The One You Feed - Dillan Digiovanni on Activism and Identity
Episode Date: January 17, 2018Please Support The Show with a DonationDillan Digiovanni used to be a really angry activist. He believed his anger was an important driver to fuel his work to inspire change in the world. Then he had ...a revelation: His anger wasn't working. It was driving other people away and it was toxic to himself. Where his path led him from there has turned out to be quite an adventure. He's now an activist without the energy of anger and he now identifies as a man. This interview will inspire you to live your truth. It will inspire you to examine your own life and be better because of it. This important conversation is not only relevant to the issues of today, but it proves to be perennially relevant to how we decide to live our lives in the skin we're in.This episode is sponsored by Health IQ. Get lower rates on life insurance if you are health conscious. Get free quote hereand by Casper In This Interview, Dillan DiGiovanni and I Discuss...The Wolf ParableHow, as an activist, his anger was driving people awayThat there's no right way to do anythingIf you're angry all of the time you're constantly looking for the threatHis gender identity transitionThat anger can be a healthy thingSearching for the feeling that's underneath the angerThe harm in being angry at people for being ignorant about an issueThe way anger impacts your perspective on life and other peopleThe harm in saying "they did this because..." when what you're working with is an assumptionHis relationship to anger now that he's awake to itThe power of "allowing" vs "resisting"His story of transitioning his gender identityResilienceHow to live in the world when no one person understands all of youThe anger that arises when your expectations about how other people should behave aren't metThe power of meeting people where they really areHow to work with your vision about how the world should beThe power of the serenity prayerWhat happened when he let go of his anger as an activistHis Buddhist traditionHaving a meditation practicePlease Support The Show with a DonationSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
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When you're angry all the time, all you're doing is constantly looking for the threat.
You're not looking for the opportunity.
Welcome to The One You Feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance
of the thoughts we have. Quotes like, garbage in, garbage out, or you are what you think,
ring true. And yet, for many of us, or you are what you think ring true.
And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don't strengthen or empower us.
We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear.
We see what we don't have instead of what we do.
We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit.
But it's not just about thinking.
Our actions matter.
It takes conscious, consistent,
and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep
themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf. Thanks for joining us.
Our guest on this episode is Dylan DiGiovanni, an interactive health coach.
Dylan has a Master of Education in Integrative Wellness, Leadership, and Change in Individuals and and cultures from Lesley University, Cambridge,
Mass., and a Bachelor of Science in Education, Secondary Major in Art at the College of New
Jersey, Ewing, New Jersey. He's a member of the Speaker Bureau of International Information
Programs and International Association for Health Coaches. Our sponsor on this episode is Health IQ.
To see if you qualify and get your free health quote, go to healthiq.com
slash wolf or mention the promo code wolf when you talk to a Health IQ agent. And here's the
interview with Dylan DiGiovanni. Hi, Dylan. Welcome to the show. Thanks very much for having me. I'm
excited to have you on. As I mentioned to you when we were talking before, I rarely accept unsolicited
guest requests for people that I don't really know. But there was something about the way you As I mentioned to you when we were talking before, I rarely accept unsolicited guest
requests for people that I don't really know.
But there was something about the way you wrote and the topics you brought up that I
thought, I want to talk to this guy.
So I'm excited to have this conversation.
But let's start like we always do with the parable.
There's a grandfather who's talking to his grandson.
He says, in life, there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle.
One is a good
wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love. And the other is a bad wolf,
which represents things like greed and hatred and fear. And the grandson stops and he thinks about
it for a second and he looks up at his grandfather and he says, well, grandfather, which one wins?
And the grandfather says, the one you feed. So I'd like to start off by asking you
what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do. Well, I first learned
about that parable, I would say back in 2005. And I remember someone shared it with me and I thought,
well, that's really interesting. And then over the years, I just always kept reminding myself of that.
And then over the years, I just always kept reminding myself of that.
And in fact, most recently, this past June, I got the tattoo of the two wolves, you know,
one on each arm.
