Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - The Science of Emotion Regulation: Strategies for When You're Anxious, Angry, or Comparing Yourself To Other | Marc Brackett, Ph.D

Episode Date: March 16, 2026

Yale emotional intelligence expert on how to deal with other people's emotions (and your own). Marc Brackett, Ph.D. is the author of Dealing with Feeling: Use Your Emotions to Create the Life You Want... and the bestselling Permission to Feel. He is the founding director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence and a professor in the Child Study Center at Yale University. You can watch Marc's podcast interviews here.  In this episode we talk about: How to deal with stress, anxiety and anger How to use gratitude in moments of compare and despair, like when you're on Instagram comparing yourself to other people's lives  How to talk to yourself in moments of high stress How to talk to other people when they're experiencing powerful emotions themselves 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 Thanks to our sponsors: FitBod — Personalized workout plans that adapt as you improve. Get 25% off or try free for 7 days at fitbod.me/tenpercent ZipRecruiter — Find qualified candidates fast. Try free at ziprecruiter.com/tenpercent Gainbridge — Guaranteed-rate financial products with no hidden fees. Learn more at gainbridge.com Henson Shaving — Aerospace-precision razors with 100 free blades included. Visit hensonshaving.com/happier or use code HAPPIER at checkout. Wix — Build a pro-grade website with AI and drag-and-drop tools. Try Wix Harmony at wix.com/harmony   To advertise on the show, contact sales@advertisecast.com or visit https://advertising.libsyn.com/10HappierwithDanHarris

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the 10% Happier Podcast. I'm Dan Harris. Hello, party people. Today I am talking to a world leading expert on emotional intelligence. He is a professor and researcher from Yale, who is sometimes referred to as the feelings master. We're going to talk about how to deal with stress, anxiety, and anger, how to use gratitude in moments of compare and despair, like when you're on Instagram, comparing your life to other people's lives, how to talk to yourself in moments of high stress. and how to talk to other people when they're experiencing powerful emotions. By the way, this is a thing a lot of us avoid or fear dealing with other people's emotions. But as you're about to hear, my guest makes a very strong case for developing this skill as a way to vastly improve your own life. And I've seen this play out in my own life.
Starting point is 00:01:03 My guest is Dr. Mark Brackett. He's the founding director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence. And he's the author of a book called Dealing with Feeling. Use your emotions to create the life you want. As you know, meditation is a great way to manage your unruly emotions. So please check out my new meditation app, 10% with Dan Harris. We've got guided practices from many of the world's greatest teachers. We also do these amazing weekly, live video meditation and Q&A sessions.
Starting point is 00:01:30 There's a ton of evidence that shows that meditating with other people is a great way to keep the practice going. You can get the app by heading over to Danharis.com. D-A-N-H-A-R-I-S dot com, join the party. We'll get started with Dr. Mark Brackett right after this. As a dedicated exerciser, is that even a word exerciser? Anyway, as a dedicated one, one of the big things I've learned over time after decades of hitting the gym is that you need variety,
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Starting point is 00:04:39 Blades free with the purchase of a razor, just head to hensonshaving.com slash happier or use the code happier at checkout. Dr. Mark Brackett, welcome to the show. Thank you for having me. It's a pleasure. You make a pretty strong claim here. You say emotion regulation is the single most important skill we can develop. Why is that?
Starting point is 00:05:09 Because if you can't deal with your own emotions, life is pretty tough. And if you can't deal with other people's emotions, meaning if you're not a good co-regulator, I don't think many people want to be around us. Your belief is that this inability that many of us have or this underdeveloped skill to co-regulate with others and to regulate ourselves is a major contributor to the mental health crisis we're seeing these days? It is. If you think about what we're seeing these days, whether it's emotion dysregulation, with anxiety or depression, or whether it's the inability to control oneself from doom scrolling
Starting point is 00:05:48 for six hours every night. I mean, in the end, it's a form of self-regulation that most people are lacking. And in the relational aspects, let's think about our society today. I mean, don't you think maybe our society would be a little bit better run if leaders cared about how people felt and were concerned about the well-being of society? I do, and that caring quotient fluctuates in Washington and in the seats of power around the country. Oh, this is a whole digression, but I'm not sure how high it has ever been. I mean, we were a flawed species.
Starting point is 00:06:27 Sometimes it's high, sometimes it's not, but I'm not sure how high it ever gets. Well, it hasn't been explicitly taught, and that's my whole argument, that none of us really ever got an emotion education. And, you know, from my book, I did this research with thousands of people across the world. Less than 10% of people said they had any formal education and emotion regulation that couldn't even define it. Most of us can't even articulate what it even means. What does it mean? Good question.
Starting point is 00:06:56 You want the long form or you want the short form first? This is a podcast. You can go as long as you want, baby. All right, good. So the way I like to think about it is that emotion regulation is a set of goals and strategies. So we can prevent unwanted emotions. These are the goals. We can reduce difficult ones.
Starting point is 00:07:14 We can initiate the ones that we want to have or help others to have. We can maintain our emotions. We can enhance our emotions. So I have an acronym. I use prime for that. So we can prevent, reduce, initiate, maintain, or enhance our own or other people's emotions.
Starting point is 00:07:29 And we use strategies to do that. That we can go into in a minute because there's a lot of strategies. So emotion regulation is a set of goals and strategies, but there's a lot more to the formula because it's a function of three big things. The emotion you're feeling. I do different things to regulate my anxiety than my stress and my anger, then my disappointment, or to feel more pleasant emotions like happiness and contentment.
Starting point is 00:07:54 That's the E. The P is the personality. I'm an introvert who's on the neurotic side. So what I need and what you might need are two different things, but I have a feeling you might have some of these traits too. And then there's the context, which is right now I'm traveling, so I got my nice setup here in the hotel. I feel really good. I got a good mic.
Starting point is 00:08:14 And so the context matters for regulation because I can't go for a run right now if I'm feeling anxious during the podcast. I've got to use some cognitive strategies or breathing strategies. But to light or early this morning, I can use different strategies. So just to put it together, emotion regulation is a set of goals and strategies that are a function of the emotion we're feeling, the person that we are, and the context we're in. We're going to go deep on your strategies because the book is loaded with them. But let me just ask a few more sort of high-level questions. Sure.
Starting point is 00:08:47 First, just to make this even more appealing to people, what are the health benefits of learning how to regulate your emotions and maybe we can even think about it in the inverse? Like, what are the health dangers of not doing this? Well, what does this regulation lead to? It leads to an immune system that doesn't function well. It leads to cortisol levels that are skyrocketing in our body throughout the day. It leads to us choosing poor foods.
Starting point is 00:09:17 It leads us to not engaging in a lot of physical activity in general. Lots of downside health benefits. On the upside, what my research and other people's research shows is that people who regulate better are better learners in school. they make more sound decisions. They have healthier and higher quality relationships. They have better physical and mental health. They achieve their goals in life.
