The Happiness Lab with Dr. Laurie Santos - "Birds Are Like My Afternoon Martini" (Birding with Lili Taylor)
Episode Date: June 30, 2025Lili Taylor loves her acting career - but the emotional intensity of her work and the constant travel can take its toll. But Lili has found a way to relax and unwind - watching birds. As Lili ex...plains in her new book Turning to Birds: The Power and Beauty of Noticing - if we stop to listen to birdsong or pause to watch their busy daily lives - we give ourselves a break from our own stresses. Get ad-free episodes to The Happiness Lab by subscribing to Pushkin+ on Apple Podcasts or Pushkin.fm. Pushkin+ subscribers can access ad-free episodes, full audiobooks, exclusive binges, and bonus content for all Pushkin shows. Subscribe on Apple: apple.co/pushkinSubscribe on Pushkin: pushkin.fm/plusSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an iHeart Podcast.
Today on the Happiness Lab, we're continuing our series on the unexpected, creative ways that people cope with stress.
Can you hear me okay? Testing, testing.
And in this episode, I have the treat of speaking
with someone who's featured prominently
in some of my all-time favorite movies.
So we usually just have folks begin
by introducing themselves, so tell us your name
and who you are and what you do.
I'm Lily Taylor and I'm an actor
and I've done movies, TV and theater.
This is actually not the first time Lily's voice has appeared on The Happiness Lab.
If you're a fan of the show, you might remember our How-To Series
on the happiness insights of romantic comedies.
Back then, I shared an entire episode devoted to Say Anything,
the coming-of-age movie starring John Cusack as the love-struck underachiever Lloyd Dobler.
Lily played Lloyd's musician best friend, Corey,
who performed the emotionally charged and now iconic breakup song,
Joe Lies.
Joe Lies.
Joe Lies.
Joe Lies.
Joe Lies.
I revisited the movie, having not seen it, since, like, the 80s, right?
And that was, like, one of the parts that I genuinely remember.
Do you still play Joe Lies or no?
I don't play it, but I get asked to sing it a lot on the street.
Lilly has had a rich and varied career since Say Anything.
You may know her from her lead role as Anne Blaine in ABC's American Crime, or as Lisa
Kimmel in HBO's Six Feet Under. Artists of her caliber often use their work as a means
of coping with difficult emotions,
a process that Freud famously referred to as sublimation.
But what happens when an artist's work is a thing
that's causing their stress?
Where do you turn when your creative outlet
becomes a source of emotional weight?
Lilly's had to confront these questions
throughout her acting career,
especially during more challenging roles. Part of my job is that I merge with a
character, like maybe I've been working with the character all day and we've
been in a really difficult situation. So we've been crying all day and then the
day ends I need to leave her there and then I have to return back to me. But
returning back to her own identity after a tough role isn't the only challenge Lily's faced
in her acting career. An even tougher stressor is the ceaseless travel that being a professional
actor requires. Lily often finds herself filming on location far away from home.
She has to uproot her life and travel to another part of the world at a moment's notice.
So I can be in my little routine,
and then I can be somewhere else very quick.
And I can be there anywhere from a couple of weeks
to six months to even a year.
She found herself in this very situation recently.
A new TV series sent her to Santa Fe, New Mexico.
During the project, Lily struggled
with more anxiety than usual.
She was homesick and worried about her performance.
Plus, the unconventional studio space the show filmed in gave her an eerie, uneasy feeling.
It was actually a school, a college that had been abandoned.
So it had even like a sad quality.
You know, it was full of life and now it's just like empty dorms and tossed chairs.
Lilly was used to a little discomfort while filming on location, but this time was different.
Her sense of stress and disconnection was starting to feel overwhelming.
And then I realized I'm actually just afraid, afraid of the unknown,
afraid of the character. I was going to be there for about five months.
What could Lilly do to make her strange space feel like home?
The answer came from above.
What happened was these house finches started to sing.
And I was aware of their song wherever I went.
Almost like I was the baton that they were sort of passing amongst each other.
