The Happiness Lab with Dr. Laurie Santos - Laurie's Personal Tips
Episode Date: April 9, 2020Many people seek Laurie's advice on how to be happier despite this awful pandemic. Prof Katy Milkman invited Laurie to appear on the Choiceology podcast to talk about the things she is doing personall...y to optimise her happiness amid the fear and stress. We thought we'd share Katy's interview with you so you can hear Laurie on the other side of the microphone for a change.(Choiceology is an original podcast from Charles Schwab. Dr Laurie Santos and The Happiness Lab are not affiliated with Schwab and the views expressed may not necessarily reflect those of The Charles Schwab Corporation or its affiliates.) Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Pushkin. that one filled with show tunes. More of you finding Gemini is because you know you always like them.
More of you dating with intention
because you know what you want.
And you know what?
We love that for you.
Someone else will too.
Be more you this year
and find them on Bumble.
Hey, Happiness Lab listeners.
I hope you're doing the best you can
to stay physically and mentally healthy during the time of COVID-19.
For today's episode, I wanted to switch it up a bit.
And so I partnered with one of my favorite behavioral scientists, Dr. Katie Milkman from Wharton Business School.
You may remember Katie from one of our New Year's episodes where we focused on the fresh start effect.
episodes, where we focused on the fresh start effect. But Katie also hosts a fantastic podcast called Choiceology, which is all about the ways our minds lead us astray during decision making.
Katie wanted me to be a guest on Choiceology so that we could chat about strategies for
protecting our collective well-being during this challenging time. This was a bit of a change for
me, since as you know, I'm usually the one asking the questions. And so I decided to share that episode with you. I hope you enjoy it.
Lori, thank you so much for joining me. I really appreciate it.
Thanks so much. I mean, this is important stuff to be talking about today.
I actually wanted to start by asking if you could tell me a little bit about what originally inspired you to create a course on the science of happiness. I know it
was a somewhat unusual career move for an expert on canines and primates. Yeah, it was a little
strange. About four years ago, I took on a new role as a head of college on campus. So Yale's
one of these strange schools like Hogwarts, where it has Gryffindor and Slytherin, like these weird
colleges within a college. I became head of Silliman College, which is one of the residential colleges.
And it was in that role that I started really being in the trenches with college students.
My house is in the middle of their dorm. I ate with them in the dining hall and hung out with
them in the coffee shop. And it was then that I really started to see this mental health crisis
that I'd kind of heard about on the news, but hadn't really seen up close and personal.
I mean, I was dealing with students who were suicidal, students who were just like
incredibly depressed or often just really, really anxious and just kind of stressed out about the
future all the time. And it just made me sad. I mean, this was like my community of students who
I was really close with. And so the class started as an attempt to give them actionable tips for how
they could do something about this. And so I slapped this class together like a new professor does, thinking like, oh,
50 students or so will take it because it's kind of this new class and was completely blindsided
by the fact that over a thousand students at Yale wanted to take it. We had to figure out how to
teach the class in a concert hall because that was the only spot on campus where all the students fit.
And it was all a little surreal to realize how much students were excited about learning this content of what they could do to feel happier.
On that note, I actually wanted to just start by asking you a little bit about what our listeners
should know if they're trying to figure out how to improve their own emotional well-being at this
very scary and uncertain time. What insights from that class do you think are most important to the
current crisis? Yeah, well, lots of things. I mean, I think the first most important insight is just
that the science gives us interventions we can do to improve our well-being in any time, but
especially in a time that's as stressful as what we're going through in COVID-19. I mean, I don't
know about you, Katie, but I'm watching my anxiety levels shoot through the roof. I'm dealing with lots of uncertainty.
I'm constantly trying to figure out if my chest is tight because I've developed symptoms of COVID-19
or if I'm just incredibly anxious and feeling stressed right now.
I think so many of us are just kind of realizing that unless we do something,
our mental health is going to really suffer.
And I feel like that can be really frustrating because we know exactly the things
we're supposed to be doing right now
to help our physical health, right?
You know, we wash our hands,
you know, stay six feet from everybody,
you know, shelter in place kind of thing.
But I don't think the CDC and the government
and all these folks are giving us strong things
we can do to protect our mental health right now.
