The Ezra Klein Show - Why Does My Mind Keep Thinking That?
Episode Date: July 11, 2025I have had a meditation practice for about 15 years now. I started hoping it would calm me down, and it has. But it’s also made me more aware of the strangeness of my mind. Certain thoughts emerge s...eemingly out of nowhere. Many of them return again and again. Why? And what relationship should you have to your thoughts when you realize you’re not the one controlling them?Mark Epstein is a psychiatrist and also a Buddhist. He’s spent decades observing the mind through those two distinct traditions, and has written many books that helped build a bridge between them, from his 1995 landmark book, “Thoughts Without a Thinker,” to his latest work, “The Zen of Therapy.” So I thought it would be interesting to talk to him about what he’s learned about the mind after all these decades of observing it.Mentioned:Open to Desire by Mark EpsteinBook Recommendations:John & Paul by Ian LeslieEssays After Eighty by Donald HallKairos by Jenny ErpenbeckThoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at ezrakleinshow@nytimes.com.You can find the transcript and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast. Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at https://www.nytimes.com/article/ezra-klein-show-book-recs.htmlThis episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” was produced by Kristin Lin. Fact-checking by Michelle Harris. Our senior engineer is Jeff Geld, with additional mixing by Aman Sahota. Our executive producer is Claire Gordon. The show’s production team also includes Marie Cascione, Annie Galvin, Rollin Hu, Elias Isquith, Jack McCordick, Marina King and Jan Kobal. Original music by Pat McCusker. Audience strategy by Kristina Samulewski and Shannon Busta. The director of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie-Rose Strasser. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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Before we begin today, we're going to be recording another Ask Me Anything episode soon, this
one for subscribers.
So you can write me your questions about anything, about everything at Ezra Klein Show at nytimes.com
and please put AMA as a subject line. I've had a meditation practice for about 15 years now, and I got into it thinking it would
calm me down.
I've got a little bit of a highly tuned nervous system, and it has done that.
But over time and in the periods when the practice is a bit deeper, when I have a little bit more grit under its tires,
the thing it really seems to do is alienate me from my own mind.
I watch what is playing on the projector of my psyche,
and I think, why?
Why did I or something in here, some part of me,
load up that particular film?
Why are we thinking about that?
Or even more often, why are we thinking about that again?
And there are people who have been thinking about
and exploring this strange way the mind actually works
for a very long time.
One of them whose work I've long been interested in
is Mark Epstein.
He is a Buddhist and a psychotherapist.
His first big book years ago was called thoughts without a thinker.
His most recent book is called the Zen of therapy.
Now a lot of people go to therapy.
The fact that it has all these dimensions of mindfulness and awareness in it.
It seems normal and natural, but some people built that bridge.
And Epstein was one of them.
I've just had this thought for a while.
It would just be interesting to ask him, after his decades of therapeutic practice, his decades
of intense meditation, what he's learned about the mind.
How does he think about how the mind works?
What is the relationship you have to your own thoughts when you realize you're not the one controlling them?
As always, my email, eserclintshow at nytimes.com.
Mark Epstein, welcome to the show.
What a pleasure.
So tell me, after all these years, what do you think a thought is?
My meditation teacher, Joseph Goldstein, I was on a retreat with him last year.
He said, a thought is just a little something more than nothing.
So I really liked that.
I thought, oh, that's coming out of 60 years of his meditation experience.
So I've been repeating that to myself a little more than nothing.
Your first book had one of my favorite titles for a book, Thoughts Without a Thinker.
And I think that's the part of this that I want to get at, that strange sense that they
just happen.
Happen, yeah.
Why do they happen?
Well, the person is in a predicament in that they find themselves in a body with a mind
having to make sense out of being in the world. And conscious internal subjective thought seems to come along with that realization.
So thoughts are in some way what we would call the ego trying to figure out, oh my God,
what do I do in this predicament?
The ego mediates between inner and outer and between lower and higher.
That's the function of the ego. And thoughts in this way of thinking would be like an extension
of the ego, you know, a tool of the ego.
See, I would prefer it, I think, if they felt like a tool well used. The thing that I find
very alienating when my meditation practice is a bit deeper and
I'm a bit more aware is the recognition that I'm constantly thinking about things.
That if I really were trying to figure out how to live in this world in a productive
way, I would not be thinking about all the time.
The tendency of thoughts to get stuck for them to attract to negative imaginings of
the future.
It's very strange when you begin being attentive to not just that they're arising, but that
they have certain patterns that you would not choose.
And you're not sure then who chose them or how they're being chosen.
And it doesn't feel like you have a lot of control over that process. So it can be a mistake from the Buddhist point of view to see thoughts
always as the problem. A lot of people who get interested in meditation start
to value the empty mind, the mind with no thought, as if that's some kind of
great achievement. One of the first Buddhist texts
that made a big impression on me
when I was still in college,
talked about the untrained mind as being the problem.
That a disciplined mind, they said,
was the road to nirvana, the road to enlightenment.
You know, the point of spiritual practice
of meditation, of psychotherapy, isn't to
make you more stupid, it's to make you more aware or more conscious so that you actually
have choices about the way you live your life.
You started that answer by saying that it can be a common, I don't think you used the
word mistake, but I understood you as saying mistake, to fetishize the empty mind. Why?
So there's something very appealing about stumbling into an experience of, oh, the mind
is something more than just the thinker of thoughts. It's actually very peaceful to have
that experience of the empty mind. And we're all looking for something,
something different than what our everyday experience is. So it's easy to get attached to
what feels like a brief transcendental experience and or a drug experience, and then to go chasing
that. So it's not about getting rid of thoughts or devaluing thoughts,
it's about cultivating thoughts that are useful. One of my most profound experiences on a silent
meditation retreat was about five days into the retreat, my mind was analyzing what the food was
going to be for breakfast. And it was like, okay, the food is fine.