But the way that I gradually began to apply it more and more was as my own wolves started to surface, I started to really actively choose more and more the good wolf as much as I could and really focused on that as a
choice that I could make in every interaction, every thought, whether it was an interaction
live with a person or just thinking, you know, even in my mindfulness.
Excellent. So your main idea when you emailed me was about activism and anger. You know, you described yourself as an
angry activist and talked about how that's changed for you a little bit. And I'm really
interested in that subject. What I'm interested in is that there's lots of things in the world that
it's easy to not like right now. And, you know, I'm sure for a lot
of my listeners, there are challenges, but I think at any point in time, right, you could look at the
world and find lots of awful things, people that seem awful, all that. And yet, the question I'm
interested in is how do we be effective in the world? How do we make a difference? How do we do
all that without either A, being miserable ourselves, or B,
making everybody around us miserable because we're so upset about it all the time? And so
that's kind of what I want to cover with you. So if you could maybe just give us a little background.
Sure. So I identified as an activist for a long time and definitely as an angry activist because
that was the ideology that I was taught.
I would say in my early 20s, I kind of started hanging out with this group of folks who were
very politically engaged, and their narrative was around anger being the way to be effective.
So I got absorbed into that, just kind of like a club, you know, and really believed
and really invested in that.
I didn't even see it as
an ideology. I just saw it as truth. And we were all about mostly, you know, we were focused on
social justice. So racial identity, politics, sexuality, identity, politics, you know, social
justice issues. And then when I became a health coach in 2009, that ideology started to crack
because I started to see that that anger was actually working
against me because it was driving people away. And that had already happened with my family
because I was being so militant in my opinions. There was no room for anyone who had a different
opinion. And I really alienated myself from my family or my family from me, right? And so the
health coaching, the whole foundation of my training
as an integrative health coach is there's no right way to do anything. There's no right way to eat.
There's no right way to exercise. There's no right way. And then, so then I naturally had
to incorporate that into this strong activist identity that I had. And it just started to
break apart little by little, where I really started to see that this way of being
angry in the world was actually doing more harm than good. And it wasn't actually achieving the
ends that I had been told would happen if we just kept being angry about what wasn't working. And
then the more I started practicing Buddhism, started to just see that as more truth. And
that's how it evolved over time. Yeah, it's interesting to hear different people talk about anger. It's certainly
addressed in different Buddhist texts in different ways. And there's a sense that
anger can be used as an energy, right? That the energy of anger can move us towards positive
things. But the emotional residue or the bitterness that it congeals into can be so problematic. And
that's one of the things that troubles me the most today when I look at like social justice issues,
which I care about deeply. But boy, it's like nobody is exempt from the outrage, right? Like
you can be on somebody's team 100%. But if you don't say it exactly right, or you don't understand exactly
where they come from, there just seems to be all this outrage. And I feel like it keeps a lot of
different communities of people not uniting as well as they could to move issues forward. Because
there is this sense like, this is the way it's got to be done. And I have a right to my experience,
and you don't. And, you know, anger. And again, I think anger is an important energy. But I agree with you, I can see it can be counterproductive.
So besides your family, and what other ways in your life was it counterproductive for you?
I mean, myself, first and foremost, because what I was doing was, you know, turning that anger,
what I what I can see now is that that all that anger inside was I was also turning it against myself.
I was turning it against myself first and then from there turning it against other people.
And more and more I just saw that that as a way of being and a way of thinking in being in the world was bringing about no happiness and no satisfaction.
Because when you're angry all the
time, all you're doing is constantly looking for the threat. You're not looking for the opportunity.
Right. What else was instrumental in transforming that identity or that alignment you had with that
ideology? So I became a coach in 2009 and there was still a conflict. There was still an internal
conflict because I had been in that community for so long. I was, do I want to use the word brainwashed?
