Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 308: Manure for Enlightenment | Fleet Maull
Episode Date: December 14, 2020The notion of transmuting the difficult stuff in your life into something positive has become a cliche. Turning lemon into lemonades, making your mess your message, etcetera. But, as I have s...aid many times on this show, there is a reason cliches become cliches: they’re true. And it is extraordinarily helpful, in my experience, when someone can re-language and revivify an ancient truth that has been ground into platitude through rote repetition. My guest today does just that. Fleet Maull spent many years in prison on serious drug-related charges. He used that time to fuel a deep meditation practice and public service career. He’s practiced for nearly five decades in the Zen, Tibetan, and Vipassana Insight traditions. He’s also written a book called Radical Responsibility. In this episode, we talk about how to, in his words, turn the gnarly stuff in your life into a gift (or, as an old Buddhist expression has it, how to use your struggles as “manure for enlightenment”). On that note, midway through the interview, you’ll hear Fleet reveal, in real time, and to my surprise, that he is actually in the throes of acute anguish at this very moment-- and he will talk about how this experience is fueling his practice. We also talk about: what he learned in prison about whether human nature is fundamentally good; the value of adding breathing exercises onto your meditation practice; what he means by “neurosomatic mindfulness.” Where to find Fleet Maull online: Website: www.fleetmaull.com Social Media: • Twitter: https://twitter.com/fleetmaull • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/fleetmaull/ • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fleetmaull/ • YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCL_AqFCn3m6lvQTJPIx_uLg Books Mentioned: • Radical Responsibility: How to Move Beyond Blame, Fearlessly Live Your Highest Purpose, and Become an Unstoppable Force for Good by Fleet Maull: www.radicalresponsibilitybook.com • Mindfulness and Psychotherapy edited by Christopher K. Germer, Ronald D. Siegel, Paul R. Fulton: https://www.indiebound.org/book/9781593851392 People are sending more virtual gifts this holiday season to avoid putting themselves (and essential delivery workers) at risk. If you're one of them, consider helping your loved ones care for their minds by giving them a subscription to the Ten Percent Happier app. We're offering gift subscriptions at a discount through the end of this month. No shipping required - your gift will be delivered directly to your email inbox. Get a gift subscription by visiting www.tenpercent.com/gift. Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/fleet-maull-308 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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Before we jump into today's show, many of us want to live healthier lives, but keep
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But what if there was a different way to relate to this gap between what you want to do and
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show. to Baby, this is Kiki Palmer on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts. For ABC, this is the 10% happier podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hello, one item of business before we dive in here.
People are sending more virtual gifts this holiday season to avoid putting themselves and essential delivery workers
at risk.
If you're one of those people, consider helping your loved ones
train their own minds by giving them a subscription
to the 10% happier app.
We are offering gift subscriptions at a discount
through the end of December.
No shipping required.
Obviously your gift will be delivered directly
to your email inbox.
So go get a gift subscription by visiting 10% dot com slash gift.
That's 10% one word all spelled out dot com slash gift.
Okay, let's dive in.
As I suspect all of you know, the notion of transmuting the difficult stuff in your life
into something more positive has become a pretty
serious cliche, you know, turning lemon into lemonade, making your mess, your message,
et cetera, et cetera. But as I have said many, many times on this show, there is a reason
clichés become clichés because they're true. And in my view, and in my experience,
it can be extraordinarily helpful when somebody can relanguage and revivify an ancient truth
that has been ground into empty platitude through rope repetition.
My guest today does just that. His name is Fleet Mall and he spent many years in prison on
serious drug-related charges. He used that time to fuel a deep meditation practice and a public
service career. He has now been practicing for nearly five decades in the Zen Tibetan and Vipassana insight
traditions.
He's also written a book called Radical Responsibility.
In this episode, we talk about how to, in his words, turn the gnarly stuff into a gift
or as an old Buddhist expression, has it how to use your struggles. And I'm quoting here as
manure for enlightenment. On that note of manure for enlightenment midway through this interview,
you're going to hear fleet reveal in real time. And to my surprise that he is actually in the
throws of acute anguish at this very moment. And he'll talk about how this experience is fueling his practice.
In the conversation, we also talk about
what he learned in prison, about whether human nature
is fundamentally good, the value of adding breathing exercises
onto your meditation practice,
and what he means by neuro-somatic mindfulness.
Here we go with Fleet Mall.
Fleet Mall, thanks for coming on.
My pleasure, Dan.
Great to be here.
So let's start, I'm sure you're not surprised
that I'm going to start here with your personal story.
As I understand it, a big landmark in your personal
and contemplative development was going to prison.
Can you tell that story?
Yeah, absolutely. I'll try to do it relatively briefly. So, yes, that was a really important time
for me. I spent 14 years in a federal prison. How did I get there? I was one of those baby boomers
that came of age into 60s, kind of classic angry young man, graduated from high school in 1968,
completely disillusioned, alienided, justifiably or not.
That's what was going on with me.
Both families stopped, but a lot of you with the cultural stuff,
all the assassinations and so forth.
And I grew up in the Midwest, Roman Catholic,
up being basically a good family,
but we had our issues, had some alcoholism and things
like that that was quite painful.
68 was one of the multilimultuous years culturally
in this country.
I just went headlong into the counter culture,
went off to a big state university,
but really majored in drug section rock and roll
and anti-war politics and any other crazy
just I get involved in.
But I had always been a spiritual seeker.
In fact, my family always thought
I was going to go into the priesthood early on
or something like that.
So I'd always been a spiritual seeker
and I continued that all along.
So I ended up eventually leaving the country.
I just became so alienated.
In part to get away from the drug culture I was involved in and in part just Nixon was
reelected.
I just wanted to get out.
And I also was on the search for something authentic.
I remember at a time in my childhood when I felt really plugged into reality, things
were very riveted and real even magical
And that had kind of just gone away at some point and that's probably a normal
Developmental process, but I never made peace with it
So I was always hungry for that looking for that and you know the drugs were some mirage of that
But obviously with a lot of baggage and if you got a hole in your gut and addictive propensities that can take you down a lot of twisted roads
So I did leave the country and started traveling as an expat throughout Latin America.
And that was a very transformative time. I spent a year living on a sailboat to another
guy and I had a small native boat that we learned out of sail and kind of an incredible
life for a while and I was just living off the ocean literally. And then sold the boat
continued to South America. And I had some notion about getting to Peru and finding something magical there and had
nothing to do with drugs.
I don't know where I got the idea, but I did get there and did discover something quite
magical there.
Just environmentally, there was some kind of real magic in the environment.
And unfortunately, the first time I came back to the States, when I ran out of money,
I had to come back and work for a while, I couldn't bring the magic with me, so I realized it was still environmental.
Anyway, this went on, and eventually, down there, the second time, I fell into or made
choices rather to engage in kind of small-time cocaine smuggling.
Originally, I had a connection and I would purchase something for people who were coming
down as smugglers, and I could make like $ a thousand dollars and live off that for six months down there. So I
continue like that for a while. Eventually, gotten involved in smuggling myself to come
back to the US and you know, that kind of path remained intertwined for a while before
I could pull it apart. But what I came back for the US for was to go to the Naropa University.
I'd been trying to practice on my own for a couple years, high in a mountains and Peru, in a little place that very remote valley up above the sacred
valley of the Incas, and I'd zeroed in on the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, reading the few
books that were available at that time. And then when I someone actually showed up at my house
there with a copy of Rolling Stone magazine in 1974 with an article about that first summer session,
it was kind of legendary in Boulder at Naropa
then the rope institute. And when I saw Trunk Brumshade's name, I just knew I had to go there. And
so I did and went and got my master's degree there. It was very intense contemplative or clinical
contemplative psychology program. And that was very transformative in the process. I became a student.
