The Happiness Lab with Dr. Laurie Santos - How to be Awesome - With Almost no Effort (with John Green)
Episode Date: April 14, 2025Best-selling author John Green wants to see less suck in the world and more awesome - and you can help achieve that right now! John's turned his attention to tuberculosis (TB) - a disease that is fixa...ble and yet still kills millions of people. But you can stop that. TB is a disease of poverty - so if you can spare a buck, then you can save lives by donating to GiveDirectly.org/tb Giving to help others is proven to make us feel happier and more hopeful in tough times, so Dr Laurie will match every dollar up to the first $10,000, and John will match donations up to $10,000 after that. It's a bad time for people everywhere - but even a dollar donated at GiveDirectly.org/tb will reduce the suck and increase the awesome. John's new book Everything is Tuberculosis is out now.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Pushkin. totally awesome, totally life-saving, and something totally happiness-inducing with almost zero effort.
And spoiler, it's going to involve the website givedirectly.org.tb.
That's givedirectly.org.tb.
One of my favorite parts of being host of the Happiness Lab is that I get to share stuff
that I love with you.
Like the time I interviewed my 80s heartthrob Rob Lowe about nostalgia.
Just talking with you on this Zoom call, and I'm taking you back to, you know,
movies I watched in grade school
and fun times in college.
That is amazing.
It makes me feel so good.
Or when I geeked out about Star Trek
with Lieutenant Wesley Crusher himself, Will Wheaton.
Star Trek looks through the screen and it says,
there is a place specifically for you in the future.
Like you, Laurie, there is a space for you in the future.
I loved that.
But today, I not only get to chat with someone who I have nerded out about for a very, very long time,
but I also have the chance to invite you to help that guest do something to make the world a better place.
If you happen to be a nerdfighter like me, then get ready.
Because today, I'll be chatting with the amazing John Green.
Woo! Hold on, I don't even have my headphones in. This is a catastrophe of the scale of which
nobody's ever seen before. No, you're good. You're good. You're good.
Let me make sure I'm on the right fancy mic. I am. Okay, great.
I'm guessing a lot of my happiness lab listeners know who John Green is. John is first and foremost
a bestselling author, both of beloved fictional books like Turtles All the Way Down and The Fault in Our Stars,
but also non-fiction greats like The Anthropocene Reviewed, a book in which he expertly reviews everything from Diet Dr. Pepper to the smallpox vaccine.
But John is also an educator, who with his brother Hank created the awe-inspiring Vlogbrothers and Crash Course YouTube channels.
John has been a hero of mine for a while because I
see a lot of happiness science in his work.
Did you ever think that you would be
an expert on a happiness podcast?
No, I don't give off
the vibes of somebody who's an expert in happiness,
to be honest with you, Doc.
But you so are, dude.
I mean, you're so focused on things like
awe and understanding that negative emotions are
the things that you want to stick around with.
You kind of follow all the science.
I mean, when I listen to the podcast, I often think like, oh, I'm closer than I thought
I was because I'm pretty far away from the sort of wellness industry version of happiness,
but I'm pretty close to the Dr. Laurie Santos version of happiness, which makes me really,
for lack of a better term, happy.
John's work embodies so many of the lessons that I've learned studying the science of happiness.
That meaning comes not from avoiding suffering,
but embracing it.
That there's wonder to be found in the mundane.
And that even in the face of a lot of terrible,
sucky stuff, we can choose to band together
to actually fix things.
And that's the goal of this episode.
John's latest book deals with a problem
facing people around the world. The new book is called, Everything is Tuberculosis. It's a history of this episode. John's latest book deals with a problem facing people around the world.
The new book is called Everything is Tuberculosis.
It's a history of tuberculosis told through the perspective
of both a long-term historical lens,
but also the life of one kid living with tuberculosis
in Sierra Leone.
And so just for listeners who might not be as familiar,
what is tuberculosis?
So tuberculosis is an airborne disease
that usually affects the lungs,
but it can infect any part of the body really and
It makes people really sick
But it tends to make them sick quite slowly because the bacteria divides very slowly and so you can be sick for months or years
But if left untreated tuberculosis usually does result in death fortunately since the 1950s. We've had a cure for tuberculosis
It's a bacterial infection. So the cure is antibiotics given every day over four to six months.
