TED Talks Daily - The benefits of not being a jerk to yourself | Dan Harris
Episode Date: March 23, 2024After over two decades as an anchor for ABC News, an on-air panic attack sent Dan Harris's life in a new direction: he became a dedicated meditator and, to some, even a guru. But then an anon...ymous survey of his family, friends and colleagues turned up some brutal feedback -- he was still kind of a jerk. In a wise, funny talk, he shares his years-long quest to improve his relationships with everyone (starting with himself) and explains the science behind loving-kindness meditation, and how it can boost your resiliency, quiet your inner critic and simply make you more pleasant to be around.
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TED Audio Collective.
It's TED Talks Daily. I'm your host, Elise Hu.
You all might know Dan Harris from the 10% Happier book and podcast,
the former of which celebrates its 10th anniversary this year.
In honor of that milestone, we wanted to share Dan's TED 2022 talk, where he shares how
a televised panic attack turned into self-awareness and acceptance. Listen in as Harris makes a
convincing case for finding happiness within and looks back on a unique journey into meditation,
mindfulness, and well-being. After the break. Support for this show comes from Airbnb. If you know me, you know I love
staying in Airbnbs when I travel. They make my family feel most at home when we're away from
home. As we settled down at our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs, I pictured my
own home sitting empty. Wouldn't it be smart and better put to use welcoming a family like mine by hosting it on Airbnb? It feels like the practical thing to do, and with the extra
income, I could save up for renovations to make the space even more inviting for ourselves and
for future guests. Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at Airbnb.ca
slash host.
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A few years ago, I signed up for something called a 360 review.
If you've ever worked in the corporate world, you probably have heard of this diabolical exercise.
It's an anonymous survey with your boss's peers and direct reports. And the idea is to get a
panoramic sense of your strengths and weaknesses.
I opted for the colonoscopy version of a 360 review.
Which included my wife, my brother and two of my meditation teachers.
In all, 16 people gave hour-long, confidential interviews,
and I was then handed a 39-page report brimming with blind quotes.
I can tell you're looking forward to hearing the results,
sadists. But I'm going to make you wait a second because I should give you a little
background on me. I used to be an anchorman. I worked at ABC News for 21 years. It was a very
stressful job. In fact, I had a panic attack live on the air in 2004 while delivering some otherwise mundane headlines.
The good news is that my nationally televised freakout ultimately led me to meditation, which I had actually long rejected as ridiculous.
I was raised by a pair of atheist scientists. I'm a fidgety skeptical guy, and that kind of led me to unfairly lump meditation in
with aura readings, vision boards and dolphin healing.
But the practice really helped me with my anxiety and depression,
and so my goal became to make meditation attractive to my fellow skeptics
by ditching the New Age clichés and liberally using the F-word.
To my great delight, to my fellow skeptics by ditching the New Age clichés and liberally using the F-word.
To my great surprise, this unorthodox approach
turned me into a quasi-self-help guru.
And a few years into this trip,
I decided that I wanted to get a sense of whether my inner work
was having outer results.
You know, was meditation making me a nicer person?
And that's why I signed up for the 360. And now I will tell you having outer results. Was meditation making me a nicer person?
And that's why I signed up for the 360.
And now I will tell you about the results.
The first 13 pages were dedicated to my sterling qualities.
People talked about how hardworking and intelligent I was.
Many also said meditation had made me more caring.
But then came 26 pages of beatdown.
The first blow was that some reviewers noted that I had a penchant for being rude to junior staffers,
which was deeply embarrassing.
But it only got worse.
I was called emotionally guarded, a diva, and an authoritarian.
I don't know why that's funny.
Some people even question my motives for promoting meditation.
It got so bad that at one point, my wife, who was reading it with me,
got up and went to the bathroom and cried.
I think for me, the most painful part was realizing that the aspects of my personality that I was most ashamed of and
had really tried to hide were in fact on full display for everybody. And those included my
two most prominent and problematic demons, anger and self-centeredness. Bottom line, meditation had
helped for sure, but I clearly retained the capacity to be a schmuck. And I am not alone in this. All kinds of bad behavior have been on the rise.
Reckless driving, unruly airline passengers,
violent crime, online bullying,
workplace incivility, tribal antagonism,
even general self-centeredness.
At times, it can really feel like our social fabric is unraveling.
So after my 360, I decided to do some work on myself and to
see if I could also learn some things that by extension might help the species. I pulled every
lever at my disposal. I did psychotherapy, communications coaching, bias training,
couples counseling, and more. And while I was really grateful to be able to do all of this
stuff and all of it helped, I was still finding myself too often getting selfish or snippy.
So I signed up for a nine-day silent retreat
where I would practice a kind of meditation
that has been shown to boost your capacity for warmth.
It's called loving-kindness,
which, as you might imagine,
sounded to me like Valentine's Day with a gun to my head.
But I was in it to win it. I really wanted to be a nicer person. I kept getting tripped up, though, because the woman who was running the retreat, my teacher,
her name is Spring Washam, she kept insisting that if I wanted to be less of a jerk to other
people, I needed to start by being less of a jerk to myself, which I thought was the kind of thing you hear from Instagram influencers and spin instructors.
So she even went so far as to suggest
that when I saw my demons emerging in meditation,
I should put my hand on my heart and say to myself,
it's okay, sweetie, I'm here for you.
Hard pass.
Pass Adina.
I was not going to do that. But over the ensuing days of nonstop meditation,
I did notice that my twin demons were in full effect. My anger had me rehearsing glorious,
expletive-filled speeches I would deliver to my boss about the various promotions I deserved.
My self-centeredness had me writing my own five-star Amazon reviews for my various books, praising my elegant prose and rugged good looks.