But I kept this other shadow part of my life, a secret
for quite a while, from my teacher and from everyone.
I would disappear once or twice a year and I was able to live outside of system, continue
to pursue my interests and so forth.
And my marriage was falling apart.
I kept those problems at bay with money.
And so I had all this cognitive dissonance.
And when I was traveling with my teacher, which I was very fortunate to somehow develop
that relationship and travel with him a lot as one of his primary attendants, and when I was traveling with my teacher, which I was very fortunate to somehow develop that relationship
and travel with him a lot as one of his primary attendants,
and when I was on retreats,
and I spent about half the year
in retreats and programs are traveling with him,
and then I was leading a very sane life,
and then I would go to this completely crazy life,
and back and forth,
and before I could tease that apart,
I ended up earning my way into a,
what originally looked like a 30 year no parole prison sentence.
So that became a whole nother chapter of my life.
Just explain to folks in the Europa University, which began as Naropa Institute was founded
by Chogim Trunkba Rinpoche, sort of controversial Tibetan Lama, who had his own wildness in his
his life, ultimately died in his late 40s from peers
that he drank himself to death.
So he's an enigma to me because he simultaneously viewed
as controversial and wild and outside the mainstream,
but also quite highly attained as a meditator and a teacher.
So just by way of context for folks
that that was the world you're involved with.
And nonetheless, you were adding a layer of chaos
that probably went beyond the norm even for that context.
So you spent 14 years in a federal prison
and you're a practice deep in during that period of time?
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
You know, I had received so much from my teacher
and that tradition.
And yes, he is an enigma, a silt to this day.
And considered by his peers
to be one of the most realized teachers of his generation. And yet, he is an enigma, a silt to this day, and considered by his peers to be one of the most realized teachers of his generation. And yet controversial. I added a whole nother
layer of myself as you described who had nothing to do with him or what. So teaching
see was giving me quite to the contrary. But anyway, I landed in this prison and it was
a huge wake up call for me, especially because my sum was nine years old at the time. And
when I was actually sentenced to 30 years, no parole, I realized I was 35 at that time,
the paper the next day said I'd be 65 years old before I had any chance to release.
And so I thought my life as I'd known it was over, I'd pretty much torched my life.
And I realized what I'd done to my son, it was now going to grow up without a dad.
And I was just absolutely devastated.
I just completely hit a wall, went
through a whole dark night of the soul kind of experience and really had to base the incredible
selfies decisions I've been making so long in a completely self deluded way, you know,
thinking I loved my son and that I was a relatively good father when in fact I was actually
a horrible father and making all kinds of selfies decisions just regarding his safety
and security and future. And so I had to face all that, and that was excruciating, and I became radically dedicated
to get all the negativity out of my life and to take everything I've been given and put
it into practice.
And I wanted to give my son some better legacy than just his dad went to prison, or even
his dad died in prison, because I had no surety that I'd survive.
You know, I was originally sentenced on this so-called Kingpin Statute to this day.
I don't feel like I was a Kingpin.
I don't have any Swiss bank accounts anywhere.
But, you know, I was the one that wouldn't testify
against anybody.
And that wasn't about being a stand-up guy.
It was just, I was a Buddhist.
And the idea of exchanging somebody else's time,
somebody else's family suffering instead of myself.
And I just couldn't do that.
So I didn't cooperate.
And so I became the kingpin
and I did a lot of people's time.
But when I got there, I realized that the only way
through this for me and the only way out
if I was gonna get beyond this was to just embrace
absolute radical responsibility,
for having got myself there and what I was gonna do with it.
I was practicing like my hair was on fire.
I also realized that anything,
you know, there were a couple of moments, oh, really. The night before I got to say,
it's a moment I'm very grateful for it to this day. I was facing potential life in prison.
It would have been life with no parole. And I couldn't sleep. They had me in a suicide watch observation
cell. I wasn't suicidal, but I was obviously very anxious and I couldn't sleep. And sometime before dawn, I got up on this built-in,
toilet sink kind of contraption in the cell
and there was a small window way up high.
So I stood up and that's how I could actually peer
out the window, just desperate to see the night sky.
And it was a clear night.
I could see the stars.
And something moved me and I got back down,
sat on the side of the bed.
Some wave came over me and I just came committed.
I didn't, I don't know if I made a decision
or it just came up in me to knock you up on myself,
to knock you up on life, to knock you up on my son
no matter what happened the next day.
So the next day I was sentenced to 30 years no parole,
then I arrived at this federal prison.
Well, when I got there and started walking around,
I'll never forget this.
It was almost like something out of a fleeting movie.
It was, I was seeing men, you know, paraplegic and quadriplegic being wheeled around in wheelchairs.
I was seeing men who were blind, being helped walking down.
I was seeing men doing the thoresin or halodol two step, you know, and over-medicated.
And I was just seeing such suffering and and people amaciated with cancer,
liver disease, AIDS, and it just shook me out of, you know, as you can imagine, I arrived there,
really preoccupied with the drama of my own situation, just having been sentenced to 30 years
with no parole. And so seeing all this suffering just shocked me out of that, and I just realized I was
there to serve. And I had the specter of my teacher, Trung Prumche, who really in my experience
just served humanity 24-7.
And so I just tried figuring out how can I contribute?
I got a job teaching at school.
I did that was my day job for 14 years.
And I also began to see break quickly
that the environment I am was in was one of tremendous
negativity.
It was kind of a ritual with, you'd meet somebody
and you'd go walk the track and
you know, they tell you their victim's story, you know, their lawyer's good them over, their fall
partner, this or that. And then you'd share your story. And after I did that once or twice, I certainly
didn't want to hear my story anymore. I didn't really want to hear their stories, which probably
wasn't very compassionate, but I just didn't want to go there and be there. And I realized that if I
wasn't really proactive, I would come out of prison,
negative, bitter, angry, and I certainly didn't want to come out of prison that way.
So again, that's why I made this commitment to embrace 100% radical responsibility for what
I was going to do with that experience in there.
So how did it turn out? You said you practiced like your hair was on fire.
Could you find reasonably quiet place to practice in prison?
And you say you dedicated yourself to compassion. What did that look like initially in many prisons?
You're not really in regular them the cells like you see in movies, although they had some of those there
You're in these big dormitories originally I was in like what to call a 24-man dorm
So 12 bunk beds, right? Just absolute chaos at night
You start up on a top bunk.
You get seniority by basically staying out of trouble
and the transition people leaving and coming,
eventually you move your way to a bottom bunk.
Why date in the top bunk,
but arrange with the CO on the floor,
the guard to retain my seniority,
because sitting on the top bunk,
I could meditate late at night.
On the sit, trying to sit in the bottom bunk,
there wasn't head clearance.
And I could sit up there after a light-top,
people kind of wouldn't notice me.
So that was one way I practiced.
And eventually I came up with this idea
at the entrance to these dorms,
at these trash closets, where all the trash buckets
and a mop, some brooms and everything were.
So I would go in and clean it up and set some brooms
and stuff outside,
it gave people wanted it.
And I'd take a metal folding chair and I go in there and practice.
And that became my practice room.
And I practiced every day for a couple hours on weekends.
Sometimes I'd be practicing four or five hours.
I went through from 24 man to 18 man to 12 man and so forth.
I finally got a single cell.
There were just a few single cells on that floor.
This was a floor originally designed for 50 patients, but now it was a general population. Floor
there were 185 guys living on the floor, just crammed in every nook and cranny. And so
there were only a few single rooms, and it was just because they were too small to double
up. I eventually got one of those, you see, and you already, and then I was able to start
doing the noondriol practices in a Tibetan Buddhist tradition, and the prostrations, which
I had never completed.
So I was getting up at 4 in the morning and doing that.
And then at night, I was dutty until lights out,
and then I would practice hours into the nighttime.