And so why write a book about tuberculosis now? Why tell this particular story at this
time?
Well, because tuberculosis is still the world's deadliest infectious disease, astonishingly.
I mean, I say astonishingly because it's been curable for so long. Like, since the disease
became curable, we've allowed over 150 million people to die of it,
which is just a figure that's hard for me
to get my head around.
But it just speaks to how disease is a biomedical phenomenon,
but it's also a social one.
And how we imagine disease,
how we allocate resources around disease,
that shapes not just like how people live and die
of diseases like tuberculosis,
but also who lives and dies of diseases like TB.
Jon, it seems like part of your TB journey was trying to fix the problem,
but part of the TB journey, at least in the book, seemed like in some ways TB was sort of like cool.
I don't know if you can use the word cool for some disease that kills lots of people,
but it was it's kind of a fascinating cultural journey.
Yeah, I mean one of the fascinating parts of that cultural journey is that for a while it was considered cool. Like Victor Hugo's
friends would joke with him that he could be a great novelist if only he
contracted consumption because it was so widely believed that consumption made
you a great artist and also made you really beautiful. This was part of the
romanticization of the disease in the 18th and 19th centuries, but really
tuberculosis is everywhere in history. It's, um, I argue in the book that it was an ancillary cause of World War I, it was
the cause of the cowboy hat, it's the reason New Mexico is a state.
The strangeness of tuberculosis is that because it was such a powerful and important part
of our culture, I mean, this was a disease that killed one out of every seven people,
that it inevitably also became a disease that had a huge
impact on our culture in our history.
Wait, TB is the reason we have the cowboy hat? That doesn't make any sense.
And yet it makes total sense because there was a hat maker in New Jersey named
John B. Stetson who got tuberculosis and was told that his only chance of survival
was to go west. This was a very common belief at the time. You move west and
then you recover your health in the sweet clean air. And John B. Stetson made it out to St. Joseph, Missouri.
And while he was there, he recovered from tuberculosis. About 25% of people, for reasons
we still don't understand, will recover without treatment. And John B. Stetson was in that
lucky few. And as he recovered, he noticed that the hats in the American West were not
very good because there were like
Coonskin caps that were literally bug infested
There were like straw hats that folks from New Mexico and Mexico had brought up but like they didn't work particularly well in st
Joe's rainy
Environment and so he invented the Stetson hat and so yes, there would be no cowboy hat without tuberculosis
And so your own introduction to TB, as I understand it,
started when you met somebody incredible,
somebody who reminded you of your own son.
Tell me about Henry.
Yeah, so Henry shares a name with my son,
who is also named Henry.
And when I first met Henry Ryder in Sierra Leone in 2019,
I thought he was about the same age as my son.
I thought he was about nine years old.
And he just walked me all around the hospital.
And you're right, he's just somebody who's incredible. He was kind of the mayor of
that place. Everywhere he went people were shaking his hand, rubbing his head
and he took me to the lab, he took me to the wards where the patients were
living and he eventually took me back to the doctors who were meeting to discuss
cases they were concerned about or whatever and they sort of lovingly and
laughingly shooed Henry away and then I said, whose kid is that? Is that one of your kids? And they said,
no, he's a patient. And he's in fact, one of the patients that we're consulting about
because we're very concerned about him. And it turned out that Henry wasn't nine, like
I imagined him. He was 17. He'd just been so emaciated first by malnutrition and then
by the disease that he looked much younger. And it was really in following Henry's story
and getting to know Henry that I ended up writing the book.
And so something that I was shocked by in your book
and kind of embarrassed when I was reading it
is that I sort of assumed that TB was like
this disease of the past, like some like old
Victorian problem that you look in old pictures
and stuff like that. Totally.
Give me a sense of why we don't realize the scope
of TB today and what the actual scope is today. I think one of the why we don't realize the scope of TB today and what the actual scope
is today.
I think one of the reasons we don't realize the scope is that it tends to be a problem
in places where people are least likely to have access to megaphones, you know, least
likely to be able to make their voices heard.
But the scope of the problem is really, really significant.
About 10 million people get sick with tuberculosis every year and about 1.25 million die.
