The Mel Robbins Podcast - How to Build the Life You Want: Timeless Wisdom for More Happiness & Purpose
Episode Date: April 18, 2024Do you want to be happier every day and live a more meaningful life? In this episode, you’re getting the research, the secrets, and some very surprising takeaways from the #1 happiness expert, Dr. ...Tal Ben-Shahar. He has taught 2 of the most popular courses in Harvard’s history, and today you are getting a front row seat in one of his lectures. Grab a pen and paper, because class is in session. He is here to share all of the groundbreaking research and give you the answers to: - What you have wrong about happiness - The science-based tools for increasing happiness - 5 simple habits for a successful, happy life This episode will give you the secret to creating happiness in your life again, with zero weird tricks. For more resources, including the link to Dr. Ben-Shahar’s book, Happier, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this research-packed episode, here’s one you should listen to next: What Makes a Good Life? Lessons From the Longest Study on Happiness.If you are looking for more coaching, Mel just opened the doors to the once-a-year, science-backed, community-packed coaching program, Launch with Mel Robbins, and wants YOU to join her. Over 6 full months, you’ll get step-by-step support through 3 personal or professional projects that are important to you. If you’re ready for deep support, dream-chasing, and a LOT of momentum, this is for you. Launch with Mel Robbins closes enrollment on April 25th. If you miss the date, you can hop on the waitlist for next year’s course.Connect with Mel: Sign up for Mel’s 6 month coaching program, LaunchWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s newsletter Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Thank you so much for spending some time with me today.
And I also want to thank you for making the decision
to listen to something that could help you improve your life.
I think that's pretty cool.
Now, if you're new, I want to welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family.
And by the way, thank you for making this one of the most popular podcasts
in the entire world. My name is Mel Robbins. I'm a New York Times bestselling author and
one of the world's leading experts on confidence and motivation. And I'm on a mission to inspire
and empower you with the tools that you need to create a better life. And you want to know
a very important component of creating a better life, that's happiness. And I know that this is a topic
that you love hearing about.
In fact, every single time that you and I
talk about it together, you want more.
And today, I'm gonna introduce you
to somebody I deeply admire.
He is one of the world's leading experts on happiness.
His name, Dr. Tal Ben-Shahar.
And that name, I bet you're like, wait a minute,
I think I've heard that name before.
Well, let me tell you where you may have heard it,
because we did an episode just a little bit ago
on the science of goals.
And at the very end of that episode,
I shared some powerful research from none other
than Dr. Tal Ben-Shahar.
Remember that?
It was the research about the Olympic medalists
and how they felt happier as they were training
for the Olympics, when they were pursuing that dream, way happier when they were pursuing
it than when they actually won the medal.
And that part of the episode about goals and how goals are critical to happiness, because
your goals represent the pursuit of
something that matters to you. You love that. So you know what I did? I begged Tal to join us today
and he is here. He is here to unpack his research and share very specific takeaways with you.
Now, Tao is very well known for being Harvard University's most popular teacher, like ever. He taught two of the most popular courses in Harvard's history, Positive Psychology
and the Psychology of Leadership.
And today, you are getting key takeaways. He's also the New York Times bestselling author of eight.
Yep, you heard it, eight incredible books all about happiness,
many of which are required reading in university courses around the world.
And you know what I love about Tal is that he has this amazing ability to
bridge the academic aspect of happiness with the insights that you need to apply it to
your life. And today, Tal is sharing the five elements of happiness. So let's jump in. Tal,
welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Thank you, Mel. So good to be here.
I am so excited to talk to you. I want to just start with the beginning of your story, because
here you are, one of the world's leading experts
on the topic of happiness,
something we all wanna know more about.
But when you got to college,
you thought you were gonna study computer science.
So what happened in your life that created this big pivot?
So I became interested in happiness
because of my own unhappiness.
Oh.
And, you know, it started off even before college.
I was a squash player.
My dream as a young boy was to be a professional athlete.
Initially, it was supposed to be basketball, but I stopped growing at about the age of
five, six.
So that didn't happen.
But squash was it for me.
And I wasn't happy as a child, but I would always tell myself, when I become a professional,
when I win the national championship, then I'll be happy.
And for years, I was quite miserable.
And then I won the national championship.
And I was ecstatic for about four hours.
And then again, going back to where I was before, the same stress and unhappiness.
And I thought something was wrong here with my model.
But then I said, oh no, it's when I become a world champion, then I'll be happy.
And I continued towards that and I played professionally for a few years.
And then I got injured and I went to college. I said, okay, so I didn't make it in athletics,
but I'll do it academically. I went to Harvard and I was a top student there and I was miserable.
My sophomore year, very cold Boston morning, I went to my academic advisor and I told her
that I'm switching majors.
I was a computer science major.
And she said, what to?
And I said, well, I'm leaving computer science
and moving over to philosophy and psychology.
And she said, why?
And I said, because I have two questions.
First, why aren't I happy?
Second, how can I become happier?
It's with these two questions that I then went on to get
my undergraduate degree, then went to graduate school in
education and organizational behavior,
all the time asking how can I help myself, individuals,
couples, organizations, and ultimately nations,
increase their levels of happiness.
That was 30 years ago.
Wow. You sound like a really intense dude.
No, seriously, you sound like somebody that was incredibly tightly wound.
But that's not my experience of you right now.
I only say that because to me,
if somebody that is that driven and that competitive and that tightly wound can figure out, first
of all, why you're not happy, and also then figure out how to become a happier person
and then translate that to everybody else, that's cool because that means the rest of
us can probably do it too.
There's no question on my mind, mind again after 30 years of work, internal
work, external work, research that there is a lot that we can do to become
happier. So if you go back to that sophomore you at Harvard and you're
sitting there with your academic advisor and your advisor says wait what you're
gonna switch why would you switch and say, because I want to figure out why I'm so unhappy.
What did you learn about why you were so unhappy that we might
be able to apply to our own lives?
Yeah, so the first thing that I learned
or that was obvious to me at that time
was that success doesn't lead to happiness.
We think there are certain boxes that we need to check.
So for me, it was winning that championship
or later getting into Harvard or becoming a top student
or getting a good job and making a lot of money.
All of us know that the best that these achievements can do
is lead to temporary happiness, a spike.
But that high doesn't last.
So that's the first thing that I learned.
Now, the thing that amazed me is that while we all know that achievement, attainment, reaching a goal will not lead to
lasting happiness, we continue to live as if it will. Not only that, that's also how we raise our
children. That's also what we teach our students. We tell them, you may not be happy now, you may
be miserable, you may be stressed, but when you get to your top school, when you get your desired job, when you make that amount of
money, then you'll be happy. Those successes will lead to that temporary high and nothing more.
