The Dr. Hyman Show - The Awakened Family with Dr. Shefali Tsabary
Episode Date: October 10, 2018We can’t be perfect parents. There is always going to be some form of miscommunication, some misunderstanding, something that causes pain. The key to successful parenting is to make the time to addr...ess these challenges, and to listen with an open heart and mind. My guest on this week’s episode of The Doctor’s Farmacy, Dr. Shefali Tsabary, is a clinical psychologist, an international speaker and wisdom teacher, and she’s written two bestselling books, The Conscious Parent and The Awakened Family. In this episode, we dive into parenting and family dynamics. I personally have seen a lot of trauma from family dynamics manifest into physical illness, especially the relationship between child and parent. Dr. Shefali challenges traditional family roles, and encourages us to rethink the way we raise our kids. How can we let go of the toxic expectations that stand in the way of real, authentic, and loving relationships?
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Hey everybody, thanks for tuning in to The Doctor's Pharmacy. In this episode,
you're going to hear from world-renowned psychologist Dr. Shefali. Now in addition
to being a clinical psychologist, Dr. Shefali is an international speaker and wisdom teacher
who integrates Eastern philosophy with Western psychology. She's also featured in Oprah's Super
Soul Sunday and Super Soul Top 100. In this episode,
Dr. Shafali and I talk about conscious parenting and what it means to have an awakened family.
Wouldn't we all like to know that? We also talk about how to master the mind, which is often a
rogue element controlling our heads and our thoughts, which is actually our most important asset, but also, as I said, could be our greatest
foe. How can we rewire our brain through awareness and practice and meditation? That's what we talked
about. So much of what I practice involves healing the body to heal the brain. And today, we talk
about how we can use the mind to master our health. Dr. Shefali takes us on a spiritual journey to tap into our inner
wisdom and consciousness. And I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did. So welcome,
Dr. Shefali. Thank you so much for having me. So, you know, as a parent, you often don't
know the consequences of your behavior for things that might seem insignificant to you,
but might have a huge impact on your kids. And a few years ago, I had an opportunity to sit with
my kids with a friend of mine who's a life coach, Lauren Zander, and to sort of go through their
stories, my story, to sort of understand each other differently, and to sort of share what,
what were the things that needed healing or resolving. And, you know, one of the things
that came up was that, you know, I said to, once to my daughter, I got remarried, and she wasn't
happy about it. And I said, Well, this is my life. And I get to choose. Now, I thought that was the
right thing to say at the time. but it turns out that it made her
feel like what she felt didn't matter and that she was on her own and i didn't have that intention
but this was unintended consequences and so it's sort of a minefield of or i said to my son once
you know why can't you sort of study like your sister and it made him have this whole complex
yeah thing you know like it wasn't it wasn't intended to sort of destroy like your sister and it made him have this whole complex. Yeah. It wasn't, it wasn't
intended to sort of destroy him, but it really had a negative impact. So, um, I didn't really
mean to hurt them. Um, but it stayed with them. And you know, how as a parent, can we talk to
our children so we don't damage them? You know, I often say, well, how do you be a good parent?
Well, your kids come into the world as these beautiful beings
who are basically undamaged.
And your job is to stay out of the way and not screw them up.
Right, right.
So how do you do that?
Well, first you let go of the fantasy that you're not going to damage your kid.
Okay, good.
And I don't even want to use the word damage.
You're just going to put all your stuff.
This is just the way of the human experience. So when I write a book called The Awakened Family, people may be fooled
to think that it's this perfect family. That's not what this book is about. And it takes deep
reading and deep understanding to realize what this book is about. It's really about
growing together, evolving together, and becoming authentic together. So that process is murky,
messy, chaotic. It causes damage, it causes heartbreak. That is the human experience. But
to understand that you're doing it in the moment and apply as much consciousness as possible. So
what you did with your children is you allowed for that space for consciousness to now rise in the midst of all the past unconsciousness.
That's all we can do.
We can keep allowing for consciousness to rise in the midst and awareness that we just effed it all up.
How do you do that?
I mean, it's easy to say let consciousness come up, but most of us walk around pretty unconscious.
Right.
So most of us are not on a path of spiritual awakening. Most of us have
been deluded to believe that the material world of form is it. We go to work, we make money,
we drive a car, we see a few friends, we eat, we sleep, rotate. Rinse and repeat. Right. And there
are many of us who have broken out of that paradigm and that cycle to ask deeper questions.
Who am I? Why am I here?
What is my purpose? And those spiritual seekers begin to realize that there's this world of form,
yes, but we don't need to be limited by this world of form. And then we begin to penetrate
all the things that culture has oppressed us with, all the ways we think we should be and all the
myths we've followed and all these institutions we've been buried under. And we begin to break free and deconstruct and let go. So what you did with your
children is you took a pause because you're on the spiritual path of healing. And you said, you know,
I have to create a space to reconnect and reevaluate and reemerge in oneness. And you came from compassion. You came from a desire of healing and abundance.
So a spiritual warrior realizes that there's the world of form
that we can get mired and deluded by.
And then there's this other way of living,
which is a sense of abundance, oneness, healing, emergence,
constant seeking, connectivity. So as long as we have that
desire and we see our children for example as uh ushers to that greater calling then we'll always
realign we'll mess up just yesterday my daughter told me how she believes i don't like her
right and you don't like me and you're mean and you're only one half of a mother,
but you're not the other nice half.
And I had to listen.
But I came from a space of abundance, healing, oneness,
and the ego.
And how old is she, a teenager?
She's 15 and a half years.
She's just a total nightmare.
I always tell my patients that don't worry.