I was only sleeping four or five hours for many years,
first, probably seven, eight years in my sense.
I couldn't possibly do that now.
I had to force myself to get up,
but somehow thrive with that little sleep.
So I was really intensely practicing. And I also knew anything I was going to be able to
do or create in that institution was going to come out of my practice. And so I just trusted that
that if I really focused on my practice, some good things would come out. And fairly soon got a
meditation group started in the prison chapel once a week eventually we had twice a week.
I was very involved in 12-step work and became a leader in network for the whole time I was there. I was involved
with the Native Americans sweat off and on and I was teaching school as my day job teaching
school. I have an out of tremendous learning because amongst your fellow prisoners, you
know, you really have to be really careful because you know, you don't have locks on your
doors and the smallest guy in a place when you're sleeping can put a lock in a sock and you're dead.
And so I'm trying to teach these guys who for many of whom school is a nightmare and
they're angry about their force to go to school if they don't go to school they put
them in a whole administrative segregation they bring them back they're even angrier.
And I had to figure out how to get in relationship with these guys because I wanted to teach
most of the MA teachers would just go sit in a corner and
You know just try to say say but I didn't want to do that and you know
I learned a hard way I had four or five situations blow up on me fortunately I survived
But I really learned a lot of skills about how to get in relationship with people
This was 1985 when I arrived there the AIDS epidemic was going into full swing and
So I began getting very concerned and they start bringing all the AIDS patients was going into full swing. And so I began getting very concerned.
And they started bringing all the AIDS patients from all the federal penitentiaries.
This was a maximum security federal prison hospital.
So the patients were all from the federal penitentiaries, the places like Levenworth and
Lampock, Atlanta and Lewisburg and so forth.
And they were bringing all the AIDS patients from all those penitentiaries.
And initially they had them locked up back in a psychiatric
Warded isolated for their own protection because there was such fear in the unique population ahead and then in education around AIDS
I
Thought of researching how it could support them because I was also involved in a service club and one things we did
We took movies to show up in the hospital wards and they wouldn't let me stay back in that age war
But I would take it back there and pass it to the gate and
Probably some of my old smuggler habits. I would stick some magazines and other stuff in the under the camera for them
And I got in relationship with them very concerned about their plight and I started reaching out to outside organizations and
Eventually got with another inmate who was shot during his arrest
He was paralyzed from the waist down and wheeling around a wheelchair. Big martial artists with huge arms, very funny guy.
He had befriended an AIDS patient and a cancer patient on his ward and was just kind of accompanying
them as they went through their dying process.
He and I met and we got inspired to start a hospice program through a lot of effort and
a lot of proposals and eventually a change in leadership.
We eventually got permission to start the first hospice program anywhere in the world and inside of prison.
So that became a huge part of my life for the final 11 years of my time there.
It's an amazing story.
Just to clarify a couple terms you used in there just for folks who might not know what
you're referring to when you talk about inmates being thrown in the hole or administrative
segregation if they didn't go to class, that's solitary confinement.
Yeah, solitary confinement.
Check the jail within the jail.
Yep.
And then, Nundro practice, which you referenced, which is Tibetan practice, where you do prostrations.
You sort of purly yourself down on the ground and prostrate yourself and the Nundro practice.
It's a preliminary practice in some Tibetan schools and it's 100,000 frustrations.
So I just wanted to unpack that a little bit
for folks who are listening.
Yeah, it's a preliminary practice
for entering into Vajrayana Buddhism,
but there are many Buddhist traditions
in which people do bowing practice
and it's connected with the basic decision
of becoming a Buddhist,
which is to take refuge in the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha.
So you're taking refuge as you do your prostrations.
And that's just the first one.
And then there's a hundred thousand of another,
a hundred thousand of another.
And then the fourth one is a million.
So it can take a while.
I can imagine.
One last question about your personal story.
I can't help but ask as somebody who is also the father
of a boy minus five.
Yours was nine when you went in by
my math.
He would have been 23 or something like that when you got out.
How was and is that relationship?
Yeah.
Well, I did my best to stay in touch with Robert while I was in to correspondence and he
moved back to Peru.
His mom was from Peru.
And so actually, when I got locked up, I asked my family to help them get back to
Peru. So they went back to Peru because the government was trying to put pressure on my wife
and so forth. So they went back to Peru. But fortunately, every other year, my family brought my son
up for some time during what was his summer here in the States, was the Christmas holidays. He
would stay with my brother and St. Louis who had three sons, one of the same ages, my son, and go to school with them a little bit when school was in
and they'd bring him down to see me on weekends. So I was able to see him by every year that way.
And one year, the community I was part of, the Chamolah community, people pulled some funds
and brought him up and actually took him up in Nova Scotia to a meditation program for young people.
And then he was also able to come see me.
So I was able to stay in touch with him that way, but still very, very, very limited.
He moved back to the States about two years before I got out and was really struggling.
Tried in Boulder where he'd grown up in part with me, really struggling and then came
back.
Eventually, he ended up where I was in spring, film, and so where this federal prison
was and staying with my AA sponsor
for a while, still struggling.
So I kind of went on, eventually I got out
and we're both in Boulder.
And so kind of a long-quisted road,
very close relationship, he really struggled
getting his life together.
Fortunately, he stayed out of trouble,
but a lot of struggles as you might imagine
have your dad grow up in prison.
And it's a beautiful, talented person.
He became a chef.
He's worked in the restaurant.
And she most of his life is a sommariera,
a chef, executive chef, and so forth.
But very sadly, we lost Robert.
Just in September, he had improved in 2008.
He was down there and got beaten nearly to death.
I think he would just in the wrong place.
It's a wrong time in Kusko Proo at night in a discotheque and walked in on something.
It took quite a while for him to recover.
Actually, I had to go down and practically smuggling my other country and couldn't find
care frontal lobe head injury where he really recovered was on the ashram of a friend of mine up in Montana.
They hung in there with him and my then partner Denise was dying of cancer so she's on hospice my son's completely out of control crazy it was a very rough time fortunately he recovered.
But then a number of years later he started having seizures because of the scar tissue.
And so he struggled with that often on, but his continued need move back to Peru about two
years ago because he thought it would be less stressful because even with the medication,
when he gets stressed or doesn't sleep while he still can have seizures, he'll wake up early
in the morning with a seizure.
And as far as we know, he had a seizure early one morning and his mother lived nearby, came
to look for him
around 10 a.m. and he was already gone. So we don't know really what happened, but we
think it must have been related to a seizure. So it's been a heartbreaking time for his
mom and I.
I'm really sorry to hear that. I wonder after all these decades of intensive meditation practice,
was your practice useful in bearing what is the worst pain I can imagine?
Absolutely, you know, I remember the moment
his mom called me, I mean, she was there
trying to figure out whether he was alive or not,
she got me on the phone, so it was very intense,
and once we realized he was gone,
I remember dropping the phone and just wailing and
the first week, the two weeks was just excruciating pain. Actually that first day I was doing
all kinds of breath regulation. I thought I was going to have a heart attack. I could barely breathe.
It was very rough the first couple weeks but I made a commitment, you know, when my partner,
Denise died, who I was incredibly close and bonded to, she was also a very advanced student in our tradition, an amazing practitioner
and teacher, and her journey with cancer was three years, and she was able to complete
her life in a beautiful way, including how she died in the moment of death and all the
rest of it.
But once she was gone, I would just amess.
I feel like I just kind of really let it take me down.
I didn't want to avoid the grief. I wanted to just let it move through me. I didn't want to
avoid it in any way because I've studied a lot into all my years with hospice, trading a lot about
grief and bereavement. But I think I didn't really practice with it enough. And I just let it take me
down in ways that I don't think we're necessary or that helpful
and it took me quite a while to recover. And so with the loss of Robert and I'm still completely
open to going through the grief and that's going to be a I'm sure a long time winding river of a
journey, but I also committed to not let this take me down. I'm really going to practice with it.