It's like yogurt and oatmeal and peanuts and raisins, but where's the bread?
What we really need is a piece of toast.
And that was like what was preoccupying me.
And on about the fifth day, bread appeared.
And I put it in the toaster and made a plate with butter and jam and sat down and took my first
mindful bite, you know, very focused, no thinking, just the taste of the toast, you know, so
delicious.
And then my mind wandered.
And the next thing I knew, I looked down and I was like, who ate my toast?
It had disappeared.
And where my mind went immediately was who did this to me, you know, searching for someone
to blame.
And I think that's the kind of insight actually that precipitates out of a deep meditation
experience where we see that so much of our mental activity is trying to protect ourselves
or trying to find someone to blame
for whatever it is that happens that we're uncomfortable with.
So much of thinking is from a self-centered place like that.
And with enough meditation practice, we start to wade through a lot of that crap.
So in a way, this podcast, Genesis, is I was in a used bookstore in the East Village and
I came across that original Thoughts Without a Thinker book.
And that came out what, in the 80s?
95.
95, okay.
I'd always meant to read it.
And then when I did read it, it's very Freudian.
Yeah.
And so I want to start bringing in the other side of your work here. I think now a lot of us look at Freudian work, Freudian theory, and think, man, it is strange
people got excited about that.
But Freud is a big influence on that first book.
What do you still find valuable about the way Freud understood or what he did for psychotherapy or understandings of the
subconscious. And what do you look at with a bit of, well, we all got carried away.
Well, I don't think we all got carried away, but a whole generation got carried away. Freud's been
a big influence on all of my books. The whole way we think about the mind, about the self, the
unconscious, the instincts, that's all Freud. The 20th century, 21st century conception
of the mind, whether we agree with everything that Freud said about sexuality and whatnot,
but it's all Freud. Freud, in a way, was a meditator. He was snorting cocaine and using that heightened
awareness to observe his own dreams, his own mind.
Wait, I'm sorry, really?
You know all this.
I do not know all this. My Freudian knowledge is paper thin.
Oh, Freud. There's a rich...
So what you're proposing here is that the correct way to understand the mind is to take
a bunch of cocaine and then observe?
I'm not proposing that at all, but many, many people are doing that and it leads them into
meditation.
But no, Freud's whole thing at the beginning of his career, after he was studying fish,
he got into cocaine.
It's a classic progression.
It can come out of many different directions.
And his book, which was written around 1900 or published around 1900, The Interpretation
of Dreams, he engaged in one of the first self-analyses and began to really chart his
dreams, examine his dreams, examine his dreams, and interpret his dreams.
And his whole method of free association and evenly suspended attention, the purpose of
which was to get the rational mind, the thinking mind, the judging mind out of the way so that
you could go deeper into your own personal experience. That led him into the discovery of what he called the unconscious.
And the unconscious is where all our secrets are stored and where the aspects of ourselves
that comes up in our dreams, you know, and in our fantasies, where, like, what is that?
And where is that coming from?
Freud called it the unconscious.
And then he proceeded to develop a method of probing the unconscious through psychotherapy,
which was a revolution.
He promised too much the same way that psychedelics are currently promising too much or Prozac promise too much
or meditation promises too much because people want something that will cure everything and
psychoanalysis couldn't do that.
When I read things that are heavily influenced by Freud now, I'll read the stories he's telling,
the sort of ideas he is spinning out, you talking your
book about him taking a walk with some friends and just ending up as they seem a little bit
dissatisfied, spinning out a very profound and intense theory about their relationship
to the passage of time.
It's a beautiful little paper called On Transience, and Freud ends it by saying, it's a flower
that blooms for only a single night, any less beautiful because of the short duration of
its life.
But when I read that story in your book, and I've read other Freudian stories, what I think
immediately is, well, how does he know?
I feel like now there is a tendency to prize forms of knowing that can be validated in
some external way.
Oh, totally.
Whereas Freud was a, it always seems to be a very insightful storyteller.
Yeah.
But you sort of either bought into the story or you didn't.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Same with meditation.
Tell me about that. Well, there's a big effort now
to document the scientific benefits,
to prove in the lab that when you're meditating,
something is really happening in the brain.
And I started out in my career working for a cardiologist
at Harvard Medical School, Herbert Benson,
who did the physiological measurements
of transcendental meditators, showing that their blood pressure could be lowered and their heart beat slowed
and their carbon dioxide output diminished.
So I understand the value of, oh, this is a real thing.
Science tells us it's a real thing.
But my experience of going on my first couple of silent meditation retreats,
which, you know, a week or 10 days of not talking, not making eye contact, and just looking at my own
internal experience, that's what showed me that meditation was a real thing. Experientially, oh,
my mind is capable of more than just my usual thoughts.
You know, there's a whole vast, both interior and external experience
that I have never allowed myself that is opening up.
Science, if it was going to try to document that,
might be able to measure my heartbeat,
but it couldn't get close to the poetics of the experience, you know?
If science can't find it, how would you describe what it is that science can't find?
Love.
In meditation.
Yeah, in meditation.
The great revelation that can come out of meditation is, oh, you start to experience
yourself as a loving being.
Why do you think that is?
I don't know.
I think because we are fundamentally loving beings.
And that's our true nature.
I've always been a little bit, I don't want to say turned off,
but the idea that the good nature is underneath.
Yeah.
We're just trying to pull off all the crust and the crud
and the stories and the, is that what you're getting at?
And I don't know, I have little kids.
Sometimes they're really loving and great.
Sometimes they're, you know, slightly tyrannical.
Totally tyrannical.
By the time they're little kids, it's already happening.
So it's just when they're a baby,
that our good nature is there.
What is that thing underneath?
And do you actually believe it is underneath?