Anytime between like 13 and 18,
your kids are going through a period of temporary psychosis
yes no pay attention aliens and they'll come back and then you'll suddenly say where were you all
this time but in that process they'll massacre you you know and that's okay so again if you're
a spiritual warrior and you understand you're on the spiritual journey with your children to evolve
then you won't react you won't get egoic you won't get personal you won't interlack as much right as
much so yesterday when she told me how i was a mean mother and i'm not this and i'm not that i'm
not not not not not i could see the rise of my ego to say but i am but i am but i am but like you did
with your children i was because i've done work i could allow the space to hear it her experience
and connect to her and then offer her something
she needed versus what I thought she needed.
And this is the constant dance of the spiritual experiment of this life.
So paying attention to your kids for who they are rather than who you want them to be.
All of life, right?
Paying attention to every moment as it is versus how we want it to be.
This is the disconnect, right?
We expect, we want, we then this is the disconnect right we expect we want we then project we rage we react because it's not what we want it to be
spiritual uh teachings wisdom teachings train us to first accept the isness of the isness it is here she says she doesn't like you. Now let's connect, right? We go deep into
the isness of the moment and don't resist it. So how do you do that? And you're a parent,
your kid's saying all this horrible stuff to you. But it's not horrible. See, we judged it.
You've judged it. All right. But she said you're a terrible parent. It's her experience. So if we
can enter the isness, very hard to do. I'm acting like I'm so zen. Well, that's what I'm asking.
Yes, it's very hard. First, you have to deconstruct it all so first the judgment that i'm calling it horrible
and this could be her putting it on me or me putting it on her she gets a c grade he gets a
c grade you say oh my god my kid's gonna have a horrible future yeah right or she's making me feel
horrible because we immediately enter prophesizing prophetic omens of lack.
This is our default.
What is our default?
Lack.
I'm not good enough.
You're not good enough.
It's not good enough.
We're not going to be good enough.
We're failing.
I'm a failure.
I'm full of shame.
This is the default.
It's predictable.
It's ubiquitous.
It's really quite simple.
It's quite...
How do you unhook from that?
It sounds like a great idea.
I want to be like that. Well, first you have to commit to a spiritual path that you do even want
to recognize, become aware, deconstruct and transcend. If you're not even wanting that,
you can't do it. And it's different you're talking about than a traditional religious
practice or a religion. Yeah, yeah. This has nothing to do with religion. I'm sorry. Because
religion too controls through a little bit of guilt-tripping and lack and fear.
Let's be real about it.
If you don't, then you will.
And then it's prophetic omens about the future and a little bit of control.
Heaven or hell.
Somebody on top and the big one.
Yeah, it's all about duality in many ways, good, bad, evil, heaven, hell.
No, wisdom traditions are about accepting the isness of the way of the Tao,
you know, the way that reality flows and entering it with surrender.
You can fight the river or you can go with it, right?
Yeah, yeah.
So wisdom traditions have nothing to do with an institutionalized practice
or dogma or scripture.
It's about going within,
deconstructing your beliefs, your past, your present moment resistances, and transcending
them. It's about deconstructing the mind. It's breaking free within the mind.
But it's not just intellectual. You work with patients using practical tools to help them
understand. Right. I teach them how the mind is full of resistant blocks.
And then I show them how psychologically they've been buried under.
So I traditionally look at people as evolving across a spectrum of four layers.
So one are the 99.9% that are mired in form and the material.
So I call it the material level.
Most of us are just zombies reactive in sleepwalking in the material level.
Like I said, just concerned about eating, sleeping, making money, looking good.
Who do I belong?
Where do I belong?
Who are my friends?
And rinse and repeat, right?
That's their world.
It's about money, very material, superficial.
But they're enraptured by it,
and they truly believe that that's who they are
because they haven't awoken yet or weakened yet.
The next level is a psychological level
where people begin to ask, who am I?
And pain begins to send them to the therapist,
to the seeking path.
Like, let me ask for some help.
I'm drowning.
So pain is a great portal to snap people out of the material.
It's usually bad health.
That's why I said people don't change until they have any P syndrome.
Absolutely.
Well, not enough pain makes people avoid change, right?
Absolutely.
Pain is it.
So I have often told my patients, go back, come back when you're in more pain because obviously
this pain is not enough it's a little bit you complain but you stay in the washing machine
when the pain is greater come back I just tell them don't come now you're wasting your time
you're not ready you just you're just wasting your time spinning you know so pain catapults us
from the material into the psychological to ask who am I am i really maybe it's me and we go to a therapist
but then we have a tendency to get stuck there too yeah and just go on and on like oh my mother
my father and i'm a therapist so it's no you mentioned that before about the challenges of
therapy yeah because therapy is also traditionally rooted in ways of being that regurgitate the past
and as long as we stay stuck in the past,
it's a trap.
We can keep blaming and being victimized
by our victim status and our mother and our father.
It's a whirlpool.
You can deeply understand the story and the why,
but you don't change.
But you don't change.
And you espouse and you engender a victim mentality.
You stay there.
Yeah.
You know?
You don't know.
Then.
So you're saying people shouldn't go to therapy?
Well, I think it's the inevitable first step breakthrough after the material subjugation.
You have to go to therapy.
Then after you've done therapy and you realize, okay, deconstructed the past.
I've stayed in the past.
I've recognized where my traditional belief systems come from,
where my fear was birthed.
And now, few go to the next realm,
which is the spiritual,
which is I want to master my mind.
I realize that I'm a co-creator of my reality.
I see interconnectedness, but I can't understand it.
And then you begin to
meditate and you begin to spend time in quietude and solitude and truly go deep within and learn
to have a communion with your truth. You begin that deeper contemplative process.
And then the fourth layer is the transcendental layer.
But you need help to do that, right? I mean, you can't just sit by yourself.
No, you need help.
