Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - Anxiety Narrows Your Brain. Here's How to Widen It Back Out. | Susa Talan
Episode Date: May 29, 2026Plus: how to handle discomfort, be more present, and remember to be aware throughout your day. Most of us spend our days somewhere between the past and the future — technically conscious, but not re...ally there. Meditation teacher Susa Talan takes live questions from practitioners on what it actually means to show up for your own life, and how to do it even when you can't sit still, even when you're crying, even when anxiety has narrowed your whole world down to a single racing heartbeat. Susa Talan is a meditation teacher trained in the insight tradition. She works one-on-one with students around their meditation practice, and she was the Teacher of the Month for April 2026 for DanHarris.com. You can get more guided meditations from Susa in the 10% with Dan Harris app. In this live Q&A, Susa Talan shares: Why awareness isn't hard — what's actually hard is remembering to be aware The "what else is here?" technique for working with anxiety and heart palpitations Why you don't need to understand why you cry in meditation — and what to do instead How to cultivate awareness all day long, not just on the cushion Why meditation has nothing to do with sitting still — and everything to do with the whole car ride Get the 10% with Dan Harris app here Sign up for Dan's free newsletter here Follow Dan on social: Instagram, TikTok Subscribe to our YouTube Channel Join Dan, Sebene Selassie and Jeff Warren for Meditation Party, a 3-day immersive retreat at the Omega Institute in Rhinebeck, NY, October 16–18, 2026. Register here. To advertise on the show, contact sales@advertisecast.com or visit https://advertising.libsyn.com/10HappierwithDanHarris
Transcript
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This is the 10% Happier Podcast. I'm Dan Harris.
Hello, everybody. How are we doing? We are so often exhorted, encouraged to be here now,
to be present, to be in the moment. But then, of course, the question, how do you actually do that?
And then how do you remember to do that? That is one of the things we're going to be talking about
today with an ace meditation teacher named Susa Talon. What you're about to hear is a recording
of a live session that Susa did with subscribers to my meditation app, 10% with Dan Harris. We do these
weekly sessions that are only available to subscribers where you can meditate with me and or with
one of our teachers and get your questions answered. So what you're about to hear is the Q&A portion
of one of these sessions. Just a little bit more about Susa before we dive in here. She's a meditation
teacher, an artist, and a writer who's been studying for nearly 20 years with her primary teacher,
a Burmese master named Sayada Uthaginia.
I have known and worked with Suza personally for more than a decade.
She is great, and I think you're really going to enjoy this session.
Real quick, before we dive in, just a rapid plug for my weekly newsletter.
I think a lot of you know that I have this weekly newsletter, but if you're not signed up,
I'd love you to sign up.
you can do so at dan harris.com.
Every Monday morning, you'll get a little nugget of wisdom for me in your inbox.
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But what I do is something very different.
I give you just a little bit of wisdom that you can operationalize in your life immediately.
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All right.
We'll get started with the great Susa Talon right after this.
First of all, just thank you for all of your questions.
There's such rich curiosity and care and interest in all of them.
And of course, I won't be able to answer them all, but I'd like to try and offer as many as.
I can. So the question is, I really like the simplicity of Susa's awareness practices. I think I know
the answer to this question, but unsure, why is being aware a preferable way of moving through the
world? In essence, I'm asking, why is this worth cultivating? Thank you for this question.
I love this question because it really gets right to the heart of exactly, you know, why are we doing
this and what is the point of being aware? I can't remember if one of the meditations that has dropped so far
in the app spoke to this, but I think I use it in one of the meditations, which is, I love this
example of driving. So most of us have gotten in a car at some point, and 20 minutes later, we've
arrived in our destination, right? And we can think back on the drive, whether we were driving ourselves
or we were in the car. We were at stoplights and green lights, and there were.
were pedestrians and so many things happened, but where were we? Right? You get to the end of
where you were arriving to and you realize, wow, I was driving the car, but my mind was somewhere else.