AMT – Why wouldn't it make you happy to achieve something that you've worked really hard to get? Because our system is built for the pursuit, not for the outcome.
So once there is the outcome, there is sort of like, okay, check, been there, done that.
Now I need something else.
And that's part of our nature.
And, you know, you may say, you know, it's terrible.
It's awful.
Why is it that it just is? You know, why is
the law of gravity the law of gravity? The question is, how do we accept nature, just
like we accept the law of gravity? How do we accept our human nature and then build
our life based on that?
So if I'm hearing you correctly, what you're saying is that one of the biggest things that somebody could take away from this conversation with you is
That you are not hardwired to feel happy
Simply because you've achieved something that happiness is tied to pursuing it not the achieving of it
Yes, and if you do live by the belief that achievement will lead to happiness, that will cause you
a great deal of unhappiness.
Oh, that's a big one.
In fact, that is one of the main causes for the levels of unhappiness that we see in our
world because people are focusing on the wrong thing.
They're climbing up the wrong mountain.
So can you break that down for us?
Because I want to just stay on this point and highlight it.
Because if thinking about happiness wrong
creates unhappiness, explain to us how you want
us to think about happiness.
So happiness is important.
It matters.
Just like we are hardwired not to celebrate successes forever,
we're also hardwired to pursue happiness.
It's not that I'm saying, OK, forget about happiness.
Happiness matters.
OK.
However, there's also research, and this is research done quite
recently by a Professor Moss, M-A Moss M A U S showing that if I wake up in the morning and say to myself,
I want to be happy or happiness is important for me or it's a value for me.
I will actually become less happy.
What? Wait a minute. Really?
That was exactly my reaction. That's a problem. You know, and, and, you know, I read. And I read about this five years ago and I said, but that's what I'm dedicating my life
to.
Of course, happiness is important for me.
And yet what the research clearly shows is that this will make you less happy.
So does this mean we should say to ourselves, I don't want to be happy, wink, wink, I actually
do.
You know, self-deception is certainly not the path to happiness.
So what do we do about it?
Let me use an analogy that was very helpful for me in thinking about happiness.
Imagine you go outside, it's a beautiful sunny day and you want to enjoy the sun.
So you look up at the sun directly.
What happens?
You hurt yourself, it burns, it hurts, you look up at the sun directly. What happens? You hurt yourself.
It burns.
It hurts.
You tear up.
So looking at the sun directly hurts.
However, what if you take a prism and you break the sunlight and then you look at what
has just been broken?
In other words, the colors of the rainbow.
Then you can look at the sunlight and enjoy it,
but you're looking at it indirectly.
It's the same with happiness.
Pursuing it directly and saying,
I want to be happy, happiness is important for me.
That will make us unhappy.
But if I break down happiness into its metaphorical colors of the rainbow,
and then pursue it indirectly,
that is when I can actually become happier.
Okay, so I'm gonna see if I can understand this
because you're saying, I totally get the part
that if you focus at something maniacally, right,
you're gonna get the sunspots,
you cannot hold that intent gaze at something,
even if you want to.
But when the sunlight hits a prism and it casts a rainbow,
you're saying that the rainbow is the way that you indirectly enjoy the sun.
Yeah.
I have so many questions. What is the definition of happiness?
Yes, so there are many definitions to happiness.
In fact, as many definitions as there are people around the world.
The one that I work with that I find most helpful
actually draws on the work of Helen Keller,
who says that for her happiness is wholeness, wholeness.
So I define happiness as whole person well-being.
There are five elements to happiness.
There may be more, but five main elements to happiness,
which we call the SPIRE elements.
The SPIRE.
S-P-I-R-E.
S stands for spiritual well-being.
Spiritual well-being is about,
of course we can attain it through religion,
but we can also find it through doing something
that is meaningful to us, purposeful.
By being mindful, by being present,
we experience the spiritual.
That's one of the colors of the rainbow.
So if I wake up in the morning and say, I want to be happy,
I'll be less happy.
But if I wake up in the morning and say,
I want to find something which is more meaningful to do,
or I'm going to meditate for 10 minutes now,
that is an indirect way of pursuing happiness.
That's one of the colors.
So, that's the S of Spire.
The P of Spire.
That's physical well-being.
Physical well-being is about nutrition.
It's about rest and recovery, sleep.
It's about touch.
It's about what we eat that of course matters. So if I
start to exercise regularly that's an indirect way of pursuing happiness. If I
eat more healthfully, the same. Then we have the I of SPIRE. I stands for
intellectual well-being. That's about curiosity, about asking questions, about constantly learning, about deep diving,
whether it's into a text or a work of art or nature.
And these are, again, all indirect ways of pursuing happiness.
The fourth color of the rainbow, the R of spire, relational well-being.
Number one, predictor of happiness, quality time we spend with people we care about
and who care about us.
So if I spend more time with my loved ones
in directly pursuing happiness.
And finally, the E of Spire, emotional well-being.
Emotional well-being is first of all
about giving ourselves the permission to be human.
In other words, allowing the embracing
painful emotions that are natural parts of any life,
even a happy life, sadness, anger, frustration,
allowing these emotions to freely flow through us, paradoxically,
actually leads to more happiness.
So these five elements of happiness,
spiritual, physical, intellectual, relational,
and emotional well-being, are the metaphorical colors
of the rainbow.
And when we pursue them, we're actually
pursuing happiness indirectly and becoming happier.
As you were describing all five elements,
you did keep saying the word well-being.
And it makes a lot of sense, right, that all of these components go into a whole look at how to elevate or experience happiness in your life. What do I got to achieve next to feel that thing that I want to feel? How
would you begin to explain to somebody like that what this actually means and how you
pursue it if you don't even know what happiness kind of feels like? You got the wrong definition.
Right. You know, so the first thing that I would do is I would take a step back and explore models of happiness
because if you think about it, in our culture today, we have two major models of happiness.
The one model of happiness which is mostly associated with the West is you become happier
by achieving your goals.
That's the most important thing.
You get to the peak of the mountain, then you'll be happy.
That's a model that I tried and that many people tried. It doesn't really
work. The other model that people veer towards is, okay, so the future doesn't get us happiness.
Let's focus on the now. Let's just be in the present moment. That's an alternative model
which is mostly associated with the East.
You know, meditation, mindfulness, being the here and now. There are problems with both models.