You need help.
Yeah, I had help, tremendous help.
I went to spiritual teachers, wisdom books,
read voraciously, and also helped myself.
So you have to be self-initiating.
You have to want this.
That's why when I see people are not ready,
it's no knock on them.
They're just not ready. They don't have to be ready. ready it's no knock on them they're just not ready
they don't have to be ready
but it's a choice
between one kind of living
and another kind of living
and it's distinct
and you can define and identify people
based on their propensity
they're either here or they're here
and then the transcendental level
is where you've truly understood
that the mind is conditioned
we live in a deeply conditioned world predicated on lack and fear.
And that mind truly seeks to liberate out of enslavement, its own enslavement.
And that mind is the true rebel or the warrior and the liberator,
but also the lover, the compassionate person who proposes oneness and sees the world on an elevated
level and takes people toward that light.
So how do you practically help your patients?
You say, you know, start meditating.
Is there technique?
Is there a school of thought, a philosophy?
First, people need to recognize where they are at.
Not everyone can meditate.
Not everyone can go for therapy.
So I first pay homage to where
is my client on these four levels. And most people are in the material. So I help them on the material.
They only need help strategically because they're so mired in form. And then I slowly begin to show
them how they are creating their own patterns. And then when you begin to show people their patterns in therapy
they begin having aha moments wow i'm just like my mother was or i am projecting onto my daughter
all the things that my mother projected onto me no knock on mothers but you know um that was that
was a way my friend who's a life coach used to really help me stop and think what she said
you sound like your mother and i'm like oh because my mother
you know tended to be on the negative side and tend to look at things and you know not always
the bright side of life yeah shall we say and uh i developed that same habit and it was like jarring
when i would actually see it because it was told to me in a way that wasn't blaming or accusing or judgmental.
It was just like kind of funny and joking.
But I was like, oh, okay, I get it.
I don't want to be that way.
Right.
There's nothing to be judgmental about.
It is the way to inherit the patterns we absorbed in childhood.
We are all living patterns, not lives.
We are a pattern.
So it's when you awaken that you break
the pattern and disrupt the pattern but if you're not on the path of awakening you are living a
pattern okay so let's let's dig into some practical stuff because we all were kids we all had parents
and many of us are parents are going to be. And we all dream and hope the best for our children.
And it doesn't always turn out great.
So as you were writing this book, The Conscious Parent, and in your work,
what are the lessons, the sort of little nuggets of wisdom that you can share
with people who are listening about how do we become a conscious parent?
And what does actually that mean?
And what is an unconscious parent?
Yeah. So this is not about things turning out great so we abandon all oh yeah okay all right because what
is great right is the is so shaka sangor who's coming to my conference evolve he was incarcerated
was that so bad because now look where he is. So we put judgment on
experiences based on our very conditioned minds. And this book, I hope, or my books,
totally take the roof off all conditioned labels. There is no good or bad. There is no success.
Your book isn't called The Unconscious Parent.
No, it's called so the
conscious parent realizes that they've been living in a conditioned world that culture has dictated
how they should feel think believe and that's not true it's not true that a successful child
is one who is obedient it's not true that a good child is compliant it's not true that a good child is compliant. It's not true that a child who gets A grades will be a success in the future.
It's not true.
Yeah, many, many CEOs are dyslexic.
Yes.
And did terribly in school.
But they think laterally.
Right.
We've cookie-cuttered our existence to survive.
But it's all based on fear.
So a conscious parent is the parent who begins to realize how conditioned they are by
their own childhoods and culture. And they do not wish to impose this on their children as much as
possible. Like some default damage is going to happen just by the human to human experience.
But so in my life, for example, I'm ever watchful of the dumping I'm about to always do. And I minimize it and
I mitigate it. I don't always succeed, but I'm always watchful. What's my stuff? What's her
stuff? Who is she truly to the most organic core that I can distill her to? Can I truly see her
without my screens? This is the endeavor. It it's not perfection it's not the destination
it's the endeavor so how do you how do you do that by having a spiritual practice of mindfulness so
meditation is the only way anyone on a spiritual path can not lose their mind is through my
all meditate i if i could give one law and one dictate out of my place of tyranny,
it would be everyone.
The tyranny of meditation?
The tyranny of meditation.
Breathe.
Close your eyes right now.
Yes, I would do it with glee.
Yes, because the practice of sitting with yourself,
confronting your own mind,
and realizing the wisdom that your thoughts are not you.
They're just impulses constantly being stimulated by the noise around you and by your own generation of energy.
But it's not the true you.
You begin to realize in meditation that there's a you that's beyond the thoughts.
Yeah.
And you're the witnesser of your thoughts.
And as you go deeper and deeper into meditation, you realize there's even an awareness of the person who was just aware of the thoughts.
And you go deeper and deeper to realize that.
It's the watcher watching the watcher who's watching the watcher.
Exactly.
To quote Dr. Seuss.
Right.
And then you disconnect
and you detach from this ego,
a cold of I am my thoughts
and I am my feelings.
And then you can live in a space
of greater spaciousness and awareness.
It's a training of the mind, really.
Right?
It is, exactly.
Because we have these minds that are so
undisciplined.
Exactly.
Conditioned.
Conditioned. Conditioned.
Habitually addicted based on childhood.
Automatic ways of being. Based on childhood
patterns and cultural conditioning.
And you want to deconstruct that.
So when you say meditation, is it a particular kind?
Is it mantra meditation? Is it breath
meditation? Is it Vipassana meditation?
Yeah, I do Vipassana.
But that's just what I do.
And everyone has their own portal in. and it's all to be respected.
Yeah.
You know, the Buddha talks about true nature or bodhicitta,
which is sort of clear mind.