And unfortunately, that number is likely to go up in the next few years.
This seems really crazy, right?
The disease is still around even though we have good treatments for it.
Yeah.
Why aren't we fixing this?
This seems like a problem that medically we've sorted out the hard part, right?
We have antibiotics that can fix this.
Why are people still dying from this?
Well, TB isn't an easy disease to cure by any stretch of the imagination, but, you know,
my brother had cancer a couple years ago and that also wasn't an easy disease to cure. It cost about
150 times more to cure my brother's cancer than it cost to cure Henry's tuberculosis, and yet nobody
at any time said, I'm not sure that it makes sense to treat you. It might be better to focus more on
prevention. No, it's true that in a narrow sense, it's a better investment to focus on the prevention of cancer
than it is to focus on treating cancer. But of course, that's a ludicrous thing to say.
We would never say that to someone living with cancer. And yet, Henry heard that all the time.
He heard that there just aren't resources out there to offer you the kind of personalized,
tailored care that you would need in order to survive.
And as a result, he was really, really sick for a really long time.
I mean, Henry was essentially on his deathbed when finally, thanks to an extraordinary doctor,
Dr. Jeroen Teffera and the Sierra Leonean Ministry of Health and the nonprofit organization
Partners in Health, they all kind of came together and decided that this kid was worthy
of that kind of treatment.
And even though, as Dr. Jeroen told me,
I know it's just one kid,
but what if he can be the first of many?
And he has been the first of many, blessedly.
So many more people are receiving the kind of treatment
that Henry finally was able to receive.
And that's why he's here with us today.
But it seems like what you're saying
is that TB isn't just like a medical problem.
It's really like a social justice problem.
It's really sort of a disease of poverty. Is that kind of what you found writing the book? Absolutely, it is a social medical problem. It's really like a social justice problem. It's really sort of a disease of poverty.
Is that kind of what you found writing the book?
Absolutely.
It is a social justice problem.
Tuberculosis follows the paths of injustice
that we blaze for it.
And that's been the case for decades now.
Anybody can get TB.
It's an airborne disease.
But you're vastly more likely to become sick and die
if you're malnourished, if you have other health problems,
like an HIV infection or diabetes.
And so it's a disease of injustice in every way.
And the reason I wrote this book is because for me it's the exemplary disease of injustice.
It's certainly not the only one, but it is a disease that is a social phenomenon as much
as a biomedical one.
It also seems to be one that we kind of ignore for the same reason we ignore poverty, right?
Like we like to think we have control over the disease. We like to think that we, you know, we earned our status if we
happen to kind of be privileged enough not to be in a place where this disease is wiping people out.
It seems to also be kind of a problem of human nature. Yeah, totally. I mean, I think that's a
great observation. We are uncomfortable with dealing with randomness and injustice in our
social orders because of course we are. It discomforts
those of us who are extremely privileged. It also discomforts other people because we
don't really want to live in a world where like the most powerful emperor of all time,
Alexander the Great, can die from just like typhoid or malaria or whatever, which is why
like for centuries we've had rumors that he died of poisoning because that would be a
much more human centric thing to have happen a
Much more agency based thing to have happen the places where we where we don't have agency or where our agency is very
confusing like it is with tuberculosis are
Are uncomfortable for us
I think because we don't want to reckon with not just the randomness in the social order
But also the injustice that's built into the social order
I mean especially when it comes to life and death. Like if you're someone like Henry,
and you're literally hearing, you know, your life is not worth saving because it's too expensive,
given where you live. I mean, that's just incredible.
Yeah. I mean, it really is horrifying. And yet people are told that every day,
and not just people with TB, but also people living with other diseases, you know. When my
brother got cancer, one of the first
things he said to me was this has a 93% cure rate in the United States and a 20 to 70% cure rate in
poor countries. And the reason we don't know whether it's 20% or 70% is because we don't even
do a good job of counting. Yeah. And you just said something that was even scarier, right? You said
that TB is really bad now and it's likely going to get worse.
And that's in part because you and I are having this conversation at a strange time when things
are getting worse.
Why are things getting worse and what's happened recently to change things?
So we've had dramatic cuts mostly from the US government, but also from other governments
to tuberculosis response.