So I've been practicing really and I always practice. I mean I practice some as strong practice
in any way on a daily basis. My partner, Sophie and I get up and do a long practice session
every morning together. But I even up the ad to you with that really practicing intensely.
And also in our tradition, we believe the transition from one life to the next is very important
to support people. So I was doing intensive practices for Robert and doing guidance for
him and so forth. So I just made that my focus for the first 49 days, which is the traditional time.
I actually found myself over the weeks coming to a state of peace and a state of clarity
that Robert's okay and continuing with the journey.
And I mean, that's a subjective feeling, but also even though, you know, there's a deep
pain and a loss there.
And I'm sure that will still come up in very painful ways,
but there is a real sense of peace and calm
in the midst of it all,
and I can only attribute that to practice.
So it has been a very different experience this time,
and at times, you don't know how to feel.
I remember I had experiences in prison
where because I was practicing so much
and doing deep inner yogic practices,
and I started having this experience.
I remember the first time it happened.
Sometimes the pain of being separated from my son and him growing up without me and me
not being part of his life, that pain would hit me.
And it would just be so excruciate.
I feel like I was going to die in the spot like the blinding white light of excruciating
pain.
And I remember being in my cell and all of being at the point,
I just wanted to smash my head on the concrete wall of the cell.
I was just with that and it was like my practice kicking in or something.
It was like this space just started to emerge around the pain and became bigger and bigger
and the pain dissolved into the space and then I was in the state of bliss.
At first time, it happened.
It was incredibly unsettling because a moment ago, I'm an agony
because I'm not with my son and that makes sense.
I feel like a human being.
And the next moment I'm in bliss and that feels like I'm an alien or something.
So it was very unsettling until I began to understand what was going on.
So even now, you know, the part of my brain is sometimes go, well, you should be a mess
on the floor completely and capacitated.
Your son died. But, you know, that's just one voice in the head. And I realized that's not really
holding the experience with my practice. So I'm just trying to stay open and commit myself to
continue serving in a way that I know Robert was really proud of the work I do. So just really trying
to dedicate the work I do to him and to his memory. To be clear, he died just this past September or the September before that?
This past September, September 14th, yeah.
Just a few weeks ago as we record this.
Yeah.
Well, I'm really sorry, that's awful.
I didn't know coming into the interview, so.
Yeah, I know.
I know quite nowhere to share it with people in the public situations because it
kind of feels like a heavy burden, but yeah, it's very alive in me every moment.
And at the same time, I'm using all the practices and skills I've learned to hold it and be
with it rather than just kind of collapsing with it.
And that does seem to be a journey that somehow feels different than the last time I went to a really serious
loss like this in a good way.
You're a teacher and it may be so fresh that there's not a good answer for this, but
what would you, you know, the folks who come to this show or you're going to learn to apply these
principles around meditation and Buddhism in their own lives?
What would you teach based on what you're going through right now?
Mm-hmm.
Well, you know, I think we have a basic choices, human beings, and it's almost not even a
choice until we become aware we have a choice, but we're very conditioned, and we get most of our conditioning in our childhood, most
of it before we're seven, and we don't have any choice about that.
We get what we get, and it's a mixed bag, as we all know.
We get some really good things, good values, some useful programming.
We can walk and talk, and lots of different things, and some good bags, and then we get
some stuff that's not so great, and gets in our way.
And then we get all the adaptations we come up with as children and some of which are not
so serviceable as adults, but they're deeply in grade.
So we have that conditioning and then we have the world around us and we kind of live in
that space between our conditioning and the environment and mostly apparently unconscious
reactive way.
And that's the way a lot of us live.
And even at that, I think we have amazing qualities as human beings.
I think there's this underlying goodness
underneath all that, but we are really driven
by our conditioning.
And so at some point, we have a choice whether to live
that way or to embrace some kind of awareness practices
to train ourselves, to rise above that mechanical level
of just constantly chasing pleasure and avoiding pain,
chasing comfort and avoiding discomfort,
and a very mechanical
automatic way of living, reactive way of living and to choose to live consciously.
And what that really is is having a practice like mindfulness practice, very mindfulness
awareness practices that are in all traditions.
And so we can learn to actually work with our mind, become embodied on our own physiology,
learn how to regulate our own physiology,
regulate our own emotions, and not to suppress anything,
but to actually be with it,
rather than getting hijacked by it.
So it's not a matter of repressing anything,
but it's also being able to hold our seat
and stay with our experience.
And that really lives in, to me,
our human destiny has become conscious beings
who can be in net flow of life
and face the challenges that we all face in life and still be able to show up for ourselves, our families and for the larger world
in ways that are beneficial and that takes constant training and constant practice.
Well, that's a great recitation I think of one of the core value propositions of meditation. I'm listening to this and I'm thinking, personally, I don't have anything even fractionally
as traumatic as what you've gone through in your life recently or what you are going through right now.
Nonetheless, I try to be a consistent meditator, but on the regular encounter emotions that are
I try to be a consistent meditator, but on the regular encounter emotions that are,
you know, we're all in a pandemic,
we're all living through the aftermath of this,
rather, let's just say tumultuous election,
there's a lot of stuff going on.
And so occasionally powerful emotions come up
and I don't really want to be with them.
Or I do find myself sort of acting blindly on them.
Here you are in the grip of the, again, just
being personally the worst emotion I can imagine. I'm just trying to figure out if what you're
describing is applicable in the lives of mere mortals.
I definitely think so. For years coming out of prison, and I do want to say one thing about prison, so I've
often interviewed, would say to me something to me like, well, prison seemed to really work
well for you.
You did well there.
I'd say yes, that's true.
But for the vast majority of prisoners, it's exactly the opposite.
They come out worse.
It's destructive.
I just was lucky to go in with a lot of resources.
So a lot of times people would ask me things like, well, okay, you faced all these things,
but how do I change without facing prison or a cancer diagnosis or these kinds of things
that finally wake us up?
That's kind of a $64,000 question, but today more than ever, we're all facing that.
I mean, if we're open to what we're going through with this pandemic, I mean, we're all
in a very traumatic situation
and incredibly challenging situation.
And we may choose to kind of anesthetize ourselves
to it in some way or try to avoid it or ignore it
or numb ourselves out,
but across those who are losing family members can't do that.
And this is a really an incredibly traumatic situation
we're going to together.
And then you add to that what's in the background, but we wish would be in the foreground as
the climate emergency that we're facing, that actually humanity could be really facing
an existential crisis in another generation.
Then we have the reckoning with race we're going through in this country, and the incredibly
divisive politics.
So this is an incredibly challenging time to be alive.
If climate change goes unchecked,
it's lovable to get a lot worse.
So, you know, we're all really challenged
and we can feel, we have a choice to feel victimized by that.
You know, before I was talking about that choice,
that we really have a choice to be either the victims
of our conditioning and our circumstances,
or decide not to, and to embrace responsibility for the choices we
make day-to-day out, and train ourselves to be able to make good choices, and deal with
these challenges.
And it takes training.
We need to train our body, heart, mind.
Fortunately, there is more knowledge and more support available to us today for that
than there ever has been in history.
I mean, what's available in terms of transformative technologies and meditation practices and I mean, I'm going to a training
right now that is just profound psychological insights about how to transform. So, you
know, there's so much available and if we choose to do that, this is a tremendous opportunity.
This is, we're all in that situation and the person that got the, you know, almost died
but didn't die or got the cancer diagnosis, but healed
and it changed their life.
We all have that opportunity right now.
Yeah, there's an expression that's coming to mind manure for enlightenment.
It's all grist for the male.