And I think that's why droves of people
are coming to this course now.
They're like, they want actionable tips
that they can do to make things better.
And so I think one good thing is that the science really shows us there are actionable tips you can
do. There are simple interventions that all of us can be doing right now to feel better.
But they take some intention and they take some work, just like washing your hands a little bit
more than you normally would or washing them more carefully or for longer than you normally would.
I think that science gives us tips about what we can do to improve our well-being, but you have to put
some work into them. And it could feel foreign when you start these new habits. But the biggest
thing I think that the science suggests is that we have to be taking care of our social connections
right now. And I think that's for two reasons. One is, we have to worry about our immune function.
And we know if there's one thing scientifically that completely tanks immune function,
it's feeling lonely and feeling socially isolated.
But the one thing we have to do
to protect our physical health right now
is to socially distance.
It's like not to go do what we'd normally do
when things feel threatening and scary,
which is like go to the pub with our friends
or like go to our mom's house and get a hug.
Like what we have to do is just like shelter in place
and kind of be by ourselves.
So I think being socially connected right now means being very intentional about it.
It means using the technologies we have from phone to FaceTime to Zoom to actually get those
informal interactions that we're all missing right now. And that can look like checking in on your
elderly parents once a night. It can look like calling friends more often than you would normally,
but it can also look like doing the fun things we do socially together just over these technologies,
which has been really fun for me. I've reached out to a number of friends I haven't seen in a while.
I did a spa night with my college roommates where we all did mud masks on Zoom. I've been getting
dinner with friends across different time zones. I did a dinner with a friend in Seattle
who I hadn't seen in a long time.
And even just like silly things
that you'd never do socially over technology before,
like share a yoga class online with a friend
at the same time.
We wouldn't do that normally,
but right now we need to be doing those things
to have the same social connection we normally would.
So the advice I gave to my podcast folks is,
think about the social connections you had a month ago before all this started,
and figure out how you can build exactly those same things in with these technologies.
My research team is doing virtual water cooler meetings at noon every day to sort of
try to simulate that experience. And Angela Duckworth and I were just talking and she told
me that they're having family dinners with a guest every night propped on the table, a family member who can't be with them,
like an uncle or an aunt or a grandparent. So I love all the ideas you had. I'm curious about
the various ways that your listeners and our listeners are coming up with creative solutions
to this. I love that you use the water cooler example because I think those are the things
we need to replicate, right? We know know how to formally have like a conference call over
Zoom. We do that for work all the time.
What we don't know how to replicate well yet
is the informal things, you know, like
Joe was dropping by the house and was like, oh,
stay for dinner. Like that kind of simple
thing we don't know how to replicate or I'm
walking by your office and I just want to chit chat
for five minutes. We need to find ways
to do those intentionally over
these technologies too. And I
think that's going to make or break our feelings of social connection. I'm actually hopeful that
this COVID-19 crisis and the ways we're using technology right now might form new habits that
end up helping us even when this whole crisis is over. Because that's another thing to remember is
that it feels like this is going to go on forever. But in fact, coronavirus is going to go away. We'll go back to normal life. But I'm hopeful that some of these social things
we're doing now, I can do later when all this is over. I hadn't seen my college roommates all in
the same room in years. But now because of COVID-19, I'm having this spa night with them
and catching up with them and seeing their kids over Zoom. I want to do that when things go back
to normal. That would help my normal social connection
and to help me feel less lonely
in like the normative kind of typical day.
I think we'd never do that before
because it kind of just felt so weird
to like call somebody up and have a Zoom spa night.
But now that we're kind of breaking the barrier
to do these things,
I think we can keep doing them in the future too.
Yeah, that's a really optimistic note.
And I guess one of the things I've been thinking about
is these wonderful moments we've seen captured
on social media where like all of Italy
comes out onto their balconies
and everyone's clapping or singing together
to celebrate healthcare workers.
And these kinds of moments,
how can we find more of those after the crisis
would be helpful as well, I think.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, we should be thanking our healthcare workers all the time, right? You know,
we should be kind of coming together as communities all the time. And I think,
I mean, as you know, from all your work on habits, like once we start doing this stuff,
once it becomes part of our behavioral repertoire, we'll be able to do that more often once this is
over too. I love all these suggestions about how we can maintain our social ties. I know there are
some other things we can do too outside of maintaining social ties to maintain our well-being.