Or do you believe it is a thing we are shaping
and then it feels like it was always there
in sufficiently advanced meditation
or moments of awakening?
I had a conversation once with Ram Dass,
who, you know, Richard Albert, Baba,
who I was very, I'll let you explain.
Ram Dass, a great, eventually Hindu influenced mystic,
also crucial figure in the psychedelic revolution alongside
Timothy Leary, one of the most fascinating lives of the 20th century.
Started out as a psychology professor at Harvard.
I met him when he was already in his Indian Ram Dass incarnation, but I was just at Harvard.
I was in my early 20s.
And then I went to medical
school, became a psychiatrist, didn't see him for 20 years. He had a bad stroke, could
hardly talk. I went to visit him and he always sort of joked with me. He was like, oh, are
you a Buddhist psychiatrist now? I was like, I guess so. He said, and he had trouble making
the words because he'd had a stroke. Do you see them, meaning my patients, do you see them as already free?
And it like took me up short, you know?
Do I see them as already free?
But I had to say yes, that that was like, that's what I had gotten from the meditation
side of things. But the mind is capable of something so beyond
what we normally think of our minds as doing
that the shorthand for that would be love.
Are you talking about something we would understand
as a mind or something more like what we would understand
as like the shards of a soul?
From the Buddhist side, they use the same word to talk about mind and heart.
So, put that together and I think you get a soul. So, if there's any purpose behind our incarnations
as humans, the purpose would be to come in contact with that greater potential of the mind.
And that's what all this work is about, is uncovering, to let it shine through.
Well, this gets to a symmetry that you point out between how Freud advised the therapist
to show up and how Buddhist meditation advises a meditator show, which is with this unusual spirit of
non-judgment.
Suspend judgment and give impartial attention to everything there is to observe.
That's Freud.
Sounding like a Buddhist teacher.
So tell me what is valuable about that orientation. What that mental, emotional, even spiritual state permits is an openness to the other.
So when I'm being the therapist, I'm just really curious and really trying to make room for whatever it is that you,
if you were my patient, whatever it is that's happening truthfully for you in this moment.
That's what I'm encouraging.
Hopefully there's no hint of judgment.
And I think that's something that Freud was very clear about.
Suspend judgment and give impartial attention to everything there is
to observe.
That makes space for someone and it's very unusual that we engage in that kind of way
with each other.
And how about from the meditative standpoint?
Why is that?
I think most people who initially get into meditation, get into it from a
highly judgmental place of their own emotional experience.
Very true for me.
I would like to not feel the way I am feeling all the time.
Anxious, spun up, pulled along by the current of my own
thoughts, and I have been told this can help.
And sometimes it does.
Sometimes it does the opposite and makes you more aware of actually
how stirred up you are.
And then you start telling this to more experienced meditators and they say, oh, right, yeah,
this was missold to you.
This is about being aware of what's going on, not about attaining this much more equanimous state that you were showing up instrumentally
to grab hold of? Yeah, it's not just about being aware of what's going on. It's about changing the
way you relate to what's going on. Coming into meditation, all I could see was my own judgmental
mind. I'm judging myself, I'm judging the other people there, we're not even talking, I'm
not even looking at them, I've got an opinion about everything, that's what's occupying
my mind.
Gradually with meditation, just be mindful, see what's there, see what you're feeling,
see what your mind is doing, gradually you see those go-to conditioned responses to one's world.
That doesn't have to be the last word in how you relate.
And it doesn't feel good.
That's the main thing.
So you start to feel, oh, this doesn't feel good.
And there's an alternative.
I don't have to be judging.
Well, you say that. That's not my experience of it.
I often will hear meditation teachers
and for that matter, therapists say something like this.
The implication is it how I feel about things,
what emerges into my mind is under my control.
I understand that I can be less reactive
to what I'm thinking or what I'm feeling.
But the feelings are still there.
They've just then feel like they're bouncing around
inside of me.
Yeah, the feelings are still there.
I think that's the common experience.
The wish is that they're just gonna go away
and you're gonna become a different person.
But the much more common experience is that
you just are who you are, the reactions are still
there, but as a one-time teacher of mine used to say, at one point they were these big monsters
and the monsters became like little shmoos in the mind, you know?
So you're trying to cultivate equanimity.
The Buddha talked about gain and loss, pleasure and pain, sorrow and so on as like the great
winds that blow through us.
So it's trying to get your mind into a place like on the top of a great mountain or under
a big tree, you know, where all the ebbs and flows, all the fluctuations are part of what the mind
can tolerate.
And how much is this emerging from the, I don't know how to describe it, the lack of
identification with what we normally think of as the self?
You have a line, the more you examine your experience, the more mysterious and elusive
the self becomes. This is an enriching, if also a sobering and humbling realization.
And it's a bit where I started, but this feeling that, oh, I might be feeling this way, but
I'm not choosing it. And I don't necessarily have to follow it. It's both valuable and it's very strange.
It's very self-alienating.
You know, 10, 15 years into having a meditation practice,
I'm much less certain of why the things happening in my head
are happening than I was before when I didn't question them.
I just assumed that what was going on in my head was the outcome of
some cohesive process and self and set of intentions that were, you know, I was thinking
about this and that's what I should be thinking about. Well, I think it's a really nice thing to
be less certain. That little bit of freedom that I was talking about before, that's associated with being
a little less certain about everything, certainly about the self.
In Buddhist psychology, one of the main principles is selflessness.
So it's taken me a long time to get my head around self, selflessness, ego, eagleness.
But the thing that helped me the most is that the principle
that in order to understand selflessness,
you first have to actually find within yourself,
you have to locate within yourself,
the self that doesn't exist.
And that helped you understand it.
That helped me understand it, yeah.
Because, like, when I look down at my toast that wasn't there, who ate my toast?
That was really me, upset, like no toast.