Maybe, you know, but I, it was, I was, it was a real, you know, my brain was really wired that
way and, but it was starting, you know, starting to fray. And then in 2012, I began the process
of transitioning my gender identity in my mid-30s. And what happened is
that was actually the thing that kind of cracked the rest of the process because the response that
people had to my transition ranged. It was everywhere from people rejecting me outrightly,
like my family, the relationship I was in, similar kind of thing. But then there
were other people who were embracing me, but kind of treating me like an other, like this alien
species when people had never treated me like that for 34 years of my life. And that plunged me
into some real deep anger. Because for the first time, I could no longer intellectualize prejudice and
discrimination. I was experiencing it outright. So you got plunged into this deep anger during
that period. And I'm sure that there were a ton of things going on in that period. And I'd like
to explore that a little bit, because it's just not something we've talked about on the show at
all. But let's stay with the anger theme for right now. Sure. And I started to see that the anger, because I agree
with you, anger is, I think, a healthy thing to have. It tells us that something's wrong,
right? It's a symptom that says something's not right here. But what I learned from my therapist,
who was an amazing person and just recently passed in June was that it's telling
us that there's a feeling that we need to address or pay attention to. So with his help, I started
to get underneath, like, what is the feeling that's underneath the anger? And the feeling was
fear, fear of being abandoned more or, you know, stigmatized for the rest of my life,
fear of not being able to control
how people spoke to me or how they saw me or how they treated me, resentment, all the bad wolf
feelings. That's when I was like, wow, I really understand this parable now. Or I should say at
a deeper level, disappointment, regret, all of those feelings, you know, should I have done this?
disappointment, regret, all of those feelings. Should I have done this? Maybe I never should have made this decision. Just the full range. And when I could really sit with those feelings,
I really started to understand that being angry at people for how they were treating me or speaking
to me or were curious, the endless questions, being angry about that was not serving them. It wasn't going to help them.
It was definitely not going to help me. And it was never going to change the world for the better.
I think that's a big part of, you know, people talk about forgiveness or getting over anger.
And I think for me, that was the fundamental thing that I think turned me into a person who's
pretty easy to forgive, pretty slow to anger, was when I really,
at a fundamental level, understood what it was doing to me. You can chalk that up to being
selfish, which it is to some extent, but I just really realized, like, oh boy, like, this is
awful. I am really suffering, and the other person is not. This doesn't make any sense.
And it just made me less effective in every way.
Totally. Here I was, you know, making people feel ashamed and embarrassed for being ignorant.
And ignorant at face value is just lack of awareness, right? Here are these people not
trying to be malicious, not trying to hurt me, but just doing things from a place of
curiosity and ignorance.
And I was making them feel horrible about it. Right. Yeah. I mean, I think there is there,
you know, obviously we could talk about different types of ignorance, but one type of ignorance is
just very much like you said, it's just, I just don't know. And, and, you know, you and I had a
conversation before the show a little bit where I was like, all right, I want to make sure I'm
going to get my terms right. because I don't want to offend anybody
in any way. I want to treat people the way that they want to be treated. And yet it's sort of
like, well, I'm not quite sure. And so, you know, I think in a lot of cases it comes, like you said,
it comes from a place of concern or care. But if you're so angry all the time, you can't tell them
apart almost. Totally. I agree. And the way to use all those
words or terms, right, that's essentially another whole language is what I realized.
Whereas when I was in the activist community, I think a lot of, you know, I'm speaking,
I'm totally generalizing, but I think a lot of activists forget that they've nurtured a culture
that's exclusive and it has its own rules and language and a lot of their anger is,
how could I speak for myself?
A lot of my anger was forgetting that I was making assumptions about what people knew
and didn't know.
And when you step back and you say, well, actually it's a whole different language,
which is like a different culture.
And I wouldn't expect a person from a different country to come over and just automatically
be able to know.