Starting point is 00:09:42 And I think the big one, which seems to be the new thing that everyone wants to talk about, is longevity. People live longer. You're going to live a healthier, happier life if you can deal with your feelings. On the longevity piece, my understanding, and you're the expert here,
Starting point is 00:09:56 so I'll defer to you, obviously, on this. My understanding that the most powerful way to regulate your emotions is by having positive relationships, and those positive relationships are what help us do it. Is that your understanding? It's part of my understanding. We have never put all the variables into the equation to look at predictive-wise. A lot of the studies, you know, my friend Bob Waldinger is the big person to do the Good Life study. And yes, relationships do matter. But I find in my research that something I wrote about earlier in my career seems to have the same predictive power, which is what I call permission to feel, that when we give ourselves,
Starting point is 00:10:38 just the permission to be true, full feeling selves, that we don't judge our feelings, that we're comfortable being with them, that alone is a master emotion regulation strategy. I'm thinking about my longtime meditation teacher Joseph Goldstein. He teaches in these pithy phrases, and one of them is, it's okay, by which he does not mean. everything's fine. He means it's okay to feel what you're feeling right now. Like you might not think you can withstand it, but you can just let it all in. A hundred percent. That's a big project that I'm working on right now, which is the follow-up research to that concept of permission to feel. About 70 studies that I run across the world on it actually. It's a powerful
Starting point is 00:11:21 concept to give oneself permission to feel, to live without judgment of the emotional experiences as you're having. So much of our dysregulation comes from the judgment around the feeling. I'm anxious. That makes me weak. I can't feel this way. It's the feelings we have about our feelings. You know, we call that meta emotions. But, you know, the shame I had as a kid that I was being bullied. So I was feeling fearful, you know, with the bullying. But my shame around being a boy who was bullied and had a father who was a tough guy is what really got in the way of dealing with it. What you were just saying right there, that's your story. wasn't just a for example yeah that's personal yeah so that sounds pretty
Starting point is 00:12:04 searing bullying I think is always most of the time quite a searing experience and then when you add that into the context of your family configuration is that what drove you into this work it is although if we want to go deeper into the personal unfortunately also was abused sexually by my parents best friend for five years of my childhood. Oh, my God. And so if you couple having five years of sexual
Starting point is 00:12:33 abuse from five to ten years old and not disclosing it, with hating school and having two parents who love me, but one was angry, couldn't deal with his life, and the other one was anxious and couldn't deal with her life, where do you go with your feelings?
Starting point is 00:12:48 You eat your feelings, you know, you scream your feelings, you cry your feelings, you do mischievous things. The reason why I wrote my first what called permission to feel was because I had one person in my life who was my Uncle Marvin, who was an amazing human being. He was a school teacher by day and a band leader by night. And he happened to be running a curriculum to teach kids about feelings in the 1980s. And he happened to use me as a guinea pig. So he sat in my backyard when I was around 11,
Starting point is 00:13:20 and he'd say, hey, Mark, how are you feeling? I would say things like sad, angry. He was the only person never asked me how I felt. But on top of that, when I shared what I was really feeling, he didn't say, you know, toughen up, kiddo, or I can't handle this because I'm going to have a breakdown because of your feelings, which was what would have happened at home. He's like, let's get through this together. He didn't fix me. He didn't solve my emotional difficulties. He just was present. And that's what we're hoping for, what I'm hoping for, for everybody. because my research shows only about one third of us have an Uncle Marvin. One third of us, and only about 15% of us say it's our parent.
Starting point is 00:14:03 85% of us are growing up in homes, where we don't believe our own parents give us permission to feel. I'm having a million thoughts as I'm listening to you talk. First of all, I'm really sorry that happened to you. I appreciate that. Thank you. Not the Marvin part, the abuse part, and the bullying. That's awful. The other thought I was having, which is we don't have to dwell on, and it's just I sometimes think about how we use language.
Starting point is 00:14:27 We say to people, how you're doing, how you feel. And we often say also take care or take care of yourself. And we don't actually mean any of that. It's just wrote. But it would be interesting if we as a culture started to mean it. I meant it do because I think you're correct, which is that, you know, in the workplace especially, it's like, you know, we don't say how are you feeling because that's like very intimate.
Starting point is 00:14:51 It's like, how you doing? And then before the person even responds, you're already down the hallway. We don't really stay with people's feelings. And I have research to show why that's the case, too. A lot of it is people don't think it's worthy. It's like time, like, really? I'm going to waste my time with this. The second is fear, which is that people are afraid about what they're going to hear.
Starting point is 00:15:14 Like if I asked you, hey, Dan, how are you feeling today? By the way, how are you feeling today? But that's a whole other discussion. Let's blow past that. We can come back to it if you want. All right. I would answer and I will answer, but I don't want to derail the point you're trying to make.
Starting point is 00:15:30 I appreciate that. But the point of me asking you is that if you were to say, like most people say, good, fine, okay, you know, it's like, great, me too. And then we move on. But if you said, you know, Mark, I'm actually feeling this odd mixture of anxiety and frustration and overwhelmed.
Starting point is 00:15:45 I'm excited to be with you on the podcast, but I got so much going on in my life. What do most people do when they hear that? They're like, ugh. Oh, gosh, really? This is why I didn't ask you how you felt from the beginning. I don't want to have to deal with this. And that leads to the third issue.
Starting point is 00:16:00 Well, for parents, by the way, it's a lot of fear. I asked my kid how they're really feeling and they tell me the truth. Yikes. What am I going to do with that? And the big one is skill, which is why I wrote this book, because people don't have the skills. They don't know what to do with that information. They get overwhelmed by other people's emotions,
Starting point is 00:16:16 and they don't know how to work with that. them to support them. You're one of these guests. This happens every once in a while where your answers beg a bunch of questions. I'm trying to write them all down and then figure out what order I should ask them in. But you said something right there at the end that kind of begs a question. I think a lot of people don't know. What do you do if you actually inquire of someone how they're feeling?
Starting point is 00:16:40 And they say something that has some moment to it, some power. It's momentous in some way. how do we handle the, how can we develop that skill? Because it's a massive public service to be Marvin for other people. That's my vision. And again, I think people have this weird conception that being the Uncle Marvin means that you're like indulging, you know, this is the pushback we get now for the work that we do in schools.
Starting point is 00:17:07 It's all you're indulging kids' emotions. I'm like, absolutely not. This is emotional intelligence, not emotional indulgence. We're helping people develop the skills they need because if a kid, for example, comes into my classroom as a teacher who's just gotten bullied on the bus and feeling fearful and hatred and anger, they're going to be ruminating about that
Starting point is 00:17:25 pretty much all day long and figuring out a way to get home safely, they're not going to be good learners. So it's my obligation to help kids, A, be safe, and B, have the vocabulary and the strategies to deal with their feelings. So I think the first step is, let's say you said, I'm anxious and overwhelmed,
Starting point is 00:17:43 they said, gosh, Dan, yeah, it's a lot of feelings today. what's going on? Just be curious. What's wrong with being curious about someone's experience? Again, what I want to share is that people are not looking for someone to fix their feelings or even to give them necessarily specific advice. People looking for presence and co-regulation or support.
Starting point is 00:18:07 And that really should relieve people, provide some relief to people who are listening, thinking, you know, the reason why I'm afraid to ask people how they're feeling is because, you know, I'm not sure what to do. You don't have to do that much. You just got to be there. People, actually, their resilience muscle will be built by not giving advice, by not doing problem solving for kids, especially.
Starting point is 00:18:28 It's letting them be with their feelings, the ones that are uncomfortable, and help them think through the solutions to those emotions if they're even in need of a solution. Because most emotions, right, they're ephemeral. We're not regulating all day long. We go crazy. it's the strong ones.
