Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 285: What’s the Point of Joy Right Now? | James Baraz
Episode Date: September 23, 2020In my opinion, purveyors of joy can come off as oily and unctuous, even in the best of times. Like walking impersonations of Rainbow Brite. But in hard times, arguing for joy can seem pollyan...na-ish or downright clueless. Our guest today reframes joy as supremely relevant and eminently doable. His name is James Baraz. He is the co-founder of Spirit Rock Meditation Center in California, and author of the book Awakening Joy. We talk about: why joy gets a bad rap; why it’s not a feel-good project, but instead a “feel-everything” project; and the role of meditation in taking on pressing issues such as climate and race. Also, stay tuned for a cameo from our producer, Marissa, who weighs in with a personal question. Where to find James Baraz online: Website: https://www.awakeningjoy.info/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/baraz415 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/awakeningjoy10/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtcjQ-YTKDv18nT6t3Abq1g Books: Awakening Joy: 10 Steps to Happiness by James Baraz and Shoshana Alexander: https://bookshop.org/books/awakening-joy-10-steps-to-happiness/9781937006228 Awakening Joy for Kids by James Baraz and Michele Lilyanna: https://bookshop.org/books/awakening-joy-for-kids-a-hands-on-guide-for-grown-ups-to-nourish-themselves-and-raise-mindful-happy-children-9781941529287/9781941529287 James Baraz leads the Awakening Joy course each year which people take from all over the world. You can go to awakeningjoy.info for more information. Other Resources Mentioned: A sorority of mothers in Mexico search mass graves in hopes of finding missing children's bodies: https://abcnews.go.com/International/sorority-mothers-mexico-search-mass-graves-hopes-finding/story?id=67639741 EAARTH by Bill McKibben: http://billmckibben.com/eaarth/eaarthbook.html Dianne Bondy: https://diannebondyyoga.com/ Why mindfulness matters during a pandemic: https://mashable.com/video/mindfulness-tips-coronavirus/ Additional Resources: Ten Percent Happier Live: https://tenpercent.com/live Coronavirus Sanity Guide: https://www.tenpercent.com/coronavirussanityguide Free App access for Frontline Workers: https://tenpercent.com/care Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/james-baraz-285 See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello in my humble opinion purveyors of joy can often come off as oily and
punctuous even in the best of times, like walking impersonations of rainbow bright.
But in hard times, such as the ones
through which we are living right now,
arguing for joy can seem polyanna-ish or downright clueless.
Our guests today, however, reframes joy
as supremely relevant and eminently doable.
His name is James Barris.
He's the co-founder of Spirit Rock
Meditation Center in California, author of a whole book about joy called Awakening Joy.
In this conversation, we talk about why joy gets a bad rap, why it's not a feel-good project,
but instead a feel-everything project, and the role of meditation in taking on pressing global
issues such as climate and race.
Also stay tuned for a great cameo
from our producer on this episode, Marissa Schneiderman,
who weighs in quite bravely in my opinion
with a personal question.
Here we go, James Barres.
All right, James, joy boy, welcome to the show.
Okay.
Okay.
I know that Monica is at least semi facetious,
but I'm super interested when you talk about joy, what do you mean?
Because when I think of joy,
I think I might have said this before in the show,
on the most superficial level,
I picture those Toyota commercials from the 80s
where somebody's just bought a Toyota
and they're leaping into the air.
What do you mean when you invoke the word joy?
Well, in Buddhism, the word joy or different flavors of it are quite prominent.
It's one of the seven factors of enlightenment.
It's a variation in the four divina bodes.
It's a variation in the four divine abodes. There's suka happiness and there's Pomodia, Gladness and lots of different expressions. For me, I'm talking about
all the states of well-being and there's a continuum of that from deep peace and contentment to rapture and bliss and everything in between.
There is a place inside of us that longs for happiness and that when we discover it, it's right
inside. So truly, I'm talking about well-being. It's just not as catchy to say a waken-in-well-being as a waken-in-joy,
but it covers the whole range. How does one access joy? What can I do to get more joy?
Probably the most direct root is getting out of your head and into your heart, I would say, because it's usually in the head that's trying to figure things out or solve problems
as useful as that is, as important as that is when the mind starts spinning, it gets contracted,
and when there's a kind of spaciousness and ease and relaxation, that natural state of being
can be accessed. And we came into this world with that state of well-being. You see a baby who's dippered and fed and given a little bit of love. They squeal
with delight. Wow, there's wonder, there's openness. And we were all that baby but it gets covered over with so it's
really quieting down and giving enough space to get in touch with that natural goodness
and aliveness that's right inside. One of my main formulas I I've got a few, but one of my main ones is first authenticity, being
right where you are, and having a connection to that, a genuine presence to where you are, and
out of that authenticity and connection, there's an aliveness that comes and that's the beginning of opening to joy, I would say.