One thought that I had was that a lot of our mutual friends in the scientific community
have been advocating for something called the three gratitudes exercise. In normal times,
that's something that can be helpful. And I thought maybe it would be helpful if you could
talk our listeners through how that works and why it might be
valuable to try now. Yeah, I think this idea is so critical right now where we can just get in
the mode of, woe is me, everything is terrible, like complaining about everything from staying
inside to like what we have in our pantry to, you know, the small things to like the really big,
awful things like, you know, People's family members are dying.
This could be a time when we really got in everything is awful mode. But what research
shows is that that doesn't help us as much as we think. And that we really can benefit from taking
an approach that involves being a little bit more grateful. So counting our blessings, even right now
when it feels like there aren't that many blessings to be counted. There's lots of work suggesting that the simple act of scribbling
down three to five things you're grateful for can significantly bump up your mood. In some studies,
as quickly as within a couple of weeks. And so this is an exercise that all of us can be doing.
It's completely free. It takes like five to 10 minutes a day. For me, I've been trying to do
this sort of informally myself. And the list is a little bit crazy. It's like, I have the tea that I really liked in the back
of my cupboard and I found it. Neither me nor my husband are sick and I can still hug him right now,
which is something I want to savor now because who knows how long that's going to last, right?
Again, those seem like silly things and they're against a backdrop of a lot of bad stuff.
But just remembering that I have these enormous blessings does two things. One is it makes me feel grateful, which can boost my
well-being in the moment. And so those moments that you appreciate can cause you to savor the
things that you really care about now and can appreciate them, even though some of them are
really fragile. So we're talking a lot about things that are bringing us hope about after
this crisis. I also want to talk about what's giving you hope and the way people are behaving are really fragile. So we're talking a lot about things that are bringing us hope about after this
crisis. I also want to talk about what's giving you hope and the way people are behaving during
the crisis. Are there things that you're seeing about this crisis that are bringing out good in
people and that you think will have benefits on society immediately? Yeah. And that too is a thing
that I've seen, but it also takes work. If you're not putting
intention in and you just go on your Facebook newsfeed or go on Google News, it doesn't look
like the world is a happy place. It's a very woe is me kind of time right now. But if you dig a
little deeper and you look for where there are people doing amazing things, as I think it was
Mr. Rogers said, go look for the heroes. That was one of his quotes during tragedy.
If you look for the heroes, there are heroes there. And there are heroes that are doing amazing things.
One of the things I've been doing is on Twitter, there's this wonderful hashtag called COVID
kindness. And whenever I find myself panic scrolling, I've been on Twitter looking at
the awful stuff. I'm like, let me do the search for COVID kindness. And whenever you do that,
you just see these wonderful stories of people who are doing things in their community to help vulnerable individuals or healthcare workers that are just, you know, being incredibly brave to help the community.
Just like wonderful stories of just human kindness and compassion that just pop to the fore.
And when you see those, you realize that, you know, all the panic buying and the toilet paper stealing, that's not actually the norm.
What does happen when people are in crisis is that people come together in these incredibly
beautiful ways. But you have to be a little intentional to notice that. I've been trying
to do the same thing to look and see where people are doing these generous acts and I've been
totally blown away. One thing that I've been thinking about as I've read about many of the
generous acts that we're seeing is that not only are they helping other people, but they're actually probably helping the people who are doing them, right?
So for those of us who are trying to figure out how to maintain well-being at this time, one of the things I've been thinking is we should all be trying to find a way to contribute in a small way from home.
trying to find a way to contribute in a small way from home.
You know, maybe the way we can contribute is just by staying home,
but finding a purpose and finding a way to be generous has benefits.
Could you talk a little bit about the research on pro-social behavior and how that affects well-being?
Yeah, I mean, there's so much work suggesting that if we want to be happier,
we need to be other-oriented rather than self-focused.
And I think this goes against the kind of standard cultural line right now.
You know, when we think about like, oh, we need to treat ourselves or like self-care, you know, during the pandemic.
What the research suggests is that that doesn't work as well as other care during the pandemic.