Starting point is 00:18:45 It's the big ones that we have to deal with. I just want to completely agree with you. I mean, it's something I learned late in life that you don't need to fix. In fact, fixing is annoying, usually, for the person who is being worked on. I often think of something Renee Brown said here on this show, actually, about her own children. And of course, this applies to grownups too. She often says to her kids, or at least did at the time we did this interview, I can't solve the problem, but I can sit in the dark with you.
Starting point is 00:19:17 And I like that, because that's what people want. We want somebody to, I learned this when I was a hospice volunteer, too. Like, sit there or hold somebody's hand. And sit in the light, too. I think that we underestimate the power of co-regulation of positive emotions, the savoring of these beautiful experiences in life that we say, oh, fabulous, crude, congratulations, as opposed to really being with those pleasant feelings.
Starting point is 00:19:39 I completely agree with you. another little moment of wisdom is coming to mind from another past guest on the show. She didn't say it on the show. She said it in the context of a direct teaching from her to me. There's a great Dharma teacher named Spring Washam, who one of her subspecialties is teaching what are known in Buddhism as the Brahma Viharas. These four interrelated skills of, I would call them love, call them warmth or heart qualities, whatever, compassion, friendliness, equanimity, and then the skill she was
Starting point is 00:20:10 talking about specifically that comes to mind when you said your thing about sitting in the light. It's called sympathetic joy or moodyta, which is just the pleasure we take in other people's success. This is a trainable skill through meditation where you envision people and imagine people savoring their success and send them wishes for continued happiness and success. And it's very hard to do. That's why there's that expression every time a friend of mine succeeds. I die a little bit. But what Spring once said to me that has never gotten out of my head is you want to be the person that other people like to call when they have good news. Exactly. I would say that it's a skill.
Starting point is 00:20:54 Yeah. And I teach this skill to kids and to others, but kids are my favorite because they're our future. Just to give an example of this, it was a fun one. When I do writing, I oftentimes go into the real world to do it, meaning I do workshops with kids. kids or teachers or leaders, and I record them, and it helps me think about my work. So I'm working with this group of fourth graders, and I'm asking them to differentiate the feelings of excitement and elation. Do you want to try it?
Starting point is 00:21:25 Verbly, to distinguish them? Yeah. Excitement to me is jangly, and elation has a bit more stability and ballast and calm in it. Nice. that was a beautiful way to describe them. Definitionally speaking, right, one is more anticipatory. I'm excited about going to the park. I'm excited to go on vacation.
Starting point is 00:21:49 Where elation tends to be kind of afterward, you're related, you know, when you watch the thing in sports, the goal, you get the goal and you're like this sense of joy and kind of pride coming together. So I'm teaching this to kids, and I ask them to think about, well, what are the ways that you would help a close friend prolong their feelings of elation.
Starting point is 00:22:13 And it was amazing. I mean, they got into groups and they're thinking about all, like, give me scenarios where this could be true and where you would practice this and do it. And what would it look like and sound like and how would you do it? And then we role-played it. I mean, these kids would blow your mind. And what I loved about it was at the end, I usually tell these kids, obviously it was a letter that went home that Professor Brackett came to visit your
Starting point is 00:22:37 class today, and your parents are going to probably ask, what did Mark do with you in that class on emotional intelligence today? And this one girl raises her hand, she goes, sir, I think we learned a new form of empathy. And he said, say more. She goes, well, we always talk about empathy. You know, if someone's grandma dies, or their dog dies, you know, we have to show that we care, and that's obviously important. But helping people savor their pleasant feelings, that's a really important form of empathy. Yeah. My point is that you can teach this at a young age and when they see the value of it,
Starting point is 00:23:11 they're going to do it more. But I didn't learn. I mean, did you learn anything about modita or positive empathy when you were a kid? No. I have to say, I had really touchy-feely parents, like hippie,
Starting point is 00:23:21 ex-hippies, and I was raised in, as I often joke, the People's Republic of Massachusetts, and it was like, you know, free to be you and me, that record that they played to kids back then.
Starting point is 00:23:30 So I may have been taught it, but I wasn't paying attention. Yeah. It's not explicit. Yeah, it should have been more explicit. Absolutely. And I agree that it's a new form or an enhanced and advanced form of empathy. I will also shout out that you said two words there that can be very practical for the rest of us
Starting point is 00:23:49 when dealing with what can feel like an emotional onslaught from other people. Say more. Exactly. The same thing, by the way, goes for pleasant feelings. Yes, yes, of course. That's how you engage in the Mudita process, right? It's like, tell me more about that goal you got. What did it feel like in your body?
Starting point is 00:24:09 What was going on in your mind? I want to hear the whole story. And people love that. As a matter of fact, longitudinally speaking, when we reflect back on our childhoods, or even when we reflect back, period. And we think about the people that had the greatest impact on us. It's the people who engage in the positive empathy that stand out,
Starting point is 00:24:27 more so than the people who engage in the traditional empathy. That's great. That's good to know as a father of an 11-year-old as well. Coming up, Dr. Mark Brackett talks about a self-interested top spin on everything we've been discussing this far, why savoring positive emotions actually strengthens relationships, upregulating joy and contentment in your everyday life, and the upside of identifying what brings you well-being and then thinking about how to get more of it. As many of you know, I'm not a big fan of this. so-called power of positive thinking that just because you think something like,
Starting point is 00:25:14 let me get a million bucks or let me cure whatever disease I'm struggling with right now, just because you think it doesn't mean it's guaranteed to happen. However, one of my sponsors today has a product that is as close to genuine power of positive thinking as I can imagine. It's called Wix, and they have this thing called the Harmony Editor, which makes it so easy to create a website, exactly how you imagined it in your mind, that it's almost like you're thinking out loud, thinking it into existence. Experience the new way to create websites. Wix Harmony is a hybrid website editor that offers the perfect blend of AI and precise drag-and-drop tools, introducing the world to the next generation of website creation.
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Starting point is 00:27:29 and then you don't have to think about it. That's the peace of mind part. It's not only about growing your money, it's about releasing an element of financial anxiety. Your money grows, you know exactly how much, and then you get on with your life. Gainbridge, let your money work for you. Learn more at Gainbridge.com. Rates subject to change. I just want to put a fine point on this part of the discussion. I'm always, and I don't know if this is a service that people actually need,
Starting point is 00:28:05 but it's what I need as a person who's wired for selfishness. I want to put a self-interested top spin on everything we've been discussing. Sure. In my experience, if I had heard this discussion 10 years ago, even though I was already kind of interested in Buddhism and personal growth, I don't know that I would have understood why helping people savor their positive emotions or survive their negative ones would be in my interest. But I think to me, it kind of, well, there's the evidence base, which is what you referred to earlier with Bob Waldinger and his work at Harvard with the Harvard Study for Adult Development, which has shown. shown over 80 plus years that the quality of your relationships determines the length and quality of your life. So there's that. And then I can also just say from an end of one perspective, having these skills to draw people out and be with them no matter what's happening has
Starting point is 00:29:04 brought my life from black and white to color. I don't do it all the time. I once heard somebody on my team say that Dan practices what he preaches about 70% of the time. So that felt pretty good, actually. It really has helped. You're making me think about, not just about parent-child relationships, but colleague-to-colleagues relationships. You know, I work at a university
Starting point is 00:29:25 where people are not so great at celebrating other people's success. I see couples all the time who feel inhibited sharing the good news they had because they feel like maybe their partner will feel like, well, I don't get the good news that you get. And so it almost is like this weird dynamic of power, where I can't really share my pleasant feelings because I'm afraid that you can't handle
Starting point is 00:29:48 the fact that I'm actually enjoying my life, which is we can do like a 17-part series. I think where we were going, just for my own sense of staying on track, is that the regulation of emotion oftentimes is focused on down-regulating unpleasant feelings, and we just had a little movement here around. It's not just that.