I'm going to push you. I'm going to go into character as I do. My role is the fidgety skeptic.
Bring it on. I try not to be cynical. I do like being skeptical.
The Buddha said skepticism was very good. Good. Thank you, Buddha. I was there for the birth of my son,
and he came out purple and slimy and screaming,
like an undersea creature that had been brought up
from the bottom of the Marianist Trench
and did not want to be here.
And so, I mean, I, you know, he's now five,
but I remember what it was like when he was a baby,
and yes, there were times when he was cooling with delight,
and then there were times he was puking in my face. That's
a little glib. But I guess what I'm trying to get at is, you know, this authenticity that
you reference this getting out of your head and into your body and then the deep piece
that's available there in, et cetera. I don't know. Like I said, and meditate quite a bit and find myself continually stuck back
in my head or confronted with all sorts of my own ugliness, et cetera, et cetera. So I
don't know that I feel like this joy is as easy as, you know, like hailing an uber.
No, it's not. It takes practice and it takes some understanding of how the mind works.
And the first step in the process is making friends with what's here.
If you're trying to bypass it and say, oh, give me the joy.
You know, I give me out of this confusion and I want some joy.
You're very attitude of grasping, of wanting, of version to what's here is going to work
against you.
So in whatever way possible to get a sense of spaciousness and acceptance and compassion
around what you're going through, compassion is a key doorway to awakening the heart.
So you can't bypass, that's where you have to start to come to terms first with what your actual
experience is. And actually the pain and the confusion and the duke as we call it in Buddhism
and the confusion and the duke as we call it in Buddhism becomes a doorway to joy.
It's one of my favorite lists of all the lists that the Buddha has. He has this one list. It's a, you can impress your friends with it called transcendental dependent arising,
where he says that suffering, he starts with suffering, which is what he started in the first noble truth is suffering in the world and he says
suffering
can lead
To faith
Not necessarily, but it can and often does
faith
can lead to gladness
Faith can lead to gladness, gladness can lead to joy,
can lead to contentment, concentration,
all the way up to awakening.
But it starts with suffering being the causative factor for faith.
Sometimes people say,
how is that possible?
And I often ask people who have a critical look on their face,
how many people here
have come to their spiritual practice or come to looking for deeper answers to life through
suffering, and most every hand goes up.
So it's not to bypass the confusion and all the things to get in the way, but to have tools to work
with them so that we can have some space and understanding, and that loosens things up
and creates enough openness that we can access what's deeper inside.
I could see people getting hung up on the word faith, but by faith I imagine you mean
a trust and confidence that this endeavor is worth
embarking upon. Exactly. The word Sada is translated as either faith or trust or conviction or
confidence. There's something bigger than my own small story of the world in this moment. And there's a kind of inspiration that we can get
from opening up to a wider perspective.
So, how would work? And I'm saying this aloud, hoping that you'll correct me, would be,
you can find in meditation that you're suffering, you know, either it's a lead cramp or some murderous itch just above your left nostril or
falling into the same
habitual thought patterns that have been with you since, you know, that argument you had with your mom at eight seven or whatever it is all of that comes up.
And yes, it can suck, but also knowing and getting the increasing sort of bone level,
axon and dendrite level confidence that this suffering will arise and inevitably pass
impermanence in this aspect can be your friend.
That can be the doorway to the other sort of more fun links in the chain of faith,
slash confidence, joy, et cetera.
Definitely. That's one access to it. You know, as you probably have heard many
times in the practice, it's not what's happening. It's our relationship to
what's happening. That's really the key. So it's developing a wise relationship
to your experience, whether it's
a pain in the knee or a memory from 30 years ago, oh, can I have a wise relationship so I'm
not completely lost in my reactions. And then I can respond appropriately and wisely.
So why for you, did you fasten onto the joy aspect?
Because if I'm here, you correctly, everything that we've just discussed is, you start as
you're teaching emphasis with joy, but then very quickly becomes, you know, meat and potatoes
Buddhism.
And please correct that if that's incorrect.
And if it's not, then the question I guess I have is like,
what about your life and your mind encourages you
to fasten onto the aspect of joy in all of this?
Mm-hmm.
Well, I have, in me, my natural bent before I came to Buddhism
was there's a part of me that always did like to celebrate life and
before I got in touch with Buddhism I was deeply impacted by Neem Crowley
Baba, Ramdhasa's Guru Maharaja Yarenda B here now in 1971 and it changed my life and that really appealed to me. However, then I discovered
the Dharma in 1974 when Joseph Goldstein first came back from Asia and that first summer
at Naropa, he and Jack were there and Sharon too. I felt like I came home. I was thrilled that I found a path to get there.
And I had what is called a long honeymoon period
where I just want to tell the world,
you just have to be mindful, you just have to be mindful.