It really changed. It was a whole different frame. Yeah, it's one of the most fundamental
lessons, I think. But when we stop assuming we understand people's motivation, we're so much
better off. You know, like, you can look at the action and go, okay, well, they said this, or they
did that. And you can like that or not like that, right? And you can address that. But the minute
we go into they did it, because, boy, I get my, you know, I used to get myself into trouble. I still do get myself
into trouble with that all of the time. And it's also very much sort of a self absorbed mindset,
because it means like, I just assume everybody thinks like I do. So if I did this, here's what
it would mean to me, but it's totally different for someone else or can be completely. I'm Jason Alexander.
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And now back to the interview with Dylan DiGiovanni.
Let's stay with the anger theme for a little bit longer. So talk to me about your relationship to anger now. Well, I'm awake to it in a way that
I wasn't. I think the anger was just in the driver's seat and it just compelled me for
definitely, you know, years before my transition, but then definitely in the transition early on.
years before my transition, but then definitely in the transition early on. And then I just started to realize like, this is a self-created prison, Dylan, and you signed up for this for
the rest of however many decades you have on this plan. And you can either walk through the world
really annoyed or frustrated or whatever, or you get to choose how you're going to respond,
you know, and if I'm being completely honest with you, because why not?
I mean, it's really a day-to-day practice.
Right.
Just like I think it is for everybody.
But it really is a day-to-day practice for me.
And I will say it definitely gets easier with time.
When you come, when I come from that place that I don't have to be perfect, I'm allowed to get frustrated with people sometimes.
As soon as I allow that, then, you know, as it works, right, as I allow it for
myself, then I can create that space for other people. Yeah, that is a mysterious way things
work is that, you know, when you allow something or don't resist something, it's very easy for me
to recognize that in an exterior sort of way, like, well, I shouldn't resist that I have to
go to work, or I shouldn't resist that it's cold outside, or I shouldn't resist something else. It's a lot harder for me to recognize it
with a personality trait. What in a 12-step program we might call a character defect, right?
It's a whole lot harder for me to be like, all right, I'm just going to let that be there.
I'm going to let myself be that way. And it works. Yeah, I agree. It works, but boy, it's
non-intuitive and hard for me to do because
there's a fear like well if i just let it be there it's always going to be there like i can't act
like that i can't be like that you talk about a work in progress that's what i'm still definitely
working my way through is i'm like well some of these things that i've tried to get rid of for
how many years aren't going anywhere you know they, they may not be as grievous as they
once were, but they're still there. And so maybe the approach needs to be like, all right, you
know, just sort of like, I see you in the same way that, you know, I talk with people a lot in the
coaching, I'm sure you do. And we talk about on the show around relating to thoughts and feelings
in that way, get some distance and just see them. You don't have to change them. You
don't have to make them go away. There's different approaches. But learning to do that with my own
personal sort of flaws, I guess, is more challenging. Yep. So let's talk about the
transition. So I would just be curious, like, for how long did you know that you did not identify
with your given gender? Was that something you've known a long time? Or did you know that you did not identify with your given gender? Was that something you've
known a long time or did you grow into that awareness? Thanks for asking the question
because I'm really always excited to share my experience because it's pretty different from
the common narrative that's out there of what people think and what other folks associate.
I grew up not really having that internal conflict. I was more identified
as like a tomboy, right? I was kind of more of an androgynous tomboy, which was an acceptable
identity. And because there was no visibility of transgender people when I was growing up
in the media. And then when I moved to Boston in 2006 from New Jersey, where I'm from, Yeah, yeah. for me to actually start to explore that for myself. Like, is this true for me? And here's
the honest truth. I came to the conclusion after exploring that, that I couldn't really answer the
question because I lived as a person for 34 years and I couldn't imagine into a completely different
reality. So I ultimately just made the decision to try it. Wow. And so that's a fairly
significant trying. It is. This isn't then, again, you're right, the narrative that I've heard or
understand is that people lived in this unbearable confinement for all this time. Right. And then
eventually summoned all their courage to make a change. And it sounds like it's very different in your case.
you know, you know, for graduation ceremonies or whatever, I mostly wore whatever I wanted to wear and had been doing that for many years. So the gender expression of ambiguity or androgyny
wasn't, you know, I'd already been doing it for so many years. So then it was the next step of like
changing other things. And then it was at that point that would just became like a conscious
decision, honestly. And I think when I tell people like, they're like, that's wild, you know?