Starting point is 00:30:12 it's also about supporting other people and experiencing pleasant emotions and also upregulating our own pleasant emotions to enjoy our lives. And that matters a lot. Well, say more about that, upregulating our own positive emotions, because I don't think we've really touched on that. We've talked about how to get other people to savor theirs. But I think given the negativity bias that is so hardwired into the human animal, it can be very easy to move past the pleasant things in our day, the taste of our food, the quality of a tiny, fleeting little interaction with your pharmacist or somebody at the barista or whatever, or big positive things. How do we draw those out and savor them more? Well, first, we have to know what those things are. In our
Starting point is 00:31:00 work, we have a tool we call the mood meter, which you may have seen before. It's this box of four colors, the yellow, the red, the blue, and the green. And we have an app now that helps people to use that more effectively. And so yellow emotions are the high energy pleasant ones, the excitement, the elation, the optimism, the hope, the green emotions are those of calm, content, tranquil, peaceful, relaxed, low energy, pleasant feelings. And then we got the blue and the red, which are the unpleasant emotions, the anger and the anxiety family, and the kind of sadness and loneliness family. So, firstly, like, do you know what brings you into the yellow? Like, what actually brings you into the yellow quadrant? Like, what does that you know the same thing? Like, what
Starting point is 00:31:39 the things that you'd like to do that when you're there or doing them, you feel joy and excitement. People don't reflect on these things very much. What are the things that bring you into that green quadrant, the things that make you feel content? It's funny, I live now in the countryside of Connecticut. We moved after the pandemic to a very rural area. I've got lots of property and hiking trails. And people always say, like, what do you love to do more? And I said, well, now that I live in the country, I love to hike. And people say, well, how often do you? a hike and I'm like, I think I did two last year. You know, it's like I don't make the time to do the things that I know
Starting point is 00:32:19 bring me pleasant feelings because I'm busy working. So identifying those things in your life and planning them. For me, one thing that I do that I've never done before is I plan my well-being time. And so my calendar, I may look like a severely neurotic human being, but I schedule my workouts. I schedule my hiking time. I schedule my connection time because otherwise I'm not going to do it. Yeah. My default is research and analysis and you know, blah, blah, blah. Yes, you're reminding me of somebody on my team. She didn't give me permission to name her, so I won't name her, but somebody on my team who talks about her default mode being work robot, and so therefore has to put, go to the movies with
Starting point is 00:33:04 a friend or take a walk on her calendar because otherwise it's just the slog. Exactly. So identifying those things that bring you joy is critically important in scheduling them really matters. I mean, I think that's just one thing. If everybody did that every week, twice a week or three times a week, just found those 15-minute blocks or one-hour blocks and just schedule that, I think it would be a huge difference in people's lives. Okay. Let's dive more deeply into the book. You referenced your first book, permission to feel. The new book is called
Starting point is 00:33:37 Dealing with Feeling. It's just packed with, as you say, research-backed strategies for emotion regulation, which as we established at the top of this episode is a very important skill.
Starting point is 00:33:50 And so, number one, the first strategy you mentioned is quieting the mind. What do you recommend for doing that? I mean, this is your whole thing. I mean, I listen to you all the time. This is your practice, right?
Starting point is 00:34:03 It's the breathing exercise. is this, the mindfulness exercises, it's the meditation. Writing a book on emotion regulation that has a chapter on quiet in the mind was not easy, by the way, given there are 3,750 million books on this topic. And so I wanted to be really clear in terms of, I was very curious around the nuance in the research, because, I mean, it's pretty obvious for most of us, breathing is going to deactivate our nervous system. Would you agree? Yeah, I think that's unimpeachable.
Starting point is 00:34:36 It's the advice every mom gives their kid, you'll take a deep breath, but it's, there's evidence for it. Exactly, except it's not great when we tell people that. I've learned that the hard way. Fair enough? I mean, it really doesn't work. I'm like, everybody breathe.
Starting point is 00:34:51 And they're like, that's a trigger mark. That's a trigger. I'm like, okay. But we do know it works, and it's the place where we can build that space to deactivate. I make sure I'm clear that I don't think breathing is sufficient. I always joke when my mother-in-law got trapped with us during the pandemic, I would do a lot of breathing exercises and I'd be like,
Starting point is 00:35:11 I'm even clear why she needs to go home. So, you know, yes, it does lower the temperature. It helps us to be able to access some of those cognitive strategies that I think are critically important. But it doesn't guarantee we're going to use them. Obviously, the mindfulness work is important, whether it be mindfulness exercises to be more present or to, as we talked about earlier, the compassion-focused ones. And so I think stating the obvious that we need to do that,
Starting point is 00:35:43 the problem is that nobody wants to do it. We haven't sold it well. The best example I have for that is here I am. I got a large amount of money from a donor to do a study with my undergraduate students to put them through different forms of mindfulness training. And we were going to pay these people, and then didn't even need the money, but we paid them anyway to participate because we figured we'd get them to stick with their research.
Starting point is 00:36:10 By the time, the study was over, something like 70-something percent dropped out. So we couldn't even actually analyze the data because there was nobody left to actually study. And it was once a week working together through the mindfulness exercise and they had their on their own time practice. Zero percent practice on their own.
Starting point is 00:36:31 The numbers were terrible. And when I interviewed, the students afterwards, what do you think the number one reason why they didn't do it was? Not enough time? Not enough time. That's only a piece of it. It's deeper than that. It's a waste of their time.