And who are you beyond your thoughts and your conditioned self
and your experiences?
And I studied in college, my major was Buddhism and Eastern religions.
And I practice, you know, meditation and yoga was very impactful for me to begin to sort
of differentiate, you know, my sort of conditioning, emotional reactions, automatic ways of being
and sort of to realize that there's a there's a being that's not all of that.
It's not my thoughts, not my emotions my emotions, it's not my behaviors, it's not my physical self.
I recently had a profound experience, not that I would wish it on anybody, but I got really sick over a year ago.
And my physical body completely collapsed.
I'm 185 pounds, 6 foot 3, and I lost 30 pounds. I was,
I'm already pretty skinny and I was really skinny. Uh, I couldn't focus on anything. My mind was
completely gone. I could just basically watch Netflix or HBO go and that was it and sit in bed.
Uh, emotionally I wasn't really available. Um, physically I wasn't available mentally. I wasn't
available to myself. And the only thing that I knew
was true was that there was some being entity true nature something whatever you call it that was
abiding through all of that and I actually was completely at peace and surrendered even though
I didn't know if I was going to die I was really close to death and And it was being in that experience that sort of reinforced the view that, you know, none of the noise matters, right?
That just connecting into that place of who you are allows you to live a more authentic life.
So let's talk about authentic life because you write a lot about it.
You speak a lot about it.
I don't know if people know what that means.
How do you live an authentic life? How do you be your authentic self what does that mean but for me that experience
you know even though i said when i was younger had a lot of those experiences just it just sort
of reinforced a shift in the way i want to show up in the world how i want to relate to people how i
want to treat myself the work i want to do what matters what doesn't matter like things that used
to upset me don't upset me anymore right
and then it's just like so easy to go through life you just clean the the you know all the cobwebs
and yeah you could see clearly who you need to be because you stop buying into the fear that you are
who others think you need to be yeah right you just let all of that go because you came down to your elemental core
of you may die
so you better live
the truest way you could
because there's no time to waste.
Yeah.
Not everybody has that experience though.
I mean,
I think people,
I've been with many people dying
and they still
are in their patterns
right up to the moment of death.
Yeah.
You know.
Yeah,
because many of us
have grown up
with so much pain
that we created
all these barriers
against pain.
But those barriers now obstruct our true self.
So those people who, even death doesn't break the shell,
it's because they're just, they were so defended
all their life against pain
that they just can't let go of their identities.
You know, and this is what we do in life.
To ward off pain from others
we become who they want us to be we or we rebel against it just one or the other but what we don't
become is non-labeled or non-judged or just spacious awareness which is what children
really are and they live in that space they don't know whether they're boy or girl or African-American or Caucasian or pretty.
They learn that, right, through a conditioning.
And they become that identity and that label.
I'm married, I'm smart, I'm athletic,
I'm a jock, I'm a theater kid, I'm a geek.
God, there's so many labels.
So as we keep putting on labels and holding on to them
because we believe that's who we are in order to be in the world,
we go further and further away from spacious awareness
and moving with fluidity and flow
because we're always quagmired by the role.
The role of husband, the role of wife, the role of parent.
That becomes its own crazy, tenacious identification.
Many parents screw up not because they're really not smart or not wise. It's because they so want
to be a good parent, right? But there's a whole trap there because they want, they want, I want.
So I want to be a good parent. it's all identification with a role versus just being
present for who your kid is yeah that's an important statement you just said being present
for who your kid is because they may not be who you want them to be or who you dream for them to
be and i think a lot of cultures i mean i'm jewish tradition i mean there's a sense of you know
performance and achievement success you know a friend of, you know, performance and achievement, success, hard work ethic,
you know, Indian, very successful Indian businessman talked about how he's raising his kids and
pushing them to be, you know, at this level of excellence, you know, that was just, I
thought was kind of intimidating if I was his kid.
And yet, you know, he thought that was the best thing to do for them. Because he's so
conditioned by the artifice of success. But we all have been seduced by this. And so then to
not do that means we're failing as a parent. That's why I said you have to make a choice.
You either go the conditioned way and get mired in it and get enraptured in it or you realize that it's all creating a false self.
It's really not who it is we are or need to be.
Our children don't need to follow this.
They need to follow their own inner calling.
And a life lived even on the street
but to one's inner calling, to me,
to me, is a more worthwhile life
than a false life lived in a
gilded castle yeah you know it's so true um so how do you how do you still meet the sort of
sort of innate thing that a parent wants the kids to do their best
and be their best without sort of being authoritarian or sort of controlling.
Right, right. This is the question I always get asked.
How can I make my kid be implicitly motivated?
But, you know, how can I make them be implicitly motivated, right?
You know, we're so insane, we parents, you know.
So we try to not push, but we're full of pushing energy.
We're full of controlling energy because we're deeply afraid. And this is where
the conscious parent may differ because they've done the work to confront their fear. They've
surrendered their expectations of their fantasies being met via their children. They've said, you
know, my child is not here to meet my needs. My child is not here to fulfill my fantasies. I got
to go do that on my own. My pain cannot be solved by my child.
I cannot use my child to rescue me. So the conscious parent fully sees the separation
of the two paths and in that can really see the oneness of the two spirits. You see,
when we're enmeshed, we think we're one, but we're not. We we're enmeshed we think we're one but we're not we're just enmeshed
also khaled braun talks about how we sort of are just here as stewards of our kids yes they're not
we don't own them we don't control them but there's a delusion because they come from us they
bear our name or we give them our name and so we own them and we possess them but that's the delusion
and then we're eternally dissatisfied disappointed despondent our children grow up with shame the child is like
what have I done yeah and the parent is what have you not done today you know
it's even in the language of some traditions like in the Jewish tradition
in the Hebrew naming of somebody you're saying you are so-and-so the son of you
know I just came back belong the Middle East and yes you're so-and-so the son of
this one the son of that one the son of this one I'm not one it's like no pressure you know youso, the son of this one, the son of that one, the son of this one, and that one.