Has anybody had that experience of, yeah, checking out in parts of life. Our bodies can do
incredible things without awareness. It's amazing. We're conscious, so we're engaging with the
world, but we're not necessarily aware of what we're doing. So I love this example.
because the invitation of awareness of this practice is that we want to know what we're doing
for the whole drive. We want to know that our hands are on the steering wheel. I want to feel them
there. We want to know that we're looking out the windshield. We want to know that we're seeing
the sky or seeing the road. We might even be able to feel our own breath, just coming in and going
out steady as we're driving. And in those moments when we're more aware for the ride, we have a chance
to actually feel what's going on for us. We're not just thinking about life. We're not somewhere in the
future or in the past. We're actually there for the whole ride. And the way my mind often thinks about it
is a moment that you come to a stoplight. If you're being aware, you're really present for what's
unfolding. You might see a pedestrian on the street and you might catch up.
eyes and you might share a smile or you might notice that they're struggling and you might feel your
heart kind of move towards them in some way and there's a moment of shared humanity that happens
where your mind isn't in the future or the past but it's right where you are this is a more full
way of living you know there's a fullness to our experience when we actually are in the present
moment as it's unfolding. It gives us an opportunity to live in more intimacy with ourselves,
with others, people we love, and the natural world. You know, we're there more present for the things
we really care about. So in a way, being more aware means we're here for the whole car ride,
which if that's our life, you want to be here for it, right? There's all kinds of things that you can do
when you're more aware. You can make choices. You can do kegles at the stoplight. You can take care of
someone in your backseat. You can listen to something that really impacts you. You can have more
agency to make the choices that we want to make in the present moment. And that's listening to a
rainstorm and really knowing that you're there. That's it. Awareness isn't some magic bullet. It's
just being in the present moment exactly as you are. Yeah. Yeah. So I see,
this question about, do you have more tips for meditating with palpitations from anxiety or stress?
Really, I mean, one of the reasons that we want to work with palpitations and anxiety is because
we want it to go away. If we're really honest with ourselves, we want to work with it in order for it
to stop or to go away, right? And so often the strategies that we use to try and work with it
are actually subtle or more than subtle experiences of resistance to the palpitations, right?
We don't like them. They're uncomfortable.
They're unpleasant and we want them to go away.
But instead of pushing against them or sort of getting lost in them, I'm going to ask my mind, what else is happening?
And I'm going to bring my attention into my hands, which maybe are going to feel more neutral and we're settled.
I might be able to feel the way my body feels sitting in a chair.
I might tune into the sounds that are happening around me.
And suddenly we're teaching the mind that anxiety isn't the only thing that's happening.
I know there are lots of guests on Dan's show who could speak with a lot more expertise about this,
but the very basic way I think about this is anxiety often brings forward sort of more fight or flight,
like amygdala responses, right?
We zero in, we can narrow in on feeling like we're,
in a more binary relationship to the world.
The mind narrows, and it can attend just to this one experience.
But actually, there's a lot of things that are happening at the same time, all the time.
So when we ask the mind, we use the prefrontal cortex a little more,
come into the part of the mind that has more ability to navigate complexity.
We're inviting the mind to navigate that there are multiple things arising.
things that are difficult like sensations of anxiety, and then we're also noticing connection with
a loved one or listening to the sound of someone's voice who we care about. We might be putting our
hands on a cat or a dog or the hair of someone we love, and we can recognize we can have those
experiences. That's also what's arising while we're also experiencing some of these other
sensations. And sometimes it can help to lessen them. That is an outcome. But that's not what we're
going for. We're working to develop a mind and a heart that has a capacity to be with whatever's here.
It's not dependent on conditions changing outside of us or inside of us, but a mind that has
a resilience and a capacity to really be with experiences even when they're difficult.
So I hope that's helpful. All right. Here's one from Julie.
I find myself crying or wanting to cry often when I meditate.
Can you help me understand why?
One of the reasons I like this question, why it's landing with me,
is because in many ways our job isn't actually to know why something is arising when it comes,
but to just let it be here when it does come.
And in a way, what it's doing is it's moving from a mind that wants to figure things out
in order to fix, possibly in order for it to go away, right? This is another one of those sneaky
moves of the mind to want to understand, but often in order for it to change. So when crying comes,
you can just recognize what are the sensations of crying? Right? Maybe a little bit of pressure
in the chest or the throat. Maybe there's some experience of tears. We can actually just
be with the experience of crying and not have to even know why it's happening.
And maybe something will come forward in the relaxation of that, in the ease of just letting
it be there that allows your mind to understand something more about it.
But maybe notice first, is it pleasant?
Maybe there's something easeful happening with the crying.
Or maybe there's something that brings some sadness or tension.
we can just notice that too.
It's really a culture shift, this meditation practice.