The United States has long been the most generous funder of tuberculosis response. The United States even if your treatment gets restarted, you're very likely to develop drug-resistant tuberculosis,
which is a much, much more serious thing.
That's what Henry was living with.
And we know that most of those people will die, unfortunately.
And just as catastrophically,
many of those people will circulate
drug-resistant tuberculosis in their own communities.
We've already seen the rates of tuberculosis death go up.
I think 12,000 people, excess quote unquote excess deaths have happened in the last three months, but
it'll go up much more dramatically as time goes on because tuberculosis is a slow killer.
I mean, this is like a like slow burning moral emergency. This isn't just like, oh, some
aid got cut in this country that I don't care about so much. Like this, this is like really
tragic and utterly preventable.
Yeah, yeah, utterly preventable.
And also, I mean, frankly, scary,
because the more complicated drug-resistant tuberculosis
you have circulating in communities,
the more likely it is that we'll see more cases of TB
that we simply don't have any tools to treat.
I mean, I try not to be a person who engages in hyperbole when it
comes to global health. And I think it's important to understand that the main reason we need
to respond to this tragedy is because it's affecting millions of human beings. But there
is another reason to respond to this tragedy, which is that if we aren't careful, it will
affect billions of human beings.
And so this all is pretty sucky. But one of the reasons-
Yeah, Laurie, can you see why maybe I'm not an expert in happiness?
I mean, are the people listening to this like, oh, this guy's got happiness cracked?
They're like, I'm on the wrong podcast for what has happened.
No.
But this is the reason I love you and your work, John, so much is that in the face of
sucky stuff, you have us do something, right?
Which is that you have us find hope and find agency.
And so we get back from the break,
we're gonna talk about what we can do to fix
this totally fixable problem of beating TB around the world.
And we're gonna see that the act of taking action
to fix it is gonna come with a bunch of happiness benefits
that we might not even expect.
Happiness Lab with John Green, we'll be right back.
You crushed that, man.
I mean, that's such a pro.
Like, I take like eight takes on my breaks.
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One of my favorite John Green quotes, which might be apocryphal, you can tell me, is allegedly
the following.
The most punk rock thing to do in the world right now is to embrace the current problems
with earnestness and optimism.
I did say that.
You did say that.
Okay, it's cool.
Like, it's punk rock to like look in the face of something really sucky, especially something
as bad as global health problems and TB and say, we can fix this.
And so what's the best way that folks who are listening to this right
now can fix the problem of TB with earnestness and optimism?
Well, I think there's a bunch of ways we can respond.
I mean, just our attention matters.
Like we are much more likely to solve the problems we pay attention to.
And when we think about our attention,
we need to be thinking about it as a resource that's
incredibly valuable, right? Like all these social media companies know the value of our attention,
and we need to understand it too. But I also think that there are functional things that we can do.
We can give to organizations that are making a difference, and there are a lot of ways to
make a difference with TV. So obviously, there's organizations that are fighting TB itself, like Partners in Health.
There's also organizations that are fighting malnutrition
and poverty overall,
which we know is a good way to fight tuberculosis.
We know from the history of the United States
and the United Kingdom that when poverty goes down
and when food insecurity goes down,
tuberculosis rates also go down.
And that means that the cure for tuberculosis
isn't in some lab somewhere that, you know,
and I don't have to like learn about how to create new antibiotic cures. The cure is actually in our
wallets and maybe like even small change that we have in our wallets. Yeah, it is incredible the
extent to which tuberculosis is a resource problem. Now we do need better tools. We have great
researchers. They need to be better supported so that we have better vaccines for TB. I mean,
the only vaccine we have is 105 years old. It's not very effective. We need better shorter treatment regimens. We need better diagnostics.
We need all of that stuff. But we have the tools to cure tuberculosis today. We have the tools to
offer people, you know, 93% cure rates today. And we just need to be using those tools. It's
the rare problem that actually is mostly a resource problem.
And so today, happiness lab ministers are going to get a chance to help fix that resource problem.
If you're a fan of the happiness lab, you know we've worked with give directly before.
Give directly is one of the most effective, cost-effective ways to reduce poverty
because they just give people money directly.
