myself with self-compassion. This book really is about love, a kind of,
and again, I keep quoting the TED talk because the TED talk really is the blueprint for the book It's a it's a kind of unified field theory of love which is
on the one hand
self compassion self love these inner skills that improve your inner weather and
Then what scientists have called on the other hand social fitness this set of skills for?
and social fitness, the set of skills for cultivating and deepening and maintaining relationships
with other people in all aspects of your life,
from friendships to work relationships
to romantic relationships to your family
to what scientists call micro-interactions, which
can have a real impact.
These little interactions you have with a barista
or the male person,
these can have a real impact on your psychology. And so thinking about
inner management and outer cultivation of relationships and how they work together to
create this virtuous upward spiral. And in an know, we in an individualistic culture
where we are, thanks to technology,
which technology, you know, has many good aspects to it,
but one of the negative ones is that we,
it's put individualism on steroids
where we're kind of self-focused,
not interacting with other human beings.
This, I think, is really at the root
of the unprecedented
anxiety, depression, suicide, addiction, and loneliness we're seeing in our culture right
now. And if you can start to focus on not only on self-love, but on the inexorable,
I believe the inexorable outcome of self-love, which is improved relationships. If you can get more mindful and deliberate about cultivating positive relationships in your life, that's
going to help you inoculate you against the political tumult, against some of the more
negative aspects of social media. It is just a protective layer that is, you know, in my view, unquestionable.
Well, so much of what you've shared has been sort of grounded in your approach to meditation and
your use of meditation as a tool in supporting your journey in self-love. And we have a question
from Josh Schar who also practices meditation, and
their question is, did you find as you deepened your meditation practice, there was an inflection
point where the more self-aware you become, the more you realize how neurotic the mind is?
That's actually a great question, Josh. And it's a common bump that people hit early in their meditation practice
And you keep bumping up against it, but especially early on people are
Interested in mindfulness meditation which again gives you
a kind of a more powerful microscope on your inner life
So that you're not so owned by it. So that that is one of how I would describe the benefits of mindfulness meditation where you
get interested in what's happening between your ears so that whatever neurotic obsession
or powerful emotion happens to flit through the mind doesn't lead you to lots of reflexive
negative behavior.
A lot of people get interested in this because it's been shown to reduce anxiety and depression and stress and
One of the things you see quite quickly and this can be this is why the early stages can be so cultish and awkward is
You you really see it can feel like oh wait
This is making me more anxious and that is not because it's making you more anxious.
It's just see it's like turning on a black light
in a hotel room.
You ever see those legendary news reports
where they turn a black light on in the hotel room?
A friend of mine actually did those stories.
You're seeing disgusting stuff.
Well, that's just the nature of seeing your own mind.
There's a great expression from the writer, John Barth.
Self-knowledge is always bad news.
I don't think that's always true,
but it's true to a large extent.
And, but don't be fooled.
The seeing it is what is empowering,
because as you get more familiar with the chaos
and cacophony of your own mind,
you're able to ride it in a smoother, more supple way.
But the process, in my experience, I've only been meditating for about 15 years, but I
spent a lot of time with people meditating for 50, 60 years.
In my own experience and from what I've heard from my friends who are really deep end of
the bull meditators is that it is just a process of, you know, I'm using
this word somewhat tongue in cheek, just ongoing
humiliation, you just seeing over time how ridiculous the
mind is. And that word ridiculous, my teacher Joseph
Goldstein, who is this amazing guy who's coming up on 81 and
has been meditating since he was 21. He uses that word
ridiculous all the time, because really when things are going well, over time you start to develop a
sense of humor about it. You start to kind of get over yourself in a really deep way. And that's why
the Dalai Lama is always laughing. A big part of it is because you can't sit in meditation for
decades without seeing how ridiculous this all is. And that's really helpful.
It feels like a dose of humor. It makes such a difference here. Well, Gabby R. has a question
about just your personal journey and whether there was a moment when you felt like you
were regressing
instead of progressing and how you personally navigated that.
And I guess this is post the 360 review post, the things
you already shared.
You know, progress and then progression and then regression
is just in my experience is like, that's part of the deal.