And they sort of asked me from place to place and so everywhere I went was like,
oh there's a song, there's a song and I felt sort of welcomed.
So I realized, okay wait, I can use that right now. I can set up a feeder, a bird feeder,
so I have some friends so I can get to my neighbors. My little house finches were my main neighbors,
so this place doesn't feel so foreign to me.
Lily says that she often finds herself turning to birds during times of stress,
hence the title of her new book, Turning to Birds, The Power and Beauty of Noticing.
What I've realized about birds is, first of all, they're everywhere. So I really have a friend
anywhere I go. And they're connected to where they are because they depend on the environment,
they depend on food sources, on water.
So they're almost like a guide.
And there's usually a story that brings me into other parts of the whole area.
It's like even if someone's not into birds,
there's still a pretty interesting way to get to know a place.
You know, National Audubon has upraised birds tell us. And I love it because birds tell
me what is going on in New Mexico. They tell me there's lots of different ecosystems, there's
lots of different altitudes. They give you a deeper sense of where you are. And I realized
I don't know where I am a lot, like in a deep way.
Where's North even?
I don't even know where North is.
What am I standing on?
What's around me?
I don't know anything.
And when I start to realize like,
oh, I'm standing on a glacier that moved 10,000 years ago,
makes me feel like really a part of time,
a part of history.
So if I'm gonna make the new place home,
one of my ways in is birds.
When I get to know the birds, I get to know the environment.
And so anywhere I go starts to take on more meaning in that
I can be on the highway that can feel lonely,
but I know there's a river right next to me.
And I know that there's habitat beyond her.
I know all these things that start to make the place feel
friendlier to me.
Birds also help Lily find peace after an emotionally draining
day on the job.
They can help her finally settle down
after bringing a complex character to life.
Going to just sit and just watch some birds and just relax, like I guess would be my transition
back into myself.
I guess it's the equivalent of an afternoon martini that they used to do in the old days.
But we all need to find ways to leave the job and go back to ourselves.
And birds can be a transition because they can just sort of bring you from one world
to the other. And that's why Lily invests in creating inviting spaces for birds wherever she goes,
including that abandoned college campus that she had previously found so unwelcoming.
All it took was a quick trip to the hardware store, some birdseed, and a bit of elbow grease.
So I bought a birdhouse and I bought a bird feeder and I bought a water tray
and then I bought a hummingbird feeder and then a whole habitat started to get created.
You can make something out of nothing. Life will come.
How did you get into birds in the first place?
It seems like you have this deep connection with them,
but what's the origin story there? How did it start?
I feel like I always knew about them more than maybe the average person.
My parents put out a feeder and water and breadcrumbs.
I had an awareness of them.
I liked them.
I thought they were interesting.
But the whole thing with me was I wasn't really noticing them.
And that happened when I had a quiet moment, very similar to everyone else's COVID moment, where a lot of
people slowed down during COVID. People started to get into different things. And some people
did get into births during that COVID moment. Well, mine happened just 15, 20 years earlier.
At the time, Lily had been going from project to project without a break.
She was noticing all the psychological signs of burnout.
She was emotionally exhausted and feeling uninspired by her work.
With her star on the rise, she could have kept pushing.
But instead, she chose to do the courageous thing we recommend a lot on this show, and
something that I did myself when I was feeling burned out.
Lily took a sabbatical.
I was so depleted and exhausted and maybe hadn't been listening to myself.
What's a great example of a door closes and a door opens.
Sometimes we have to kind of bring ourselves to that sort of heightened level, right?
In order to get a message. It's like a nightmare.
You know, nightmares aren't necessarily bad.
They can sometimes really say,
hey, I really need you to listen to this.
And that's kind of what I had.
During her sabbatical,
Willie retreated to her home in upstate New York,
which sits on 100 acres of protected farmland.
Most years, the property would be busy with incoming trucks
and the incessant buzz of farming equipment.
But this year, the farmers who tended the land
chose to let it lie fallow.
They were giving the soil a break
so that it could heal for the future.