It's inviting us not to use our minds to try and fix or figure things out,
but to just learn how to trust and be with things as they are.
And there's something, even though it can feel a little uncomfortable to start doing that,
there's something sort of relieving that can start to happen
when we're not trying to change an experience or even trying to understand it.
but we're just letting ourselves sort of trust that like all things in nature, an experience comes,
and then it goes.
So the crying might come and then it goes.
It changes.
And I can understand, Julie, like, it makes sense that you might want to know.
How come every time I sit down and go to meditate, I cry or that happens?
It's an understandable curiosity.
But we could just leave it as an open inquiry, see if maybe over time you start to
understand something more about it or as you start to settle some days maybe it does happen and some
days it doesn't so just staying curious and maybe offering yourself a lot of care if it brings up
some uncertainty in you when that arises so rose z asked a question does it make a difference
whether you do a guided meditation or just meditate on your own i have a lot of trouble sitting
and trying to focus i know there's no wrong way to do that you do that you do that you know there's no wrong way to
do it, but I have a hard time finding the time every day for a five-minute meditation.
I know that sounds crazy, but it's very hard for me. It's a little bit easier with a guided
meditation, but I still find myself multitasking while the meditation teacher is walking
you through the meditation. Could be my ADHD. I don't know what I'm trying. Okay, thanks,
Rose. So what I like about this question is in some ways it reveals that sense that if we're
sitting in meditation, that there's sort of something that we should be doing and paying attention to.
And so I have a lot of trouble sitting and trying to focus, right? So first of all, it doesn't
make a difference whether you're listening to a silent meditation or a guided one. It's really
more about what supports your mind to be aware to come into the first. To come into the
present moment and to stay in the present moment.
One of my favorite definitions of meditation comes from my teacher, Saidaa, Utajania.
His definition is meditation is cultivating wholesome states of mind.
And that word wholesome might work for some of you or not others, but we could just say,
you know, states of mind that are skillful, kind, wise, onward leading in a direction that we
want to go. Most of us are here and most of us are cultivating this meditation practice because we want to
feel more patience, more kindness, more care. We want to feel more connected to ourselves and others, right?
We're here to feel more of those feelings that we experience in our lives and to be able to navigate
the difficult feelings with more ease and more skillfulness. What I love about that definition is that it
says nothing about form. We can cultivate our mind and heart, whether we're sitting on the cushion
or we're moving about our day. So it can be helpful to have a practice and sit on the cushion.
Yeah, I often think of it as a renunciation practice. We're putting down a lot of our life when we
sit on the cushion, right? We're letting go of a lot of the things that we're holding throughout the
day to just attend to the body or just attend to the mind. But that doesn't mean that
that we can't also be cultivating awareness all day long. And as we know, awareness allows us to come
into more intimacy with our experience, right? So for Rose's question, it's not about meditation
practice just being an experience where we sit on the cushion and we focus on one thing and we just
listen to the sound of someone's voice or we just notice the breath. We can actually cultivate
awareness while walking and multitasking. We're not cultivating necessarily focused mind or a calm
mind. But focus and calm bring certain states and support, but what we're really doing here in this
practice, at least an insight practice, as I've come to understand it, is that we're cultivating
awareness not as an end goal, but to understand more. Awareness is a tool. It's not the goal. If we could
use that word goal, we would say, understanding is the goal. We want to understand more about
why we struggle. You want to feel more of what is actually happening for you when you're
multitasking. If that's something that we do a lot of the day, we want to be able to be aware
while we're multitasking. Maybe just paying attention to where the hands are, everything that
you're picking up, everything that you're putting down. Or while you're moving about, or while you're moving
about the kitchen or about the house, you're paying attention to what you can hear. This isn't
sitting silently on the cushion, but this is cultivating awareness, and we can do that all day long. My
teacher invites us from the moment we wake up until the moment we go to sleep, which gives us a
much bigger on-ramp for cultivating our heart and mind if it's all day long, not just on the
cushion. So, you know, for Rose, if it feels more comfortable to be walking around the house
while listening to a guided meditation, I would say, just see what you can be aware of while you're
walking. So notice the feeling of your feet on the ground. Or for any of us that have sight,
who are on this call that are able to see to use the eye door for seeing. And some of us might not.
maybe there's just the ear door for hearing, right?
But these are our sense doors, as we call them, that are happening all day long.
We're hearing and potentially seeing from the moment we wake up until the moment we go to sleep.