Tons of lovely work by folks like Mike Norton and Liz Dunn show that the simple act of doing something nice for others,
whether spending money on others or spending your time on other people, can boost your well-being more than if you spent that money or time on
yourself. And again, that violates our intuitions about what we need, but it's what the research
suggests. And I think right now that becomes all the more important. I think one of the frustrations
people are feeling about staying inside is that they see so many people in need. There's so many
vulnerable people. There's so many sick people who need help. And you say, well, what can I do to help? And people say,
just stay home. Like do nothing. Like just stay home, which kind of violates our agency. Like we
want to take active steps to be helpful. But then when you look at what people are doing,
you realize that like so many of us can do really simple things right now. And I think it's
particularly useful right now, not just because we all need this bump in well-being that can come from pro-social behavior, but also because we all
have these windfalls that allow us to do that more easily. So many of us are experiencing a
bit of a time windfall right now. Some of us aren't working as much. Some of us even who are
still working at our normal jobs don't have the normal commute time that we spend, we can use that time windfall to help. Whether that's calling and advocating for people in need
or doing chores and stuff for people in need. Whether that's going on social media and writing
gratitude letters for the healthcare workers. We can use that time in specific ways to help others.
Some of us are even experiencing what we don't expect, but which is a sort of financial windfall. And I've seen this in myself. It's small. And so we might not notice it. But those
cups of coffee that I'm not buying at my coffee shop every morning, that's three bucks a day that
I'm saving that I could be using to do something nice for other people. Whether that's, again,
buying groceries for someone in need or buying a gift card to a local restaurant that needs the
support right now. And it helps the folks that are really in need, but a gift card to a local restaurant that needs the support right now.
And it helps the folks that are really in need, but it also helps us. It's like this kind of
wonderful win-win situation that doing nice stuff for others right now is going to boost our
well-being in a time when we really, really need it. Right. And I think that's one of the most
fascinating findings from research on happiness of late is how we get this virtuous cycle
where giving
helps the giver and the recipient. And it feels really important right now. I've also been
thinking about how we find meaning in these moments. And I think looking for ways that we
can be purposely helpful is probably going to help us all find meaning in this madness.
Exactly. And I think that is a scary part of this is that it feels so uncertain.
Many of us are facing our own mortality or the close mortality of the people we care about,
and that can launch us into this deep search for meaning. And I think the act of realizing that
our purpose in this crisis is to do whatever we can to help other people and to make other
people's lives better in this yucky time, That can curb that existential anxiety, which I think can be really, really powerful. Okay. I want to pivot
from the existential to the super practical and talk a little bit about a couple of other things
that people might want to focus on and think about doing just to make themselves feel better on a
daily basis. We talked a little bit about three blessings or the three gratitudes exercise.
I wanted to talk about physical exercise as well. Where does that fit into maintaining
well-being and how are you finding ways to do it while you're social distancing?
Yeah, I think one kind of scary thing about this crisis is that the normal things that we do for
our well-being, like our daily yoga practice, it's hard to maintain that habit in this new
situation. Mostly just because we're
in a totally new situation. We're all like in our houses, we might not be able to get to our gyms or
our yoga studios. And so we need to be very intentional about making sure the normal things
we did in our daily lives to promote well-being like exercise that we still seem to fit those in.
And exercise is a really, really critical one. We know exercise is super important for our physical
health, right?
It's another thing that contributes
to healthy immune function,
which we all need right now
to protect ourselves from this virus.
But it completely contributes
to healthy mental health as well.
You know, a half hour of cardio on Monday morning,
there's research that suggests
that the kind of endorphin well-being boost
you get from that can last till Tuesday at 2 p.m.
And so I think we need to find ways to prioritize it,
but that means hacking our new habits
to figure out how to fit it in.
And one of the tips that I've been giving
my listeners of the podcast
actually comes, Katie, from your work,
which is on all this work on fresh starts, right?
So one of the bad things about this crisis
is that we all are stuck in this new situation
of being inside our house.
But for many of us,
that's a really unprecedented situation.
And what we know is that we can use those new situations
and these new kind of temporal boundaries
to set up fresh habits.