All the usual activity, all the usual buzz, it just stopped.
That silence felt like the perfect metaphor for the grace Lilly was trying to give herself.
And so things quieted down.
I started to hear things in a way that I hadn't before.
And so there was that space where I was able to say, wait a minute, that thing that I'm hearing, that call, that bird call, is not just a
general call. There is something going on there and realize there's stories going
on out there. There are things with meaning, drama, mating, death, life, the will to
live. And so then I started following those noises, those sounds.
I followed it into different kinds of life
and start to look outside myself
and see what's around me, start to pay attention.
In the book, you taught me something really interesting,
which was the Latin root of attention,
which I guess is tendere, which is like tendon.
It's reaching towards, which I really is tendere, which is like tendon, it's reaching towards,
which I really love this idea of reaching towards.
How do birds cause you to reach towards them?
And what does that do to your emotions
and your sense of joy?
I mean, they are full of life.
They're beautiful, they fly.
There's usually some question that comes
from just watching them, observing them,
that leads to other questions.
I think we're drawn to mystery.
And so reach, reach, reach, reach, reach,
stretch, stretch, stretch, stretch, stretch.
But what are the emotional benefits
of all this reach, reach, reach, stretch, stretch,
stretch towards things of beauty?
After the break, we'll turn to the surprising
positive psychological effects of bird watching.
We'll hear about the power of awe,
and we'll learn why tracking a reclusive cat bird
may offer the same benefits as meditation.
The Happiness Lab will be right back.
As a professor, I get to travel a lot for work,
and I'm often asked what's the best
place I've ever had the chance to visit.
And my answer is pretty much always the same.
If you get the opportunity, I say, find a way to visit the Galapagos.
The Galapagos Islands are a small volcanic archipelago about 600 miles off the coast
of Ecuador.
They're most well known for being the spot where Charles Darwin began formulating his
famous theory
of natural selection.
And if you visit the islands,
you'll immediately see why they inspire Darwin so much.
Because the Galapagos are about as untouched today
as they were when Charles Darwin visited them
back in the 1800s.
These islands are one of the few places in the world
where the animals aren't afraid of people.
You can sit and watch them closely
while they go about their daily lives.
On a typical visit, you'll get to snorkel with sea lion pups who twirl and play all
around you.
You'll get to watch giant tortoises slowly lumbering through the trees and marine iguanas
chilling out in big piles on the beach.
But the real highlight is that you get to watch the unique mating rituals of lots and
lots of incredible birds.
The blue-footed booby is the Galapagos species that gets the most air time, which makes sense
because they are really awesome.
They somehow manage to be both incredibly beautiful and incredibly goofy looking at
the same time.
But my favorite Galapagos bird has always been the Waved Albatross.
It's a mostly brown bird with a striking white head
and a very sharp, bright yellow beak.
And Waved Albatross are huge.
With a two and a half meter wingspan,
they're the largest birds in the entire archipelago.
But the reason I love this species so much
is because of its unique mating ritual.
Like many bird species, Waved Albatross mate for life.
So they put a lot of work into not only finding the right partner, but also re-establishing
their relationships when they meet up after being apart for the whole year.
And their highly ritualized mating dance is completely over the top.
One biologist christened it the ecstatic ritual.
It's got these slow, sweet parts where the partners use their sharp beaks to gently caress
one another.
But it also gets weird, like when the pair begin what's called their head-swing walk,
moving back and forth while exaggeratedly bobbing their heads across their bodies.
Oh, and then there's the comical moments of beak-fencing, in which the pair start fake
fighting one another, as though they're sword- with their faces. The entire ritual is punctuated with these funny honk calls.
But the best part is when the couple
just stops the entire dance.
They just pause and sit there lovingly,
looking into one another's eyes.
I've only had a chance to watch this display live
twice in my life, but both times I was moved to tears.
I was just filled with this sense
of overwhelming transcendence.
This sensation is now something I recognize
as the emotion of awe,
a feeling that the American Psychological Association
defines as the experience of admiration and elevation
in response to physical beauty.