And I was like, yeah, it is.
But there must have been enough of a thought that that could be the case that you maybe
were unable to say like, absolutely yes or absolutely no.
But there was a pull in that direction, obviously.
It wasn't like one day you were like, oh, going to wake up and throw my whole life into chaos to a certain extent just on a whim, right?
Yeah, it definitely wasn't a whim. It's not like I woke up and was like, hey, this would be fun.
It was after careful discernment where I did ultimately make the decision
that it wouldn't necessarily be fun, but it would be an adventure that I was ready to take
on. I felt like I had lived a certain way and had lived as a certain identity for 34 years.
And at some point, my body would give out. And I had enough of an inkling that I thought, well,
this would be a really wild adventure. And that's exactly what it's become. And I am a person
inside and out that I never would have been if I hadn't done it. And it's pretty awesome.
That's wonderful. It's so great to hear like that, you know, on the other side of it,
it feels good. So you refer to it as a transition, as in past tense. And again,
here comes my lack of real knowledge of it. So is that something?
It is like a point you hit where you're like, all right, done.
Like I transitioned and I am done now.
The transition is over.
And now I am established in this gender. Every person makes that decision at different points.
different points. So for me right now, I'm satisfied with any adjustments to myself,
you know, physically, mentally, emotionally, but also mindful that I'm a work in progress until I leave the planet. So it's always going to be, you know, maybe in five years I'll make a different
decision or something like that. But every person makes that decision at different points. But for me, I'm content.
So that process of transition can go on for either a much longer or shorter time.
And that's totally each person's sort of decision.
But from your perspective, you feel like at least that part of the journey is kind of, you know, at a standstill point.
You've got lots of other growth and opportunities you're working on.
Yeah, definitely. One of the things I've seen you talk about in your blog and in different places is the idea of resilience.
And I'd be interested in, as you went through this transition, which was enormously challenging, you mentioned your family abandoned you, people that you thought would really understand sort of treated you strangely? And where did you turn to
for the strength to continue that process through and get to the other side?
Myself, ultimately, which is why I really wanted to share this story with you,
because that parable of who we ultimately decide to become for ourselves is really the most
fundamental decision that we can make.
Because in a moment like that, where you're really in despair, you know, if I have moments
of despair or regret or feeling so abandoned, feeling so alone, feeling like I really don't
belong anywhere or with anyone, like these real deep feelings of isolation, in the blink of an eye or in the second,
I can make a different decision and feed that other wolf and say that I'm fine the way I am.
I'm fine in my own company. I can become my own best friend because of that parable.
That's like we could go down one tunnel or we can decide to go around back and
go down the different tunnel. And I can say that there were people along the way who would support
me and encourage me. But what I found is with the transition, there were increasingly fewer people
who understood, you know, so first I distanced myself from the activist community and then I
transitioned. So that's like this whole other layer of a different lens of living life. And then I'm really intense Buddhist. There were fewer and fewer people who would understand all the different things I was understanding and seeing. And so I finally was like, you know, I have to be that source for myself.
what you just said, uh, interested me, it triggered something in me, which was, you were mentioning like people who understood all those different aspects, you know,
I'm no longer an activist and I am transitioning and I'm a Buddhist. And, and it's interesting
because I used to think of mentors and in 12 step programs, there's the idea of a sponsor
and the sponsor is, you know, they always say, well, you know, ask the person that you want to
be, you know, like that you look at them and you, you know, ask the person that you want to be.
You know, like that you look at them and you're like, well, that's where I want to be.
And I could never do it.
I would always look at them and be like, well, I like that and that. But they don't have this or they don't have that or they're not going to understand this part of me.
And it took me a long time to realize, like, I'm not going to find that person.
I'm not going to find the person who's me five years from now.
Because that's what I want.