And so this is something that I've been trying to do
where I'm like, okay, I'm not working in the mornings.
I'm not having my normal meetings.
That means the mornings are for cardio right now.
And so almost like you might treat a new year
as a new moment, as a new time horizon,
as a good new start.
I'm kind of using social
isolation as that. It's like, well, now I'm sheltering in place, new situation, let me set
up these new habits. I think we also have to get really intentional about how we do that exercise,
especially if you're a person who's gone to the gym a lot. I think you just need to get creative.
And one of the creative ways to do that, I think, is to harness exercise, which bumps up your
well-being, and being social, which bumps up your well-being, and to try to find ways
to do exercise via these technologies with friends.
And so I've done this a lot with different yoga classes.
You can actually learn from some of the best yogis in the country for free because people
are doing these wonderful, nice things where they're sharing this stuff.
But don't just do that yourself on your yoga mat.
Do that with a friend over Zoom.
Book a class together and meet with a friend in a different time zone
who can work out with you.
And I think that allows you both to get your workout in,
but it also can let you have that social connection time
that we're all craving right now.
It's also a nice commitment device, by the way,
to throw out another thing
we've actually talked about on this show
and maybe you've talked about on yours too.
By committing with someone else to do something,
it ensures you'll actually fall through
at a higher rate, right?
So if you tell your friend,
you'll meet them at this class online,
it's sort of like telling someone
you'll meet them at the gym
because if you don't show up, then you're a jerk.
Exactly.
You'd never go to an online yoga class with your mom
before this crisis,
but now this is this new way
that we can connect with the people we care about
who we may not see as much. And hopefully that can be a thing that sticks into the future. You know,
hopefully this fresh start of this crisis, if you can harness it to do better habits, whether that
be exercise or these new forms of social connection, or even things we haven't talked about
yet, like meditation or breath work, like hopefully those habits will stick beyond the time that we're stuck in our houses.
I hope you like the tips that you've heard so far. We'll take a quick break, but Katie and I
will be back in just a second with even more practical ways you can focus on your well-being
during this challenging time.
We'll see you next time. always like them. More of you dating with intention because you know what you want. And you know what? We love that for you. Someone else will too. Be more you this year and find them on Bumble. The next thing I wanted to ask you about was meditation and what you think that
can do for people at this time and in general. You know, it's something we hear about all the time.
And I always wonder, you know, is it just overhyped or can meditation really be helpful? And sort of how does it relate to
mindfulness and how can we use both at this moment to boost our well-being? Yeah, I think this stuff
is so critical right now, both meditation and then all just different attempts to kind of chill out
our sympathetic nervous systems. You know, fast biology lesson, you know, one of the reasons we're
all feeling so hyped up and anxious right now is that coronavirus is the kind of threat like a tiger
lurking in the bushes that's going to set our sympathetic nervous system going a little bit
crazy. And so this is the fight or flight system. It's the system that says, oh my God, shut off
everything else about the way the body works so that we can run away really quickly from this
threat. The problem with coronavirus is that it's chronically on,
possibly it's gonna be a threat
that we're all facing for months and months and months.
And it's really wigging our sympathetic nervous systems out
for lack of a better way to phrase it.
We're not meant to turn these systems on,
but the constant threat is making us feel anxious.
It's causing our bodies to be flooded with stress hormones.
And that has a number of really awful physical consequences. First, it's really bad for our immune system.
So again, at this time that we need our immune function to be working at its optimal level,
we're flooding our bodies with hormones that are making that not the case.
But the second thing is it's awful for our digestion. It's awful for our
sexual health and functioning. It's just not good to be turning this system on for a long time.
The good news is that the body has a stopgap, which is the parasympathetic nervous system.
That's the rest and digest system. And normally you would turn that on by shutting off the threat,
which we can't do right now. But the great news is that the body gives us an awesome way to
activate the parasympathetic nervous system. And that's actually through our breath.
If you ever notice when you have like a horrible threat
or if you've been attacked by a tiger,
even if you're like running a marathon
or running on a treadmill,
when you're breathing in the time
when your body's like activating all its muscles,
you tend to breathe really shallowly
and through your chest,
the kind of thing that people experience
in say panic attacks too.