It's all of the horrible stuff that comes up in our lives.
Nobody's exempt from horror. You can use all of it horrible stuff that comes up in our lives. Nobody's exempt from horror.
You can use all of it to wake up.
Yeah, manure for enlightenment was actually
Trinkper M. Schae's expressing.
He called it the manure abode was his expression.
And Gris for the mill is a classic expression.
I don't know where that comes from,
Western or Eastern traditions,
but the manure abode and part of what he was saying there
was not only our circumstances,
but not to reject anything in ourselves.
All of our own internal challenges are most neurotic and gnarly stuff.
He said, that's really your beauty because that's what you can leverage for your own awakening.
If you have a practice to embrace it, the whole thing really comes down to do we have a way
to work with our own mind that is transformative.
And again, there's so much support available for that now.
Your work, what you're doing to 10% happier is offering people those simple tools to begin working with their own mind in that way.
First of all, thank you for that. When you're working with beginner students and teaching them how to work with their own minds, what's the basic blocking and tackling that you recommend for people, especially those who don't want to do a million frustrations?
Yes.
Well, trying to introduce basic mindfulness, body, mindfulness, and breathing practice,
in a way that people can actually begin to put it in their lives in some way.
So even if it's in very, very small chunks and also integrating it with other life activities.
But at the same time, I've really been working and pursuing
my own study about what I would just generally call embodiment for a long, long time. And
my meditation teaching is more focused on a very embodied approach over the last 25 years
and every year more so. I now have a method I teach called Neurosomatic Mindfulness.
And I believe the power of that when we learn to practice in a very unbottied way, we learn
how to actually come into the body and feel the body deeply, awakening this capacity we have
known as interoception, which is just short for internal perception, feeling the body,
which is sensory all the way down to the bones and including the bones.
That gentle effort to do that grounds us very quickly and
anchors us in noun is that it makes it a lot easier to practice. I think so many people
when they first start practicing, they spend years trying to be with the breath and go lost
in thought, come back, lost in thought, and it's all happening up here in the head. It's
very frustrating and they're not really reaping the benefits. They know it's supposed to be
good for them. They have a good experience every now and then, but of course they're not really motivated
to do it.
But if you can give a person a technique and a quality of instruction where immediately
they learn to make that ship from the noisy monkey mind default mode network of the brain
to the attention stabilizing task positive network.
And they learn to do that through an internal belt process.
They can break quickly, start feeling experiencing a much more stable meditation practice and
reaping the benefits very quickly, sizing people in a relatively short time can experience
some of the benefits that long-term meditators experience, but they need to practice and
it's really deeply embodied way, activating this capacity and all this interoceptive
way out of so that's what I focused on is trying to give people something that goes, oh, that works.
The other thing I focused on with new students and like, a lot of my work today is, I mean,
I've been working in prisons forever.
For the last 12 years, I've been training a lot of correctional officers, probation and
pro-alsters, police and other public safety officials.
I know I have to give them something quick that works or they're not going to get interested in it.
So, I use a lot of simple breath regulation tools that allow us to take charge of our physiology
and engage the relaxation response, the parasympathetic branch response, to down regulate when we're
getting too upregulated, and there are simple tools that they work immediately.
So, when you give these simple techniques to people, it gets their attention. They go, oh, that's amazing. I had no idea that I could navigate
my own physiology. I tell them, you don't know how huge this is because, as I said before,
without that, we're living in that interface between the world around us and our own conditioning,
which for many of us isn't a very comfortable place to live and doesn't work out too well.
But if we use these simple techniques, we can learn to regulate our own physiology, which
allows us to regulate our own emotions, our behaviors, and starts to put us in a self-leadership
position or more into the driver's seat of our own life.
So I try to give people newcomers simple things that they can have some immediate success
with.
I'd like to dive in a little bit deeper on the actual technique.
Let me start with the term you use neurosomatic mindfulness,
which is designed to trigger this interception,
this ability we have to perceive our body sensations directly.
So what are the beginning instructions for this?
So we begin with posture, and I invite people to establish a posture that for them feels
relatively erect and uplifted if they're able if people need to do it lying down standing up or leaning it back
Hence the chair they should do it works for them
But if they are able to sit up it's generally helpful to sit up with a fairly uplifted posture one that feels kind of naturally dignified and
Hulsam this kind of. And then to gently begin bringing
their attention to the body, and not just the image of body or the concept of body, but
to the actual physical sensations that make up body. I'm sure you're familiar with the
construct from Theravadan Buddhism of the four foundations of mindfulness. And my teacher
had a unique teaching on that. And he talked about there's psychosomatic body, which is the
thought body or the conceptual body made up of images or memories and thoughts. But what he called
the direct experience of body, he just called it body body. So I invite people to try to
gently push through that conceptual layer and start to explore feeling the actual sensations
that make up the experience we call body that we call breath. To begin with on all across
the surface of the skin,
which is one big sensory organ,
and then also embodying them to begin to explore internally,
feeling the overall weight mass of the muscles and bones,
any aches or pains,
and also let them know that this idea of interoceptive awareness
is not something foreign to them.
We're all aware of it.
It's how we know and we're tired,
when we're hungry, when we're thirsty,
when we need to use the restroom. But generally, we ignore it except when there's discomfort.
So here, I'm inviting them to begin to explore that, feel into the body. And the more they do,
it grounds you in the moment. You develop a more deeply felt presence of the body, which
anchors us in the moment, makes it a little harder for the mind to wander, easier for it to come back.
And you're actually what we know from neuroscience
is you're making that shift from the default mode network,
which is that busy kind of yada yada part of the brain
and the more intense and stabilizing task
positive network.
And so through a gentle effort of really beginning
to explore that internal landscape,
we begin to experience our ability to do that.
And anyone can learn to do it with a little application over not too long of a period
of time.
So that's kind of where it begins.
And but that explanation can go very deep in terms of really beginning to examine your
skeletal structure, your internal organs, the connective tissue, the ligaments tendons,
you know, the circulatory system, lymphatic system, and really beginning to explore that internal landscape,
getting very physically embodied,
puts us in touch also with what you might metaphorically
call our emotional body.
So we're tuning into our emotions,
and we know from current neuroscience
that enhanced interoceptive awareness leads to
an enhanced ability for physiological self-regulation
and emotion regulation, and thus regulating our own behaviors.
And also, I believe it's really taking us into that body-mind interface.
Body-mind is either one holistic phenomena or some kind of continuum.
Western science would probably say mind stops when the body dies.
Eastern science would probably say that mind continues. Our mind was there before body.
But regardless, while we're alive, there are some kind of continuum. But there is a more subtle layer
and what many of the eastern traditions talk about subtle energy body and so forth. So I feel like
the deeper we go into the body, the deeper we're going into our own being. And the more we begin to
have experiences of that depth of our being, blow all the noise,
we recognize this unmistakable in-a-goodness, in-a-wholeness that's there at the core of our being.
And to what extent we have any relationship to that, thus our overall confidence and life
grows in our level of fear and anxiety lessons, and we're able to live our lives from a place of
greater unconditional confidence. Much more of my conversation with Fleet right after this. in our level of fear and anxiety lessons, and we're able to live our lives from a place of greater
unconditional competence. Much more of my conversation with Fleet right after this.
Life is short, and it's full of a lot of interesting questions. What does happiness really mean?
How do I get the most out of my time here on Earth? And what really is the best cereal? These are
the questions I seek to resolve on my weekly podcast, Life is
short with Justin Long. If you're looking for the answer to deep philosophical questions, like,
what is the meaning of life? I can't really help you, but I do believe that we really enrich
our experience here by learning from others. And that's why in each episode, I like to talk with
actors, musicians, artists, scientists, and many more types of people about how they get
the most out of life.