I want the me in five years to lead me along. And I finally hit a point where I was like,
it's not going to happen. There is no other me in five years. I can go to certain people for
this type of help or advice and other people for this type of help or advice. But thinking that
I'm going to roll them all into one Uber person
who's going to be like my true guide and savior was misguided. And I think it cut me off for a
long time from getting help from people in particular areas because I was like, well,
they don't understand all of me. I completely identify with that. I think I look at the major
thought leaders today and there's nobody who's living my experience that I would want to emulate or that I even feel like understands the world the way I understand it.
They have certain identities and they've lived certain experiences, but there's no one who has this extra piece.
And even, like I said, I referenced my therapist.
He had a lot, but then there were moments where I would say, you know what I mean?
And he'd look at me and he'd say, quite honestly, I don't know what you mean. I haven't
lived what you've lived. And I'm like, I don't, you have to tell me. And that's when, that's when
I had the breakthrough. Like, I've got to be this for myself. Yeah. And I think that at the same
time, we'd have to be that for ourselves. And there's places to turn for help, right? There's
people we can turn to, even if we're like, well, they, you know,
they don't understand everything about me.
Still, you know, obviously you do coaching work.
So that's, you know, part of what you offer to people.
Sure, sure.
Yeah, people can make contributions, right?
Yeah.
And from the place that they live.
And it's as valuable.
It brings value. If you're enjoying this conversation, I hate to be the bearer of bad news.
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And now, back to the interview. You've talked about anger being a work in progress.
Obviously, I think it is for all of us. What are the sort of things that make you angry today?
What triggers you? What sets you off the Dylan of today? Well, my own expectations about how
other people should behave, ultimately. That's what I really saw. And you and I were speaking
earlier, and that's what I see now happening on the world stage is so much of the anger that people have is they keep expecting other people to be thinking
and behaving the way that they either think and behave or that they think people should think and
behave. And they don't get that as a distinction. They don't get that, that they're doing that.
And how they're really, even in the name of something that they think is so just and so positive, they're actually adding more aggression to the planet with these unrealistic expectations.
And I say they're unrealistic because they're not dealing with how people really are, right?
Whereas if you meet people where they really are, then you can work with them,
right? So, and yeah, and you said that earlier. And I really saw that for myself, that so much of
what makes me angry is when I completely forget that people are being who they're being instead
of who I think they should be being. Right. And that's a tricky one, right? Because
this show is so much about finding the middle ground, right? And it's so much about balancing
contradictions and paradoxes and all that. And this leads us right up into another big one,
which is, I've got this view of the way I think the world should be. I've got a vision of what's
right and what's wrong. So I've got that on one hand. and then on the other hand, I've got this sense of letting things be as they are and accepting people where they are and being in the moment and acceptance, I would say it is perhaps, it's in the
top five wisest things ever written, I think, because that's the heart of our human condition
to a large extent is, what can I change and what can't I? And the things that I can, give me the
strength and the energy and the courage to go about changing them in a useful way, and the things I
can't, you know, let me accept those. And the wisdom to know the
difference is obviously the tricky part. Yep. And that, and that's really what I saw. And that,
that was my last kind of handhold to that angry activist identity was, um, if I let go of this
anger, I'll be so passive that I will do no good in the world. I will be read as being too passive
and looking like I'm
just, you know, who cares, whatever, life is a dream, you know, and I'll lose this need to help
be a change agent. And then I realized, no, it's actually in letting go of the anger and the need
to change people that you actually will help change things. Because when they don't feel threatened
and... I'm Jason Alexander. i'm peter tilden
and together on the really no really podcast our mission is to get the true answers to life's
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Hello, my friend.
Wayne Knight about Jurassic Park.
Wayne Knight, welcome to Really, No Really, sir.
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They feel invited into transformation. That's actually how I can help make a difference.
And I was like, wow, why didn't I get this 10 years ago? You know, and that, and it was,
it was great. Although I think I agree with you a hundred percent. And I think there probably
is equally a place for really angry activists. And it's probably good we have some of them.