But the parasympathetic nervous system
is activated not by shallow chest breathing,
but by this deep sort of belly breathing, you know, these deep breaths that we take,
where we take the air in through our stomach and then let it out really slowly.
The awesome news is that this is a way that science suggests we can activate our parasympathetic
nervous system just through our breath. And so just taking time to do two to three minutes of
deep belly breathing, and this isn't even meditation per
se, it's just kind of getting your breath right, can give your parasympathetic nervous system a
moment to kind of jump in and react. You know, this is a spot where the ancient wisdom was just
spot on. The simple act of taking time to focus on your breath means a couple of things. One is
that you're kind of training your brain to focus on something. You're training your brain to focus
in some sense on what you want.
And so when your mind might go to ruminating about COVID
or what's happening with your elderly grandparents,
all these things that you might not be able to control at that time,
that kind of sucks and it's going to activate your sympathetic nervous system.
But the simple act of focusing on your breath means you're kind of like a muscle
retraining your mind to go to the stuff that you want it to.
And every moment that
you spend kind of focusing on your breath or a mantra is one that you're not freaking out about
COVID statistics right now. And it can have these incredible effects. The simple act of meditating
a few minutes a day can increase your concentration. It can increase your focus.
It can decrease things like craving and things like your addictive tendencies.
It can be really helpful for sort of promoting the healthy behaviors you need to get over addictions and things like that.
But it can really regulate your emotions.
It can really help with things like depression and anxiety.
Again, I think in part because you're kind of training your mind not to ruminate on the bad stuff, but to focus on the good stuff.
That's really helpful.
And for those like me who are a little bit new to the world of meditation, do you have any advice on great tools we can use to get up to speed? Would
you just Google meditation or do you think there's some offerings out there that are better than
others? Yeah, there are lots of different ones. If you look at beginner meditations or especially
beginner mindfulness-based stress reduction, which is one of the most secular and scientifically
based versions of meditation, those tend to be really good. Other folks really like Calm, an app,
or Headspace. But honestly, even if you just Google beginner mindfulness-based meditation,
you can get started. Another thing that I often tell people who are new to it is to
not focus on the amount of time. I think sometimes you think, oh my God, I had to meditate for 20
minutes and so on. Start with a minute. Dan Harris, who is a big new proponent of meditation, he wrote a book called Meditation
for Fidgety Skeptics. He's a big proponent of just do it for a minute because we all have a minute
where you can just sit there and you'd be surprised that just sitting and following your breath for a
minute can be really powerful. I also think it's useful to think about the particular kinds of meditation
because there are different sort of flavors of meditation
that you can try out,
whether you're focused on your breath.
In some meditation cases, you're focused on gratitude.
So you're actually kind of using that meditation time
to count your blessings in some sense.
But a really powerful one
that can be particularly helpful right now
is a form of meditation known as loving kindness
or met meta meditation,
which sounds so cheesy and syrupy sweet. And so bear with me if you're the kind of person who's
not like into this stuff naturally. But what loving kindness meditation is, is it's the act of
trying to control your compassion muscles. Basically, during the meditation, you sort of
think about people in your life and you sort of wish them well. You'll often use phrases like, may you be happy, may you be healthy, may you be free
from harm, things like that.
But practitioners of this practice often report that in the act of thinking those thoughts,
they kind of feel these warm compassion feelings in their chest.
And the research suggests that practicing these things can be incredibly powerful.
So one piece of research suggests that loving kindness meditation can really help with burnout.
And the way this is thought to work is that, you know, burnout is when you kind of overfeel people's pain too much.
You know, think of these healthcare workers right now who are dealing with these awful situations, you know, seeing people in suffering, watching young people die.
Like, it's awful.
you know, seeing people in suffering, watching young people die, like, it's awful. Practicing compassion through these techniques allows you to experience the care that you want to give for
other people without necessarily experiencing their pain. So it's a little different than
empathy and kind of feeling people's pain. You're kind of feeling motivated to help them.
And what the research suggests is that these practices can allow you to engage with the
suffering of other people in a way that doesn't mess you up. One study by Tanya Singer and her colleagues showed that if you give subjects these
kind of nasty videos of people suffering, but you have them do this practice of loving kindness
meditation, they experience those videos not with negative emotions like, oh, I feel sad and I feel
angry about this situation. They actually experience those videos with more positive emotions and
particularly more affiliative or caregiving emotions. So in other words, you see human
suffering and rather than wanting to run away from it, you want to do something about it and help.