No pressure.
You know, you're like the son of like 10 generations.
But then you identify with it.
Of course, you're the son biologically.
Of course, there's a biological element.
But we're doing something else.
We're trying to tie people both to the tradition of a lineage, but also we're telling them
there's expectations that come with this.
Yeah. Right. So how do we allow children to be part of tribes and families, but without the
bondage of the expectation that comes with that lineage? And you've said in an interview before
that you teach your daughter to question everything, which is sort of the opposite of
telling them what to do, right?
Right.
Why is that important?
Well, I don't believe that our children should be, you know, obedient little robots.
I believe they should be questioning even irreverent at times beings because there is a lot of crazy out in culture.
There is a lot of insanity.
So if my child doesn't see it, I would have a problem with it.
I'm like, do you see how crazy?
So in doing that, though, we do raise rebels, right?
We do raise somebody who speaks out and will call you crazy.
So like my daughter said yesterday, Mom, you, you.
You have to take that with the whole experience, right?
You're raising a child who can see through
the inauthentic nature of the conditioned culture.
And that's a good thing.
But the parent would be threatened
if they haven't done that work themselves.
I remember my daughter when she was like eight, maybe.
She said, Daddy, how come what you see on TV
and like all the advertising,
actually when you see it in real life,
isn't actually what it seems like on TV.
It ever is, yes.
And I'm like, wow, that is a very smart little girl.
Right.
And she is beginning to notice and question
the discrepancy between what the culture was telling her
and what the truth was.
And it's a difficult process to awaken
because to recognize that what culture has been selling you
is a big sale and a
big lie predicated again on fear and mass control it's scary to realize wow i was raised my whole
life believing that if i was successful and if i was wealthy i would be happy yeah and that was a
lie yeah that's true that was a lie that's disorienting. You dedicate your whole life to success and
achievement and wealth, and then you're still not happy. That feels like you've been ripped off.
But this is where the conscious parent would do it differently, would realize that nothing
external can ever create happiness. It's an internal endeavor.
Well, let's talk about something really important. I think affects so many people. And, you know, when I, when I raised my kids, it was pre-internet, pre-social
media. In fact, until my son was in the eighth grade, my daughter a little older, we didn't have
television. Right. And the only reason I got it was because he liked basketball. And so we read, we played, we did things outside.
They got to experience life.
We grew gardens.
They got to have an authentic, tangible experience.
We cooked together.
And today I see little babies on iPads.
I see kids completely distracted.
I see the electronic babysitter everywhere.
I see the data now coming out about how this affects kids' brains and development and ability
to connect and have authentic relationships. And we had this explosion of social media,
which is almost in a way an oxymoron. It's anything but social, right? It's disconnecting.
You think you're having experience of being connected. In fact, it's not really authentic.
People really need Facebook.
They need FaceTime.
And I don't mean on the iPhone.
I mean literally authentic relationships.
How do you counsel parents to deal with this ubiquitous penetration of social media?
And it's even worse than traditional media, too, because it's ubiquitous.
It's everywhere.
Portable.
It's portable.
And it's also manipulative in ways that other media wasn't you knew you were seeing an ad before for whatever
now you're seeing you know embedded things stealth advertising celebrity advertising
people think it's authentic and it's just not so how do you how do you help parents deal with
yeah it's a big big mess and there is no easy answer and, I hope one day we'll wake up and throw all our iPhones away.
But of course, we won't.
We'll become more automated and more robotic till we have a natural demise, you know, because
that's where we're heading.
It's becoming increasingly disconnected, mechanized, and it is alarming.
I try not to get into fear about it because it's the way of the 99%.
So it's the way of the way.
But now what?
Now what?
So it takes a lot of gumption for the parents to create connectivity,
create playtime.
You know, I don't believe I did it differently.
Do we restrict it for our kids?
Do we let them have it?
Well, I think if I had to do it again,
I was the first generation really to see it.
So I succumbed because I was so seduced by it.
And it was such a bobble and a trinket.
And I was like, I want my own iPhone.
Right.
So we didn't know.
We didn't know what a cesspool this was and what a riptide it had.
So now being aware, I tell parents, no screens till teens.
You know, just don't do it.
Try not to do it.
The TV is so much more benevolent.
We used to complain about the TV.
I'm all for the TV now because the kid can't take it to the bathroom.
The kid can't take it to the car.
You have the remote control.
You get them a flip phone.
Get them a flip phone.
But the parent has to be willing to, A, create greater connective experiences.
But we find it so addictive because it allows us to not be parents.
You know, you said it's an electronic babysitter.
So it's going to take a lot of gumption for parents to create connectivity and then create healthy boundaries.
Very difficult.
Those teens till teens.
Very difficult because the parent themselves are now addicted.
And we are distracted and we just lost our way now.
Interesting. There's a whole movement around digital detox.
Yes.
Detox camps where people go for the weekend and just put away their phone.
I went to a wedding. It was actually an Indian wedding the other weekend.
And the request was everybody put their phones away and people show up.
And it was just an amazing experience.
I mean, I grew up in the era where there were no cell phones.
There was no internet.
There was just people.
And I found it very enticing to be engaged in the same kind of interactivity.
And I do it for work and I am always on it.
And it's something I struggle with but I I've gotten better and better about like having safe times where you
can disconnect and I I bought my wife a little box for our anniversary it was just a wooden box and
she's oh that's a nice little box I said that's not the present the present I put my phone in the
box for the weekend yeah and I give you the gift of my presence yeah and I thought I was doing it
for her yeah it's ready for you it was like I had. And I thought I was doing it for her. Yeah, it's really for you.