And then at some point, I lost my joy.
I became very serious about my practice,
dead serious, emphasis on the dead.
And I did lose my joy.
There were some teachings that I misconstrued,
which could easily be misunderstood
and went through some internal conflict
with what did the Buddha really teach?
And I went through a period, it was a difficult period for a few years until I realized,
wait a second, I'm not in alignment with who I really am. I saw the Buddha as this kind of stern, testmaster that said, it's not okay to love life and have fun.
And then fortunately, instead of turning my back
on the teachings, I said,
well, what did the Buddha really say?
Because he was called the happy one.
And the Dalai Lama in his book, The Art of Happiness,
the first line in his book is,
the purpose of life is to be happy. So I started to take
a look and I say, okay, what did the Buddha say about happiness, not just on the cushion, but in
one's life? And I found some beautiful teachings that made sense to me that I hadn't quite heard, packaged that way, that I then started practicing
and bringing myself back in congruence
both by true nature and with the teachings.
What are the teachings that you started practicing
that helped nudge you toward
the aforementioned congruence?
Glad you asked.
There were three really, which is the basis of the book that I wrote and the course that
I've been teaching for quite some time.
The first is the Buddha's teachings on wholesome states.
The teaching on wise effort, there are four aspects of wise effort.
Two having to do with unwholesome states, aacusula, and two having to do with wholesome states.
So the unwholesome states, aacusula, greed, hatred, delusion, jealousy, envy, you know those guys. And he says, guard against those if
you can, guard against them from arising. When they do arise, which is just part of being
human, learn how to overcome them. And then the two wholesome are cultivate Kusala, wholesome states, loving kindness, generosity, compassion, joy, all of those.
He says, cult mindfulness, which is the key, the whole thing.
Cultivate those wholesome states.
And the fourth, which doesn't get a whole lot of air play, he says, when there's a wholesome state that's arisen to maintain and increase that wholesome
state is a good thing.
So that was the first one.
And now you might say, well, wait a second, if you've got a wholesome state and you're
trying to maintain and increase it, isn't that just grasping? But the tricky part is, as soon as you're trying
to hold on to a wholesome state, it's just turned into an unwholesome state, because any
kind of grasping is a cusola. So the trick is rather than trying to hold onto it, how you maintain and increase a
wholesome state is to simply be very present for it.
That mindfulness itself not only is a wholesome state and cultivates others, but when you apply it to a wholesome state that's here
without grasping, you give it life and you actually amplify it and enhance it.
The first one is understanding where happiness really lies.
That's wholesome states and to be really present for them. Second teaching, which is a relatively obscure teaching
that I came across in one of the sutures
in the middle-length discourses,
he says, there's a gladness, a feeling of uplift
that's connected with the wholesome state.
And he gives the example in this discourse.
He says, if you're in the middle of a generous act, think to yourself, I'm being generous
now.
He says, this is a good thing.
Not, oh, I hope everybody sees how generous a guy I am, but rather, oh, just notice how
good it feels for generosity
to move through this being. Oh, it feels so good. And the line in the Suta, he says,
that gladness connected with the wholesome, I call an equipment of mind to
I call an equipment of mind to disarm all hostility. And that gladness one gains inspiration in the meaning, inspiration in the truth.
So he says, pay attention to that gladness. It's a really good thing.
And then the third teaching is a fairly well-known teaching, again, in the middle-length discourses,
where he says, whatever one frequently thinks and ponders upon, that will become the inclination
of their mind. And so, in modern Neuron neuroscience, the saying goes,
Neurons that fire together, wire together.
So it's all a matter of habit.
And when I saw all of those three,
it occurred to me to look at the different wholesome states
that are spoken of in the teachings. I picked ten
particular ones that seem to follow a logical sequence for me as far as developing, and if
you do it over time and you cultivate a wholesome state and you're really paying attention
to it, and you do that over a course of several months as your practice.
You start to notice your mind shifts from seeing what's wrong to start to notice all the
good and it creates space for you to open up to all the difficulties.
So that's what I did.
So evolution left us with this.
Sometimes useful, but often,
not so helpful negativity bias,
or hyper-vigilance scanning the horizon for threats.
It sounds like you're nudging us toward a rewiring,
reframing vigilance for the positive. Exactly. That's it. I know you've had Rick
Hanson on. He's a dear friend. And as he puts it, the brain is like Teflon for positive
experiences and Velcro for negative ones. So it takes some training to be on the lookout for the good and not only notice it but to be present for it
mindfully not just as a thought oh this is a good moment I'm happy now but
actually to be mindful in your body so instead of knowing oh I'm feeling good
right now to notice oh this is what it feels like to feel good.
And just with a few moments of turning your attention to that so that there's a visceral experience
is tremendously powerful. And that's what we do over a course of time.