Starting point is 00:36:51 But you can't be productive while you're doing mindfulness and breathing exercise. Oh, I see. I see. I see. I see. To me, that seems like a problem with the pedagogy. I deal with a lot of people who have beefs with meditation. Usually, if I can bend their ear for five minutes, they're disabused of the notion that it's a waste of time because there's a ton of science to show that it's really good for you and it's actually can make you more productive and focused and all that stuff. What I've found
Starting point is 00:37:26 is that people aren't doing it because they don't have enough time. And habit formation is really hard. The same thing is true with exercise or sleep hygiene or eating a healthy diet. Like, there's a reason why New Year's resolutions where we bail on them by February. You're right, but I think this goes back to, you know, I'm a prevention scientist, and it sometimes fascinates me how unpopular prevention sciences and how popular clinical research is or treatment research is. Because if we keep on treating people with anxiety disorders or depression or whatever it is,
Starting point is 00:38:05 like the number of new kids or adults who fall into that system of the need for help is never going to diminish. It just makes no sense to me why we don't think, oh, my other background, by the way, is I taught martial arts for 30 years and have a strong background in Eastern philosophy and Buddhism myself. and I would teach five-year-olds, really complex meditations and mindfulness exercises, and they loved it. But I got them when they were young, and they saw the connection between the breathing exercise and the mindfulness and their martial arts and their lives, and I taught them that explicitly. But now, as a professor of college students, I have kids who are 18, 19 years old. They've gone through a system where the only thing that makes you successful is playing an instrument that no one ever heard or having something in your seat. that sounds so special that it's like, wow, you went to a country that I didn't even know
Starting point is 00:38:55 existed to volunteer. There's no reinforcement for having these kinds of practices. And so we're starting late, and so we have to work in that mindset, which is before, the way I talk about it in my book, is like, before we can get to teaching people, whether it's mindfulness or cognitive strategies, we've got to get them to believe that all this matters. Yes. They have to have that. Both that emotions are data and valuable sources of information and that it's a learnable skill. Because a lot of people think of this as something that's innate. Like, I thought this way, by the way. I mean, until I got a PhD in psychology, I just thought I was emotionally a basket case. You know, I had so much neuroses from my childhood, this complicated
Starting point is 00:39:45 life, and I would have strong emotions. That's just part of who I am. And I just, thought, okay, you got to live it out. And then I realized, wait a minute, there's evidence-based strategies to regulate emotions. There's actually a science to this, as skills you can learn. And it's harder, not impossible, to do it as we develop. You know, my big push is let's start this in preschool and teach it in a developmentally appropriate way across development. And of course, you know, now at 56, I run a center at the university. I've got 40 employees. I've got political go pushback on my work. I still got to regulate. And I need new strategies. But I have, the muscle, you know, has already gotten that exercise that it needs to try a new technique.
Starting point is 00:40:32 Well, I agree with you about teaching them while they're young. I totally agree with you about that. And I will say that the people listening to the show want to buy what you're selling. So this is a hospitable environment. The good news, it's never too early, it's never too late. The areas of our brain responsible for learning these skills are with us. until we're in our 90s. I got a letter from a 90-year-old man just a while back thanking me for teaching him this stuff. He said, I only wish I learned it earlier,
Starting point is 00:40:58 but you're making the last years of my life better. So I promise everyone this is something you can learn today and make a difference. So the breathing and mindfulness work that we discuss, I have my favorites, and I think that's part of the work, is that I came from a Zen background. I learned of Apasana and other forms
Starting point is 00:41:20 of meditation and mindfulness. But the one that stuck with me the most was the work from Tignan Khan. And I just related to him as a human. I liked the way he thought about the world. And so I like his mindfulness practices, and they work for me. I've been practicing them for 40 years.
Starting point is 00:41:37 I can tell you that I don't need 15. I need like two or three different ones for different purposes. And it really does its work for me. Okay, so strategy number one, quieting the mind. strategy number two is about redirecting your thoughts
Starting point is 00:41:54 or cognitive strategies. What should we know about that? This goes back to your point about the negativity bias. We really have to fight that. And because, again, we're not taught from a young age to sit through the way people are talking to us.
Starting point is 00:42:11 For me, this is a big one because I grew up with very low self-esteem. Hated myself. I was too Jewish. I was too chubby. My nose is too big. I was too feminine. The world had a lot to say about who I was.
Starting point is 00:42:28 And nobody really helped me sit through that and say, oh, ho, ho, ho, wait a minute. Who are you to define my reality from me? That's called gaslighting, by the way. And like, I don't accept that. I do think that most of our negative talk comes from gaslighting. I think that other people just feel they have the right to tell you who you are. And then you start believing it because no one else teaches you other.
Starting point is 00:42:49 wise. And so going from that self-critic to the person who's self-compassionate is effortful. And we have to learn the strategies. That work of positive self-talk and that distant self-talk of Mark, take the high road. Like my favorite, because of my Zen meditation background, my favorite strategy for cognitive strategies is I say to myself consistently, Mark, you know this feeling is impermanent. And to me, it's like, I can breathe. Because I don't know about you, but when bad stuff happens, little bad things like, you know, the flight gets canceled and you're stuck there freaking out, or whatever,
Starting point is 00:43:31 you're having a really rough day, you get news that something didn't work out at work, and you just go into that rheumidative state, which is my default. I take that breath, which gives me access to the cognitive strategies, and I say, Mark, today's a rainy day. it's okay. Tomorrow's going to be a sunny day. And recognizing that emotions are ephemeral and that that's kind of the law of physics
Starting point is 00:43:55 is freeing for me. And I don't think many people take the opportunity to adopt that mindset around their emotions. They get stuck in it. The biggest challenge I'm seeing today, by the way, this is with a young teenager. I do a lot of work in high schools. And I can't tell you how many high school students
Starting point is 00:44:12 come up to me. They don't want to say this in front of their peers. but they say it privately and they say, Mark, I don't feel anxious. I am anxiety. They define their whole body and life by the emotion. And there's where the problem lies. They're not anxiety or not your emotions. Your emotions are experiences. Some of us have stronger experiences than others and sometimes they're more intense or, you know, more frequent than others. But emotions are ephemeral. And if we can adopt that mindset and recognize that when we're experiencing the strong, unpleasant ones, life is going to be a lot better for us.
Starting point is 00:44:50 You said this was your favorite strategy for interrupting rumination. Is the name for this strategy, Distance Self-Talk? It is. Because Distance Self-Talk is just like literally having empathy for yourself and saying, Mark, you know this feeling is impermanent. Yes, Mark, it's true today. Mark, you know this is like that rainy day. It feels like a thunderstorm.
Starting point is 00:45:09 But tomorrow, there's going to be a rainbow. So it's okay. And I have to say, like, again, I repeat this on 56. I still get caught up in the rainy days, never going to go away. I even take like a double step back. Mark, last week you had that really shitty experience and you were in that same spot. And the next day everything was fine. Remember that?
Starting point is 00:45:28 Oh, yeah, yeah. Right. Okay. It's work. Maybe I just need a lot more work than other people. But from my exposure in the world, I don't think so. Dude, yes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:45:39 I completely identify with what you're describing by yourself. And just to be technical here, you added on top of distance self-talk, temporal distance. That's another form of it, which is that's when you say to yourself, Mark, is this really going to be something that's problematic in a week from now? Does this really matter? I do a lot of that in my relationship. I've been with my partner for 31 years. and we have very different lives and different styles of being, and we have different values about buying things.
Starting point is 00:46:14 Part of it is like, really? You really need that? And then I have to say, Mark, you're not your partner's father. Let it go. Or I have to say something like, is this really going to impact our finances? No, let it go. So that forward-looking, forward-thinking strategy, very, very helpful.
Starting point is 00:46:31 Re-appraisal. Oh, my gosh. How critical is that? Instead of going right for the, blame, can you just try to see it from a different lens or a different perspective for a minute? It may not be the right answer, but give someone the benefit of the doubt. Maybe they're not trying to sabotage you. Maybe they're not intentionally late because they don't respect you. Maybe they just really hit traffic. I want to talk about reappraisal in a second, but just to say on
Starting point is 00:46:59 distant self-talk, which includes the kind of bonus level of temporal distancing, just want to point out to the audience that the key move that Mark was making was using his own name. That is the way to distance yourself. Dude, bro, Mark, whatever you want to call yourself. It allows you to harness this ability we all have underdeveloped, but there anyway, to give good advice when appropriate to children, mentees, friends, whatever. You can do that to yourself. Correct.