And in the face of all of this roostering and rage,
I layered on an avalanche of self-criticism.
I told myself a whole story about how I was an incurably self-obsessed,
cranky monster who had cloven hooves and a retractable jaw.
After about five or six days of drinking from this fire hose,
I caved.
Mid-meditation, I put my hand on my heart,
and while I definitely was not going to call myself sweetie,
I did silently say to myself,
it's all good, dude, I know this sucks, but I've got you.
This was very strange and embarrassing.
But in this moment, I had an epiphany.
I realized that my demons were actually just ancient,
fear-based, neurotic programs,
probably injected into me by the culture or by my parents,
and they were trying to help me.
It was the organism trying to protect itself.
And when I stopped fighting them, they calmed down for a few seconds.
I didn't have to slay them.
I just had to give them a high five.
And this counterintuitive extension of warmth was not, I realized,
it was not indulgence, it was radical disarmament.
Here's the way I think about this.
At any given moment, we humans have two choices,
or two spirals that are available to us.
The first is what my friend Evelyn Tribbley calls the toilet vortex.
The reason why this looks childish and ridiculous
is that I drew it myself.
The toilet vortex might start like this.
You're picking on yourself because you don't like the way you look in the mirror,
you're unhappy with your level of productivity,
or you have failed to achieve ketosis, whatever,
and then you take that out on other people,
and then you are feeling more miserable,
and then down you go.
The vastly superior alternative
is what I call the cheesy upward spiral.
This one was drawn by a professional.
As your inner weather gets bombier,
because you've learned how to high-five your demons,
that shows up in your relationships with other people.
And because relationships are probably the most important variable
when it comes to human flourishing,
your inner weather improves even further, and up you go.
And that is the whole point here.
Self-love, properly understood, not as narcissism,
but as having your own back, is not selfish.
It makes you better at loving other people.
And the flip side of this was on full display in my 360.
All the ways in which I was torturing myself
showed up in my relationships with other people.
And as those relationships suffered, so did I.
Taken together, my two excellent drawings
represent a kind of
amateur unified field theory of love. I call it me, comma, a love story.
That's a deliberately ridiculous name, but I am actually pretty serious about using the word
love. Granted, it's a confusing term because we use it to apply to everything from our spouses to our children to gluten-free snickerdoodles. But I am comfortable embracing the broadness
of the term. I consider love to be anything that falls within the human capacity to care,
a capacity wired deeply into us via evolution. It's our ability to care, cooperate, and communicate
that has allowed Homo sapiens to thrive.
And it is a failure to exercise that muscle.
It is a lack of love that I think is at the root
of our most pressing problems,
from inequality to violence to the climate crisis.
Obviously, these are all massive problems
that are going to require massive structural change,
but at a baseline, they also require us to care about one another.
And it is harder to do that when you're stuck
in a ceaseless spiral of self-centered self-flagellation.
Thank you.
So I guess what I'm trying to say here is there's a geopolitical case
for you to get your shit together.
And the massively empowering news
is that love is not an unalterable factory setting.
It is a skill that you can train.
It's actually a family of skills.
After my 360, I learned a whole bunch of practices for upping my love game,
and I'm going to share two with you right now
that I think would be very easy to integrate into your life.
The first is to boot up a practice of loving-kindness meditation.
I should say that it does not require you
to subscribe to some fancy metaphysical program,
and it shouldn't take up too much time,
maybe a few minutes, a couple times a week to start.
The instructions are really simple.
Find a reasonably quiet place,
assume a comfortable position,
close your eyes,
and begin by envisioning a really easy person.
Maybe a good friend, maybe a pet.
And then you repeat in your mind four phrases.
May you be happy, may you be safe, may you be healthy,
may you live with ease.
After you've generated a little warmth,
you do a bait and switch and move on to yourself.
Once again, you conjure the image and send the phrases. After that, it's on to a mentor,
somebody who's helped you in your life, then a neutral person, somebody you might overlook,
then a difficult person, probably not hard to find, and then we finish with all beings everywhere.
To some of you, this may seem forced and treacly, but it's worth noting that the research shows
that this practice has physiological, psychological,
and even behavioral benefits.
The other practice I'm going to recommend
is to start consciously counter-programming
against your inner critic.
Next time you notice yourself going down the toilet,
if nobody's looking, put your hand on your heart
and talk to yourself the way you would talk to a good friend.
For ambitious people, this may be a little scary.
You might fear it's going to erode your edge,
but research shows that this process of replacing your sadistic inner tyrant
with a supportive inner coach who has high standards
but is not a jerk about it
makes you more likely to reach your goals.
Now, I will cop to the fact that even though I've now retired from my job as a newsman
and am a full-time meditation evangelist, I still go down the toilet on the regular.
But I am much more likely to access the upward spiral these days.
In fact, three years after my 360, I got another one, because I never learn.
And this one was way different.
People gushed about how much I had changed as a friend and a mentor and a colleague.
They talked about specific meetings where I used to be a prosecutor and was now delightful. One
person said his ego is shrinking, which I think was a compliment. And another person said he's
finding his heart, which the new me let pass. After she finished reading, my wife turned to me and said congratulations now you're boring
i'm hoping that was a joke because in my opinion upping your love game is anything but boring it's
counter-cultural because it cuts against the never enoughness and always behind us that society seems
to want us to feel it's courageous because it's hard to look at your demons,
and it's happiness-producing because when you high-five your demons,
they don't own you as much.
And all of that makes you more generous and more available.
If that sounds grandiose or touchy-feely to you,
let me put it to you another way.
The view is so much better when you pull your head out of your ass.
Thank you very much.
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