I'll give you an example just for my own life
and tell me if you think this is an appropriate
operationalizing of what you're talking about.
I will preface this by saying that my family
and our extremely privileged, if you want a less PC term,
just lucky.
During the pandemic, we were when it hit
for the first three months we were living in New York City
with our five year old.
It happened that our lease was ending and we had the means to be able to get out of the
city with my cousin who also lived in the city and is a single mother of a child who's
my son's age, her daughter's six, my son's five, and we were able to get up to the suburbs,
which is an incredibly fortunate thing.
And I have this little rule.
I met a woman named Lucy Diaz last year whose leader in Mexico of this movement of moms
who are searching for the, by conservative estimates, 40,000 missing people in the country
of Mexico.
It's probably closer to 120,000.
Anyway, Lucy's son is one of the disappeared and she's been leading hundreds of other
moms to go out and look for mass graves.
She's just an incredible person.
One day we were talking and I spent quite a bit of time with her.
One day she said something like, you know what?
Never turn down an opportunity to spend time with your family.
So the little rule that I've generated is that
unless there are extremely
extenuating circumstances,
if my son knocks on the door of my office
and says he wants to play,
I will do it at least for a little while.
And this is a long story, sorry.
We first moved up to the country,
there was a snapping turtle we saw in a front yard.
We were so excited and she was bearing her eggs.
90 days later, the little turtles showed up
and they were in the backyard
but they were going in the wrong direction
and we found two of them
and we marched them over to a nearby pond
and then we found a dead one along the way
and my son, he was asking me,
I hope Alexander and Shane
of that's his name and his cousin's name, they had named the turtles that he said, I hope
Alexander and Shane are doing well in the pond. And he said, it also Dan and I said, Dan,
he said, yeah, that's the dead one. He's got a sharp sense of humor inherited from,
I'm sure it's his mom. Anyway, all of which to say
Even in those moments when my mind may be calling me elsewhere. I've been
Trying to pay attention not to the thought of okay, this is fun Harris and tune in
But also just that it feels good in the body and the whole system to be
Taking a few moments to spend time with this kid who is by the way not going
to be five forever.
Long story I apologize, but does that sound like an application of what you're talking
about?
Exactly.
How did it feel when you felt it?
Oh, this is what it feels like, what a great feeling.
It feels good, even when I feel proud of my son for burning me.
I love that.
And probably even just in recounting the story, it brings it to life too, which is another
very interesting principle that sometimes we think, oh, I'll never feel
joy again, and all you have to do is remember a moment like that. And there it is. It's much more
accessible than we realize. But that's exactly it. And in fact, that's one of the reasons why
being around kids can be, if we can set aside our agendas, can be such an excellent doorway because they have a sense of wonder and they're playing
with the world.
We forget how to play often and we become doing important matters of consequence.
And so a lot of it is bringing a sense of wonder to the world.
Like Jesus said, he said, unless you become like children, you will not know
the kingdom of heaven. You know, there's an Einstein quote, he says, there's two ways of going through
the world. One is seeing nothing as a miracle and the other is seeing everything as a miracle.
So it's like bringing back that natural aliveness and curiosity and really being present for it when it's there is beautiful story one more very short story
This one I promise just to accentuate your point about playfulness. I love it yesterday. We went back out in the rain
To look for more turtles. We didn't find any but I heard my son singing it's raining. It's pouring the old man is boring
referring to me.
So yes, I mean, he senses it too, you know,
as you get older, you know, you can have those, you know,
very important things to do.
In fact, he sometimes marches around the house saying,
I'm important, Dan, amitating his dad.
So yes, the playfulness is really important.
And I wonder just to make this really practical
for listeners, are there specific ways of meditation
or even just an orientation in our basic meditation that we can use to accentuate these
Kusala qualities that you're describing?
Oh, definitely.
There's lots.
It's the ten wholesome states that I chose from the teachings. They're all
ways to cultivate well-being.
Mindfulness brings them about naturally.
There's these wholesome factors and unwholesome factors, and then there's some that are neither wholesome or unwholesome.
There's 52 mental factors in Buddhist psychology and one
model. The one unique property of mindfulness is that it is the only one that both when there's
mindfulness you're weakening unwholesome states. Suppose you have sadness or worry or anger. When you're mindful in a wise way, you are weakening
the unholsom state. You're giving it space, you're not getting caught up in it,
and there's a kind of opening, which is by the way, one of the key components of
the wholesome states. There's a spaciousness, there's a relaxation, and all the
unhulsome ones are contracting. So mindfulness weakens the unwholesome states and it strengthens the wholesome states automatically
without you even realizing it.
But when applied, you can call up a wholesome state, say loving kindness.
You do some loving kindness practice.