And I think in this time where we need to kind of deal with the suffering of other people and
not fall apart, but also in a time when we need to focus our energies on more pro-social actions,
this particular kind of meditation can be really powerful. One thing I've been thinking a lot about, and you mentioned earlier, is how
much time we're all spending on social media and the news and how hard it is to rip ourselves away
from that. For me, one of the biggest challenges actually is that at night, right before bed,
I sort of get on my phone, I start reading all the latest statistics, and it doesn't seem like
that's probably the best thing to do. So I'm wondering if you would suggest other routines in particular, how can we rip
ourselves away from these statistics? When is it most harmful, in fact, to be looking at them?
And what other routines should we have if we want to make sure that we sleep well, for instance?
Yeah. So I think the social media one is a big one. Many of us are in a new situation,
we're feeling anxious, we're feeling a little bored. And in our normal life, many of us have a habit that we do when we're feeling that
way, which is like we quickly go on Facebook or Instagram or Twitter and like do a quick check.
The problem is that while those quick checks might have worked and kind of bumped up our
dopamine in the past, right now they're not filled with happy cat videos or baby pictures. It's
filled with like these scary coronavirus statistics that are going to spike our anxiety. I think one of the things I've been trying to do is when I do those things,
in other words, when I do the quick Twitter check, I try to be really mindful and pay attention to
how it's feeling in my body. Did that help or did that kind of make me feel worse? And inevitably,
whenever I've done that check lately, I've been like, this was a really dumb idea. Why did I just
spike my anxiety unnecessarily? Again, right before bed, right when I was going to bed. And so I've kind of just put a moratorium
on any social media after around 6pm. I've made a little spot in my room where I put my phone and I
keep it really far away. And the things I do before bed now, usually I'd read on my Kindle.
I've only brought out physical books ahead of time so that even if I'm planning to just read
on my Kindle, I don't have the urge to kind of do the quick social media check.
And that's been so helpful for my anxiety levels, particularly before I sleep, right?
Because another thing that spiking your sympathetic nervous system does is it makes
it really hard to go to bed. It makes it really hard to rest and relax. So that's been really
powerful. I mean, I think it's incredibly important to be informed, right? And some
amount of anxiety about what's going on is important because we have to plan and act on it.
But I've been trying to figure out like, what's the optimal level right now? How many times a day
do I actually have to check in to be informed rather than to be totally freaked out? And what
I've realized is that like, you know, one half hour check in the morning is probably good for
the day. Anything else is gonna be superfluous.
And so that's been really powerful to realize
I don't have to do it.
And also to realize that doing that
is an opportunity cost on other stuff
that could really be helping me.
When I get the urge to go on social media now
to do a quick check,
I've been trying to harness that into a new behavior,
which as you know, to replace habits,
it's helpful to have the other new behavior you go to. So I've been trying instead of going on social media to say, oh,
this is a time when I should text a friend. Who should I text? Oh, I'll text my dad or I'll text
a friend who's like up the street. And so it's still like going to my phone and doing something
when I have that momentary anxious feeling that I have this cue that I want to act on.
But instead of acting on it in a way that's going to bump up my anxiety,
hopefully it's acting on it in a way
that will help with social connection right now.
I love that habit replacement.
That's a fantastic one.
Use that cue of a social media craving
and instead text a friend or make a donation
or find a way you can help someone.
Exactly.
That's wonderful.
Same with going to bed too.
I think if I didn't have the other cue
of a physical book that I was excited to read, even if I put my phone somewhere, I would just get up and
go look at my phone, right? Like, but having this other thing that I'm looking forward to,
that's an alternative behavior that I can just slot in. It's been really powerful.
That's great. So we have to be really disciplined about replacements.
On the note of sleep, you mentioned your sleep routine, which is fabulous, and I'm going to
emulate. Are there any other things we should be thinking about doing to ensure that we're able to sleep well or as well as possible at this very stressful time?
And what does the research say about how we can ensure we get the sleep we need for our immune systems and our emotional well-being?