Awe is an emotion that actress and bird lover,
Lily Taylor prioritizes experiencing very often.
And unlike me, she doesn't need to travel halfway
around the world to find a bird
that will give her the sensation.
In fact, Lily meets birds who give her a sense of awe
in the most mundane places, like the heart of Manhattan.
I was going into Central Park
and it's like 300 yards in from 59th Street.
I hadn't really connected to myself,
and all of a sudden I felt emotion.
I started to feel like I was going to cry.
I was stopped.
I was feeling a part of something.
I was in awe.
Some feelings were coming up that maybe I had been pushing away,
but they didn't kill me and they weren't going to hurt me.
I don't know why I was afraid of them.
They just sort of wash over.
I think that's one of the most interesting things that we know from
the science of eyes that it's not a purely positive emotion.
It makes us feel small,
it has this fear component,
but there's so much evidence that experiencing it makes us feel better.
Ultimately, we feel more connected to people.
We feel more connected to things beyond us.
And so it's such a funny emotion because it's one of these few emotions
that like has these negative components,
but ultimately taking time to experience it makes us feel so much better.
Yes, just like planting your feet and just saying,
I'll stick this through, this thunder, this frightening, whatever it is.
It's almost like you're open and then things can come in.
It's like receptivity can be really scary.
Another thing that gets to come in though
is like the appreciation that we have for things.
And these were some of the most beautiful parts
of your book.
It seems like you really do a lot of savoring of birds.
And this is something we know from the psychology,
this act of savoring, noticing the good things,
noticing the delights.
Like that is what we need to have a fulfilled life.
You know, I love that word.
I hadn't really realized how important that is,
but I guess what birds have helped me do is slow down.
As I move fast, part of why I'm moving fast
is getting away from something inside.
I was doing this more like in my teens and 20s,
was like running from some kind of thing
that I thought was going to devour me or something.
I still move fast, but birds have helped me slow down.
And so I guess I can just say, wait, am I savoring right now,
or am I not?
Use that as a barometer?
Like, wait, no, I'm not savoring at all right now.
I want to turn to this idea of just how helpful birds are in terms of slowing down.
You seem like the kind of person that would be sort of into meditation and so on,
but in the book you talked about how that wasn't your path to kind of being present.
You know, I might be one of those people that maybe meditation isn't good for me.
I found sometimes, especially in my 20s and 30s,
that things got even louder when I meditated
to the point that I felt worse when it ended.
And so maybe I'm just one of those people
that I need like an activity or something.
I need something outside of myself maybe.
I need that extra help.
And birds were that for you.
Explain kind of how birds are like your meditation.
Well, I'm focusing on something that's not me.
I'm focusing on something that's a part of something greater
that I'm a part of too.
Talk to me a little bit about the listening skills
you brought to birds and how your training
kind of in a very different domain was sort of helpful
for that.
So acting is usually one character is talking to another. There's a lot of just listening.
Like when I'm doing the play, I'm listening for two hours a note. On a deeper level,
I'm trying to really take in that other actor and be as open as I can to them because that's going
to light up my mirror neurons. That's's gonna set a lot of stuff in motion.
And that's really what's going on,
not my own little memories
of whatever I'm trying to do for the character,
that's not as interesting or as alive.
So I find that when I start to get into listening more
as a verb, that was a much more active way
for me to get kind of grounded
as opposed to I'm trying
to be present or I'm trying to be in the moment, which was very fake for me.
And I didn't know what was the criteria like, well, how do I know if I'm in the moment?
There was nothing to hang on to except judgment in a way or feeling like I didn't get there.
But listening, like I know when I'm listening and I know when I'm not.
Like there's somewhere to start with listening.
And I've gotten more compassionate, I guess,
in that to expect myself to listen perfectly
and 100% is unrealistic.
It's not gonna happen.
That's something I've used with acting.
And then because I'm acting a lot,
I've been working it a lot.
And then because I realized it's a skill,
yay, I can do something, I can practice.