You're just inclining the mind towards
well-being, towards wishing well, and then you're really present for it. That's cultivating a
wholesome state. You can tune into compassion, which is a wholesome state, even though it requires suffering, when you feel that quivering of the heart,
that resonance in the heart, and you feel that sense of caring, and you're present for
it, that is a wholesome state of well-being.
One of the most direct ways is gratitude. The Buddha in one discourse in the blessing suitah says, to be content and grateful,
this is a blessing supreme. So a direct way towards well-being is to think of something that you're
grateful for and be very present for it. If you'd like, I can take you through 30 seconds of
well-being if you're up for it. Yes, I do like. Okay. Alright, close your eyes, go inside,
bring to mind some blessing in your life, some one that you're grateful for or some circumstance that you're grateful for.
Just I'll be quiet and call up a blessing.
And now have an image so that you're even a bit more in touch with it,
of that person or that situation. Now give a simple silent thank you right from your heart to that person or to life of thank you.
And now just relax and enjoy that feeling of gratitude, feel it in your body. Oh, thank you. And just
meridate in it. Thank you so much.
Okay, you can open your eyes.
So two things to say, this just came to mind in my end.
I won't surprise anybody to hear me to say that the thing I'm most grateful for is my son.
And this morning he came into my office after he was soaking wet, he came in to give me
a hug.
And yeah, I can feel a lot of gratitude to him, to the universe, to the IVF doctor, to
my wife.
And then I also feel fear, you know, that something would happen to him, et cetera, et
cetera.
What do you make of that?
You're human. It's great that you can see it carefully so you can parse out the gratitude and the joy
and see the subtle conditioning of fear and attachment that can block that.
It happens all the time. Sometimes people are afraid to love or afraid to really
let go and let themselves feel fully. They're joy because oh, they're afraid the other shoes gonna drop and so they
can sabotage their well-being out of fear. Or as you probably know, when we're feeling mezzo, when we're feeling
loving kindness, the near enemy of loving kindness, what disguises as loving kindness,
is attachment. And so they can get mixed very into trying very easily. And so the important thing is to see how that works in the mind.
So you're not subject to that very deeply practice conditioning and work with the fear.
Don't pretend it's not there. Really see it and name it. So it doesn't have the power that it often does over you.
So you can just hold it wisely and then go for that true
well-being that's expansive.
Much more of my conversation with James Barris
right after this.
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So I think you brought us very nicely to a pivot I want to do in this conversation because
another issue people will inevitably have and this won't surprise you at all.
And I'm happy to make this pivot because you have a very good answer and a very good track
record.
One big issue that people have with the emphasis on joy is in a world that is deeply,
I'm not a sure that people have,
where the emphasis on joy is in a world that is deeply, I'm not a lot to swear, so I'll say,
messed up. I might have chosen another word. In a world such as the one we happen to occupy today,
there's a lot to be really angry about, to be scared of. So what role does joy play in a messed up world?
Yeah, that's the big question.
And as maybe you know, I'm besides being involved with joy and teaching about joy, I'm also very involved in things that have to do with making
this a better world and dealing with all the suffering. You know, climate is a big issue for me and certainly these days between the virus and race
and injustice and a country that seems like it's possibly going off the cliff or else maybe we'll
go in the right direction doing
everything I can to make sure the letter comes true that it's one important to
do what we can to make it a better world but not be so overcome with our fear
and our outrage and our anger so that we can be more effective because, as I said in the
teachings, the Buddha says, hatred never ceases by hatred, hatred ceases by
level-known. This is an ancient and eternal law. When you're around somebody who's
filled with anxiety and worry and outrage, which can be any of us at any time. I mean, I can definitely
get into those places. It's not where I live. I take in my share of news to be informed and it can,
you know, those things can be activated. But when you're around somebody in your environment
in your environment who is expressing that, how does it feel? You might have compassion for them or commiserate with them or say, yeah, this really is a
terrible world, but it's not going to be leading to the wisest response. When
you're around somebody who cares deeply about the world, but has balance and equanimity
and also sees the good in the world, it affects you.
Just like fear is contagious, so is balance and centeredness.
One of my friends says, we're in a race between fear and consciousness and you don't want to get caught up in the fear. So the more you
can be realistic and see what's out there and address it wisely but come from a
place of love, come from a place of gratitude, come from a place of seeing all the goodness in the world,
then your actions will be much more effective and you'll also magnetize inspiration.
So it seems like it's one of the most important things to do to stay in touch with what's good
And it's one of the most important things to do to stay in touch with what's good along with seeing what's difficult.
One thing that occurs to me a number of years ago when I first got into the climate issue,
I read Bill McKibben's book, Earth, and I've been aware of climate and it was troubling,
but I just kind of put it on the back burner. And I read that book, Earth with
two A's to see the different kind of Earth that we were about to enter. And it shook me,
it shook me deeply for really about a year to really take in the enormity of what we
might be facing. And I was with a friend of mine who was a Dharma practitioner
and also the head of a climate program
for World Wildlife Fund.