We know what the problem is with the future oriented model, but there's also a problem with
the present oriented model. And that is human nature again, because we do want goals. We are
ambitious. We do want to achieve things.
And the question is, can these two models be reconciled?
In other words, can you draw the best of both worlds?
And the answer is yes.
Goals matter, they're important.
Whether it is to win a championship in sports or whether it is to get into a college or
whether it is to make X amount of money. Goals matter, we care about them.
Why do they matter in the context of happiness?
Well, they matter because again, it's part of our nature.
We want to improve, we wanna get better,
and that's a beautiful and wonderful part of our nature,
which we are to celebrate, not attack.
So that's a good thing.
However, what we also know is that the achievement of these goals
will not make us happy. What will make us happy? Not the achievement of these goals, but the
existence of these goals. Whether or not I achieve them is actually less important. To have them
matters. Think about it. You go on a road trip and you've no idea where you're going.
So you know, you turn left or right, you look over, am I falling over a cliff? What should
I do today? Is this the right thing? You know, it's, it's, you're meandering, you're not
certain, you're not happy then. But if you know, I'm going to the top of that mountain
over there, then you can go there with full energy, with motivation,
especially if that mountain top is meaningful to you,
which is an important component of a goal, of course.
So you have a meaningful goal, you're going towards it,
and what does having that goal do?
What it does for you is it liberates you
to enjoy the here and now.
That makes a lot of sense.
The two of them are reconciled.
Because it gives your day-to-day life a sense of purpose and direction.
And I can see how if you wake up in the morning and you're either just going through the motions
or you wake up in the morning and you're not quite sure what to do with your time,
because you're not quite sure what you want,
how that lack of purpose
then starts to probably make you think too much
and probably make you start to dwell on questions like,
am I happy, am I not happy?
What should I be doing?
I don't know, am I lost, am I stuck? I What should I be doing? I don't know, am I lost?
Am I stuck?
I mean, I've certainly been in those areas of my life
and so you're absolutely right about that.
I see what you're saying.
Yeah, and then what that means is that that future goal
is not an end, but rather a means.
It's a means towards liberating you
to enjoy the here and now. Tal, thank you for explaining that.
And this is a great moment to remind you as you're listening that the episode that we
did on the science of setting deeply personal goals, we're going to link to that in the
resources.
It also is the episode that features some of Tal's research on goal setting that's
there for you.
I want to hear a quick word from our sponsors
who are bringing us this amazing, amazing information
about happiness at zero cost.
Do not go anywhere.
You're gonna be happy you stuck around
because when we come back,
I'm going to ask Tal to walk you and I step by step
through all five elements of happiness
and give us a specific
example of a simple action you can take in each area that will make you feel
happier today. Stay with me.
Welcome back. It's your friend Mel and boy are you in for a treat today. I'm so excited.
We are here with Dr. Tal Ben-Shahar. He is the most popular professor in history at Harvard,
teaches positive psychology, the psychology of leadership, and we're going through 30
years of his work on happiness, and more importantly, how you
can be a happier you.
Now we've already covered two important things.
Let me just recap to make sure that you got this.
That happiness is about wholeness, and there are five elements to you being happier, spiritual,
physical, your intellectual wellness, relationships, and emotional.
And one of the things that I wanted to ask you, Tal,
is you're talking a lot about the things we can do
to improve those areas of our life,
which impacts our happiness.
For somebody listening that maybe
has not grown up around happy people,
doesn't really know if happiness is possible or even kind of what it feels like.
Where do you even begin if you don't know what happiness looks like or feels like or
how to achieve it?
Yeah.
I always tell my students that the best self-help books are biographies.
Why? Because biographies give us, you know, the deep understanding of what a happy life,
miserable or a successful life looks like. And one of my favorite biographies is Mahatma Gandhi's.
The subtitle of his autobiography is, My Experiments with Truth.
It's not my finding truth.
It's not the ultimate truth.
It's my experiments with truth.
And that for me is a guiding mantra.
And I think it ought to be for many of us, because it is very much about experimentation.
It's about trying things out.
It's about trying different ways of being, living, and doing.
Through experimentation, if we're not afraid of experimenting, if we're not afraid of falling
down, then we'll get better.
Then we'll grow.
Then we will actually become happier with an emphasis on happier.
What do I mean by that?
Many people ask me,
okay, Tal, you've been in this business for 30 years.
30 years ago, you embarked on this journey.
Are you finally happy today?
Are you?
Good question.
My answer is, I don't know.
What?
That is not acceptable, Tal.
I'm sorry.
You're supposed to be here and tell us to be happy.
How to be happy?
You don't know if you're happy?
I'm here to tell you how to be happier.
Okay.
Because I don't know what being happy is or means
in the sense that I don't think there is a binary zero one.
Okay, so yesterday I was unhappy, today I'm happy.
Rather than a binary zero one, it is a a continuum so I can certainly tell you
that I'm a lot happier today than I was 30 years ago but I hope that five years
from now I'll be happier than I am today how do you know how do I know that I
will be happier or how do I know how to measure that I of both. I know this is kind of a basic question,
but happiness eludes so many people.
There are so many people that write in about feeling stuck
or a lack of purpose or devastated with grief
that I know when you look in the rear view mirror,
you can say, oh, I'm happier than I was 10
years ago.
I feel in your definition that you've presented to us that you really like a sense of wholeness,
right?
An access to it.
But for somebody that really feels like whether it's because of depression or they've just
been miserable their whole life or their life has been really hard.
Yeah. So I would go for small changes, the Kaizen change that the Japanese talk about,
which is how can I become 1% happier? Not how can I become happy? Not how can I find the answer.
Just how can I become 1% happier?
And then if you look at ask this question and look at the five spiral elements, and
you can look at all five and you can look at one of them, how can I introduce a small
change?
Experiment with a small truth and then see how that works.
And then if it does, great, do more of it.
If it doesn't try something
else. But the key is to continue moving because as we know, one of the major characteristics
of depression is helplessness, which means doing nothing. So, counter that with doing
something. And again, that something doesn't have to be major. You know, one of the things that I'm working on a lot now is how small changes can make
a big difference when consistently applied. And I know that you are, you know, you know,
doing work in that area as well when you talk about, you know, take that one minute to breathe.
And those small changes make a big difference. And you you know, I've coined a term. I don't know if you're familiar with the term MVP, not from sports, from business.
MVP, minimum viable product. This is something a company brings out as sort of a beta version,
a test case. And, you know, it's not perfect. It's not ready.
It's not ideal, but it's good enough.
So based on this MVP, minimum viable product idea, I coined the term MVI, minimum viable
intervention.