Like what happened?
Who can I blame?
They say in Buddhist psychology, the best time to find the self that doesn't exist is when
someone who you love hurts your feelings, accuses you of doing something that you really
didn't do, and this thing in you seizes up, you know, like, how could you think that about
me? I didn't do that. That me or that I, that's why, like why we're all conceited like that.
So when those situations happen
and you feel really gripped by that sense of injustice,
from the Buddhist point of view,
you can turn your mind and look at that feeling
and there's the self.
There's the self that doesn't exist.
That feeling of me is just a little bit more than nothing.
As Joseph said at the beginning of our conversation, it's just a feeling that under the power of
self observation, it starts to break up.
I'm married.
I've had experiences of feeling upset with my partner.
I've had it with my friends. I've had it with my friends.
I've had it with myself, right?
I'm constantly pissed off at myself.
And if there's ever a time
when the self feels strong and stable,
it is when it is under threat.
Yeah, I don't know how stable it feels
when the self feels strong and indignant and angry.
So what about the looking inward when the self feels strong and indignant and angry.
So what about the looking inward opens your patience?
Sometimes when I'm in that mode to listen,
the thing that I just hear is like the endless recitation
of why I'm right in my own head.
Exactly.
And I'm not sure it's helpful.
Not helpful.
But it's definitely something I can locate.
Yes, exactly.
That's my point.
That's my point.
So that the self is actually intrinsically relational.
So the self wants to be in relationship to the other, but that feeling of she hurt me, that feeling of righteous indignation
pushes you, pushes yourself into an isolated, defensive,
rigid, self-important, judgmental place.
That's not a happy place.
As right as you feel about it, it's not a happy place.
So what's my role as a therapist?
One, to support the feeling, because I'm sure
you're right. You know, always. And but secondly, your marriage is important. And your relationship
is important. And you care about whoever it is.
But what part of this? At what point are you saying that the self does not exist? Yeah.
I understand the part of the sentence where you located the self. Yeah. I don't understand yet the part of your sentence where you located the self that does not exist. I understand the part of your sentence where you located the self. I don't understand
yet the part of your sentence where you located the self that does not exist.
Everything appears more real than it really is. We see the world as this is all totally
real, but it's not. It's much more evanescent. It's much more impermanent. It's much less stable than we want it to be.
You know, like the final words of the Diamond Sutra, this is how you should experience this
fleeting world.
A star at dawn, a bubble in a stream, a flash of lightning and a summer cloud, a flickering
lamp, a phantom and a summer cloud, a flickering lamp, a phantom, and a dream.
So what I'm after when you come in and you're putting yourself in that place, that fixed,
certain hurt, angry place, I'm trying to loosen that up for you.
I'm trying to loosen up that identification with being you.
The angry you, the hurt you, the judgmental you,
the you you know,
because they're sitting, this is Freud's contribution.
There's so much about you that you don't know. You had a line I thought was interesting where you said that traditional therapy unpacks
in order to make sense.
Meditation asks us to stop making sense so that we can find where happiness truly abides.
Therapy examines the accumulated self, the only one that is shaped by all the defenses
we've used to get through life.
Meditation asks us to divest ourselves of those very defenses.
Tell me a bit about that tension, right? through life, meditation asks us to divest ourselves of those very defenses.
Tell me a bit about that tension, right?
You're sort of setting them up as almost, not quite opposite ways of knowing, but one
mode is very cerebral and takes the stories very seriously.
And the other mode is in some ways trying to get you to loosen your grip.
Yeah. Be very, very skeptical of you to loosen your grip. Yeah.
Be very, very skeptical of the stories your mind tells.
Yeah.
I was trying to channel David Byrne there with the stop making sense.
Taking the story, one's own personal story, seriously is super important.
And there's a real tendency among people who don't have a psychotherapeutic interest,
but are coming strictly from the meditative point of view, to sort of diminish the importance
of everything we've learned from a hundred years of psychotherapy.
Early childhood experience, emotional pain, even traumatic events.
Those are all just phenomena to be observed, you know, don't make too big a deal.
I think that's a mistake. I think we need to take ourselves seriously and understand ourselves as best we can, and then begin to loosen the attachments
that we all have to the various events that have formed us.
So from the spiritual side, freedom from identity is like the goal.
And we can see what happens in the world when people are unable to free themselves from
their identity.
You know, it's a big cause of conflict and pain.
But those identities are super important to be able to make sense of too.
So that's one of the ways that I see these two worlds really helping each other.
One experience I've had in therapy, and I've had very, very positive experiences in therapy,
and then not very negative ones, but when I tend to exit therapy, it's often because I notice that I'm,
it now feels like it is reinforcing stories I don't want to tell.
It is a space where I come in and it feels like there's a pull to say whatever I'm upset about that week. And I leave feeling more upset, but somehow more entrenched in my upsetness. There's one part of
me, maybe the meditative part of me, I'll identify it as, that wants nothing more than to loosen the
stories I tell about myself. And then going into this place where I tend to keep telling them, even if only to
examine them.
Over time, it becomes very hard to say, well, am I getting better or am I getting worse
or am I getting more concretized in this one narrative?
And I've definitely, I think, watched people get stuck in therapy and they're probably
there for much too long.
And it almost becomes a place of ego, right?
Somebody would just listen to you and reflect back at you.
How do you think about when talk therapy is helpful and when it can become harmful?
Well, I'm not sure the length of time that somebody stays in therapy is the right measure,
because when therapy is good,
one thing it can be good for is that
it's a real relationship.
And it can at its best be a surprising relationship
that continues to provoke and enliven and nourish.
So I wouldn't judge it necessarily by the length of time.
It's very tempting as a therapist to just sit back and be supportive of the person in
their struggle.