We explore how they felt during the highs and sometimes more importantly, the lows of
their careers.
We discuss how they've been able to stay happy during some of the harder times, but if I'm
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Like, if you had a sandwich named after you, what would be on it?
Follow Life is short wherever you get your podcasts.
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or Wondering Up.
Well, just staying on the sort of more accessible
and the pool here, I mean, it just seems pretty obvious
to me having done a limited amount of meditation
in my life that the more aware I am of
my bodily sensations, as somebody who's writing a book, I'm very aware of a clenching in my chest
almost all the time, the more I am aware of what's happening in my body when, you know, maybe things
are getting tense in a conversation, the less owned I am by it and the more power I feel
to sort of self-regulate by just bringing kind of a
non-judgmental, maybe even warm attention to it.
That all makes sense.
You did say something that was intriguing to me.
You were talking about the sort of deeper benefits
of this body awareness.
And you said something about getting in touch with our
innate goodness. I find that intriguing and in some nebulous way that feels right to me,
but I have no idea why. So what are you trying to say there?
Yes, well, and this is really at the core of the work I do is for myself and my teaching
work with others is really to help people get in touch with what I would call their innate goodness, unconditional goodness. My teacher
called it basic goodness. My work with prisoners, I mean, it just feels so critical because many of
them have very little connection to that at all. In fact, they have an internal landscape that's
full of so much self-patreon, self-judgment, and all the internalized shame that they've taken in.
And of course, the results of that are predictable.
Personally, it's kind of an experiential belief on my part that human beings are innately good.
And actually, if you study, I think that's been the dominant view across humanity throughout history,
although in the West, and this is not to demonize any particular religious tradition,
I'm kind of a great lover of all the traditions, but you know, there did a kind of theological orientation did arise that I think was a bit of a mistake in view about the fall in nature of humanity.
And I understand what they're pointing to because the human condition is a setup for living a fear and survival based life if we don't examine it, right? If we don't practice them some way. So I think that's what those traditions reference as original sin or fall in nature. But I think underneath all that, our ultimate being is
innately good. And that's not good as opposed to bad. It's just life. And it's beautiful. It's
being. I mean, how could the the break root of life be other than that? And when we're in,
you could, I think it still makes sense to call it basic goodness because when we're in touch
with it, certainly doesn't feel bad. It's very nurturing and healing, right? This kind of underlying
ground of our being where we're not caught up in the self-referencing of me and you and other
and all that kind of dissolved, but we're still here and we're feeling some inner resonance and
beingness. It's kind of pure presence pure being. And that's just incredibly healing and nurturing.
And it taps us into something
that just gives us a completely different perspective
on life.
I mean, I think it's that many religious traditions
have spoken about getting to the mountaintop
and that didn't see, reality, that change.
And then you come back down, but everything has changed.
Or as Jesus said, in a new testament being in the world, but not of the world, or the
idea of the Zen-Axerting pictures where, you know, the last step is after attaining realization
coming back to the marketplace.
But everything has changed because you are in touch with this dimension of beingness,
which gives you this profound sense of confidence and actually even overcomes fear of death.
And that's just the nature of it.
And I think that is what is accessible
to our practice for everyone.
And it's something that we get,
we all have moments of it,
and we all experience that a whole life,
but we don't recognize it.
We don't have a name for it.
And the more these little moments of being
this kind of connect together,
they form like a rosary or a mala of,
you know, they're in a background
that would somehow we just know
something's fundamentally okay somewhere. Now, it may be, we may be going through a huge dorm
here on the surface. It's very scary, but some part of our being knows is something fundamentally okay.
I've mentioned this before in the show, but I find a lot of what you just said in treating, and yet part of my intellect is rebelling against some of it.
And yet in the few mountain top, I was probably just the top of a foothill, but anyway, the mountain
top moments in my own practice, if I had to articulate what the experience was like at
in the simplest possible way, it would be a feeling of like everything's okay.
Even though part of me is rebelling against, and
I don't mean this in a bad way, but this kind of the grandiosity of the claims here, I
still feel like, yeah, I guess somewhere in my meditation practice, I have landed on
that. I'm not always in touch with it though.
Well, I'm not either. Fortunately,, fortunately, I'm pretty deeply in touch
with a lot of the time because I've been practicing
very intensely for a long time.
And actually, even in prison, I mean, when you're in prison,
there is conventionally nothing there to be happy about.
I mean, it is a really rough environment
and very negative and violence and just hatefulness.
And I mean, on a good day, you maybe have less than 10
bay demeaning encounters with your fellow prisons
of the guards on a good day.
You don't have any of your normal needs met.
You're separated from your family.
But I found a way to embrace that and make that my world.
There are things you can do that do give yourself value
in that environment.
You can work on your education.
You can work out and get healthy.
And I got involved in service work.
So there are all those things, but still the basic environment, none of our conventional sources of happiness are there.
And yet, through practicing really deeply, and especially, I was very fortunate once I finished my Nundro, that
one of my teacher and a very high-laminative and Buddhist tradition came to do further
impoverence for me, and I was able to start doing these kind of deep inner practices and where you're kind of really working
with all the inner body landscape.
And I really found myself living in that prison
in a state of peace contentment and often even joy.
And it was really weird.
And I didn't share it generally with people
because they would have thought I was nuts.
But I did feel that that's what came through me
and my work as a teacher and doing
the hospice work and participating in the 12-step work and so forth was that I was living
in that environment in a way where I felt this internal peace and joy even in that environment.
And when you can experience that in an environment where there's no support for it, I mean, that
just really gets your attention, obviously.
I had a little project going on for a while because I'm from Missouri, the Showme State.
I had a good rationalist, humanistic, skeptical, scientific education and some very skeptical
by nature.
This idea of basic goodness has always appealed to me, but everybody, and so here I am in
this prison environment, and there were some characters among my fellow prisoners and the prison guards who you really had to wonder.
So I was kind of this informal research going on
of kind of tracking some of these.
And I was there for a long time, right?
So I'd usually have three or four kind of on my top,
five list, pretty questionable whether there's any
redeeming value in these people.
And every single time without fail, at some point,
just when I really thought I had my man,
this was a male prison, I found this person
with no redeeming value,
maybe they don't really have basic goodness,
not everybody has basic goodness.
They would inevitably reveal their humanity to me
in some way, inevitably.
And at some point I gave up the project.
You know, when you think about humanity,
even though many of us have not had the
opportunity to, you know, learn transformational skills for awakening, right, and getting out of
our outside of our conditioning and having more self-agency. But nonetheless, what are the vast
majority of human beings do every day all over the world? The vast majority of us, we get up,
we do our best to take care of ourselves, take care of our children, we work, we queue up at the well,
We queue up at the market, we drive on the right side of the road, we're incredibly collaborative and partnering
Except when fear overtakes us and of course when we're overtaken by fear, then we're capable of lots of things
But are more the fault way of being and you know even current neuroscience my colleague Richie Davidson
He's probably been on your show before I would imagine. Yeah, so you know, even current neuroscience, my colleague, Richie Davidson, he's probably been on your show before I would imagine.
Yep.
So, you know, he talks about those experiments that research they've done with infants where they demonstrate that even infants have this
preference towards
prosocial behavior and witnessing prosocial behaviors, right?
So there seems to be a default inclination, absent fear in within our humanity towards prosocial
behaviors, kindness, compassion, and so forth.
Right, and so that's why moments of seeing that everything's okay.
That's the antidote to fear and when everything's okay,
why would you be bad?
Why would you be mean?
Exactly.
You don't need to take anything from anybody else.
Exactly enough.