Minimum viable intervention, these are the small changes that you can introduce that
actually make a difference over time.
And this is what I would urge.
The MVIs is what I would urge that someone who's feeling stuck or down or someone who
just lacks motivation introduces in their lives.
OK. What are these MVIs?
For example, you know what?
Actually, let me go over the spire elements and provide an MVI for each one.
I love you. Yes.
All right.
So spiritual well-being.
Spiritual well-being is about purpose and presence.
Okay.
Let's say we, for one minute, breathe deeply, focusing on the air going in and out.
That's meditation.
You know, it's not 30 minutes, but it's one minute.
And we know, and there's a lot of research showing that, that one minute can make a huge
difference or, you know, one minute of the four, seven, eight breath that Andrew Weil
talks about.
You know, there are so many things we can do in one minute while being present.
And that will enhance, and we know that, and there's a lot of data on this, will enhance
your spiritual well-being as well as your physical well-being.
But let's move to the P of Spire for a second.
So going to the gym, working out for an hour, great.
Doing high intensity interval training for 15 minutes, amazing.
Sounds horrible, honestly.
But you will become happier as a result subsequently.
But what about taking 30 seconds or 45 seconds
for a burst of energy, running on the spot,
or doing your push-ups or sit-ups?
45 seconds, that's all.
Now we know, again, there is research on it,
showing that if you do it three times during the day, you will actually have the equivalent of a workout.
So, it doesn't have to be all at once, meaning you can do it now for 45 seconds and then
in two hours, another 45 seconds climbing up and down the stairs, which you can do in
the office.
You don't sweat, you don't need to shower after, and then five hours later, you do it again when you get home.
45 seconds, minimum viable intervention.
It's cumulative.
And it actually has the effect of psychological well-being impact, and it also impacts your,
of course, physical well-being.
Now, as you're talking, I just want to remind the person listening that you're considering
this inside the context of happiness being wholeness and well-being, meaning you are
intentional about caring for your well-being.
That these are all components of wholeness and these five
categories are the ones that matter the most.
So what's another MVI for I?
Intellectual well-being.
So intellectual well-being, which is after spiritual and physical, it's the third element.
This is about, for example, learning something new, you know, and going online and looking
at these, you know, short excerpts.
Okay, I'm going to learn a new technique or I'm going to learn a new idea or I'm going
to come up with a new question to ask my partner or my friend.
So this is intellectual wellbeing and it's incredible how these small changes, just asking
a question or just learning something new, then trigger your curiosity muscles.
You know, by the way, Mel, I forgot to say this, but curiosity, you know, the saying
curiosity kills the cat?
Yeah.
It turns out that it's the opposite for human beings,
meaning people who are curious,
who ask many questions, who are lifelong learners,
actually live longer.
Wow.
So look at all the benefits of being curious.
So that's intellectual wellbeing.
Then we have relational wellbeing, the R of spire.
You know, a hug, you know, and a nice text you
send your partner.
Relational well-being, you know, really listen, really listen to someone, be present for them,
even if it's for two minutes, the impact of it on the relationship, on them, on you is
remarkable.
And yes, of course, if you have two, three hours
to spend together, even better, ideal.
Good enough to use those MVIs.
I'm hearing from so many people that listen to this podcast
that are really struggling with loneliness.
And if one aspect of the Spire model,
one of the five elements of happiness,
is your relationships and well-being
in that area.
For somebody that's just feeling isolated and lonely or that sense like, where are all
my friends and feels disconnection?
What does the research say in terms of happiness?
Number one predictor of happiness is quality time we spend with people we care about and
who care about us.
Now, we also know that the number one predictor of unhappiness in our world today is loneliness.
And this was exacerbated as a result of COVID, of course.
Because what loneliness does is it very often gets us into this downward spiral,
where I feel lonely and I feel incompetent in the social realm and what we need to do in order
to get out of it is get out of it.
There has to be focused action and intention.
In other words, single tasking rather than multitasking.
Because one of the main causes of loneliness is not the fact that we're not around people.
It's the fact that when we're around people, we're also doing 20 other things. You know, Daniel Goleman
calls our age the age of distraction. Yes. So, you know, if I'm with friends, but at
the same time, I'm texting and doing something else and they're doing, we're not really together.
Right. You know, it's the example that I like. So imagine you're listening to your favorite piece of music.
And can I share with you what mine is?
Absolutely. All right.
Don't tell anyone. Drake. No.
Whitney Houston and I will always love you.
My favorite song of all time.
So imagine you're listening to that or whatever your favorite. OK.
And then you listen to your second most favorite. And you know, my second most favorite is Beethoven's
Fifth Symphony. And then for the perfect experience, you take these two pieces of music and you
play them together.
At the same time?
At the same time. It's cacophony, It's noise. And that's modern life for you.
Because what we're doing is we're trying to pack, because of FOMO, because we're eager
to experience things, we pack in many things.
So while we're with friends, we're also doing some work perhaps, and while we're with kids,
we're also watching a movie.
And you can't do it all.
Well, you can do a lot, but you certainly can't enjoy it all.
And much of our sense of loneliness comes because when we're with other people,
we're not really with other people.
And what we need to do is put time aside.
And it doesn't have to be seven hours.
Even if it's an hour, twice a week, or that text that you commit yourself to mindfully.
These small committed focused activities can get us out of the sense of loneliness or unhappiness.
Beautiful, beautiful.
What a beautiful metaphor.
It makes so much sense.
And finally, emotional well-being.
That's about, you know, the gratitude journal.
Take a minute to write three things that you're grateful for.
You know, close your eyes and savor, savor what what you have right now.
Or write a journal about what's hurting you for two minutes.
There's research showing that even two minute journaling,
whether it's about difficult experiences
or about ecstatic experiences,
two minutes actually make us happier and healthier.
Better to write it in a journal
or to talk about it than to just ruminate over it.
Why?
Why is it better to write in a journal and talk about it?
So here I'm drawing on research by Sonia Lubemirski, who's a professor at UC Riverside. And what
she shows is that when we are dealing with painful emotions or difficult experiences,
we can either talk about it, write about it, or think about it.
People who think about it, it actually gets worse.
We ruminate.
We go down the rabbit hole, downward spiral, and we can stay there for hours or sometimes
weeks.
Or decades in some people, right?
Exactly.
Whereas if we write about it or talk about it, there's a much higher likelihood that it will emerge
stronger. Why? Because what we're doing when we're writing and talking about it, we're
actually making sense of it. You know, so often, and this is work on journaling, Jamie
Pennebaker and others, showing that when we write about something, very often we reach
an aha moment or, oh, now I see what's happening or now I see what I need to do.