And I'm sure I fall into that sometimes, but I'm also very aware of being provocative in
some kind of way. I'm always looking for how to undermine the narrative
and coax somebody into a perspective that they might not have had if not for the conversation
that we're having. So a lot of the patients who have given me any feedback about what they've gotten out of being in therapy with me,
they all tend to say, oh, you always surprised me
and that's why I kept coming back
because I never, I always thought you would say one thing
but you said another thing.
And so that feedback makes me feel like,
oh, maybe I'm actually doing something helpful, you know?
One thing I wonder about is, and I'm about to sound like a big skeptic of therapy, and
I'm not.
I've been in therapy with many different therapists and have gained hugely through those relationships.
But we have this society right now that is much more therapeutic than it has been at any other point in history,
much more influenced by therapy.
There are more therapists, people go to it more often,
it's more destigmatized.
And you might think having spread this treatment so far,
that you would see this huge reduction
in the things that therapy most obviously treats,
depression, anxiety, other kinds of disorders you might find in the DSM manual.
We seem to not be seeing that.
We seem to be seeing a more therapeutically informed society,
where this has almost become more of people's self-definition,
particularly among young people where sometimes
it feels like anxiety is almost an identity.
How do you think about that tension?
I mean, you know from your own work that therapy can do great good, and yet somehow we have
a much larger societal dose of therapy and a much more comfortable time to be a human
being than 100 years ago in this country.
And we don't seem to be doing great.
Yeah.
There's a lot of truth in what you're saying. We had a series of conferences a couple of decades ago about Buddhism and psychoanalysis,
bringing R.D. Lang and Ram Dass and people like that together.
And one of the conclusions that came out of those conferences was that one of the things that psychoanalysis
or psychotherapy and Buddhism or meditation, one of the things they really share are that
there are two methods that don't work.
Because what people want from them is beyond what either of them can do. So to try to answer your question,
neuroscience, science, psychopharmacology,
we really don't understand the mind or the brain
or any of the major psychiatric disorders,
bipolar disorders, schizophrenia, OCD,
even post-traumatic stress.
There's a lot of talk about the neurophysiological correlates, and there's a lot of work to be
done, but the genetics of it, we don't understand anything.
So in terms of treatments, even the drug treatments are very crude.
Then there's a whole class of people since the advent of Prozac and the SSRIs and so
on who are hoping that this medication or that medication will free them in some way
from thoughts or feelings that have been plaguing them.
And sometimes those medicines really help.
So I have an ear for when they might.
And what I usually find is that either they're going to help or they do nothing.
So it shouldn't be a surprise that people aren't just like magically better.
Plus being a person is really difficult.
Having a marriage is difficult.
Having children is difficult.
Having parents are difficult.
Being in this world politically is difficult. Having a marriage is difficult, having children is difficult, having parents are difficult, being in this world politically is difficult. Even when the country is at
peace, it's difficult. So psychotherapy is like a miracle in our culture that two people
could come together in a room with no purpose other than to talk about what's happening
between them or in
each of their lives kind of thing.
So there's a kind of comfort in it, which might really be what it's good for.
Like it's a relationship where you can be yourself.
And how many of those do we really have, you know?
It's true that it is hard to be a person.
And it's also true that we don't understand much
about people and the mind or the brain or these disorders.
And it's also true that both therapy
and in a different way, meditation,
are very alert to stories.
And I guess something I have wondered over the years
is to what degree the therapeutic stories
we are telling are contagious.
That the more we become a society alert and validating of the experience of anxiety, more
people begin to notice their anxiety.
Noticing it makes you more sensitive to the fact that you're anxious and it kind of begins
to build from there.
I felt that that has happened to me at times.
Or trauma is something we didn't talk about
nearly as much 30 years ago as we do today.
Now my grandparents' generation,
my great grandparents' generation,
they had far more trauma in their lives.
Like when I think about what happened to them,
what they escaped from, what they dealt with.
And if you talk to them, I mean, and I did when I was younger,
they did not describe themselves as traumatized.
That was not their self-definition.
I mean, and some of them had gone through,
I mean, I'm Jewish, they'd gone through terrible things.
And today, trauma is omnipresent.
You've written a whole book on trauma.
You described in your book on this,
trauma as a kind of omnipresent feature of everyday life.
How do you think about that, the sort of rise of people believing that their trauma is definitional
to them, despite the fact that I don't think one could really defend the proposition that
people who grew up in the 90s and 2000s or the 80s and the 90s are net-net going through
more things we would objectively describe
as traumatic than the people who grew up in the 30s, the 40s, the 20s.
I think first of all, the pendulum has swung about trauma, like you're saying.
So coming out of World War I, even coming out of World War II, the norm was not to talk
about it.
So the men who came back from war and from the trenches
or from the plains or whatever, the norm was not to talk about it. And that worked for
some people and didn't work for other people and led to a lot of alcoholism and secrets
and acting out in ways that people didn't understand and so on. And the therapeutic culture that we're a part of came around and began to see what the downside
was of that way of coping.
The intrinsic tendency of the ego, of the self, the intrinsic defense mechanism is to
look away.
When the Buddha used the word dukkha to describe suffering, life is tinged with
a sense of unsatisfactoriness or suffering, the actual word dukkha can be broken apart
and translated as hard to face. The problem with that is that we never put words on it.
When trauma, either little trauma of second grade being difficult or big trauma of losing a
child or a partner or a piece of your body or whatever.
My sense of what can be therapeutic in those conditions is to help a person who has been
through something like that begin to articulate what the experience really was. And once it's articulated, it can either become a thing that gets over-articulated, like you
were saying, where it becomes the defining narrative, or it can take its place in a person's
history so that they have the understanding, they've achieved the understanding, and they
can begin to file it away in a conscious way,
in a conscious place, rather than it being stored in some kind of unconscious place where
it leaps out in the shadows, you know, and wrecks a life.