And that's why culturally, socially, globally, if we really
want to have a better society, what we really need to do is lower the amount of fear for as many
people as we can and give them opportunities to connect with some, I mean, some people may connect
with this through faith and they may get a similar kind of confidence about the okayness within
life. But giving people opportunities to do that, doing a better job of collectively helping each other meet our needs, lowering the fear, and we're naturally going to have
a more functional and better society. We talked about neuro-somatic mindfulness. The other
was some breath work that you teach often to prison guards and police officers, et cetera, et cetera.
Can you just maybe give us one of the techniques that you'll teach to these folks who might come in skeptical and time-stuffed?
Yeah, sure.
So a very simple one is called straw breathing.
It's called that because you can do it with a straw.
You can take a whole straw or a half straw
and you blow out through the straw,
but you can also just do it by blowing out through per slips.
So it's very simple the way you do it.
You breathe in through the nose with your mouth closed.
And then you breathe out through per slips, as if you're blowing through a star or whistling. So
into the nose, out through per slips, into the nose, out through per slips. And once you've
established that pattern, then we start counting, which helps us down track, but also to assure
that the out breath is twice as long and nearly twice as long
as the in breath.
So you might be breathing in a four count, something like this.
In two, three, four, out, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight.
So something like that.
So you're breathing in through the nose, out through per seps,
out breath twice as long as the in breath. Something anyone can learn.
And if you do it for a couple of minutes,
you'll feel your whole system just starting to settle,
feeling yourself kind of chilling out, relaxing.
And what you're experiencing is the engagement
of the parasympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous system.
That's our nervous system that operates all the complex processes of this most complex
organism in the known universe, the human body and brain, and it has these two branches,
the up regulating sympathetic branch, which is a stress response, and the down regulating
parasympathetic branch, which is a relaxation response.
They're both happening all the time, and there's an ideal balance for any particular human
activity we're engaging in, but often we're not determining that.
We're letting the world around us to terminate, and most of us live too upregulated in the
stress zone, which is the reason for chronic stress and all the chronic stress related
ailments that beset society today.
So by learning to regulate with our own breath, that puts us back in charge of our own physiology.
And good diaphragmatic breathing as well,
if we've learned to become chest breathing,
which is a stress response,
retraining ourselves to be belly breathings,
which is not that hard to do
because we have neural networks that support
that default mode of breathing, belly breathing.
So before we go to sleep at night,
we can move our body around,
place one hand on a chest, one hand on a belly, until we find it to one on the belly's going
up and down. It's kind of how we hold our pelvis hugely. And we get into that pattern where
the belly's going up and down, this one's fairly still, and we just do that till we fall
asleep. And if we do that for several weeks or the most several months, we will retrain
ourselves to be diaphragmatic breeders. And even just taking one conscious deep breath, or just one conscious belly breath is like
hitting the pause button or the reset button on our nervous system.
But then doing something like straw breathing, we can really engage the relaxation response
and bring ourselves back down into that recovery zone when we're up in the stress zone.
So that's one real simple one.
There is, you know, Andrew Wilde,
the well-known holistic position teaches one called
478, which is similar.
It comes from the Indian Pranayama tradition.
And that's where we breathe in for a four count.
And then we hold for a seven count
and then breathe out for an eight count.
And the holding for the seven count
gives us an oxygen boost,
because we're holding the air deeply
in the lungs long enough that we get more saturation of oxygen.
So there's a lot of simple ones. There's also box breathing.
People can find all these on my website, HeartMineInstitute.co, or on our prison site, prisonmy脆嫂.org.
And they're readily available. Those are three of the really simple ones. draw breathing box breathing in poor seven eight breathing, and anybody can learn their great benign. And they really
almost magically start to put us in charge of our own physiology instead of just kind of
being victimized again by our conditioning and the world around us.
Yeah, while you've been talking, I've been doing the draw breathing it, it is kind of magical.
And it gets me thinking that these two techniques
might be nice in concert,
the breathing exercise and the mindfulness,
because I'm just thinking
of what's the biggest stress in my life right now.
I have a very privileged life,
but I would say the biggest stress for me is writing.
So I spent a few hours in the morning writing,
and of course, my mind is hammering up against,
you know, seemingly insoluble
creative problems.
I've got the voice in my head saying you're behind, you're never going to live up to the
success of your first book, blah, blah, blah.
And then the tightness in the chest and the lack of creativity will set in.
So sometimes I'll sit, very often I'll sit for a while, but it seems like maybe even before
I sit and this is applicable to anybody else who's got any level stress in their lives
By which I mean everybody in the world
Maybe before sitting doing a few minutes of breathing exercises in that way the two could work very nicely together
You're shaking your head. Yeah, no, I'm shaking. Yes, you know, absolutely
You know there has been kind of an ethic
I would think in some of those spiritual training the ones that I was trained in both I trained deeply in a Zen tradition,
a Tibetan Buddhist tradition as well as in the Biposhtrian,
in-site meditation tradition.
And there was kind of an ethic of, you know,
you just put your butt on the cushion and you get what you get and you're not trying
to create any particular state, you're just trying to,
to have the ability to be with whatever is there, even if you're kind of
suffering through the struggle of it.
And there's some value in that.
But I also, more of these days, I think especially with the constraints of modern life and the
time people have, I think, you know, if you can do a little breath regulation, so that when
you, if you got 10, 15 minutes, that you're sitting practice and you do a little breath regulation,
then you can sit down and settle more easily and you're going to get more benefit from
the practice.
I mean, that makes complete sense to me.
You know, even doing an interview like this, I've been working with embodiment and breath
regulation the whole time we've been speaking.
I do it when I'm training.
I deliver some very intensive training, so there's sometimes 12, 14 hour days, and I'm
doing this kind of regulation the whole time I'm doing it.
The end, you know, after 14 hours, I'm ready to keep going.
I'm not exhausted at all because I'm taking care of my body in this way.
Final question for me, and I should have asked this earlier, early on in our conversation,
you used the phrase radical responsibility a couple of times. It's also the name of your
book. And I have a sense you've covered it without being explicit about it, but let's
be explicit for a second. What do you mean by radical responsibility? Yeah, I certainly did point to it.
Usually I say what I mean is voluntarily embracing
100% response player ownership
for each and every circumstance we face in life.
Now that includes those that we can see
we had some role in, whether we see we actually created
or at least contributed to it,
or maybe we just allowed it by being unaware,
or maybe we're unconsciously promoting or setting ourselves up in some way through self-honesty
We can see you know our role in some of the circumstances we face
But then there's also the ones that we just don't see we have any relationship to it
It just feels like they fell out of the sky and landed on our head or in our lap and everyone would agree
We're just an innocent bystander. I mean, unless it's past Carmen, who knows about such ideas, but in any rate, there it is. But at some point, even with
that, the salient question for me becomes, what am I going to do with it? Am I going
to let it take me down and victimize me? Or am I going to, you know, marshal my resourcefulness
to find the most creative way I can to respond to this to move forward in my life and ways
that are beneficial for myself and others. Now, I want to respond to this to move forward in my life and ways that are beneficial for myself and others.
Now I want to say that this has absolutely nothing, and we really have the most important
distinction in this model is that it's between ownership and blame.
So this obviously has nothing to do with blaming others, but absolutely nothing to do with
blaming ourselves.
So even when I'm looking to see if I had some role in creating or allowing a circumstance
or something, that's not for self-blame at all.
It's just for insight, because if I can see how some
situation evolved that I'm not so thrilled with,
and I can kind of see the steps I went from point A to B
to C, and then I have the insight,
the next time I can do it differently
and get different results.
So it's simply for that self-education, insight,
and understanding that I look into that.
But really it's about living from choice, and realizing, and this idea has been around
for a long time.
I mean, Marcus Arellius often called the last good Roman Emperor and one of the historic
philosophers.
He had many operasms and sayings as a whole collection of those which I highly recommend.
But one of them paraphrasing is something to the effect that, you know, most people imagine
that their destiny is really
controlled or created by their circumstances in life. And he said, in fact, that's not true.