But it was like I had the best time
because I wasn't constantly looking at my phone,
checking my email, looking at texts.
I literally could just be present.
I could listen to music.
I could just daydream.
I could play with the cat.
I mean, whatever was just going to be.
Yeah, and I don't think it's necessarily the phone.
It's what we're doing on the phone, right?
So if we're listening to music on the phone or reading a book on the phone it's what we're doing on the phone right so if if we're listening to music on the phone or
reading a book on the phone or or really connecting you know some sometimes we need to connect to
people those are those are not the mindless distractions that succumb us to endless hours
of addiction it's it's this constant need to be on Facebook, to see what other people are doing.
It's really that that's mindless.
The prying into other people's lives and wanting people to validate yourself
through Instagram and Facebook,
that's the addiction.
If you're reading an article on the New York Times website,
that may be good for you.
I don't think there's anything wrong with reading,
with learning,
but it's this vapid part of social media that's alarming to me.
And it's interesting how it's designed to be addictive.
It's not an accident, the way they present the information.
Because it's all visual, it's quick, you scroll.
But you can spend 10 minutes and not have learned one.
Or 10 hours.
Or not have learned one positive thing.
So how I do it is to give myself boundaries.
Is I have all my favorite wisdom sites there.
My favorite wisdom podcast.
So if I'm going to be there, I'm going to be learning and cultivating my mind.
No, my daughter's completely addicted to
senseless vapid activities as most teenagers like snapchat which is drives i want to take the phone
kill it but i also know that she needs to find her way with it because this is the culture and i
i was a bad parent by giving her the phone i didn didn't know. So now I try to educate, but you can't control.
I don't want to do anything out of an imposition or an oppression.
I want the child to awaken to it themselves.
So then I become more of a jewel.
Come to me.
Let's go hiking.
Let's go out.
So I connect more.
Great experiences.
The new iPhone software has the ability to
track the screen time and the hours, which I think would be a fascinating experiment
for people to do for themselves. Where they were on the media, where they were. Yeah,
so it tracks your usage in a way that's much more transparent. And you go, wow, I spent
like four hours scrolling on Facebook today.
I mean, what a waste of time.
I could have been learning something
or talking to a friend.
I think it's going to be interesting.
And I would love to sort of have a way
of tracking my kids and my niece and my nephew
and seeing like, what is actually happening?
I mean, I remember when I was,
this was still when they had like the flip phones.
I got them for my kids and they were in junior high
just so I could, you know,
have the ability to contact them.
And I got the bill for my phone.
They're like 2,000 text messages.
Crazy.
And I calculated how many text messages a day,
a minute.
And I'm like,
what are you doing in school all day?
Yeah.
2,000 text messages you know
yeah unbelievable yeah and and I would still say texting to friends is still different it's still
at least an attempt at virtual connection but it's that that mindless scrolling and posting
and needing validation that's the psychological abyss
that people are in and they don't realize.
They're doing it for this hunger, this craving,
this see me, see me.
And it's not the real self that they are.
It's never.
It's all edited and Photoshopped.
And that's what I...
The texting to friends is still connection.
Connect.
Yeah.
You know, it's okay.
2,000 times a month but that's still it's
an attempt at connection it's the the complete self-absorption and the other absorption that
that i'm talking about where you're so invested in other people's lives and so measuring your own
life in comparison that is the pitfall the psychological pitfall okay let's talk about
something else which um is death okay something people don't like to talk about think about
but uh you sort of talk about death as a an opportunity to actually be more engaged in life
and have a more authentic life can you talk about that well you know we're we're really dying all
the time so i don't know why people people are so scared of the final form death.
But we've already had form deaths.
We've already died.
Our infant self died.
Our toddler self died.
Our adolescent self died.
Our romantic selves with many partners died.
We're constantly evolving.
So death is, is.
It's not something to be afraid of.
If you're going to be afraid, now stop, contemplate,
and be afraid that you've already died so many times.
So it's the final, the final apparent physical death that we're afraid of.
But that also is not the end of the end.
It's a constant transformation.
Where does that energy go?
It's got to go somewhere.
I don't know where, whether it's going to be incarnated or in a form of a biological being,
like a flower, compost, bacteria, but it's going to transform.
So we've already seen evidence of that in our own lives, right?
We've already transformed.
The death already transformed into a new spaciousness so the fear
again is because we don't understand the nature of ourselves and how life evolves and so we have
fear so we live in fear and then in that fear we don't really live so if i'm just really curious
about this book the awakened family because um it's something that I definitely aspire to, failed at.
Yeah.
Wish I came from.
Yeah.
And the subtitle is How to Raise Empowered, Resilient, Conscious Children.
Yeah.
Which is what we all want.
Yeah.
So can you sort of break it down for us?
What are the practical steps?
Because we've been talking, you know, about big ideas.
Yeah. for us what are the practical steps because we've been talking you know yeah philosophically yeah but let's talk about some of the practical ways that yeah you can begin to create an awakened
family with the notion that it will never be perfect yeah right but that what are the things
that we can learn and that you've learned through working with families and so i'll just outline
a couple so one is that an awakened self or an awakened family is endeavoring to be authentic. So we are always
waiting for the child to unfold in their self-expression. So for example, I didn't do
any structured activities with my child until she was six because I was waiting for her to tell me
how do I know whether she likes horse riding or parachute jumping? You didn't get her practicing the piano at two years old, no?
Or learning Mandarin or parasailing.
I didn't know, so I'm waiting because I wanted to be authentic to her.
So that's very hard for parents,
is to match it to who the child is showing and revealing themselves to be.