As I was speaking with Lily,
I couldn't help but think of the work
of Harvard psychologist and mindfulness expert,
Ellen Langer.
Lily's book celebrates the power and beauty of noticing
that come with being a birder.
Ellen describes mindfulness as the process
of actively noticing new things.
Like Lily, Ellen was always frustrated
with the common advice to be in the present moment.
She's even called the idea an empty instruction.
Instead, she argues that to truly ground yourself in the present moment,
you need to intentionally notice new things about your environment.
And research shows that this practice has significant physical and psychological benefits.
It can help you manage anxiety, depression, and everyday stress.
Lily uses
this more intentional path to mindfulness every time she notices
something new. A bird's song, their plumage, even a subtle change in their
habitat. So it's no surprise that Lily's getting better and better at regulating
her emotions more effectively, especially when things don't go her way.
Birding has a lot of falling down and getting back up, a lot of trying too hard, willing, jumping the gun.
And so instead of yelling at myself, just being gentler.
Because I used to yell at myself.
That's so not constructive.
And on stage too, it's like when I'm on stage
and I go out of the moment, you know,
to yell at myself inside.
I know a lot of other actors do that too. But that practice, I guess, of going in and out, you start to
just get back in, just get back in, look at the bird, just look at the bird. That's all
we got to do.
So watching birds is funny because on the one hand, they kind of get us to slow down,
but I think on the other hand, they can kind of just teach us that like, life is going
on, just do your thing and stop worrying. Like, is that something that you get out of birds too, just kind of watching them do their thing?
Yeah. I mean, they are moving forward. They don't stop and hang around. They are moving
and we should be too in some ways, even if it's inside, we shouldn't be resenting or
stagnating inside our mind. We should be starting to move forward in our mind.
I mean, when I'm looking at the birds migrating
in the spring and I know they've gone through so much
and you would never know it.
They are facing obstacles and they just,
their eyes are on the prize and they keep moving forward.
And I just said, well, I can too.
They're a power of example.
Keep going, don't sit and fret.
You got things to do.
You had this lovely story.
I think it was a catbird in Bryant Park where you sort of had to realize and step back a little bit.
Share that story and what you learned.
So I went into Bryant Park and I thought I was being really open because like I took a risk to
go into this park when I didn't feel like going in.
And so I came in looking for a catbird and I was like, yeah, and I'm looking for a common bird
and I know a cat bird.
And I went in really kind of like confident
to the point of being cocky.
And I realized I really was like,
I feel like John Travolta, like I'm strutting almost, you know?
And then just the bravado or that confidence
just wore down quickly.
Like I wasn't finding anything, first of all.
Not even a friggin' squirrel or a house sparrow, nothing, because I wasn't receptive.
And then I realized I really didn't know the catbird at all.
A bird I thought I knew, a common bird I've heard a lot, seen a lot, no.
I didn't notice it really.
I didn't really observe it, thought about it. Where does it even like to be?
I don't even know where it likes to be, low, high.
So then I had a little surrender
out of being uncomfortable and defeated and overwhelmed.
So then I started with manageable.
So get step by step.
Where am I right now?
I'm in front of a green thing.
Okay, and I have this app by Naturalist.
Let's identify it.
It's called Viburnum.
The cat bird likes Viburnum.
So I've just kind of located myself somewhere with something.
Keep walking, keep walking, open, focused, loose,
and feel the myopia coming in,
loosen up, in and out, in and out, in and out.
Catbird.
That whole thing probably only took 15 minutes.
I was exhausted by the end.
Once I had the catbird, I was like, I'm done.
I felt like I'd benched 50 pounds and I should get a break.
That defeats the whole thing.
Why not stay now with the catbird,
seeing that I don't know it at all?
And it's fleeting too, which is something, at least in my limited experience with birds, that I had to
come to terms with. You hear this call and for me I'm like ready to pull out some app and trying to
figure it out. And then it's just like, it's gone. You know, the good things are fleeting, but also
it seems like birding has taught you that the discomfort, the bad things, are fleeting too, right?