You know, you
you learn something useful and you make a few strides and then you just screw it up and think that you're a wretch and then somebody in your life either you have to have the inner resources
or the outer allies to you know talk you off the ledge and um and get back in the game and so
absolutely um i'm just thinking of an example that i've been writing about recently this happened many years ago
But after I had my 360 in 2018
I ended up
Meeting this much younger person than me who became my assistant. Her name was grace
And uh
It turned out that she actually had a lot of experience with self-compassion.
And she started sending me these like assignments that made a huge difference to me.
And like she was helping me integrate self-compassion into my life.
And so she went from being my assistant to really becoming a kind of teacher for me.
And then at one point we got in a big fight because she said something totally innocuous from being my assistant to really become a kind of teacher for me.
And then at one point we got in a big fight because she said something totally innocuous and it just triggered me.
There's a great expression. If it's hysterical, it's historical.
And she just said something that triggered some historical stuff for me.
And I handled it so poorly.
And I'm just bringing this up because it's an example of regression. And
you know, I think one of the tricks of self-improvement, for lack of a better term, really is learning
how to handle the inevitable mistakes. I don't know if this is entirely apropos, but one
of the things I think about is if you're doing self-improvement or personal growth or
Spiritual development whatever you want to call it if you're doing it correctly
You should always feel like you have been a complete idiot your whole life up until six weeks ago
But you should just be constantly learning stuff and reevaluating
And hopefully in a fun way with other people doing it as a team sport
And to me this is just a very exciting and interesting way to live.
Well, I feel like there's this conversation has been chock full of just so many thoughtful tips and insights into just how you think about all of this.
And you shared that you have this book coming out.
Are there any other exciting things on the horizon?
Where else can we see you next?
Well, I host a podcast as you referenced.
That's a huge deal for me.
That's a huge part of my work.
I also have a little, I've been experimenting on Substacks.
I have a little community going there.
We had our five month anniversary this week.
So it's pretty new. Congratulations. And yeah, I would love to have people sign up there. We had our five-month anniversary this week, so it's pretty new. Congratulations.
And yeah, I would love to have people sign up there. There's a free version and a little paid
version if you want to get direct access to me. So just that's a total experiment, but
I'm really excited about it. And I also would be very excited to finish this book finally,
because I have like four other books I want to write after it.
Well, and any insight into what those books might be about or what sort of topics you're
eager to get into?
Yes. Yes, I have a book. I'm really interested in how to apply all of this at work. And so
we have a series we've done on the podcast that's been very popular. It's a kind of
occasional series that we bring back once in a while called sanely ambitious where we talk about all of the
Psychological and contemplative tools that can make you better at work
And so we interview lots of people who've given TED talks including Adam Grant
And many many other people and so that's interesting to me to kind of do a really
Practical book about how to get better at work. I talked about Joseph Goldstein, who I have just so much respect and
affection for. And he has these little phrases he uses in his teaching. These just pithy little
phrases like self-knowledge is always bad news. That's one of his things. He says a lot
And I want to write a book
where it's like
Not a quite a coffee table book
But a book that goes through all of the phrases and and explains them
And it's so it's kind of a backdoor way to really get at deep Dharma, deep Buddhism, but in a very
fun snackable user-friendly way.
Well, Dan, this has been really a treat.
There are so many more questions I could ask.
There are so many more questions from our members that we didn't get to, but we have
reached our time.
Thank you so much for being with us.
Total pleasure.
Thank you so much for being with us. Total pleasure. Thank you.
That was Dan Harris in conversation with Whitney Pennington Rogers for a TED membership event in 2025.
If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today's show.
TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This episode was produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, Alejandra Salazar, and Tonsika Sarmarnivon.
It was mixed by Christopher Faisy-Bogan. Additional support from Emma Taubner and Daniela Balarezo.
I'm Elise Huw. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
What if everything you thought you knew about your own child was a lie?
Ellen Pompeo and Mark DuPlace star in Good American Family.
In this all-new limited series, a couple adopt what they believe is an 8-year-old girl, but
when concerns soon arise, it forces them to question her actual identity.
Told from multiple perspectives, Good American Family is inspired by the true events behind
the disturbing story of Natalia Grace, and unpacks the case that spiraled from private
suspicion to public spectacle.
Streaming March 19th, only on Disney+.