Well, I think one thing is to just realize how critical sleep is for our mental health right now.
realize how critical sleep is for our mental health right now. The data on sleep and mental health are like shocking that you basically can spike your mood and your emotions to basically
almost be at a clinical level where you need treatment simply by getting like, you know,
three to four hours a night of sleep for a week or so. There's some studies suggesting this, right?
So finding ways to prioritize sleep, it's really critical. And I think you hit the nail on the
head. Like we just have to be really intentional about it. We have to form new habits. The good news is we're in this
crazy new situation where we can start to form those new habits. We're in the house in a different
way than we were before. We're not going out, say, at night to go get drinks with friends or
doing what we would normally do. And I think that allows us a novel situation where we can set up
these new habits. The last thing I was thinking about is these stressors that are very real and aren't just
in the media, but things like losing a job or being afraid that you're going to be out of a
job or knowing someone who's sick and being very worried about them. When we have these very real
concerns that we can't ignore, like social media, which we really could live without,
what advice do you have on how we can handle that?
I guess there are two pieces of advice. One is if you're dealing with that situation happening to
someone else, someone you care about, right? You know, this is happening with me in my own life,
you know, I'm finding out that students in my college are presumed COVID, you know,
and they're really, really sick right now. And this is one of the worst things about this crisis
is like, I can't do what I would normally do, which is like show up at their door, give them soup, like, you know, wish them well.
I think we have these thwarted moments of wanting to help where we can't do it.
And what I've been trying to do is to harness those thwarted altruism moments to a different
kind of altruism, right? Like every time I get an email from a sick student, I'm like,
let me donate some money to a cause that's really good right now, or let me call an elderly neighbor
and check in on them, right? So you kind of take the altruistic urge that you have to help the person
in need who you might not be able to help directly and sort of channel that into something else.
I think if you're facing these problems yourself, right, you've personally lost a job or you've
personally started to feel sick. I think the key there is to do the kinds of things that we know
can be really powerful for promoting resilience.
And a lot of them have to do with realizing that this situation, as awful as it is, is temporary.
And it's the kind of thing where we know that people who've gone through really awful life circumstances
and have come out the other side often report that it was ultimately a good experience.
Okay, so it'll be hard in the moment when you're
dealing with a crisis to see that, but it sounds like the key advice is, yes, this may be the low
point in your life. We don't want to take anything away from that, but research shows that you will
come out of it. And that six months later, a lot of people are able to be back just as happy as
they were before. So know that there is a light at the end of the tunnel
and look for opportunities to grow.
Yeah, and you can speed that light up
by kind of taking this future-oriented processing yourself.
So if you're experiencing something awful,
describe how you're going to deal with that setback
a year from now.
So if you've lost your job,
sit down and be like,
all right, a year from now me, what am I thinking?
Actually, I got through it.
Things are going to be okay.
It can kind of just get you to have a more meta view
of what's going on.
And you can realize that it's in the moment,
things that seem really awful in the scheme of things
are often going to be okay in some time.
Lori, I know we're about out of time.
And I just wanted to ask if you have any final words of wisdom
or any final things you think we should cover so that our listeners can get through this very difficult time. You've given
so much great advice, but is there any last word that you want to share? I think, I guess the last
word is two words, but just self-compassion. It really is an awful time. Like there's a reason
we're calling this crisis unprecedented. There's a deadly virus that's incredibly scary and incredibly uncertainty provoking. And I think one thing to realize is
it's okay to feel crappy. Like it's okay to not be working. It's okay to give yourself and your
family members a little bit more self-compassion and a little bit more of a benefit of the doubt
than you usually would. But part of that is to realize that science gives you intentional things
that you can do to feel better.
So yeah, like feel crappy and lick your wounds.
But as soon as you have the space,
try some of these things out that we've been talking about
because all the research suggests they can help a lot.
Thank you, Lori.
This was so great.
I really appreciate you taking the time.
No, no problem.
This was fun.
I hope you enjoyed this special episode.
If you liked what you heard, you should subscribe to Choiceology wherever you get your podcasts.
And I also hope that you'll come back to hear the next episode of The Happiness Lab with me, Dr. Laurie Santos.
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