So the over-articulation of the anxiety that one could say is a normal part of being a human is just as much a problem as the suppression
or repression because once you're over identified with any aspect of your experience, then you're
falling into the trap of conceit or of self and that becomes a limiting factor. And it's sort of
like it's making me think about the swings of the pendulum in terms
of infants and parents and the infant's sleep.
When we had kids, it was all about fervor and you had to fervorize your child and let
them cry and then the pendulum swung and it's like sleep in the same bed and there's problems
on either side.
Let me ask you or try a thought on you and see what you think of it.
In the people I have known who have gone through profoundly terrible things,
things people should not have to go through,
the people I've known who it seems have emerged the healthiest,
in some cases I feel like they're much healthier than I am with my more gentle existence.
Are the people who have eventually turned the work they were doing inward to work they're
doing outward?
That something about what they went through and the way they processed it became a way
they began to interact with others and they made meaning out of it.
But it became part of the way they give their own gifts into the world.
And it is deep in their own sensitivity and empathy and the set of tools that they use
to help others.
And then the people I've known who have struggled more, I feel like they've sort of gotten trapped
on the internal part, right?
It's become not just a story about them, but a story that has kept them trapped inside
themselves.
It's become where they don't have to engage as much with other people and other people's
experiences, because theirs has remained so overwhelming.
There's something about being able to turn the internal experience into something external
that seems important, but my sample size here is limited.
No, no.
I think you're totally correct.
The common tendency when some horrible thing happens that we feel should never happen to
anyone, but those kinds of things are going to happen to everyone because we all face
old age, illness, death, separation from the loved, et cetera.
But when it happens in an obvious extreme way, the common psychological
tendency is to feel like I'm the only one who this is happening to. They call it a sense
of singularity. And that is very imprisoning. It's totally normal. The floods that are happening
now at the camp in Texas, you know, that should
never be happening.
All these parents are losing their kids, you know, and each one is going to feel like no
one is going to be able to relate to this.
And they, you know, there are a couple of great Buddhist stories, famous Buddhist stories
where the Buddha comes upon a woman whose child has died who won't put down her dead baby and the villagers
are scared of her and she's acting like a crazy person and she says, isn't there anyone
who can help me? And they point her towards the Buddha. The Buddha says, yeah, I've got
medicine for you. Just all I need is a mustard seed from a family in the village where no one has lost a husband
or a wife or a parent or a child.
Just go bring me the mustard seed."
And she goes and talks to everyone and she can't find anyone who hasn't experienced
this kind of loss.
One of the great benefits of working in a psychotherapeutic way with an event like that is that sometimes
you start to feel like even though this horrible thing has happened to me, like this is a window
into all the horrible things that are happening everywhere to everyone.
I don't have a quote from you in front of me, but in that book about trauma, you write something
that is like, trauma is a terrible experience
that is not relationally held.
Mm-hmm, yeah.
What makes it a terrible experience
is that it's not relationally held.
The need is for the holding in the aftermath
of something like that.
Tell me about the relational dimension of it though.
Well, we're relational beings.
That's the great revelation.
We think we're isolated individuals,
like locked inside our heads with our thoughts,
in competition with everybody else, but we're not.
From the beginning, from infancy,
we're relational beings.
We know ourselves through the reflection,
the mirroring of the parent. We are constantly in relationship to our world.
We're not separate from the world. We are of the world and we are of each other.
So we need each other. We need each other to make sense dimension of being human.
You know, in the classic sort of origin story of the Buddha, goes out and sees old age,
goes out and sees sickness, sees death, sees loss.
It's not just it'll happen to you, it will happen to everybody.
And it makes being in relationship with anybody very frightening.
All the way down to the small bits of it, which is far before you face any of that,
just the knowledge that on the one hand that you need people terribly, and on the other
hand, that you won't always get what you want from them.
Yeah.
Like the nature of other people is they cannot fully give you what you want because they're
someone else.
Yep.
And like there's always going to be that gap between the two of you.
Yeah.
You have a book about desire, which is a very important concept in Buddhism.
It's sort of all about this.
Can you give me a little bit of a thesis?
The book about desire was written to try to defend desire from the Buddhists who kept
saying when they talk about the Four Noble Truths, you know, the first truth is suffering,
the second truth is the cause of suffering, and the cause of suffering is desire.
And so, all these people who I knew who were Buddhists were running around denying their
desire, you know, or in deep conflict about their own desires, especially their erotic
desires.
So, my understanding of the Buddhist teaching was not that he was saying that the cause of suffering was desire,
but that the cause of suffering was clinging or craving or ignorance.
And the clinging or craving or ignorance had to do with trying to get more from one's desire
than desire was able to yield, which is what you were paraphrasing there. That desire often, if not always, leaves a gap, and Freud wrote about this very beautifully,
the gap between what's imagined, what's desired, and what's actually possible.
And Freud called that the reality principle, you know, that the pleasure principle runs
into the reality principle.
And the Buddha talked about the same thing.
You have in the book about desire that I found very moving.
Love is a revelation of the other person's freedom.
Tell me what that means to you.
That's the best quote in the book. The wish, the inclination of erotic desire, is to fully possess or become one with the
loved object, person, body, however you want to say it.
The revelation is that the other person's subjectivity can never be totally known.
No matter the desire, no matter the love, there's a separation there which can't be
breached and love means you allow that and you actually experience it first as a disappointment
and then as a release. Tell me what you mean when you say experience then as a release.
Tell me what you mean when you say experience it as release.
What does it mean not just have the revelation of the other person's freedom,
but actually to respect another person's freedom?
Love that allows the other person's freedom means that you can let them go away with
the faith and the understanding that they will return. So
that permission and that faith is an essential part of love.
You talk about there always being a residual of loneliness in all relationships. And you say,
in the revelation of another person's freedom is a window into a state
of non-clinging.