You know, you can be kind of restless and kind of not wanting to do it as you were in Bryant Park,
and then there's a way to sort of soften too. It teaches us like both the good and bad parts aren't going to be there forever.
That's right, and we need those experiences to see, oh this passed because it passed 50 other times.
After the break, I'll talk more with Lily about some of the surprising benefits of birdwatching,
and I'll share where I'm at in my own birding journey.
The Happiness Lab will be right back.
In a society that rewards hustling to the point of exhaustion, it can often feel like
any time not spent being productive is time wasted.
I fall into this trap a lot. I know all the research showing that setting boundaries when
it comes to work is crucial for your well-being, but it can be hard to do. Of course, it's
important to make time to rest and move your body, but it's also just as essential to
spend time doing things for no other reason than the simple fact that you enjoy them. Psychologists have a word for these kinds of activities, atelic, as in not telic, not
reward driven.
Think things like listening to music, doodling, or reading for pleasure.
Atelic activities not only help us manage stress, they can also bring a sense of purpose
and meaning, which are of course key ingredients in improving our well-being long term.
Actor and author Lily Taylor finds that bird watching is one of the most beautifully atelic
activities around.
It is an activity that is just for the sake of.
And so birding has also helped because I do like lists, I like results.
I don't have to have a goal with birding.
I can just enjoy it for the sake of.
And I don't have to bring a goal with burning. I can just enjoy it for the sake of, and I don't have to bring anything home to show for it.
And I think the more we allow ourselves
to not be doing things for these extrinsic rewards,
like we get out of hustle culture,
we're not ticking stuff off the list,
we can do stuff just to be, right?
We can kind of just get rewarded
from what's happening in the world, right?
It doesn't have to be, you know,
on our LinkedIn profile to kind of matter,
but we can sometimes get in the boat
where that's what it feels like. We just have to be on our LinkedIn profile to kind of matter, but we can sometimes get in the boat where that's what it feels like.
We just have to be working all the time.
It's allowed. We are allowed it.
This is just your way to have something that's enjoyable,
that's not like work,
it's just not another thing.
Are you at Yale?
I am at Yale, yeah.
Right, because Rick Prum is there.
Rick Prum, yeah, who's my colleague at Yale.
He has this wonderful book called The Evolution of Beauty.
It's a great book.
Where he kind of just argues that like we can understand
so much about even human beauty from understanding birds
and how they evolve so many colors and shapes
and things like that.
He helped me realize I can just love it for the beauty.
I don't have to have a reason.
It can just be beautiful.
Another benefit that I didn't expect to see in your book,
but makes a lot of sense once you get into it,
is that birds have been a path for you
towards social connection.
Pretty much every available study on happy people suggests that happy people are more
social.
And maybe this isn't my stereotype, but I didn't really associate birders with being
very social.
I kind of thought it was like a solo kind of by yourself in the woods activity.
But you told all these beautiful stories of how birds helped you connect.
I think my favorite one was a story of a downy woodpecker that you ran into in Brooklyn.
Can you share that story with my listeners?
Sure.
I was looking up at something in Brooklyn
and someone stopped, which is what usually happens.
And she asked what I was looking at.
I told her I was looking at a downy woodpecker.
She didn't know what a woodpecker was.
I told her what it was and we shared a moment together
and the woodpecker flew from a tree right in front of us
to this hanging basket of suet, which is fat.
Birds need fat in the winter.
So the brownstone we were in front of
was also connected to something because they were putting suet out for birds. So if you add some stuff to an
environment like food and shelter, not only will animals come, but people will come too.
You had people who were caring and sharing something, a little moment.
And that was enough.
Yeah, I feel like especially in a city
where a lot of people think like,
well, nobody's paying attention to each other.
There's everybody's just anonymous strangers on the street.
That was like your one moment to feel connected
with a neighbor and to teach her something new.
That's right.
And so it seems like there are many,
many benefits of birdwatching.
If someone is listening to this and is like, it's for me, how should I get started?