Starting point is 00:47:31 You can be your Uncle Marvin. Well, by the way, I love that. You just said that because a big part of my training now is, you know, because two-thirds of us didn't have the Uncle Marvin, a lot of people, and my research shows that if you have the Uncle Marvin, you tend to be more successful in life, you tend to have greater life satisfaction, greater purpose and meaning, better physical health, better mental health, you actually sleep better at night. Big benefits to having grown up with that Uncle Marvin. But then two-thirds of the people in the room thinking, like, look at me, like, maybe that's why I'm so messed up. Look, I didn't have the Uncle Marvin. And I have to remind people, you got to look in the mirror and be on Uncle Marvin. Yes. I just think that's so important. We can, and I'm here for this, to a certain extent, bemoan our life circumstances, and we've all got challenging ones, some of us, way more than others. And that's all true, that we're trying to take that away from you or gaslight you. And you still have an opportunity right now to be your own supportive aunt or uncle. By the way, just for the research,
Starting point is 00:48:34 play a little bit of my research here, that will help clarify what that means. Like, being Uncle Marvin, like, okay, that sounds complicated. Like, what is that? My research shows three things that Uncle Marvin's have. And by the way, they can be Aunt Maria's,
Starting point is 00:48:47 they can be grandparents, they can be coaches. This is just people that we want to be around that are emotional allies, as I call it. Three things. Non-judgmental, good listeners who show empathy and compassion. That's it.
Starting point is 00:49:02 And by the way, that shows up cross-cultural. There are cultural differences and strategies that people use to regulate are how people express emotions. But in terms of people reflecting on their childhoods and thinking about the people that created the conditions for them to have permission to appeal, I have not found cross-cultural differences. People say non-judgmental, good listeners
Starting point is 00:49:24 who show empathy and compassion. Write it down, people. Coming up, Mark talks about some tools for breaking out of room the importance of gratitude when you're in one of those envy or social comparison situations on social media, for example, and how to regulate your identity and act from your best self. He'll explain what that means. Probably the most important variable in my experience as an entrepreneur, even more important than the quality of your idea for the business is the quality of the people who you work with. It's just so crucial to have high quality, really smart, really effective, really. really committed people on your side as you're building a business. However, hiring can be a pain in the bud. You spend a lot of time waiting for the right candidates to apply, sorting through resumes, trying to get in touch with the potential candidates. It can be a nightmare, honestly. Which brings me
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Starting point is 00:53:07 Don't side with yourself. Nice. I love that. The reappraisal piece for me, I actually love re-appraisal, and I love teaching it because I think it's actually one of the most creative emotion regulation strategies there is. And I love helping kids think about it. Like, give me five alternative ways of thinking about that particular experience. And they love the challenge. And so this is where I think there's a beautiful intersection of emotional intelligence and creativity. Sharon Salzberg, Joseph Goldstein's longtime partner in crime in the meditation world, has this rap that she goes on sometimes about how we all think certainty is going to help. We crave certainty in a world in constant non-negotiable flux, which is scary. We find refuge, we think, in certainty.
Starting point is 00:53:56 But actually, thinking we know how things are that they're terrible and will never change makes us feel worse, it's that think of five different explanations. That's how uncertainty actually, curiosity feels safer actually when you do it. I agree with that. That's also the certainty, control. This is why we get anxious, because we can't make the prediction. We want to make that, we want to be clear the pandemic. I want to be clear. When are the office is opening? I want to be clear. When am I going to be take it off the mask. I want to be clear, all that kind of stuff. And for things that we have no control over, it's where all these strategies come into play. I remember my favorite one during the
Starting point is 00:54:40 pandemic, remember that, like, it was like, maybe May, and it was like, nobody knew what the heck was happening. Everybody was freaking out. And we're spraying our groceries with Windex. I mean, it was nuts. The stock market's crashing. I mean, it was just like, you're watching the news and it's, like, horrific. And I would just sit there thinking, I started singing songs. I mean, it was nuts. I mean, like, we all go down together. You know, like, Mark, you're pretty selfish thinking, like, you're the only one who's suffering right now. You're actually doing pretty good.
Starting point is 00:55:08 You got a good job. You have a home, a little home office. Actually, life is pretty good. How about some gratitude? And I switched from all the negativity to gratitude, and it was eye-opening for me. And I actually did a study on gratitude during the time because I was very curious how people thought about gratitude during the pandemic. And the little results of that study were that people were that people.
Starting point is 00:55:29 just rely on like they think about, I'm grateful, I have a family, I'm grateful I have food. There was no real gratitude for things like the doctors and nurses who are putting their lives at risk to help people, the people who have jobs where they're cooking for people in precarious waters or the delivery people. And I think that oftentimes taking a moment, it's another strategy, right, of cognitive strategy of gratitude, really does make a difference, as we know. probably the strongest research is in the field of gratitude. Tell me about the how of gratitude. If we want to use that as a motion regulation strategy,
Starting point is 00:56:07 what's the best practice? It's pausing. There's multiple strategies. I mean, techniques, one can be just doing the writing exercise. One little caveat about that, though, is that people tend to overdo it. And so this is the stuff that never gets published, but I won't mention the scientists on this,
Starting point is 00:56:25 but years ago was part of a think tank of researchers doing stuff on this. And there's a sweet spot because if you write 10 things you're grateful for every day, but at the time Friday comes, you can't think of anything. And then all of a sudden you're still like, you know, like, I guess there's nothing to be grateful for and it actually backfires and your happiness goes down. It's like all things. To me, it's like the Buddhist way, the middle path. All these strategies are a middle path.
Starting point is 00:56:51 The breathing is the middle path. The cognitive is the middle path. Eating's a middle path. It's all kind of that way. But I think the writing of it is great, and I think just the pausing as a mindset shift. For me, I do it in the morning. I have some rituals that I do.
Starting point is 00:57:06 And one of my other rituals in the morning is I say to myself, how wonderful it is that today is the first day of your rest of your life. And it's just like all that shit that was like, oh, yesterday, that's the past. I got the whole day. I got tomorrow. And I think we could all be more forward-looking in our lives, to be frank.
Starting point is 00:57:31 It's like present moment with forward-lookingness. One of the quick side about the gratitude thing, I think it's a beautiful antidote to a very popular emotion these days, which is envy. I know from my research with students, they say they're stressed, but their research actually shows that the deep feeling is envy and jealousy. But they don't have the vocabulary, so they say stressed. but when you get into the nuance, it's actually all about
Starting point is 00:57:57 social comparisons, whether it's about body type or whether it's about studying for less hours and getting better grades or parents who have better connections in Wall Street or Hollywood. Everybody's like to scan in the world for what's going to be better than me. Remember my
Starting point is 00:58:13 formula, I don't think just doing kind of mindfulness and breathing exercises alone is sufficient because when you're in a classroom of 300 people like mine and you're looking around thinking everybody else is better than you are, you got to switch your cognitions. If you don't shift here the way you see the world, you're going to drown in the envy.