You go on, while desire yearns for completion and seeks it most commonly in love, it can
find the freedom it is looking for only by not clinging.
What does that mean?
That the space between the liminal space, the space of disappointment, the space where you're thrown back on yourself, is a spiritual
place and it's a very important place to explore.
And it takes you deep into the self in a unscripted and potentially nourishing way.
And in that book, I quoted the poet Ann Carson, who has a beautiful book called Eros, the
Bittersweet, where she quotes Sappho, and she's a scholar of ancient Greek.
But she says the Greek word for bittersweet is actually sweet bitter, that it's turned
around in English.
The sweetness comes first, but then because there's always a little little bit of a letdown, you know, there's where
the bitterness is.
And the Buddha in his teachings was actually saying that gap is interesting and that if
instead of turning away or getting angry or getting frustrated or trying to squeeze more out of the object of desire.
If instead we can settle our minds into that gap with less judgment,
that there's an important lesson there that will help us with old age, illness, death,
and any other tragedies that are going to befall us.
You have a lovely, I think it comes from the teacher,
Stephen Batchelor in that book,
but he talks about this difference
between holding a coin in a clenched fist
and holding it with an open palm.
And I found that to be a very resonant visual for me.
But how do you understand that difference?
Because nobody's saying, you're not saying
that people can or should get rid of desire
or that the suffering will go away or any of it really, but that there's some difference
between clenching around things and still holding them, but there being some space around
it.
What creates a space? motivations of desire is the need of the self to come in contact with its own mutability.
So it's the need of the self to merge temporarily with the other, to loosen its boundaries.
So the clenching that can come with desire is basically holding on too tight to, we say
in psychoanalytic language, the object of our desire, even though it's a person, not
an object, which tends to alienate the other or push them away or actually get in the way
of the experience of the other.
The open hand, holding the other with an open hand, allows space around both of you,
so that there's room for the inevitable moving away.
But pull out of the metaphor of the holding, right?
Yeah.
Like, let's literalize that.
We all have things that we want, we desire.
And then when they don't happen,
or they happen not the way we were hoping they would happen,
we get upset, right?
I wanted this night to go this way.
I wanted this trip to not get canceled.
I wanted this promotion to happen, whatever it might be.
And I understand that the clenches is a kind of anger, right?
I wanted this thing and I didn't get it or I didn't get it the way I wanted to get it.
And now I'm upset and I'm trying to change it, or I'm angry at people for it, or I'm
angry at myself.
What is the actual experience of being open-palmed about it?
Because I try sometimes.
And I almost feel like what I end up doing is like white-knuckling through my own emotional
response.
It's like, I know that I'm trying to be open-palmed, so I'm just going to sit here and endure it.
This is a good metaphor because we all understand what it means to open and close a fist.
But emotionally, internally, what are you talking about?
Emotionally, internally, what I'm saying is all of those feelings are going to come,
the frustrated ones that you're talking about, but they don't have to hold you tight. Because
the spaciousness that comes from opening up the palm is what allows you to move into the new
reality. But how do you do it? Just by opening the palm. Okay, but there's no palm in this.
We're not actually holding things.
The palm is in your mind.
My experience of emotions having a hold on me, to get very specific about it, is I'm
upset about something and I can't stop thinking about it.
It just plays and replays and replays and replays.
And every time I catch myself, I can be like,
oh, there's a thought again, but it just keeps happening.
And it feels like a storm inside me, like energy.
And I can let it out, yell at somebody, yell at myself.
And I don't, I'm actually pretty good
at controlling that kind of thing usually, but it's still there. I don't know what it would mean in that moment to open my palm.
I don't feel like I have control.
Yeah. I'm not saying that we actually have control over our emotional responses to things.
If something is making you angry, you're going to get angry before your thinking
mind can tell you not to. So I think it's trickier than that. It's that once the difficult
emotion is aroused, we don't have to completely indulge it. There's always a moment when self-awareness kicks in, and it's at that moment when the
self-awareness kicks in that we have a choice. So you could try visualizing opening your
palm, like that literally. What some cognitive behavioral people might have you do is actually
try to think those thoughts consciously more rather than, oh, I can't stop them and they keep coming, you know?
So you could play with it in various ways.
And the idea is to begin to play with the reactions
rather than feeling besieged by them.
And you might have to try, you know, five different things, but...
Is that something that you feel over your life,
over your practice, over your therapy
you've gotten much better at?
What is the difference between how Marc Epstein handles an upsetting situation today versus
when you were in college?
There's not much difference.
All this work you've done, all this meditation, you stay here in the same place?
When I'm upset about something, I'm upset in much the same way.
Hopefully it doesn't go on as long.
So what was all this for then?
Well, something to do.
Come on, either you don't believe the thing you're telling me or this undermines the book
somewhat.
I don't think so.
I think it's all in the attitude that one has towards one's experience.
Well, but that might be the difference.
That is the difference.
So what is the difference in the attitude you would have had when you were 20 to the
attitude you would have now?
Oh, I have much more of a sense of humor about myself, at least in the immediate aftermath
of whatever it is that has been so upsetting.
I definitely get upset about what I get upset about.
And the people who are close to me have to live with that.
There is no, I-
So you've not become non-reactive, you've not-
No, I don't think that that's a possibility.
So what is a possibility here?
What, if you do a lifetime of this work and it goes well,
what have you achieved at the end of it,
aside from that it was interesting?
And I agree that meditating is interesting. Yeah, oh, what have you achieved at the end of it, aside from that it was interesting? And I agree that meditating is interesting.
Yeah, oh, what have you achieved?
Peace of mind.
But does it sound like you have peace of mind?
It sounds like you're stormy.
No, I have peace of mind, definitely.
All right, match those up for me.
Within the storminess.