Because we're in some hurry, and the age of six was already too late.
She couldn't join any group activity she
ended up only doing tennis and horse riding because those were the solo activities because
she was so behind the curve mark yeah isn't that insane at six so first to show parents the insanity
and then to show them that it's about authenticity this is not about a family that all does everything
together and everyone believes the same things.
It's about each one being authentic.
So the parent has to be able to withstand that, right?
A child wants to explore Hinduism, but the family is Muslim.
Or no religion.
How is the parent going to truly live up to that value of authenticity?
Very few parents can.
They say they want to, but no one can. The second thing is to let go of authenticity very few parents can they say they want to but no one
can the second thing is to let go of ideations of good and bad right there is no good child there
is no bad child every child is endeavoring to be their most revealing self and if they can't it's
because we haven't created the conditions so the parent always turns the spotlight within how is
this moment showing up for me to evolve?
What does this say about my childhood wounds?
What does this say about my projection?
So the daring parent is always turning it around to,
let me examine myself.
Let me detach from my expectations.
Let me release my control.
Let me surrender.
Let me attune to what my child is really saying.
So constant practice.
Letting go of good and bad.
I don't know what's good.
I don't know what's bad.
I only know what is, what is.
And allowing my child to have their life's experience.
If they need to be lost a little bit,
that's their life experience.
How can I find their way for them?
Lostness is part of the human experience.
It's hard to do.
Hard to do as a parent, right?
Hard to do because we're believing we need to lead our children to success.
Or that we're in control.
And we're in control.
The spiritual parent, conscious parent, understands there is no control.
There's no one to lead.
There's no future.
It's all in the present.
There's no good or bad.
It's all conditioned.
It's only the self that needs to be raised.
So how do you teach that in a family?
I mean, you say in terms of family values, these are our family values.
We believe we should be authentic.
We should be honest.
Well, you're lucky if you have a spouse who's on the same page, yeah?
So that's very rare.
So you just basically, that's why I say it's all about one,
any one parent who wishes to awaken, that's the family.
One parent, one child.
Don't wait for your mother-in-law.
Don't wait for your siblings.
Don't get permission from your parents or your spouse or your partner.
This is about you.
You awaken and you free your child.
So are there practices or conversations or ways of sort of making this
practical for people? Because it sounds like it's a hard thing to get people's hands around.
Right. Because I think I'm being so practical, but I understand what you're saying. This is what
people always say. Give me the tools you didn't tell me. Because spiritual practice is not about
cookie cutter tools and keys. You can't put it on a wall. It's a wisdom, it's a way of being,
it's an enlightened mind.
So yeah, it's a tougher path
because there are no golden strategies.
Because if I gave you golden strategies,
it's against the teaching, right?
It's like then you, so you wake up your kid,
then you smile five times and you give 10 compliments.
Right, you can't.
No, no, that's it.
I'm thinking more, you know, like I studied Buddhism
and you know, it's interesting when you look at the way it is.
It's not a religion.
It's a way of looking at the way the mind works.
I call it a phenomenology of the mind.
It's a description of these automatic patterns
and what causes suffering and how to undo them.
And so I think, you know, there are ways to teach that.
I think there are ways to teach,. I think there are ways to teach,
break things down for people and say,
well, your perception is this,
but here's what the real story is.
So every parent who wishes to do that needs to go on this path.
The child is not responsible to free us.
It's not changing the child,
it's changing yourself.
It's only changing yourself.
So you have to endeavor to go on this path.
Like I said, extricate from the
material, enter the psychological work in the terrain of deconstructing your childhood patterns,
seeing that everything is a pattern, then going to the next step of learning meditation
and learning wisdom. It's a path that you have to follow if you wish to embody this as your life's purpose, right?
And then daring to break paradigms, daring to say, you know,
I'm not afraid of telling someone that my kid failed.
I'm not afraid of saying I made a mistake
or I'm not a good parent in a conventional way
or I lost my temper because I'm not a good parent in a conventional way or I lost my temper
because I'm all about self-exploration.
So when you have the right vibrational frequency of what your path is about, you start breaking
paradigms.
You start not caring or being so attached to what people think.
In Buddhism, essentially, you have the concepts of the teaching, which is the wisdom teaching
called the Dharma, yes the the importance
of practice so self-work and then the importance of community they call the sangha those are the
three pillars so you can't like do it on your own number one you you need the understanding right
the intellectual understanding of the nature of our thinking and our emotions and our behaviors
and our thoughts and you also need the community the our thoughts. And you also need the practice.
The practice.
And the practice.
So it's the Buddha, the Dharma, the Sangha.
These three are the pillars of your practice and your path.
So you attract that.
You go for it.
You invite it into your life.
So you train your mind.
You do the practice of it, the mindfulness, the meditation, the application.
And you have to be surrounded by people who support that.
Yeah.
And who also are like-minded and like-hearted.
Yeah.
You can do it on your own, but it takes a real maverick to do it on their own.
That's true.
We talk about eating right.
We talk about exercise.
We talk about getting sleep.
But, you know, we need brain training because our minds are unstructured.
They're undisciplined.
That's the most essential thing in the world is the mind creates happiness or suffering is the mind is not how many hours
you exercise or how pretty you are how buffed you are it's this is the birthplace of all suffering
you dig and why it's not really the birthplace it is conditioned so once you decondition you're
back to the mind's original nature, which is freedom. The conditioned mind
is the suffering mind. And who are we conditioned by? Really just silly culture. Once you see
through culture, you realize it's really just a scared place of lack. And once you get out of it,
because you don't wish to be part of lack and competition and fear anymore,
you go back to the original nature of your mind, which is a free mind.
So part of what you're saying is really learn some of the wisdom traditions,
like learn how they've uncovered the patterns of the mind that cause suffering
and the ones that create happiness.