Starting point is 00:58:37 And if you take a moment and think, wait a minute, I'm actually a student at Yale University. Wow. I got a great frequent professor, whatever it is. But getting people to shift out and please just focus on three things that you might have gratitude for. and it just pulls them away from the rumination or the perseveration around their not worthiness or everyone else's betterness and it gives them a bit more freedom. So just to put a fine point on this, I think what you're saying is to the listeners,
Starting point is 00:59:11 next time you find yourself in a moment of social comparison, if you can catch it because it can be sneaky and subtle. But if you're in that moment, and it's probably going to happen the next time you're on Instagram, if you're on Instagram or whatever social media death trap in which you find yourself. Try to use that as a wake up, an alarm bell, to pause for a second and think of three good things in your life to mitigate the pernicious effects of comparing yourself to other people's curated versions of their lives. Exactly right. Okay.
Starting point is 00:59:47 I'm skipping around a little bit in your book. That's okay. One of the strategies you recommend is, identity regulation. What does that mean? Well, what I mean by that, it goes back to kind of our opening conversation about like, why is it so important? I got this idea, by the way. So one of things I did for my own well-being while writing the book was I started doing a rigorous weightlifting workout. I was always a physically active person with martial arts and other things I taught exercise in gyms during graduate school. But, you know, you know, you.
Starting point is 01:00:23 you become a professor, you get a little dumpy, and if pandemic hits, you're eating too much Thai food. And I'm like, Mark, you've got to work out. You've got to get yourself in shape. So this is the positive benefits of social media. I was scrolling one night, kind of feeling disgusted, and I found this virtual trainer. And I decided it was a reasonable price to get me started.
Starting point is 01:00:45 And I meet this person, his name is Marco. And he's interviewed me. He's like, I only really want to take people who are, motivated and I'm like wow that's pretty intense anyway we had this long conversation and he said there's different phases who are working out the first phase is you're going to hate it it's like why am doing this this is ridiculous which by the way I went through for months I would be doing like deadlifts and I'm like I'm 50 years old you know I've been with my partner for 30 years who cares like nobody's looking at you anyway all the negativity I got through that I was like mark
Starting point is 01:01:19 it's ridiculous take the high road you know that this is what you're you want to do. I had all self-talk worked. Then I saw changes. But the conversation that was the most interesting to me was that he said, just to make the parallel, I see myself as a martial artist. I have a 50-degree black belt in a style called Hopkido. If you ask me, like, do you consider martial arts an aspect of your identity? I'd say 100%. I feel like I operate as a martial artist in the world around. I'm scanning the environment. You know, I feel like, I'll call it. I feel like, confident in terms of protecting myself and other people. Do I feel like I have a black belt in emotional intelligence? Not so much. Do I identify? Do I see Mark Brackett as a highly
Starting point is 01:02:07 regulated human? Not yet. And I feel like that's where people need to grow, that when we start identifying as people who got this, yes, I am the Yoda of emotion regulation. That's when our automatic, habitual, unhelpful reactions to stimuli become our automatic, habitual, deliberate, conscious, helpful ways of dealing with our emotional lives. And that's my whole life is striving for that. I mean, for helping people to see that, to identify that way. Isn't that a setup for failure? If you think you're a Yoda, the next time you're a shitbag, like, it's going to be devastating. Well, you're going to be Yoda with some humility.
Starting point is 01:02:56 But for me, it's actually great because I'm very easily, for whatever reason, I feel strong emotions in the world around me and whether I'm getting a coffee and I feel like the barista's nasty or whether I'm online at the airport or wherever, or people challenging me in my public speeches. Or students, for example, Professor Brett, I've got a question, but I'm not sure you're going to know the answer. I'm thinking to myself, okay. you know, this isn't going to be a winner. I use that as an opportunity. To me, it's like, Mark, I go into Mark the Yoda. Mark, you are the feelings master. Mark, you are the world's leading expert in emotional intelligence.
Starting point is 01:03:36 Use that identity to solve this problem. And by the way, it works. And there's good research to support that. Okay, but when we press on that, what about, what does it do to your identity in those inevitable moments when you are dysregulated, and in a bad enough situation that this regulation might last for a while. It might, and that's where you have to have the humility and the courage to either have some self-forgiveness
Starting point is 01:04:03 or apologize to your partner. There's a lot of emotion regulation that goes into having the courage to say, I'm sorry, honey. I have to do that pretty much every week. I'm terrible at this, by the way. And just the other day, I was like, we went out for dinner with friends and I was triggered by something and we're walking home. And of course, I like, don't say it more. Don't say it. Of course I said it.
Starting point is 01:04:29 And then I'm like, yeah, why did you do that? And then it was like a whole thing when we got home. The next morning I woke up and I was like, I don't know what got to me that I needed to say that. And I'm sorry. And I'm going to really work on not doing that again. That's the best you can do. you reflect on it and you try to move forward. I think that 90% of our divorces are because people can't regulate.
Starting point is 01:04:53 They can't deal with their feelings and their relationship, whether it's telling someone about their discomfort or whether it's managing these moments. People just either decided they're going to cheat on them, they go to the gym for six hours, they compartmentalize, suppress, deny, repress, as opposed to approach. The approach takes courage. The approach takes skill. but I think the approach is what makes us
Starting point is 01:05:17 healthier happier people you have this kind of order of operations in this section of the book under identity regulation sense stop see your best self strategize and act walk us through that yeah so that's a technique we call the meta moment I cultivated this technique with a colleague of mine
Starting point is 01:05:39 whose name is Robin Stern and we came at this from a really fun perspective She's a clinician who was dealing with patients. She was teaching them in motion regulation strategies. They go home and they would not use them. We just worked on this and you're a couple's therapy. Like, what's going on here? I was a scientist working on research and teaching people this,
Starting point is 01:06:00 and I got all this resistance. And so we're like, nobody wants to regulate. It's not just about the strategy. Because, you know, you can do the breathing exercises. You can do the cognitive exercise that we've talked about and others, but if you don't actually see that my life is going to be better, my relationship are going to be better by applying these strategies to my life, then you're probably not going to do them because it does feel good to be dysregulated. I prove myself right that evening on that walk home.
Starting point is 01:06:31 And it does feel good to say, go blank yourself and have that extra alcoholic beverage in the moment. These strategies don't tend to do well for you long term. With that said, we realized the missing link was something we've spoken about already, which is this idea of cultivating your best self. So we get the four-step process of the metamomomomone. Three of the steps are similar, right? The first step is you notice that something has shifted in your environment. I am triggered.
Starting point is 01:07:01 I'm feeling tense in my shoulders. I have that negative thought. I want to say something mean or hurtful. And then we do that pause button, where we do that breath. But the critical and creative thing about the meta, a moment is this moment of seeing your best self. So what does that mean? Well, it's role specific, but very simply, if I were to ask you, Dan, you're a father of an 11-year-old, you just said? Yes. Okay. So I'm going to put you through this exercise. You didn't sign the consent form,
Starting point is 01:07:32 but it's okay. Dan, in your role as a parent, your best self, or you would say this to yourself, my best self, how I want my child to see me, how I want my child to experience me, how I want my child to talk about me to their peers. What are the three qualities that you would want them to have in mind? Well, I think number one is the Uncle Marvin role, just a safe place. I don't know that my son would have the vocabulary for this, but like a safe place to just express himself in his full range. So what's the trait or attribute that you would have? How about easy to talk to. Great.
Starting point is 01:08:11 So you want to see yourself as a dad who's easy to talk to. Yes. Give me two more. Fun to be around. Like, I'm down to do his stuff, even though I don't really want to do it. Listen to him, talk about video games as long as he wants to talk, take him to sporting events. Another thing I also don't really want to do. But I play drums with him.