And then it becomes more manageable. It becomes more coherent, more clear.
And then we're ready to move on and we know what we ought to do. So writing and talking about it
rather than ruminating about it is very important. And then after we have written about talked about
it just do it. What is it? It could be an MVI, a minimum viable intervention. It
could be you know go to the gym. Doing it could be you know go out with
friends even if you don't really feel like it but keep on experimenting with
truths rather than sitting down and trying to figure out the meaning of life friends, even if you don't really feel like it, but keep on experimenting with truths,
rather than sitting down and trying to figure out the meaning of life or the ultimate answer
to the universe.
You know, I have something to share that happened with my sister-in-law, business partner and
friend Christine.
She had been somebody that really loved going to church.
And then, like many of us, life gets busy with your kids, especially if they're in these
sports teams and everything else and something happened at the church.
And so they kind of stopped going.
And for a number of years, she thought about it and thought about it and thought about
it.
And recently, let's talk MVI,
a minimum viable intervention,
she just got up off her rear end,
she didn't wait for her husband and sons to go with her,
and she just one Sunday went back to one service.
And I will tell you that there is something,
if we go back to the rainbow analogy, and you think about happiness being
an indirect thing in your life that you feel in multiple ways,
that one small action of no longer thinking about it but going back,
it's almost like if you think about a rainbow, there is a hue there,
there's a vibrancy there.
And I love this word wholeness, because it is part of her well-being to have a spiritual
practice.
And it does create a vibrancy and a wholeness in that area of her life.
It is one simple change.
It is an hour every week.
She is not dependent on anybody else in her family doing it.
To me, that is a very clear example of what you're talking about in terms of
how it relates to these five elements of happiness and how you can
just in very small ways experience what you're talking about.
Yeah, so I love that story and I love it because of what you brought up saying that it's one small
action. It's not all or nothing. Experiment with these small truths.
You know, I'm wondering as one of the world's most respected and leading experts on happiness. What do you do every day to be happier?
You know, I do the basics I wake up in the morning and I do my meditation now
Do you lay in bed you get up do you like do you what? How do you?
Yeah, I lay in bed and again, I'm a technically like just sort of snoozing
Like what are you doing? Like you literally are like you wake up and then you meditate while you're lying there?
And then I meditate and again this is good for a morning, I'm a morning person.
So when I wake up, I wake up.
It's not like I won't fall asleep again.
But for people for whom it's difficult to wake up in the morning, get out of bed, you
know, wash your face, do whatever you need to energize and then sit down if you need
or do walking meditation.
But meditation is where I start. to energize it and then sit down if you need or do walking meditation. Right.
But meditation is where I start.
And then I read and I love reading in bed and I read quality stuff.
I don't look at the news.
You're not looking at TMZ on your phone?
No.
Just kidding.
That yes, but not the other news.
So I do quality stuff.
In the morning, then I'm responsible for taking the kids to school.
I love that.
Yeah.
They might.
I bet they love that too.
They do, and I do.
And we have sort of a ritual around that, where we talk, and then they ask me, okay, dad, one message for the day.
And it could be something like, be generous, be kind, or appreciate, or whatever it is.
And they go with it and they also share it with their friends.
That's pretty cool.
Yeah.
So we have that.
And then I go home and I work. Mornings are my productive hours.
And then I do yoga in the afternoon.
Almost every day, you know, have lunch with my wife.
And then sometimes work in the afternoon, you know,
do sports, I do a lot of sports.
You still play squash?
I play squash. I didn't play squash for 25 years and I always said if one of my kids
plays then I'll take it up again and our little one, our 14-year-old, plays squash. So I play
with him.
I bet you're a monster on the pickleball court.
I've never played pickleball but I want to.
I bet you would destroy it.
I want to. Yeah. Yeah. And so, yeah, and then, you know, I love movies.
I love, you know, reading, hanging out with friends, family.
I want to reflect on something because what you're describing sounds like a happy life.
And if you're not watching this on YouTube,
you can probably hear in Tal's voice that he's smiling as he's reflecting on this.
And it is true that so many of us make ourselves unhappy
because we think that the answer to it
is something out there, that national championship,
the getting into the right school, the right grades, that national championship, the getting into the
right school, the right grades, the right this, the right that.
And what you just described is the little things you do every day that make you feel
whole.
There's something very important, Mel, that I want to add.
You know, it may sound, you know, fairy tale.
Oh, he's always happy and always smiling.
Far from it.
I have my bad day.
Why ask your kids?
They said some days you're a real jerk.
They don't say, they don't say jerk, but they say daddy chill.
Yeah, chill.
Chill.
Yeah.
And, and, and it's, it's important to, to understand, you know, not every morning when
I get up, I want to write.
Now some mornings I get up and I want to stay in bed and do nothing.
What is most important is what we do rather than what we feel.
You know, I do what I do, whether it's the yoga, whether it's the writing, whether it's
spending time with family and friends.
I do it even if I don't feel like it. And over time, what we do affects us.
It also affects our feelings.
You know, Tal, when I was researching your work to get ready for this conversation today, I came across a video that you did that has seven million views where you say stop chasing happiness and you want us to focus on something else instead.
I'm gonna ask you to tell us
what we're supposed to be focused on
after a short word from our sponsors.
So stay with us, you'll be happy you did.
["The Daily Show"]
Welcome back, it's your friend Mel Robbins.
I'm so happy you're here with me today
because we are getting to spend time with Tal Ben-Shahari. He's one of the most respected and prolific
experts on happiness in the world, and he is the most popular professor to ever teach
at Harvard. He taught positive psychology. And we're digging into 30 years of research
and what research says about how you can be happier. We've already
covered the definition of happiness as the sense of wholeness. We've talked about the
five elements of happiness. He's made it very clear that this is not about checking boxes.
It's not about achieving goals. It's about pursuing small 1% changes in these five areas of your life.
And one of the most popular things you've ever put out
online has seven million views in less than a year.
Don't chase happiness, become anti-fragile.
What does anti-fragile mean?
Yeah, you know, that's one of those concepts
that really made a difference in my life.
It's an idea that I read about
through the work of Nassim Taleb, who is a
professor at New York University. And what is anti-fragility? The opposite of fragility
or I've come to look at it as resilience 2.0.
Okay.
So, let's begin with 1.0.
Please.
Resilience 1.0 is actually a term that comes from engineering. It simply means that...
Resilience 1.0 comes from engineering?
Resilience is a term that comes from engineering.