The truth is that our destiny is created or manifest from our response to those circumstances,
our response, which is the choices we make. And, you know, that can feel like a burden, but it's
actually the it's the place of complete freedom. It's the only place we have any real power and freedom.
And it's very compelling.
And again, I also want to say that people are victimized.
I mean, horrific things happen to human beings.
And also, this is about adults, because children come of age, or responsibility in different
cultures, but in general, children need to be protected and deserve to be protected.
So, I'm talking about adults here, but even horrific things happen to adults,
and incredibly criminal and unjust things and tragic things. And so this is not about telling
somebody else, you know, you need to take ownership and not be a victim because somebody may really
need to have it affirmed that they were victimized and receive a lot of support to affirmation.
And it's not really for me to say what their journey is or should be, but I think we can all
It's not really for me to say what their journey is or should be, but I think we can all, you know,
reflect that no matter what befalls someone,
if they stay stuck in that,
as unstable as that might be,
and as much compassion as we want to have for them,
it's gonna be very self-limiting for them.
So owning something might be seeking justice, seeking support,
but it's operating from that place of,
how can I respond to this,
rather than being lost in the sense of being victimized? seeking support, but it's operating from that place of how can I respond to this rather
than being lost in the sense of being victimized.
And of course, where we practice release with the small stuff in life, because we all know
that all day long every day, there's lots of things going on in our lives where we start
to feel resentful, we start to kind of feel victimized, and we blame others for this.
It's natural to do, but the thing is that in doing so, we give away our power.
Because you know, Dan, if you and I had
some kind of business conflict, right?
And something went south and we were both hot
under the collar, we're ready to go to Fisticuffs
or go to court and sue each other.
And maybe a friend, you're gonna bankrupt yourselves
on lawyers and I know this mediator, go see this mediator.
So we do that.
And the mediator interviews both of us separately and
that brings us together and says, well, I don't know. You guys are both really incredible storytellers
and salespeople. And it's really a he said he said thing. And but I'll tell you what, we have
the videotape. So I'm going to put together a focus group of, you know, 10 really bright people
who don't know either one of you couldn't give a hoot about either one of you. And we'll just see
what they say. And so, you know, we both kind of begrudgingly agree to it. And I'm confident because I know I'm
right. You're probably a little nervous, but the mediator does that and comes back and, you know,
says to either one of us, I have to say they did agree that Dan bears more of the responsibility here.
And so I'm glad you found that it's a brilliant group of people and they realize that it's all
dance vault. And I feel vindicated. I feel good about that. And the media said, no, not fleet, they did say,
you know, you got to take some responsibility.
It's maybe 60, 40, 70, 30, and so I don't really believe.
But as long as they realize it was mostly dance fault,
I probably didn't have small role to play.
I'll accept my role, but I still,
it was mostly his fault.
I feel vindicated.
So does it really, I mean, that's very human.
We all do that, but it really makes sense.
Because if I'm unhappy by definition, I'm unhappy with the situation I'm suffering. I'm convinced
it's either 60% or 70% your fault, your causation. How much of my power am I giving away in that
situation? 60 to 70% of your power. Yeah, if not all of it, right? Because I basically put you in
charge of my internal state
because I don't get to be happy again
until you change your behavior.
Can I control you?
Very little chance, brother.
I mean, we might think we can control other people,
but ultimately we know that people are in control
because we know we're uncontrollable.
We know that no matter how much somebody tries to control
or intimidates, we will find our way, right?
We're incredibly inventive as human beings
and getting our needs met.
So, if nothing else, just learning to let live and not spend so much energy trying to control the
people on our lives will be much happier campers. But the point here is that when we blame people's
circumstances for our internal state, as normal as that may, as much as we're conditioned to do it,
as logical as it seems, we're actually giving our power away,
because the only place we have any real influence
is with ourselves, and that's hard enough,
that's challenging enough.
So this is really, it's not a burden
that we're taking out with radical responsibility.
It's really an act of radical self-empowerment,
and it's a gift to ourselves and really a gift to others,
because we stop blaming other people,
and it allows us to focus our energy
where we can do the most good with what can I do now,
and the matter how terrible the situation is, what can I do?
And that's really in prison, what allowed me to create all kinds of programs in an environment where the first answer to everything is no.
It's a completely totalitarian environment where the authorities have absolute power and resistance is futile.
And really if you buck the system, you're in four- point restraints or a concrete bunk being hosed down at night.
And I was able to start two national organizations and catalyze two national movements there,
the prison mindfulness movement, the prison hospice movement.
I don't say that to pat myself on the back, but just to point to what's possible by taking
that philosophy rather than getting all caught up in what's right and wrong and they're
so bad in this.
And you know, instead I would just really train myself to pokes on, okay, how do I move
something forward here?
How do I relate with people in a way that I can enroll them in a vision?
And I'll start getting yeses instead of nose.
And that led to a lot of good results.
Yeah, it seems like in part what you're saying is not blame the victim, but more like
manure for enlightenment.
It's all grist for the mill.
Before we go here, can you just plug everything you're doing
so that folks can get access to it if they want to learn more?
Yeah, sure.
So we have a great summer coming up,
which I want to let people know about.
It's going to be January 19th to 28.
It's called the best year of your life.
We all make New Year's resolutions,
and the science is not very good on the results.
Like 85 to 90% of us forget about them
two weeks later. And we have a lot of we've done a lot of study and we have a lot insight why
that is. So we're going to provide people with the motivation and inspiration, the tools,
the understanding of human psychology and habit formation and science of change, how to uplevel
or how to optimize different areas of our life, our health and well-being, our relationships, our financial life, our spiritual path. And I think it's going to be a really exciting with a lot
of really brilliant people. So, HeartMind Institute, which is HeartMind Institute.co.com, just.co,
they can find about that summit, about the global resay in summit we did last May, and my neuro-Somatic
course and so forth. My work in general, they can just remember to go to fleetmall.com.
You can basically find out everything about me.
And then just referencing the prison work, if people are interested in that, it's prismimifeless.org
is our work with at risk and incarcerated and returning youth and adults.
Then we have mindful public safety.org, which is our work with police probation and
parole corrections, public safety emergency, the courts, bringing mindfulness into the
whole public safety field, and then engage mindfulness institute dot org is where we train.
This is all the same nonprofit, but that's where we train mindfulness teachers in trauma-informed
approaches to bringing mindfulness to all these sectors of society, where there is a lot
of suffering and where the communities have been, where there is a lot of suffering and where their communities
have been marginalized and there is a lot of trauma.
And people wanna check out my book,
Radical Responsibility Book.com.
You can read about the book at a free chapter
and you can buy it through your favorite bookseller,
but you can find all about the book
at Radical Responsibility Book.com.
Great.
Fleet, thank you very much for doing this.
And again, my condolences on the loss of your son, that sounds just awful.
I'm very impressed they were able to do this interview.
So thank you.
Well, it's an ongoing journey.
And thank you very much, Dan.
I love your work and your book.
And it's a great pleasure to connect with you in person.
Big thanks to Fleet, really appreciate him coming on
and also of course my condolences all of our condolences to Fleet and his
family. Before I go just a quick thank you to everybody who works so hard to
make this show a reality. Samuel Johns is our senior producer Marissa Schneider
Min and DJ Kashmir are our producers. Jules Dodson is our AP, our sound designer is Matt Boynton
of Ultraviolet Audio, and Maria Wertel is our production coordinator.
We get a ton of wisdom and guidance and oversight from our TPH colleagues, including Ben Rubin,
Nate Toby, Jen Point, and Liz Levin.
And finally, big thank you to my ABC News comrades, Ryan Kessler and Josh Cohan.
We'll see you all on Wednesday with Kristen Neff.
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