What's your advice to a birding newbie?
Well, I would just say, just step outside and see what's around, see what's in your
neighborhood and just maybe stay in one place for a few minutes and see if anything happens.
And if you hear something, maybe walk towards it and just see if you can see it.
And if you can, follow it just for a couple
of extra minutes.
It's like when you're at the gym
and when you start to get tired and you're like,
I wanna get off this thing,
you just stay on that extra minute, see what happens.
And then I would say just like, look out your window a lot
and see who's there.
It's like, get to know your neighbors, put a feeder out.
If you start to like what's happening
and you start to like, oh my God,
I saw that bird twice now and it's like, cool.
Then get the Merlin app.
It's the Shazam for birds.
And it just shows you there's so much more happening
than you even realized.
So that's always fun.
It's like kind of like Christmas presents
or something all around.
Okay, I'm so glad you brought that up because I have the Merlin app but I don't use it nearly
enough and so I was going on a hike just kind of for exercise and inspired by your book.
I was like, oh yeah, I should take out the Merlin app and see what I hear and that caused
me to start listening.
And so I was like, oh wait, there is some bird chatter going on.
What is it?
And I pulled out the app and it was like, in my brain it was like a bird, but it was
like a few weeks ago we're having this conversation May, so it was like the big migration.
And it was just like a ton of good stuff.
I pulled out, I had great crested flycatcher.
I had oven bird,
toasted titmouse.
I even had warm eating warbler.
But that was like magic.
It was like, oh my gosh,
there's this like incredibly rich story that's happening
I don't know
I just felt less alone when I started to realize how many other birds were there. You just summed up the whole thing
I mean that to me is the metaphor is like I seem to think there's less around
less meaningless stuff than there is and what that Merlin app does is it confirms
There's a lot going on and a lot to look forward to and a lot to be open to
more than I seem to think. I seem to underestimate life out there. Yeah and this is a way to just
feel connected to more than you honestly ever thought possible. And I love that it's like an
outside in. It's fine using an outside thing to activate the hearing. It's like the Merlin was
like I'll start it off for you. Because then I spent like 10 minutes like walking around and try to find them and
looking up in the trees.
It got me to use the senses that I have to notice this interesting stuff.
Which is when technology is fantastic.
Yeah.
If you really start to love it, get a pair of binoculars and then also the Sibley
guide.
Sibley is a wonderful ornithologist who draws birds and he knows behavior.
So you can learn more about the bird and how to identify them and how they behave.
I love you can just see your joy on your face when you talk about this stuff.
It's making me, my face is hurting from smiling so much.
I hope hearing about Lily's creative coping strategy has inspired you to get out and experience
the wonder of birds.
But even if you're not quite ready to grab binoculars,
or to start tracking worm-eating warblers,
there's still a lot of great coping strategies to take away from Lily's story.
First off, if you find yourself feeling exhausted and teetering on the edge of burnout,
that's a sign that you need to seek out a quiet space to reconnect with yourself.
Second, look for moments of awe, especially in the natural world.
That can be the sound or sight of an unexpected bird, but it can also be other things of beauty,
too.
There's transcendence all around you if you just take some time to look.
Next up, practice mindfulness by intentionally noticing what's new in your surroundings.
And give yourself permission to take a break from your goal-oriented mindset and embrace
atelic activities.
And finally, if you need a good laugh,
fire up an old DVD copy of Say Anything
and watch Lily's hilariously deadpan performance
of the awkward breakup anthem, Joe Lies.
And that final suggestion is a nice transition
to the creative coping strategy we'll be exploring next week,
because when the Happiness Lab returns,
we'll be learning about the stress because when the Happiness Lab returns,
we'll be learning about the stress-relieving power of music.
We'll meet a cellist who found solace in his instrument,
both for dealing with everyday stresses
and for handling a particularly difficult time
that threatened to change his identity forever.
My fatigue, it's like I'm wearing a coat of heavy metal
or armor underneath my skin.
All that next time on the Happiness Lab with me, Dr. Lari Santos.