And I said,
hey, Lou, I've got to do something,
but I've just been teaching Buddhist meditation
and joy for the last few years.
I don't know what I have to bring to this.
And he looked at me and he said,
James, joy might be the most important thing
we need to remember now.
And I'm just getting kind of shivers remembering
and it made such sense
because you don't wanna be putting out to spare and fear and worry.
As important as those things are to metabolize, we want to come from love.
Because underneath all of that worry and outrage is care.
And if you can get in touch with the care, with the love, with the gratitude for
the life and this planet that we've been given, that's much more inspiring and magnetizing.
So I really want to hear what you have to say about something. I was on a panel the other day,
Mashable, which is a big website. It doing a big panel on mindfulness, and it was
me, another mindfulness teacher, and Diane Bondi, who's an African-American female yoga
teacher.
And I was doing a little bit, sort of, a much less articulate, less skillful version of
your rap about the importance of joy and trying to have a careful relationship to anger in
this moment,
given everything that's going on in our world from climate to race to politics to the pandemic.
And Diane, the the overt teacher, she said something that really stopped me in my tracks, which was
she didn't use these words exactly. She was quite careful about how she said it, but this is how I
heard it. She basically said it's frustrating for her when wealthy white men talk about the dis-utility of anger because anger
She was saying really helps her see things clearly and get moving and by the way what's happening out in the world is
genuinely infuriating and
I had to agree with her, but I also agree with what you're saying so I've said a lot of words there. Where do you land on all of this?
Both true. They're both true. That anger is not only human but important in that it offends to see and cruelty and just unfairness on so many levels and ignorance, but it's not a
sustaining kind of emotion. It gets one going. The outrage is important to get us
out of our complacency, but if we're're stuck in anger if that's the only thing that's fueling our actions
It is not a sustainable
nor magnetizing
Quality that we're putting out so I think it's
Absolutely essential to get in touch with our anger, get in touch with all
of those feelings of our age.
But as I said, go underneath them to the place that it hurts.
That's why this anger is a kind of protection from the hurt inside because we care, because we love, because we want this to be a kinder world.
Pemetrojourn talks about getting underneath to the soft spot, that place of vulnerability,
so that we're coming really from love, although the anger is what has gotten us going and has woken us up and it's absolutely essential to
honor the anger and honor the outrage. It's just not as effective action coming from that
place to go underneath and come from the caring that it's really trying to protect us from.
And a love can be at least for me as a skeptic can be a bit of a stopper as a word
because it can sound grandiose, but you invoked earlier on in this conversation that you I believe
you invoked Mingi Rinpoche who was on the show a few weeks ago. Great meditation teacher in the
Tibetan tradition. He was talking about love as like just the way you are that it doesn't need to be
grandiose. You can look at every shift in your chair, every effort to be more comfortable as a
form of love. If you just think of love as just giving a crap or caring. And so yes, tuning into that
being the undergirding force, anger being secondary to that. Yeah, the anger is the response to the outer world and there's a contraction, but underneath
there's something much deeper.
When I say love, there's lots of different words, and this is one of the things about
awakening joy that I'm quite aware of.
Words are really important, so you want to be able to
communicate the words that people can resonate with. That's why I have a lot of different definitions
for joy right off the bat when people are doing that. But love can be caring, is kindness,
you like the Dalai Lama says, my religion is kindness. Most people can relate to that.
Or basic goodwill, just wishing well. So it doesn't have to be flowery. In fact,
it can be a little bit tricky if you're trying to, you know,
do a walking, skipping through a field of daisies and saying, oh, yes, it's in an all wonderful,
but that basic, deep caring, which is there in compassion as well, which is in the face
of suffering, all of those qualities of wishing well and having a sensitivity and a connection
with life, those are all Kusula, those are all Hulsam states.
As you try to,
and I wanna emphasize that you've done a lot of work
on climate and race as well,
as you try to walk this line
of emphasizing joy and leaning into sort of an engagement
with the injustices of the world.
Do you ever see in your own mind or in other people's minds
and emphasis on joy leading one to a kind of polyanna-esque denial?
Definitely.
There's bypassing in so many different ways
in the spiritual journey.
And when I start my course, I say, this is not a feel-good program.
This is a feel-everything program. And so what will being does is give you a larger context
to process all the different feelings that are there. There's nothing left out as sometimes I say
in Buddhism. And so you have to honor, that's why I said before, authentically being where you're at
and feeling the connection with it.
Then you can have some space around all of the painful feelings and the hurt feelings.