See that computer science, the classes you took, they helped.
There you go.
Absolutely.
So, what it means is that if you have certain material and you put pressure on it, if it's
resilient, it goes back to its original form.
You squish a piece of rubber, resilient, it goes back to its original form. You squish a piece of rubber,
resilient, it returns to where it was before. A ball, you drop it, if it's resilient, it
bounces back up to where it was before. So that's 1.0. What's resilience 2.0 or anti-fragility?
You take material, you put pressure and stress on it. As a result of the pressure and stress, it actually grows stronger, bigger, healthier.
Or you drop a ball.
Resilience 1.0, it simply bounces back.
2.0, anti-fragility, it bounces back higher as a result.
So that's anti-fragility.
And it turns out that there are anti-fragile systems all around us and within us.
Think about it, for example, our muscular system.
You go to the gym, you're putting stress on your muscles.
What happens as a result of it?
If you persist, you actually grow stronger, bigger, healthier as a result of that stress,
we're antifragile systems, not just physiologically, also psychologically.
And that's important.
You know, most of the students in my class, not all, but most of them were psychology
majors.
And I would always ask them two questions.
The first question was, put your hand up if you know what PTSD is.
Just about everyone in the class put their hand up.
They've heard of post-traumatic stress disorder.
They've read about it,ied it in Psych 1 newspaper.
People know what it is.
And I said, okay, put your hands down and now put your hands up.
If you've heard of the term PTG, hardly anyone put their hand up.
And again, these are psychology majors.
PTG stands for post traumatic growth.
So whereas PTSD is breaking down being fragile,
PTG, post-traumatic growth, is being anti-fragile,
growing as a result of trauma or hardship or difficulty.
How do you do that?
So here is the thing.
This amazed me about the research,
and there's a lot of research by Tadeshi, Calhoun, and others.
Merely knowing about the existence of PTG, of post-traumatic growth, of anti-fragility
actually makes it more likely to happen.
Wow.
Why?
Because what does knowing about PTG do for us?
What it does for us is it actually gives us hope.
Because okay, so I'm going through hardship difficulties
I'm really struggling, but I can actually grow from this so I become hopeful
If you think about it, what is the main difference between?
Sadness and depression the main difference between sadness and depression is that depression is
sadness without hope
is that depression is sadness without hope.
Depression is sadness without hope. Because sadness, I mean-
You feel it every day.
Yeah, 10 times a day sometimes.
Big deal, that too shall pass.
But if that sadness is devoid of hope,
that too shall pass, then that's problematic.
That's when we become hopeless.
Yes.
And that's when we experience being helpless.
And that's depression.
So knowing about PTG gives us hope,
makes it more likely to happen.
It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
And remember, most people have never heard of these terms,
don't know that it's even in the realm of the possible.
So that's the first thing. I love that because the other know that's even in the realm of the possible. So that's the first thing.
I love that because the other thing that's happened, and I know that you see this too,
is just the proliferation of short form content on social media has so much about identifying
trauma. And it would be wonderful, especially based on this research, if there were just as many
reels and social media posts about post-traumatic growth, that knowing that you are struggling with
something is the first step to kind of knowing what you need to address, but being aware that you can grow through
this and be stronger.
And I think we all know this somewhere in the back of our mind.
And even if I look back on my own life, Tal, and I think about like even a period of my
marriage where my husband and I like wanted to kill each other.
And we went to therapy, our marriage was in the pits, we were, we'd been together
for over 20 years and we were just having a lot of problems and we were not feeling
connected with one another. And I can see that if you're in a situation that's very
difficult, whether you're grieving or you're having a relationship problem or you've now just lost your third job
or whatever it may be and you add a sense
of hopelessness to it, you've just driven a nail
into the coffin and sealed it shut.
It's the hope that it can get better
that is what allows you to grow through it.
And you're here to say that no matter what
the traumatic experience or the heaviness
of the emotion or the very real life experience
that you may be living through right now,
that just like a sun can shine through a prism
and cast a rainbow, so too hope can shine
through this experience and you can grow stronger.
And even just knowing that in your definition of being a whole human being
who takes care of self, that hope is a critical ingredient to you getting better.
That's is that what you're saying?
Absolutely. And it's a critical period for you as an individual getting better.
It's a critical element of a relationship, as you
pointed out.
It's also a critical element of national growth.
Yes, that's exactly what happened.
I realized I didn't complete the whole thing, is that in working through it and having the
really hard conversations and really exploring ourselves and sticking through the very hard,
painful times, I have a profound sense of, in your definition that you are giving us, Tal,
a sense of wholeness in the relationship and also a sense of wholeness with self.
in the relationship and also a sense of wholeness with self. And it's true, if you really are listening to what Tal's saying
and you reflect on your own life and you think about any moment in your life
that was crazy painful, notice whether or not as you move through it
and you really are honest with yourself that there was that bounce up effect that happens
after it as you move through the grief or the disappointment or the heartbreak that
all of a sudden you wake up one day and you weren't staring at the sun directly going
I'm going to be happy now.
You are just slowly working on your well-being and you felt different. And as I really listen closely to what you're teaching us,
I think that's what I'm starting to take away.
And I will add to that and you mentioned earlier
about how knowing that you can grow from it
contributes to your well-being.
Just knowing that a gridlock or hardships,
these are all natural parts of our evolution of life.
You know, no, no one is exempt from these. No relationship.
It could be the best, you know, fairy tale relationship.
They'll have their gridlocks.
Just know that it's a natural part of a relationship that is,
you know, uplifting because it's liberating because of a relationship, that is, you know, uplifting
because it's liberating, because you're saying, oh, okay, it's normal.
And that's exactly what I felt after reading Schnarch and going through a gridlock with
my amazing wife, saying, okay, so it's fine, that too shall pass.
And that's what gives hope.
And that is what becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy,
because through that hope, you actually grow
within the relationship or in another context.
It's so true.
You know, with the 30 years that you have spent researching this topic,
is there anything that bubbles up from the research
that is top predictors of whether or not
you're going to have that sense of wholeness and
happiness in your life?
The number one would be the belief that you can make a difference.
With your happiness.
With your happiness.
You know, many people ask me, so what is the content of the course, whether it's the MA or the certificate program?
And they're always surprised that I say that at the beginning, we start learning about
systems thinking.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
And systems thinking, you know, you know-
For somebody who has no idea what that is, what the hell is systems thinking?
No, seriously, like for somebody who's like, what's systems thinking? Yeah, so systems thinking is about looking
at things as holes.
So looking at the system rather than the symptom.