And one of the cool things is this is actually studies
on like giving people cash directly
and the effect it can have specifically on TB.
John, I don't know if you know this study,
it's one that was done in-
In Brazil?
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, it's incredible.
Do you wanna explain?
Yeah, they found, yeah, I mean, I'll probably misquote it
and then you can fix everything I said,
but that's the nature of the amateur speaking
and then the professor speaking, right?
Like that's like, that's the student-teacher relationship at its core. So my understanding is that there was
unconditional cash payment transfers to fight poverty in an impoverished community in Brazil,
and an unexpected side effect of this was that rates of tuberculosis went down by, I believe, 50%. Like, went down really dramatically.
50%.
I mean, 50% is, like, bonkers,
because, like, you'd think that you'd need to come in
and, like, vaccinate everybody or, like, add hospitals.
Just giving people some money actually reduced the rates
of TV deaths by 50%.
And this is a reminder that, like, people know how to spend money.
Like, people are much better judges. people living their lives are much better judges of how to spend their money than I ever could be.
And so this is why I'm such a big fan of give directly is because they empower people to make financial decisions that work for them. And as a result, we see less food insecurity. We see more kids going to school. We see safer housing.
And all of that contributes to lower rates of tuberculosis
among many other benefits.
So just talk about why, like, if you're
in a community that's facing tuberculosis,
this more money might help, right?
I'm thinking in terms of, like, prevention,
and then, like, finding out and treating the disease
once you have it.
Yeah, so that's one obvious way, right,
is that you're more likely to be able to use the health care system and benefit from the health care system.
But there are less obvious ways too, like you're more likely to have safe housing with
where maybe you aren't living cheek by jowl with lots of other people, where maybe you
have a little bit better ventilation in your home, which we know reduces the risk of transmitting
TB.
You might be able to afford better public transportation, so you're on public transport
that isn't quite as crowded.
There's a lot of different ways in which this could prevent TB infection, but it can also
prevent TB death by allowing people to access the healthcare system.
I mean, that was one of the things that was striking in your book where you just talk
about the reality of this disease in Sierra Leone.
You talk about how people might
even have access to treatments, maybe the money for treatments, but treatment's super far away,
and so they don't have the money for public transportation, or they can't miss work,
and then they wind up not getting treated, and the disease gets worse, and maybe it turns into
drug-resistant disease, which is even worse. I mean, it's just incredible how much resources can
help here. Yeah, resources can really help. And then, you know, we often,
those of us who live in countries with relatively strong systems,
and maybe I shouldn't be including myself in that category,
but I think I still can.
Those of us who live in countries with relatively strong systems,
forget sometimes how many systems have to
work together for this stuff to happen, right?
Like, you need functioning transportation systems,
you need electricity so that there can be cold chain, and you need trucks that have cold chain, and like
in order to keep a vaccine cold is a tremendous amount of work. And so all of this stuff has to
work together for us to fight diseases of injustice. And yet there is also the truth that like systems
get stronger when people are less poor. We know this. We know this from history. We know it from our history. And so that's why I'm a big fan of an organization like Give Directly that,
you know, fights poverty in the most radical and yet stunningly obvious way possible.
Obvious way. It is funny how we like try to complicate, you know, charity.
Yeah.
Just like we're going to have middlemen and all this stuff, like, and if you've heard the show
before and heard our work with GiveDirectly before,
you know that basically what GiveDirectly does
is they give these so-called unconditional cash transfers
to people in poverty.
Basically that just means no strings attached,
no bureaucracy, no middleman,
poorest families just get a bunch of cash.
And what we're gonna do with GiveDirectly now
is that we're going to actually give
these unconditional cash transfers to people living in the countries with the highest TB rates.
So these are going to be places like Bangladesh, Kenya, Liberia, Uganda.
Last time we did this, Jon, we raised over $100,000 for GiveDirectly.
I like to think that if you are involved, we're going to get more money. But I'm going to pledge,
I didn't do this last time, but this time I'm going to pledge, I'm going to match the first
$10,000 of donations that we get from Happiness Lab listeners, which automatically puts us up to
$20,000 if the Happiness Lab listeners give 10,000 bucks. I will match the next $10,000.