Because I think a lot of social change probably moves forward in that way, but again, I guess the question would be, could you use that energy and that drive and all that without being so angry?
And I don't know the answer to that question. For some people, maybe the answer is no.
I agree. You're right. But it's one of those that, like, for me, that's not a personality style that works for me long
term. Either in, again, for my own good or for the good of the people around me.
So you mentioned Buddhism multiple times. You said you're pretty into it. Is there a particular
lineage or tradition that you follow, a particular teacher that you have? What's that look like for you? Yeah. Pema Chodron is the person that I really
have been following since 2001, probably, and then definitely her teacher. And I got to,
kind of ultimate experience, I have to say. I went up to a couple of retreats up in Vermont
and got to meet her a couple times. And I actually asked her this question at the microphone in a program about how can I be a more effective activist?
And she said to me, ask your peers if their anger is actually working.
So that was a major light bulb moment for me.
And then I got to take a selfie with her, which was awesome.
That's awesome.
Really awesome.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She's awesome. Yeah. Yeah. She's, she's great. She is. Um,
so Leonard Cohen was the number one dream guest for me on the show that I never got
on the show. Never happened. Um, I got, I at least got his manager to communicate with me, but, um,
shows and Jack Hobner, who we had on a couple of shows ago was a monk with, with Leonard Cohen.
And I, I, I, once I just said to him, I said,
well, you know, what do you think the odds
of like getting Leonard Cohen on the show?
I mean, do you think you could ask him?
Or, you know, like, I don't like to, you know.
And he was like, well, I don't know,
but you should know that his monk name means great silence.
So don't get your hopes up.
There you go.
That said, Pema Chodron is right in the top five also of people that I think would be
great guests.
I haven't, I tried it like when we started and never got any response because we were
virtually unknown.
We're probably still too small for her, but it would never hurts to ask.
Yeah.
Never know.
Never know.
I'm here today because I reached out to you.
So you never know.
Yep.
She's wonderful.
Very remarkable teacher. Very know. I'm here today because I reached out to you, so you never know. Yep. She's wonderful. Very remarkable teacher.
Very relatable.
Yes.
And so then do you have a pretty standard sitting practice or meditation practice that you do?
I don't.
I'm so undisciplined.
Yep.
But it's more just evolved into like in the moment.
Got it.
Yep.
Just like trying to constantly be conscious and mindful.
Yep. But I do need to sit more. Got it. it took me a long time to figure that one out. But I finally think I kind of cracked the code on it and got to the point where I'm like, all right, I do this every day. Some days I do it
longer than other days. Sometimes I'm better about like, okay, my practice is close to an hour a day.
There's other times it's over an hour. There's sometimes it's like five minutes. So it's, it's
inconsistent in that regard, but I've taken the, whether I do it or not, inconsistency out of the
picture. So you inspired me. I'll start tomorrow. Well, so what I did was I just, I would read
books, you know, I'd read Pema Chodron or I'd read Jack Kornfield or all this. And I'd be like,
yes, I got to meditate. I see why it's so important. And they'd be like, sit down for
15 minutes or 20 minutes or 30 minutes. And I hated it. Like I just couldn't, it just was
really difficult. And so I started this round Like I just couldn't, it just was really
difficult. And so I started this round with like, all right, I'm going to do two minutes,
but I'm going to do two minutes every day, no matter what. And then I was able to build up to
three minutes and then five minutes and I could slowly layer on. So it was really this small step
approach. And then just giving up any expectation of what meditation would be like while I did it.
I would get so frustrated because everybody else would be like, I love to meditate.
It's so nice.
And I was like, that is not how I feel.
I'm meditating and I feel crazy.
And so when I finally just went like, well, okay, maybe that's just the way meditation is for me.
I'm still going to do it.
It got a lot easier.
Great.
Excellent. Well, Dylan,
thank you so much for taking the time to come on. Thanks so much for reaching out to me and let's keep in touch. Definitely. Thanks again for having me. Okay. Bye. Bye-bye. If what you just heard was helpful to you,
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