I'm not trying not to be stormy.
So people are dealing with you being stormy.
They have to sort of handle that you have the temper you always had and the upset you
always had.
What part of you has peace of mind during that or is it just later that you are better
returning to something more quantum-ous?
Well, it's not a part of me that has peace of mind.
Either I have it or I don't have it because there's only one of me, if there is one of
me.
But I have confidence in the people who are around me that they know me and can not be
destroyed by me.
So that's very reassuring.
So I have permission from the environment that I'm not so bad that I'm going to destroy.
So that's very helpful as a container.
And I know that the frustrated, violent, angry,
sad reactions are just reactions and not really who I am.
So there's always a part of me that's looking at it like,
if I were going to write something,
what, how would I portray this?
So the, the peace of mind is a subtle de-identification with the experience you're having?
Yes, absolutely.
And what does that do for you?
It makes me less afraid.
Of what?
Of myself.
And you used to be more afraid of yourself?
I don't know if I was consciously aware of that, but I was anxious.
And so that has created a, you do not find those experiences as...
Yes, it's created a buffer. Buffer is an interesting word. I feel like
in the periods of my meditation is going well, which is not always. The thing I have is buffer.
It's very slim, but it's just like a little bit of separation and it's very valuable and
it's very hard to maintain.
But it is just like a couple of milliseconds between me and my reactions.
The thing that comes with that is a kind of humor, which is very helpful when dealing
with one's self who we tend to take ourselves so seriously.
So I think that's the other way to answer your question, like what has changed.
I think I have a little more of a sense of humor about myself or about situations,
as terrible as they can be.
Doesn't Joseph Goldstein have a line that's something like, enlightenment is lightening up?
And not saying that you're enlightened, but you're sort of getting at something like that, which is that there's a lightening up
here.
I think in terms of, you know, what does all this really do?
Like I think that the lightening up is probably as good a way of talking about it as any.
I had a friend, he's deceased now, a psychotherapist named Jack Engler took all the psychological testing, the Rorschach
tests, projective tests, went to India, gave all those tests to control group, beginning
meditators, advanced meditators, and meditation teachers.
And what he found was even in the most advanced meditators, there was no diminution of internal
conflict. There was just a no diminution of internal conflict.
There was just a greater willingness to acknowledge the conflict.
So he was a little disappointed, you know, but I think that plays into what I'm saying.
You know, like you're still you, no matter what you're doing, you're still you, but maybe
there's a little change.
Do you feel that there's a difference in what your mind or your awareness attaches to?
And here's what I mean by that.
Even in my own experience, if I get a really good night of sleep and my kids are being
challenging, my ability to look at that challenge with humor or even be with them in it is extremely
different than if I got a bad night of sleep. And that is holding what they are doing completely
constant. And then there are people I know who are much, have much deeper meditative
practices and other kinds of practices than I do. And I'll sometimes do with them and I'll notice that their mind will incline towards the things
they like in a situation.
In almost the same way, my own client of things that dissatisfied me in a situation.
And I wonder sometimes if like the point of this path of of this work, is to try to like change what
is attracting you, right?
Change what you're noticing, change what you're fixating on, right?
The beauty of the moment rather than the edginess of it.
Do you feel that that is true?
Is that a viable thing to hope for?
Is that too much?
I liked what you were saying about when you get a good night's sleep, your way of relating
to the kids is different because I think what meditation is trying to give us is the equivalent
of a good night's sleep.
It doesn't guarantee a good night's sleep, but the attitude that you've found in yourself
when dealing with the kids, that's how we're training ourselves to be with our own
minds in meditation. It's very analogous. And that thing that you're describing of benevolently
looking to the good, supporting that, recognizing but not judging too critically
what you don't like, all of that is beneficial for the mind.
And then also our final question.
What are three books you'd recommend to the audience?
A new book called John and Paul, a love story
by Ian Leslie, do you know that book?
I've heard of it.
About the beetle, about, you think you know the Beatles,
but you don't know the Beatles.
It did seem to me we needed another book about the Beatles.
We, who thought that? It's so good. I've heard this actually know the Beatles. It did seem to me we needed another book about the Beatles. We thought that, it's so good.
I've heard this actually from other Beatles.
Not just from a Beatle,
in terms of the mutability of the self
and the creative act and love, it has everything.
It's fantastic.
Donald Hall, the poet, essays after 80.
Donald Hall was a sort of straighter poet
than the Beat poets, but of
the same time period. He was married for many years to Jane Kenyon, who was younger, and
everyone said to her, why are you with this old guy? He's going to die. But then she died,
and so he was alone. He stopped writing poetry, but he kept writing essays from his farmhouse in New Hampshire, and the essays are incredible
about having lived a whole life.
Some of them about being 80 and some of them reflecting back to when he was young.
It just gives a sense of someone who has a cohesive life and a wonderful voice.
Totally inspiring. And the third book I would say to recommend is a novel called Kairos, K-A-I-R-O-S by Jenny
Erpenbeck, who's a German writer, so it's translated.
And it's a wonderful novel about the breakup of Berlin, the wall falling in Berlin. It's a love story about a 19-year-old girl and a 50-year-old man that is incredibly compelling.
Mark Epstein, thank you very much.
Thank you, Ezra.
Great to be here. This episode of The Azuclan Show is produced by Kristin Lin, fact checking by Michelle
Harris, our senior audio engineer is Jeff Gelb, with additional mixing by Amin Zahoda.
Our executive producer is Claire Gordon.
The show's production team also includes Annie Galvin, Marie Cassione, Roland Hu, Elias Isquith,
Marina King, Jack McCordick, and Jan Kobel.
Original music by Isaac Jones and Pat McCusker.
Audience strategy by Christina Similuski and Shannon Busta.
The director of New York Times Pending Audio is Annie Rose Strasser. Awesome.