Oh my gosh. And if my math is correct and we're doing the matching, that means we already get up to $40,000. You see the professor, the psych professor doing math in her head
of 10 plus 10 plus 10.
It's a beautiful thing to watch. I really, your eyes rolled back in your head for those
of you just listening. And it was really a wonder to see Dr. Santos try to multiply 10
times 4.
But talk about the benefits that we could see if we actually are able to raise this
much money, especially during this time of so many aid cuts.
Yeah, I mean, it's hard to overstate the difference that it makes.
I mean, I've seen the difference that it made in my friend Henry's life to go from living
in absolute poverty to not.
And, you know, everything becomes easier.
And I'll give you one example.
Henry spent two hours going to school and two hours going from school every
single day for the first two and a half years of his education at the University
of Sierra Leone. So you can imagine what a burden that is. And it's not like you
can study on these incredibly crowded transports that he would be taking, the
trucks or buses that he would be taking. But then he was able to afford a motorbike can study on these incredibly crowded Henry lived in a home where the roof leaked. It was a steel or tin roof and the roof leaked.
And so he was wet every single night.
He would tell me that there was no place
that he could put his bedroll where he wouldn't be wet
and where his mom wouldn't be wet.
And that's miserable.
It's also bad for your health
and bad for your quality of sleep,
bad for your mental health.
And so I just think like small differences are big, big differences in
impoverished communities. And what's really incredible and you know the psychology didn't
need to work this way but it does is that if you can do something to help somebody in that awful
situation even with like five bucks, ten bucks, what the research really shows is that you'll be
boosting your own happiness too. Turns out we get more of a happiness kind of bang for our buck
by giving five bucks in a way that will help somebody else
than we do if we spend it ourselves,
blow it on a latte or something.
But some of your work shows the second way
we get a happiness benefit from this, right?
Which is that when we take action about something that's sucky,
we wind up feeling like the world is less sucky.
We wind up doing something to like build
our own hope up. And I know you've talked about this a lot, like in the face of just like things
being really bad, actually trying to fix it can make you a little bit more hopeful.
Yeah, it's always been hard for me to get out of bed in the morning. It is hard for me not just to
stare at the ceiling. It is hard for me not just to scroll on my phone and doom scroll until it's bedtime again.
That's just who I have always been.
It's always been hard for me.
And I have found that absolutely, that the more that I give of my resources, of my time,
of my attention to problems of the world, instead of feeling worse, I feel better, especially
if I don't just let myself get overwhelmed by the fire hose of problems, right?
Like I do not labor under the delusion that tuberculosis is the only problem that we're
facing in the United States right now, by any stretch of the imagination, right?
But it is the place where I feel like I have chosen to try to make a difference.
And in some ways, that makes it easier to live with the rest of the fire hose, because
I can say like, well, I hope other people and I believe other people are making the choice to respond to climate change or other people are making the choice to respond to this injustice or that injustice, because I'm making the choice to respond to tuberculosis, which, you know, I feel like I'm uniquely able to respond to well.
uniquely able to respond to well. And I do find that that boosts my happiness. I mean, I just got off this grueling three-week-long book tour. And going into the book tour, I told my wife, I was
like, I'm going to come home a shell of a person. I'm going to come home destroyed and devastated.
And like, it's going to take me months to recover. And what actually happened is I got home and I was
really happy to see my family and really happy to see my dog. But like, I didn't feel that way at all. I felt encouraged because I'd been on the
road meeting people who are also fighting to make the world better and that's just an
encouraging thing to be around.
Yeah and also what the researchers is like it doesn't actually matter how much you do.
I mean you went on a grueling book tour and wrote a whole book about this but like if
somebody's listening and all you can give is three bucks, five bucks, just do that.
You know our last give directly campaigns were more made up of people giving incredibly
small amounts of money, amounts of money that they thought were small.
But it turns out when we all do it together, we can have this huge impact.
And that's true, not just for money, right?
Like that's also true for advocacy, for activism.
You know, thousands of people came together to ask Johnson & Johnson, for instance, to
abandon their patents on on on bedakul, their secondary patent attempts on bedacolin.
And maybe just say what bedacolin is just so.
I just assume that the world knows what bedacolin is.