So looking at the system,
whether it's an organization is a system.
The human body is a system.
It's a system of cells and organs.
A system is all about interconnectedness.
And the key in a system is to find leverage points.
Where do I press?
Where do I touch to affect the entire system?
It's what Charles Duhigg talks about, keystone habits.
What is that place, one thing that if you do will impact another part of the system and another part.
Is it exercising daily?
Is it, you know, starting your day, you know, zone one of the day with deep breaths?
Right.
And meditation?
Is it, you know, leaving home and, you know, hugging your your your loved one?
What is that one thing?
And when everything is interconnected,
it actually doesn't matter that much where you
enter the system because it will affect everyone else.
This is why the emphasis on that one small action is so critical,
because you can literally sit down and think for
years about how I'm going to change my life,
or you can just do it. You know what is so cool about this is that,
visually speaking, between the rainbow example
and this idea of systems and wholeness
and everything being interconnected,
in this model, traumatic experiences
are connected to happiness.
Sadness and grief are connected to happiness. Sadness and grief are connected to happiness.
Struggles and periods of feeling lost
are profoundly connected to happiness.
Why?
Painful experiences, difficult experiences are inevitable.
Again, there is no life example, but let's play a game.
Let's imagine that sometime in the future, and by the way, this right now, it's
a theory, but it could become a reality.
Sometime in the future, we'll have the ability to drive away all pain because we'll have
such great control over our neurons that we'll be able to control what we feel all the time.
So, you know, in-
Why would you wanna do that?
Well, why would you wanna do it?
Many people would, especially when they're in the midst
of hardship and difficulty.
You know, all you want is for it to go away.
Or what if you see your loved one, your child in pain?
Maybe you can make it go away.
I just got something from you.
Do tell.
The reason why I had that reaction, I realized,
is because I have the belief that pain disappears with time.
The hope.
Yes.
Whoa.
And what if someone doesn't have that?
Yes.
Again, many people will make it go away.
If you think about it, why are we so, as a culture, so obsessed with those pills?
Again, I'm not against psychiatric medication and sometimes it has saved lives.
I know some cases intimately where it has.
However, we're too trigger happy when it comes to dispensing pills.
Why? Because we want to make it go away.
So if we play this theoretical game that we do get to a world where no side effects,
because we know exactly how to make these painful experiences disappear,
would we do it? But then what would happen?
I've often asked my students this.
Think about the experiences that you are most grateful for
in terms of where you are today.
Things where you have learned the most,
that have helped you grow the most.
Think about them.
Now, put your hand up if they were fun experiences,
enjoyable ones.
Very few people put their hands up.
It's almost always difficult experiences.
Now do you want to do away with that?
Do you want to get rid of growth and learning?
And this is exactly what will happen if we don't have any of these painful experiences.
So when you say there are part and parcel of a happy life, they're essential to a full
and fulfilling life and when we begin to look at these experiences as such
Then our reaction can be similar to what you said and I don't want to get rid of them
In fact, I embrace I don't enjoy them, but I embrace them
well and what you're also offering is a
Roadmap of hope and action for anybody who's in the thick of that, who's like, give me the pill
because I just lost my child.
And there is, I don't wanna feel what I'm feeling.
And what you're saying is that based on the human experience
from the beginning of time,
we are designed to move through these things.
These emotional, painful,
traumatic experiences are a moment in your life. And that if you look at that
rainbow and you look at spiritual, physical, intellectual, relational, or
emotional wellness for yourself, and you take this MVI model of minimum viable intervention and you say to
yourself, two things can be true.
This can be the worst thing that's ever happened to me and the deepest pain I've ever felt.
And I can wake up in the morning and I can pick one of those categories and I can take
one action in the Spire model forward and that is a way to start
to move through this and experience that wholeness that you're talking about even though it's
so difficult.
Yes.
And you know, Mel, I want to share a story. Please.
When I was 27, I lost the most important person in my life to me at the time. It was a dear, dear friend who died in a plane crash.
This was when I was living in Asia.
It was a plane from Indonesia to Singapore.
And it crashed. It was the 19th
of December 1997. I thought my life had ended at that moment. We were supposed to meet in
Singapore and it didn't happen. I called up a mentor of mine.
His name is Nathaniel Brandon.
Nathaniel Brandon has written many books on self-esteem.
I'd learned with him.
And I called him up for two reasons.
A, because he was my teacher and mentor.
And B, because he lost his wife in a freak drowning accident when he was around a bit older than
I was at the time.
I called him up crying and he knew my friend.
So, he was very much distressed as well.
He said, Tal, I'm going to tell you something now that you're not going to understand.
But keep it in mind
anyway.
He said, you're going to get over this.
It's going to be painful.
It's going to hurt like hell, but you're going to get over it.
We all do.
Because if we hadn't, then God help us all. And again, this was many, many years ago, I still remember
it and I remember it each time even when I go through minor crises, because we do get
over it because we're built to overcome hardship and difficulties. And sometimes it takes longer,
sometimes, you know, it's a day. But we do go over it and having that hope and doing something with it.
Again, not staying and moping and ruminating, writing about it, talking about it, doing
small things.
That is the way out of it.
Thank you for sharing that.
I was trying to put myself in your shoes because I think in the depths of that moment I'd
probably be like, fuck you, you know, I don't want to hear that.
I'm not getting over that, you know what I'm saying?
But it is true that we do get through the things that we never think that it's possible
to get through.
And I'm also really curious since you're constantly
researching something and clearly writing a book
and you've got an academy and you're teaching people
around the world, is there a particular piece of research
or new kind of finding around happiness
that really excites you?
So what I think about a lot
is how do you bring about lasting
change? Because, you know, people are
listening to us now and they're
thinking, oh, yeah, you know, I want to do it. Or, you know, I would give a
lecture and, you know, the audience
would think, yeah, you know, I'm
going to implement it.
But most times nothing
happens.
Right.
Most change efforts, you know,
you talk about it, you know, coming
into 2024. So you have a goal and, you know, you talk about it, you know, coming into 2024.
So you have a goal and you know, a 30 day challenge, you know, in January, February.
What happens with that?
Usually not much.
Yeah.
So what I think about constantly and what I'm researching is how can you increase the
likelihood, not guarantee, but increase the likelihood that you will enjoy lasting change.
And I love acronyms as you figured out, the SPIRE, MVI.
So here is the third acronym.
Give it to us.
The three Rs of change.
The three Rs, okay.
Okay.
And we can use this with everything that you've taught us today in terms of making being happier
a lasting change in your life.
Exactly.