In fact, one of those ten steps, there are ten steps in my book and my course,
the fourth step, after gratitude, after you, you know,
gone through intention and mindfulness, and then gratitude is the third, and that gives you the
space to then go into the fourth step, which is opening up to the difficult. That's an essential
piece of opening to joy. So you're not living in denial. You're not covering up what's
here. That's why the Buddha started the first noble truth. They're suffering in life. And
until you're ready to really open up to that, you're going to be living in denial and avoiding.
So they go right together.
I hope she's not mad at me for this, but I want to bring in Marissa who's producing this episode who you were talking about the difficult and she was on a retreat with you
where she had a real insight around dealing with the difficult emotion around shame.
Marissa, would you be willing to come on and just tee up a question for Mr. Barrie's
about that?
Oh, how exciting.
How could you?
Hi.
Hey, so yeah, I did the three-month meditation retreat and James was my teacher for the first six weeks.
And the retreat ended and I did not.
It was very challenging and I realized that's why I, you know, doing the retreat made me understand the power of the triple gem and why Sangha matters and Sangha isn't just being in a room silently with people. It's like having spiritual community to support you.
And the retreat ended and essentially things got very complicated with who I thought maybe was my spiritual community.
And I basically have been in shame about that ever since. So holding a lot of shame about that for two years now,
you know, talking with James and pre-interviewing him
and seeing if this would be a good fit for the show.
And he said, how is your retreat?
We haven't spoken since then.
And it's sort of like the floodgates opened up.
Because one, I realized I'd been holding this with me
for so long and
it just felt so much shame around it because I think that can get really tricky with spiritual
communities.
Like almost we try to bypass when there's a problem because you know, these people are
spiritual and they practice.
And James told me, he said, shame is a misunderstanding of on a top emptiness. That really struck with me.
So I guess the question would be to explain what that means and how that can be a value to people
who experience shame and suffering, which I think all people do.
Well first of all, I'm so glad that just through this arranging of this interview, we
got a chance to reconnect and process what you went through.
And I'm so sorry that you did go through that and I'm glad that we can work with it because it's all workable.
As soon as you start having a wiser relationship to what happened,
and this is not just you, this is for all of us, then there's a healing.
And as we were talking,
and I've really enjoyed reconnecting and talking and exploring,
what I said was, when we have shame, I enjoyed reconnecting and talking and exploring.
What I said was when we have shame, where stuck in thinking, oh, I was a bad person or I
am a bad person or I did something that it's hard to forgive myself for or I don't want
people to see who I really am, the mind might say. But that's not who you really are.
And so when I said that it's a misunderstanding of anata, anata is the concept of we are and taking ownership of a particular feeling
that comes up is misunderstanding.
We have all of these feelings that come and go,
I know what shame is like.
I know what fear is like.
I know what self-judgment is like.
And in fact, processing that and seeing, oh, this is part of being human,
has enabled me to be there for others who go through it. It's just part of the human experience.
And so, to look back and see, oh, I just didn't understand. I just wasn't seeing clearly, really in Buddhism the way I see it.
It's not so much evil, it's just not understanding, not seeing clearly.
That's the definition of Vipassana to see things clearly.
Its ignorance is the real villain, ignorance in the most respectful way, and that we do things because we're confused.
And so to forgive the confusion, rather than to blame myself for what happened or what
I did, and even to forgive the confusion if we can get to it when we're ready in other
people who have their own confusions,
and Dharma teachers are included in there.
So that's where the healing really occurs.
What I hear in that, and Marissa may have follow-ups,
but what I hear in that, and I confess to only having
episodic passing, understanding of selflessness
or not to, is a sort of
impersonal nature of the various emotions or mental qualities that wash through
us. Shame personalizes any ignorance or greed or whatever and makes it all
about you even though there isn't really a you there. Instead to see, oh yeah, well, I was caught in something else,
maybe not so wholesome, like an ignorance or a greed, but it's not so much that I am thorough
goingly rotten because there's nothing thorough going about you at all. I wonder if one could hear
that and say, well, is that a way to disavow responsibility?
Yeah. Yeah. Well, first, very well put, I like the way you just explained it not to it's all just arising and passing, arising and passing. How many
different moods have you had today? You're on the East Coast. So you've got
three more hours on me, but you probably have gone a lot of different places.
Your moods and your thoughts, how many different thoughts have you had?
And which one can you point to and say, oh, that's who I really am.
You know, you see your son and you get happy.
You get an email and you might, um, get grumpy or whatever.
So it's all just coming and going and coming and going.
But as far as responsibility, if you don't know any better, then you don't know any better. But once you do know, once
you do see, I have a choice here. This is one of the both the blessings and the curses of awareness that you
can't pretend you don't know anymore. And once you see where is this leading to,
if you see that you have a choice, this opens up a whole world. And so as far as
responsibility, you know, all of karma is based on intention and on understanding
what your intention is behind your actions. Most people are not in touch with their intentions, so precisely.