Bedacolin is a really important drug for treating multi-drug resistant tuberculosis
and one of the drugs that Henry really needed and was told that he couldn't afford.
And so thousands of people coming together to make that accomplish something that no one could
have accomplished in isolation. And I think that's very much and very often the case is that we feel
powerless. But one of the reasons we feel powerless is because we feel like we're alone and our $3
or our email to our congressperson doesn't matter much. But when you're part of a huge community,
and you are part of a huge community,
if you're part of the Happiness Lab community,
then your $3 matters more because it's not $3.
It's $3 in partnership with thousands of other people's $3.
So end us off on what makes you helpful about fighting TB and
fighting other Secchi stuff when you can do that in the context of a community.
Well, I think one of the things I've learned from you and from my therapist is about fighting TB and fighting other sucky stuff when you can do that in the context of a community?
Well, I think, you know, one of the things I've learned from you and from my therapist
is that pushing negative emotions to the side or ignoring them or trying to deny them is
not the right way.
It's the maybe the easy way and the way that sort of makes a kind of common sense, but
it just doesn't work very well.
And so I'm engaging with a lot of negative
emotions right now, but I'm using them to fuel hope instead of using them to fuel despair. That's
what I'm trying to do anyway, to fuel hope that better diagnostics are coming for TB, that maybe
a better vaccine is coming, and to fuel hope that yes, like we have fallen down the staircase of
human health in the last few months, but that's not permanent we have fallen down the staircase of human health
in the last few months, but that's not permanent.
This isn't the end of the story.
This is the middle of the story.
And it really falls to us to write a better ending.
Can part of that ending be you saying to my listeners, don't forget to be awesome, because
that would be really cool?
Yes.
They say in my hometown, friends, don't forget to be awesome.
So tuberculosis, terrible disease, but only a disease of poverty.
We can fix it.
And if we want to treat poverty like the emergency it is and TB like the emergency it is, we
can help by giving to give directly.
So Happiness Lab listeners, go visit givedirectly.org slash TB.
Make me and John, apparently, pony up our 10,000 bucks
to fix something that is totally fixable
with our collective effort.
John, thank you so much for coming on the Happiness Lab.
You totally are a happiness expert.
I know you don't think that, but.
I really, I love that.
I'm gonna tell my therapist that this week.
I'm gonna say, did you know, Joellen,
I am, according to a happiness expert,
a bit of a happiness expert myself.
I'm gonna see the eyes rolling in this part.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Thanks so much to John Green for taking the time
to chat with me.
And I'm just thrilled that he's also
going to be matching up to $10,000 in donations
from all of you.
I had no idea he'd be willing to do that.
So if hearing about this totally fixable problem of TB
has made you excited to help decrease
WorldSuck and make yourself feel awesome, please consider giving whatever you're comfortable
sharing to givedirectly.org slash TB.
That's givedirectly.org slash TB.
Seriously, anything is helpful.
Even tossing five bucks towards this important cause can help us all come together as a community
to fix something important.
I know these times feel very tough and very uncertain,
but research shows that you'll likely feel a lot better about this big mess if you take some positive action.
And you can do that with just a dollar donated at givedirectly.org slash TB.
That's givedirectly.org slash TB.
John and I also recently recorded a live event to celebrate the release of his new book,
Everything is Tuberculosis.
We had a lot of fun, despite the subject matter, and even ended the evening with my favorite
thing ever, a sing-along. We're here because we're here. We're here because we're here.
Because we're here because we're here.
I'm going to drop that show as a special bonus.
So look out for it coming soon
on the Happiness Lab with me, Dr. Lari Santos.
on the Happiness Lab with me, Dr. Lari Santos.
This podcast is supported by BetterHelp, offering licensed therapists you can connect with
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Hes-Hu Joe, discussing who can benefit from therapy.
I think a lot of people think that you're supposed to be going to therapy
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But before you get to that point,
I think once you start even noticing that you feel a little bit off
and you can't maintain this harmony that you once had in relationships,
that could be a sign that maybe you want to go talk to somebody.
There's always a benefit in talking to someone
because we can all benefit from improved insight
about ourselves and who we are
and how we behave with other people.
So if you're human, that's like a good indicator
that you could benefit from talking to somebody.
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