Starting point is 01:08:31 I watch 30 Rock with him. We're working our way through that whole show, which has a lot of inappropriate shit in it, but whatever. So easy to be around. Fun. Easy to talk to, fun to be around. Okay. Easy to talk to, fun to be around. Give me one more.
Starting point is 01:08:47 Aspirational figure, like I want to be like him. Say more about that. I don't believe as a parent in a lot of direct instruction of my child because I don't believe that will work. So I try to lead and teach through osmosis or example, you know. And so I want him to feel like, yeah, that's a dude I want to be like because he, He has rich relationships. He has work that he really cares about. He pays attention to his marriage.
Starting point is 01:09:16 He's fit to the best of his ability. And I don't mean like looking a certain way. I pay attention to my fitness. I want him to look up to me in that way. So what's a word? What's an attribute? Role model? Yeah, but that's not specific enough for me.
Starting point is 01:09:34 I want more specific. Is it passionate? Is it perseverant? Is it motivated? Is it? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, passionate.
Starting point is 01:09:45 Sure. Nice. So as a dad, I want my son to see me as someone who is. He did to talk to, fun, passionate. Nice. So tonight, or wherever you are, if you're going to meet your child tonight at home, you can be forward-looking. I said I was a preventionist.
Starting point is 01:10:06 Well, if we always are waiting for our kids at church, to then activate that best self, it's going to be harder. But you can be proactive about this. Can you, before you walk into your kitchen tonight for dinner or whenever you're going to see your kid next, just pause and set a goal and remind yourself, I've made a commitment that I want to be a dad who is. Easy to talk to fun, passionate. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:32 This kind of gets into the whole idea of intention setting, which I feel can metastasize in a very positive way throughout your life. In a Buddhist sense, I wake up in the morning, and this is Buddhist language, say that my job is to be a benefit to all beings. It sounds to me, and you'll correct me if I'm wrong, that you're saying that we can just be tweaking our intention or our best self and setting that as a North Star
Starting point is 01:11:03 in different contexts throughout the day. That's exactly right. and my best self as a husband is very different from my best self as a public speaker on stage, which is different than my best self as a colleague. And there's different attributes that come up for me. But how many of us really take the time like I did with you to just sit back and reflect on these things? And that's how you feel right now with your kid being 11. When they're 17 or 18, you might think of different attributes
Starting point is 01:11:32 because of what's going on in both of your lives at that point. the real point of it is like you said it's the intentionality of it but it's the granularity of it just saying i want to be a role model it's kind of too broad and so for me this joke in my book when i say like because my students call me the feelings master is that i had to operationalize that like what does that mean exactly it means he is beautifully creative at dealing with life's curveballs that means that when I'm in a classroom and someone throws that curve bowl at me, I see myself as beautifully creative at solving those big challenges. And if I can bring myself into that place, I'm just going to be much better at managing it.
Starting point is 01:12:21 And then you reflect on it. Because importantly, Dan, this is not about you're never going to arrive there. This is going back to your thing about Mark, you're going to make mistakes and you're going to mess up. Of course I am. Then I have to look at the barriers. Then it's like, okay, so what was the reason? And I could say this publicly, I felt insecure about what my partner said in that dinner.
Starting point is 01:12:46 And it was my issue. And so that was a nice reflection from me to have, oh, so the reason why really, the real deep down reason why I didn't live up to my best self was that I got insecure. Oh, okay, that's interesting, Mark. Say it with that for a little bit. Let's get curious about that.
Starting point is 01:13:04 So oftentimes when we're trying to be our best selves, the things that are the barriers to that are where real, the real learning happens. We're almost out of time, so let me ask you the two questions I ask at the end of pretty much every interview. One is, is there something you were hoping that we would get to that we didn't?
Starting point is 01:13:26 We covered a lot. We weren't linear, which is fine. I like over the river and through the woods. I think we covered a lot. You know, we didn't get into some of the other strategies, but that people can read about them in terms of the biology of regulation, you know, the way how food and sleep and new physical activity all are supportive of that. That's an important thing for people to know because a lot of people, I'm trying to be my best self, but I can't. And I just say things like, well, how much sleep did you
Starting point is 01:13:52 get last night? Well, it's terrible. I'm like, well, there you go. There's the barrier. And so we need a budget. We need fuel to regulate our emotions effectively. But for me, I see it as really two big things. One is the attitudinal. It's the permission to feel piece. And by the way, the one thing we didn't talk about was to give ourselves permission to feel, but to give other people permission to feel. And I want to recommend that people do this in public.
Starting point is 01:14:22 Meaning, show up and let other people observe you being the non-judgmental, good listener who is empathic and compassionate, because it has a contagion effect also. So once we can give ourselves and everyone we love and even the people we don't love that much, permission to feel, we can lean and figure out, well, even though I give myself permission to feel,
Starting point is 01:14:45 there are certain feelings that are interfering with my success, with my goals. I need strategies to deal with them. And I think importantly that our society is so, like, the quick fix thing is like, I was giving this speech for, I don't know, a couple thousand actually police officers.
Starting point is 01:15:02 And they were very impatient with me. And they were like, dude, what's the one strategy that works? And I'm like, I'm sorry, it just doesn't work that way. They're like, I'm asking you right now, what's the one strategy? I'm like, all right, be kind of yourself. And my point in sharing that with you is that when we're regulating our emotions in real life, it's never just one strategy. it's using all the strategies that I write about
Starting point is 01:15:30 and you realize you're having a strong emotion you take the deep breath, you walk out the room, you gather your thoughts, you go back and you say something to try to rectify the situation or you take a break and you go look at nature or you go work out or you call a friend. We need all of these strategies. They're a collective and if we can help ourselves
Starting point is 01:15:51 to see where our strength areas are and where our challenge areas are and kind of cultivate the challenge areas, we're going to be, I think, happier, healthier people. Well said. Final question. Just can you remind everybody of the name of your new book, your old book, any other books, any other things you do in the world, website, social media that we should know about? So my new book is called Dealing with Feeling. My first book is called Permission to Feel. I have a Dealing with Feeling podcast now where I interview the world's experts on emotions and emotional intelligence and learn about their ways of dealing with emotions,
Starting point is 01:16:27 which is fun. I'm on Instagram primarily on LinkedIn, which is my name, and my website is markbrackett.com. We will put links to all of those in the show notes for anybody driving or otherwise not holding a pencil. Mark, great job. Thank you very much. Thank you, Dan. Thanks again to Dr. Mark Brackett-Offsum to have him on the show. Don't forget to check out my new app 10% with Dan Harris. We've got a big meditation challenge coming up. It's coming up on March 23rd. It'll go for five days. And this challenge is pegged to the release of a new audible book that I'm putting out with my co-author, Seven A Salasi. The book is called Even You Can Meditate and you can get it on Audible. If you want to join the challenge,
Starting point is 01:17:19 which will be led by Seven A, head on over to Dan Harris.com to download the app. If you already a subscriber, nothing you need to do. The challenge will begin on March 23rd, and there'll be plenty of notifications for you right there in the app. Last thing to say here, thank you so much to everybody who works so hard on 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.
Starting point is 01:17:49 DJ Kashmir is our executive producer, and Nick Thorburn of the band Islands wrote our theme.

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