And so they just keep on creating more trouble for themselves by acting out of greed, hatred, confusion.
But once you see that you can choose, then that changes everything. If you don't want to create suffering, you'll
choose a different way. It's one of my favorite teachings of the Buddha. He says to
the Kalamas, he says, you know, don't believe anybody. Don't believe the teachers.
Don't believe the authorities. Don't believe the Buddha. Don't believe your own
views. But when you know for yourself yourself this leads to suffering, then if you
don't want to suffer, don't do it. And when you know for yourself that this leads to happiness,
and if you want well-being and happiness, then go follow it. The choice is yours. So the responsibility really comes from seeing more clearly
that your actions have consequences.
But until you know, you don't know.
So I look back on my life, for instance,
right about this in my book, all the mistakes that I made when
I was in my 20s, particularly in my 20s, I look back and I went on one loving kindness
retreat. My first loving kindness retreat, may I be happy, may I be peaceful, and I thought
of all the awful things that I did in my life. This is very
comment that this happens. It's a kind of purification and it was like, oh my god, I can't believe I did that.
Oh, I can't believe I did that. It got so bad. I said, okay, I'm going to name the 20 really awful
things I did in my life and just get it out. Fortunately, I only came up with 17, which was this tremendous relief. But
what I learned as I cringed each time, oh, God, I can't believe it did that. And then it
occurred to me, oh, cringing is really a good thing. It means I'm not that person that
I was anymore. I wouldn't do those things now. But I didn't know any
better than I was so confused. And there was this wave of self forgiveness,
genuine self forgiveness. Oh gosh, you were confused. You were trying to do what
you thought was, well, you didn't think at all.
And there was that healing and seeing,
I didn't know any better.
If I could have done it better, I would have.
And now I know how Lua, I see another way.
Yeah, and I appreciate grounding it in that
because it feels more practical
because Dan basically to James, you know, first I was like, I'm never meditating again. I hate this. That was my initial, you know, after the retreat. That's like this just brings more suffering.
But then sort of trying to bypass and say, well, we're just a heap of foam and samsara anyway.
My pain and hurt isn't valuable. I just need to accept some, sorry, I move on.
But, you know, in this world,
is lay people and we have to meet that with the heart.
I guess even if I don't want to.
That's where the healing really comes in.
Until you do, you're just stuffing it
or not wanting to go there, but when you see,
oh, yes, oh, I see what happened. I see my
confusion and their confusion perhaps. You don't have to go there before you're ready to, but
I understand. And even feeling that pain and like I say, metabolizing it, then there can be
a real healing and transforming it into genuine compassion.
Then there can be a real healing and transforming it into genuine compassion.
This has been a great interview. I'm just giving space in case we miss something or do we feel like we've covered everything?
I guess one thing that occurs to me is seeing that we all want to be happy inside.
Even those who say, well, I like being grumpy.
That's just their way of being happy.
So everything we do, there's something inside of us that's really rooting for our happiness and well-being.
And then to get in touch with that very pure place, whether you call it the Buddha inside
or your true nature or the kingdom of heaven within, to get in touch with that, that there's
this goodness in us that wants to come out that we, the more we can appreciate and celebrate and listen,
listen rather than figure out, listen to the wisdom inside that says, oh, what will truly be
a benefit to me and to the world, not just to me, but to me and the world, then it's listening to the Buddha or Kwanyan or Jesus,
Mother Mary, within listening to it and letting that goodness motivate you in whatever you do,
then we'll all benefit, and your own well-being becomes a gift to everybody else because it helps
awaken that in others as well.
James Barris, thank you very much. Also, thank you to Marissa. I keep dragging her into the various episodes, but I don't feel guilty about it at all. I'm just grateful.
Big thanks to James and just a plug here. I mentioned this the other day, but coming up on
the first of October from 7 p.m. from 7pm to 9pm Eastern Standard Time, Joseph
Goldstein, Sharon Salzberg, and Seven A. Slassey and I will be doing a live stream event.
It's a benefit to support the New York Insight Meditation Center and also the Cambridge
Insight Meditation Center.
If you want more information, you can go to nyimc.org and search under events and to make it much easier for you we also put a link
in the show notes. And as always a big thanks to the team these people work incredibly hard on the
show Samuel Johns is our senior producer Merissa Schneidermann is our producer our sound designers
are Matt Boynton and Ania Sheshik from ultraviolet audio Maria Wartell is our product and coordinator
we drive a lot of wisdom from our TPH colleagues,
such as Jen Poient, Nate Toby, Ben Rubin, Liz Levin,
and of course a big thank you and salute
to my ABC News colleagues, Ryan Kessler, and Josh Koham.
We'll see you all on Friday for a bonus. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING Hey, hey, prime members. You can listen to 10% happier early and ad-free on Amazon Music.
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