How much effort does it take right now to just recognize that you're hearing?
Was that hard to do?
Right?
Yeah, not hard to do.
Right?
That was easy to do.
Or how about?
just noticing that you're seeing, for those of you, for whom you have sight, noticing that
you're seeing right now, just noticing seeing.
Yeah, right, that doesn't take a lot of effort.
Very light awareness to simply remember that you're seeing, to remember that you're hearing.
We like to say awareness isn't hard.
What's hard is to remember to be aware or to remember that you're seeing or hearing.
as we start to come into more of a relationship with awareness as something that we can do all day long in an effortless way,
we get to have the experience all day long of cultivating awareness being available for that whole car ride, as we talked about before.
And then also, by the time we end up getting on the cushion at the end of the day, or maybe we start the day,
there's some momentum of awareness throughout the day that really supports us in that.
time on the cushion. They're really
simpatico. They support each other.
Okay. So,
we've just got a few minutes left.
So
remembering to be aware, Stephanie, is almost impossible
for me. Thank you for saying that. How many people feel that way here?
Yeah, I see some head nods a lot, right?
It can sometimes feel really hard to be aware,
to remember to be aware. So
here's what I would recommend.
is you start with something that you do on a very regular basis. So often it's like, you know, you might start with brushing your teeth in the morning or ideally we do it twice a day. So start with brushing your teeth and set that as an intention to be aware while brushing your teeth. You know, you can do things like be aware of what it feels like to be brushing your teeth. So you can be aware of the sensation of the toothbrush in your hand.
of the sensations in your mouth.
You can ask yourself questions like,
what is my other hand doing?
You can feel your body standing wherever you are.
You can notice seeing if the eyes are open.
You can notice hearing,
the sound of brushing your teeth.
Right?
And if you start with that intention,
I'd like to just be aware,
as much as I can when I'm brushing my teeth.
right that's twice a day for a few minutes each day that you could be cultivating awareness great stephanie yeah so
where you live it's really common to have eye contact with somebody when you see them or say hi to them
i think that's what i just saw you right yeah when you're out walking so you could just start with
seeing and noticing that you're seeing when you see somebody right if you know that you're out walking
a little bit every day right some of you might be taking a dog for a walk you're going to be holding on to a
leash maybe, or you're going to hear them or you're going to see them, right? Something that you do on a
regular basis, start folding in awareness into the things that you know you do every day.
Maybe you open the same door every single day. I imagine many of you do. Right. So as you move towards
the handle and you feel it in your hand, that can be a moment of awareness. We want to make it
sustainable and accessible and available so that you can have a relationship to awareness all day long.
That's right, Barb. Yes, tuning into the cooing of the morning does is awareness practice whenever the mind is there.
Yeah, that's right. And what's beautiful is as you start to notice those moments of awareness that you're having already in your day all day long, you'll start noticing more of them.
And you'll develop a momentum of that awareness that grows on itself.
We say it's onward leading, right?
It leads into more.
So it is pretty profound.
It's radical.
If we start to recognize that we can be aware all throughout the day,
suddenly our whole practice is not just limited to time on the cushion.
And yes, we can be aware while talking.
I do this all day long.
I work with people one-on-one around their members.
meditation practice. And so I'm cultivating throughout the day when I'm in conversation and ability to be
aware. So I wouldn't say it's happened the whole time I've been talking to all of you, but a lot of
it, there's an awareness of hearing the sound of my voice. I can feel my hand moving as I'm talking.
I can feel my mouth moving into a smile and I can feel my body in the chair at the same time
that my mind is thinking quickly and words are coming out. Yeah. It's.
It is really possible and it really changes our ability to be more intimate with ourselves and with all of life.
You know, it creates potentially a more dimensional experience of our life day to day and moment to moment, doing the things that we really care about and being more present for them.
I imagine that's why most of you are here.
Thank you, everybody.
It's really, really nice to be with you.
Keep awareness close by.
Thank you so much to Susa Talon. Don't forget to sign up for my meditation app 10% with Dan Harris.
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Finally, thank you so much to the people who work so hard to make this show.
Our producers are Tara Anderson and Eleanor Vassili.
Our recording and engineering is handled by the great folks.
over at Pod People. Lauren Smith is our managing producer. Marissa Schneiderman is our senior producer.
DJ Kashmir is our executive producer. And Nick Thorburn of the band Islands wrote our theme.