And second, you're saying develop a practice.
Develop an arduous commitment.
Just like you're gonna work out strength training
you know how do you yes how do you do that and i think personally i've you know come into this
you know 40 years ago uh left it for a while and have come back recently to a disciplined practice
i mean i did yoga i do breathing i would do things but it was very different when i started again to
daily meditate 20 minutes twice a day.
I was just in Abu Dhabi at Cleveland Clinic, and the CEO there is this amazing guy who is extremely high-performing,
has incredible vision, is really focused.
And I'm like, what's different about this guy?
And by the end of our visit, he revealed to me that he's a regular meditator. He does 30 minutes twice a day that he follows a particular practice.
And it's helped him understand his mind, be less reactive, be more authentic in his way of leading.
I mean, it's really had this amazing impact.
I mean, and you see, it's not just kind of, you know, hippies and Birkenstocks doing this.
You've got, for example, Seattle Seahawks were meditating why they won
the Super Bowl. You've got Michael Jordan and his Chicago Bulls were all meditating under the
instruction of the coach who wrote a book called Sacred Hoops. And it was all about the, I mean,
Sacred Hoops, basketball, who's talking about spirituality sports, but it's really about the
activity of training the mind. You're absolutely right. On a concrete level, it's really about the the activity of training the mind you're absolutely right on a concrete level it's this marriage it's this commitment it's this dedication to enlivening
your mind and to liberating your mind but as i said in the beginning people have to want it
and typically it's not something we feed our children at school or we say you know to our
spouses if you're not a meditator, can't marry you. It's not
part of the language, but we do see if our spouse has a good job, if they could look good, right?
But this should be part of the chemistry, and this should be part of the evaluations at school.
Yeah, it's one of my favorite things. With my wife, we sit and meditate together, and it's like
such a great, and then we cuddle after, which is pretty awesome. Yeah, it's like such a great and then we cuddle after which is pretty awesome yeah it's really about a worldview at the end of the day right understanding that we are conditioned and
we want to be less conditioned we want to be more authentic and it's not just an emotional thing
that happens when you meditate there's a wonderful book i'm sure you're familiar with called altered
traits by daniel goldman who wrote emotional intelligence and richard davidson who's studied
some of the world's most advanced meditators,
Tibetan monks who've lived in a cave for nine years
and have meditated the whole time.
I mean, people have 30, 40, 50,000 hours of meditation
and their brains literally change.
The brainwaves change.
Their creativity patterns change.
Their ability to have love and compassion changes.
You are literally rewiring your entire
inner terrain how your synapses join and connect and you're changing that right so like you were
giving the example in our break of how you had this impulsive quick reaction based on a template
from childhood yeah meditation can undo that yeah But you have to just work at it
through awareness.
And the tool is awareness.
There's no real tool,
physical tool.
It's the power of awareness.
So that's why all meditation teachers
will say,
when you ask them a question,
the first thing they'll say
is first be aware.
Then sit with it.
And then wait to see what unfolds.
Because it's not something
that is concrete.
It's something that you have to go within and allow.
Yeah, so true.
And don't be scared that you have to meditate
for 30 or 40,000 hours and live in a cave for nine years.
The science is really clear
that even people who do within a few weeks or months
see profound changes in the brain,
the immune system, stem cell production.
And you don't even have to sit and do it.
Neural patterning.
You can wash dishes and breathe.
You can drive a car and breathe.
Make sure you keep your eyes open when you're driving.
Right, right.
But once you learn to center on the breath, which is really the most elegant tool of going
inward, the Buddha said, just focus on the breath, which is what we're doing all day.
We're breathing all day, but we're not aware.
The breath brings you in the present moment.
The breath is the intermediary
between the external and the internal.
The breath is impermanent.
It teaches you the law of impermanence.
The breath is transient.
The breath is in the now.
The breath is, you know, in and out, right?
So it's constantly making you go inward and outward.
The breath is accompanying you everywhere.
So you have no excuse to not be
on the breath. And that in essence is meditation. You don't have to sit in a yogi position or in
quiet. In fact, to be on the breath in the midst of Times Square and the traffic jam and the children
pooping and screaming is the exalted application of meditation. It's not about cocooning yourself and telling everybody, shh.
Right?
So I teach meditation online and I do it with online courses.
And if the dog barks, I go see.
Yeah, no, I meditate on airplanes.
Exactly.
Subways.
Right.
Because people think it's this very, you know, coveted, pedestalized phenomenon.
Your perfect cushion, your perfect incense, your perfect candle. It it's another attachment it's just about being in the present so enter the
present wherever you are yeah yeah that's powerful Wow so if you could if
you could sort of be in charge for a day in the world yeah well what would you
suggest or create for people to wake up? Silence, quietude, solitude, breathe. Do it for 10
hours, the entire world will change because that'll naturally create less reactivity,
naturally lessen the ego, which is the cause of all strife and violence. Me, my identification to
me and my views.
And the minute you begin to meditate and see that your thoughts are just thoughts which
are conditioned, then all your ideas like I'm a Muslim, I'm a Catholic, I'm tall, I'm
better, I'm white, I'm black, dissolves.
And then you realize, oh, we're all one.
And we're all interdependent.
So when I kill you, I kill myself. myself so no more so it's the end of
all conflict strife and violence it's the beginning of love it's the beginning of just this this
eternal oceanic dissolved state called love yes amazing well thank you dr shafali for joining us
thank you so much amazing conversation lots of food for thought. You've been listening to The Doctor's Pharmacy with Dr. Shefali.
I hope you enjoyed the conversation.
I encourage you to share this with your friends and family.
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podcasts.
And we'll see you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Thank you so much.