Okay.
So that's why the three R's, that's why it's so important for me to think about it, write
about it, talk about it.
The three R's of change are essentially the, you know, should be the intel inside, so to
speak, of every change effort.
Okay.
So what are they?
It's not reading, writing, and arithmetic.
There are three R's. The first R is reminder. change effort. So what are they? It's not reading, writing, and arithmetic. Other three
R's. The first R is reminder. I mean, think about it, Mel. So if I asked you this, tell
me, is it important for you to appreciate the good people in your life, to appreciate
whatever works in your life, or do you prefer to take it all for granted?
I appreciate it. Exactly, exactly.
So, you know, no one would say,
you know, I've had enough of appreciating my loved ones,
it's time to take them for granted for a while.
No one would say that.
Except for my husband in therapy.
No.
That too shall pass.
So, and yet, and yet,
even though everyone would say it's important for me to appreciate,
most people, this is an empirical fact, most people, most of the time, take the good things
in their lives for granted.
Do not appreciate their loved ones most of the time.
Most people most of the time.
Now, it's not because they're bad people.
It's not because they are not smart.
It's not because they don't have the desire to appreciate.
All these things are in place.
The problem is that we forget,
which is why the first antidote to forgetfulness
or the first antidote to the absence of change is reminders.
And Mel, you talk about it.
You talk about your post-its.
Yes.
I love that.
Create reminders around you, whether it's post-its,
whether it's walking around with a bracelet that reminds
me of something specific.
Or a rainbow.
I keep thinking about how much you've
poured into us and how actionable everything is
and understandable.
That even if you were to write on a post-it sp spire and it's a reminder of the five elements every morning and you pop it on
your mirror at your computer at work like now it's in your face and that's
more likely with the reminder to help you go to the next star which is what?
Which is repetition because one or two two reminders, one day, second day, not enough.
We need repetition.
We need to do it over and over and over again.
And for that, you need many reminders.
So for example, a recurring function on your calendar.
Every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, I'm in the gym.
And after you have repetition and you have enough of it,
that is when we get to the third R, which is rituals.
What are rituals?
Rituals are actually deeply embedded neural pathways
that when we repeat an action over and over again,
that action becomes automatic
because neural pathways have been formed.
Our brain has quite literally been transformed
through the repetitive action.
Simple example, mom reminded me to brush my teeth
over and over again, repetitively.
I don't need mom anymore to remind me
because it's a ritual.
It's the same with cultivating a tennis forehand.
Initially the coach reminds me, you get your hand up, meet the ball here, It's the same with cultivating a tennis forehand.
Initially the coach reminds me, you get your hand up, meet the ball here, and you do it
again and again.
And then you wake up Serena Williams in the middle of the night, she'll hit that forehand
perfectly, because it's a ritual, it's a habit, there are neural pathways associated with
that.
Whether it's for hugging your loved ones, whether it's for acts of kindness, we
can actually ritualize them. Now, to many people, this sounds like the absence of spontaneity
if you ritualize things. I'm not against spontaneity. It's great. But if you want to bring about
lasting change, the only reliable way that we know about is by cultivating rituals and you do that through reminders and repetition
Well, and there's a fourth are do which is the fact that it's not about the fact that you're removing spontaneity
You're removing something else your resistance
to doing something new and if I bring this full circle to
The topic of being a happier you and the fact that in
your definition of wholeness and the five elements of happiness, which all tie to well-being,
that you could apply the reminder, the repetition,
over and over and over in each of those five elements,
going to church or to temple or to mosque,
or if your church version is taking a walk in the woods,
making that something that you repeat
so that it becomes a ritual,
that these things, and I'm suspecting that this is why
you are an unwavering optimist in people's ability,
absolutely anyone's ability, to be happier.
You know, Helen Keller, who's one of my teachers, has an essay on optimism, which I highly recommend
that you read.
And in it she says, my religion is optimism.
And she says, I look around metaphorically, I look around the world and what I see is
a lot of hardship and difficulty.
What I also see is the overcoming of it.
And she was a consummate optimist.
How could she have not been given the hand that she was dealt?
And she still lived a happy life, a full and fulfilling life.
And I think there is a very important lesson that we can learn from her.
And if I may, I just want to recommend something else by Helen Keller.
So the essay on optimism, the second one is an essay that she wrote called Three Days
to See.
In it, she reflects on what she would do if, you know, having been blind and deaf for most
of her life, what would she do if she were to regain her hearing or vision?
What would she do for three days?
And she talks about it and she talks about how important it is to appreciate, not take
for granted, the things that we have. And I have Helen Keller's essay next to me as a reminder.
A reminder, A, to appreciate and as a reminder of the religion of optimism.
Wow.
Wow.
Dr. Tal Ben-Shahar, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You are really, really good at what you do.
I know you know, but I mean,
it's like so fun to spend time with somebody who is so smart,
and who has a beautiful way of explaining
topics that are kind of hard to wrap your brain around.
I just really appreciate the time
and I appreciate the way that you think about things
and explain things.
You made a huge difference in my life
and I know that you just made an enormous difference
in helping people around the world be happier.
Thank you, Mel.
And what I'm most grateful for in terms of your work
is that you create a bridge between evidence-based
academic ideas, and you make them accessible.
Oh, that's a massive compliment coming from you.
I accept that.
Thank you.
Thank you.
And for you listening, I just wanted
to be sure in case nobody else tells you that I tell you that I love you and I believe in you. And for you listening, I just wanted to be sure in case nobody else tells you that I
tell you that I love you and I believe in you.
And I know I speak for both of us when I say we believe in your ability to take action
and do the little things every single day that will bring more happiness into your life.
Now go do it.
I'll talk to you in a few days. I'll talk to you in a few days. Are you guys ready for us?
Yeah.
Sorry.
Just on.
Here we go.
Our camera's rolling.
I should probably wait in case I say something.
Okay.
Okay.
I'm on?
Yeah.
Great.
And as soon as the tele,
audio only.
You know what? Do you guys have a cloth for these things?
I don't know about your glasses always. It's like how the hell do they get so dirty?
Do you think we touch our glasses a lot? We don't realize it. We do
Around the world. Do you hear that again? I think it was just that one. I think
You know, yeah, I know you you know, you hear that
We're gonna keep going. The thing that I found... His did not turn off, that one did. That one did.
Oh lord, okay this is hilarious. I don't know if I should have stopped.
This is amazing.
stop. So that's good. Sorry. Did it just turn off? Also, high five. Oh, and one more thing. And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is not intended
as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other
qualified professional.
Got it?
Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.